Leaked secret US files about Pak Army cooperation in war on "terror"

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-disks10apr10,0,5854905,full.story

U.S. Military Secrets for Sale at Afghan Bazaar
By Paul Watson, Times Staff Writer
April 10, 2006

BAGRAM, Afghanistan — No more than 200 yards from the main gate of the sprawling U.S. base here, stolen computer drives containing classified military assessments of enemy targets, names of corrupt Afghan officials and descriptions of American defenses are on sale in the local bazaar.

Shop owners at the bazaar say Afghan cleaners, garbage collectors and other workers from the base arrive each day offering purloined goods, including knives, watches, refrigerators, packets of Viagra and flash memory drives taken from military laptops. The drives, smaller than a pack of chewing gum, are sold as used equipment.

The thefts of computer drives have the potential to expose military secrets as well as Social Security numbers and other identifying information of military personnel. (article continues…)

(The information they found in the files)

One of the computer drives stolen from Bagram contained a series of slides prepared for a January 2005 briefing of American military officials that identified several Afghan governors and police chiefs as “problem makers” involved in kidnappings, the opium trade and attacks on allied troops with improvised bombs.

The chart showed the U.S. military’s preferred methods of dealing with the men: “remove from office; if unable marginalize.”

A chart dated Jan. 2, 2005, listed five Afghans as “Tier One Warlords.” It identified Afghanistan’s former defense minister Mohammed Qassim Fahim, current military chief of staff Abdul Rashid Dostum and counter-narcotics chief Gen. Mohammed Daoud as being involved in the narcotics trade. All three have denied committing crimes.

Another slide presentation identified 12 governors, police chiefs and lower-ranking officials that the U.S. military wanted removed from office. The men were involved in activities including drug trafficking, recruiting of Taliban fighters and active support for Taliban commanders, according to the presentation, which also named the military’s preferred replacements.

The briefing said that efforts against Afghan officials were coordinated with U.S. special operations teams and must be approved by top commanders as well as military lawyers who apply unspecified criteria set by Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld.

The military also weighs any ties that any official has to President Hamid Karzai and members of his Cabinet or warlords, as well as the risk of destabilization when deciding which officials should be removed, the presentation said.

One of the men on the military’s removal list, Sher Mohammed Akhundzada, was replaced in December as governor of Helmand province in southern Afghanistan. After removing him from the governor’s office, Karzai appointed Akhundzada to Afghanistan’s Senate. The U.S. military believed the governor, who was caught with almost 20,000 pounds of opium in his office last summer, to be a heroin trafficker.

The provincial police chief in Helmand, Abdul Rahman Jan, whom U.S. forces suspect of providing security for narcotics shipments, kept his job.

**Though U.S. officials continue to praise Pakistan as a loyal ally in the war on terrorism, several documents on the flash drives show the military has struggled to break militant command and supply lines traced to Pakistan. Some of the documents also accused Pakistan’s security forces of helping militants launch cross-border attacks on U.S. and allied forces.

Militant attacks on U.S. and allied forces have escalated sharply over the last half year, and once-rare suicide bombings are now frequent, especially in southern Afghan provinces close to infiltration routes from Pakistan.

A document dated Oct. 11, 2004, said at least two of the Taliban’s top five leaders were believed to be in Pakistan. That country’s government and military repeatedly have denied that leaders of militants fighting U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan operate from bases in Pakistan.

The Taliban leaders in Pakistan were identified as Mullah Akhtar Osmani, described as a “major Taliban facilitator for southern Afghanistan” and a “rear commander from Quetta” in southwest Pakistan, and Mullah Obaidullah, said to be “responsible for planning operations in Kandahar.”

At the time, fugitive Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar, his second-in-command Mullah Berader, and three other top Taliban commanders were all suspected of being in southern or central Afghanistan, according to the military briefing.

Another document said the Taliban and an allied militant group were working with Arab Al Qaeda members in Pakistan to plan and launch attacks in Afghanistan. A map presented at a “targeting meeting” for U.S. military commanders here on Jan. 27, 2005, identified the Pakistani cities of Peshawar and Quetta as planning and staging areas for terrorists heading to Afghanistan.

One of the terrorism groups is identified by the single name “Zawahiri,” apparently a reference to Ayman Zawahiri, Osama bin Laden’s deputy and chief strategist in Al Qaeda. The document said his attacks had been launched from a region south of Miram Shah, administrative capital of Pakistan’s unruly North Waziristan tribal region.

In January, a CIA missile strike targeted Zawahiri in a village more than 100 miles to the northeast, but he was not among the 18 killed, who included women and children.

Other documents on the computer drives listed senior Taliban commanders and “facilitators” living in Pakistan. The Pakistani government strenuously denies allegations by the Afghan government that it is harboring Taliban and other guerrilla fighters.

An August 2004 computer slide presentation marked “Secret” outlined “obstacles to success” along the border and accused Pakistan of making “false and inaccurate reports of border incidents.” It also complained of political and military inertia in Pakistan.

Half a year later, other documents indicated that little progress had been made. A classified document from early 2005 listing “Target Objectives” said U.S. forces must “interdict the supply of IEDs (improvised explosive devices) from Pakistan” and “interdict infiltration routes from Pakistan.”

A special operations task force map highlighting militants’ infiltration routes from Pakistan in early 2005 included this comment from a U.S. military commander: “Pakistani border forces [should] cease assisting cross border insurgent activities.”**

Re: Leaked secret US files about Pak Army cooperation in war on "terror"

This is simply confirming what the media have been reporting. Pakistan is not a trustworthy ally. The generals, Musharraf included, that brought the Taliban in to power still see "strategic depth" in having them around. Pakistan is the launching pad for terrorism around the world.
As one Senator said in an interview this weekend, US made bombs that were supposed to be used in fighting the Taliban are being used by Pakistan to quash a popular up rising in Balochistan. The US should reconsider it's military aid to Pakistan. It simply does not have any returns for the US. The American relationship with Pakistan is one way, and it needs to cease.

Re: Leaked secret US files about Pak Army cooperation in war on "terror"

^ Wow to pakistan. NIS get a life and go back to your Hindu run boards. Your India cannot and will not fight pakistan. Stop crying and focus on the poverty, unrest in Indain states. Actualy what needs to cease is your existence on this board.

See if you can write a letter to your senator or congress person to have this "one sided" relationship ceased. When you get a response and postive outcome, do let us know...until then shut your trap and behave.

Re: Leaked secret US files about Pak Army cooperation in war on “terror”

Well the first thing that comes to mind is:

Do not trust Afghanis even with USB drives. These poverty stricken people have been selling everything including their mother’s chair.

As for Pakistan, well some of it is true thanks to people like beardo Haji Omer. The rest should be treated as assessment. Especially the stuff that deals with Afghan beardos or Talibanic terrorists. Had USA known anything about their exact whereabouts, a simple call to Islamabad would have done the trick.

Bottom line: The slides are good about Pakistani Talibans, while the files are just speculations about Afghani Taliban.

Pakistani Taliban should quit their shenanigans. They should learn from Palestinian Fidayeen experience. When you do pin-pricks to a powerful military, the end result is pretty bad.

Big militaries like US, or Pakistan do not like their jawans or officers getting hurt by the beardos like Haji Omer. After a while, Haji Omer may survive, but his people will become victims of “Scorch the earth” policy.

Haji Omer type people should never ever use civilians as a shield. After a while, it becomes necessary to destroy that shield.