US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

Most of us knew this, but this kind of proves that ISI is acting like criminal org…which is what it is.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/05/world/asia/05pakistan.html?hp

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Obama administration officials believe that Pakistan’s powerful spy agency ordered the killing of a Pakistani journalist who had written scathing reports about the infiltration of militants in the country’s military, according to American officials.

New classified intelligence obtained before the May 29 disappearance of the journalist, Saleem Shahzad, 40, from the capital, Islamabad, and after the discovery of his mortally wounded body, showed that senior officials of the spy agency, the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence, directed the attack on him in an effort to silence criticism, two senior administration officials said.

The intelligence, which several administration officials said they believed was reliable and conclusive, showed that the actions of the ISI, as it is known, were “barbaric and unacceptable,” one of the officials said. They would not disclose further details about the intelligence.

But the disclosure of the information in itself could further aggravate the badly fractured relationship between the United States and Pakistan, which worsened significantly with the American commando raid two months ago that killed Osama bin Laden in a Pakistan safehouse and deeply embarrassed the Pakistani government, military and intelligence hierarchy. Obama administration officials will deliberate in the coming days how to present the information about Mr. Shahzad to the Pakistani government, an administration official said.

The disclosure of the intelligence was made in answer to questions about the possibility of its existence, and was reluctantly confirmed by the two officials. “There is a lot of high-level concern about the murder; no one is too busy not to look at this,” said one.

A third senior American official said there was enough other intelligence and indicators immediately after Mr. Shahzad’s death for the Americans to conclude that the ISI had ordered him killed.

“Every indication is that this was a deliberate, targeted killing that was most likely meant to send shock waves through Pakistan’s journalist community and civil society,” said the official, who like others spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the delicate nature of the information.

A spokesman for the Pakistan intelligence agency said in Islamabad on Monday night that “I am not commenting on this.” George Little, a spokesman for the Central Intelligence Agency, declined to comment.

In a statement the day after Mr. Shahzad’s waterlogged body was retrieved from a canal 60 miles from Islamabad, the ISI publicly denied accusations in the Pakistani news media that it had been responsible, calling them “totally unfounded.”

The ISI said the journalist’s death was “unfortunate and tragic,” and should not be “used to target and malign the country’s security agency.”

The killing of Mr. Shahzad, a contributor to the Web site Asia Times Online, aroused an immediate furor in the freewheeling news media in Pakistan.

Mr. Shahzad was the 37th journalist killed in Pakistan since the 9/11 attacks, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Pakistan’s civilian government, under pressure from the media, established a commission headed by a Supreme Court justice to investigate Mr. Shahzad’s death. The findings are scheduled to be released early next month.

Mr. Shahzad suffered 17 lacerated wounds delivered by a blunt instrument, a ruptured liver and two broken ribs, said Dr. Mohammed Farrukh Kamal, one of the three physicians who conducted the post-mortem.

The anger over Mr. Shahzad’s death followed unprecedented questioning in the media about the professionalism of the army and the ISI, a military-controlled spy agency, in the aftermath of the Bin Laden raid.

Since that initial volley of questioning, the ISI has mounted a steady counter-campaign. Senior ISI officials have called and visited journalists, warning them to douse their criticisms and rally around the theme of a united country, according to three journalists who declined to be named for fear of reprisals.

Mr. Shahzad, who wrote articles over the last several years that illuminated the relationship between the militants and the military, was abducted from the capital three days after publication of his article that said Al Qaeda was responsible for an audacious 16-hour commando attack on Pakistan’s main naval base in Karachi on May 22.

The attack was a reprisal for the navy’s arresting up to 10 naval personnel who had belonged to a Qaeda cell, Mr. Shahzad said.

The article, published by Asia Times Online, detailed how the attackers were guided by maps and logistical information provided from personnel inside the base.

Particularly embarrassing for the military, Mr. Shahzad described negotiations before the raid between the navy and a Qaeda representative, Abdul Samad Mansoor. The navy refused to release the detainees, Mr. Shahzad wrote. The Pakistani military maintains that it does not negotiate with militants.

Mr. Shahzad prided himself on staying out of the mainstream press, preferring, he wrote in a preface to his recently published book, “Inside Al Qaeda and the Taliban,” to challenge the “conventional wisdom.”
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Relatives and journalists carried the coffin of Mr. Shahzad after it arrived in Karachi on June 1. The ISI, the nation’s top spy agency, had denied accusations that it was responsible for his death.
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He had submitted articles to Asia Times Online, which claims 150,000 readers, since 2001, when he was a reporter in Karachi uncovering corruption in the public utility, the editor of the Web site, Tony Allison, said.

He broke into the limelight two years ago with an interview with Ilyas Kashmiri, a highly trained Pakistani militant allied to Al Qaeda. Mr. Kashmiri is believed to have been killed in a drone attack in early June.

According to associates, Mr. Shahzad cultivated contacts inside the military and the intelligence agency and members of militant groups, some from his student days in Jamaat Islami, a religious political party.

Some of his stories were threaded with embellishments. Soon after the Bin Laden raid, Mr. Shahzad wrote that Gen. David H. Petraeus visited the chief of the Pakistani Army, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, and informed him, an account the White House strongly disputes. Pakistani journalists questioned the authenticity of some of Mr. Shahzad’s reporting: whether those doubts arose from professional jealousy or were well founded was never clear.

But the ISI had been interested in Mr. Shahzad for some time. In an e-mail written to Ali Dayan Hasan, the head of Human Rights Watch in Pakistan, which Mr. Shahzad instructed Mr. Hasan to release if something happened to him, Mr. Shahzad gave details of an Oct. 17 meeting at ISI headquarters, where two senior officials in the press section wanted to discuss an article he had written about the release of an interrogated Afghan Taliban commander, Abdul Ghani Baradar.

At the end, Mr. Shahzad said, he had been given what Mr. Hasan said he understood to be a veiled death threat from the head of the press section, Rear Adm. Adnan Nazir. “We have recently arrested a terrorist and recovered a lot of data, diaries and other material during the interrogation,” Mr. Shahzad quoted Admiral Nazir saying. “The terrorist had a list with him. If I find your name in the list, I will certainly let you know.”

In its statement after the death of Mr. Shahzad, the ISI said the agency notifies “institutions and individuals alike of any threat warning received about them.” There were no “veiled or unveiled threats” in the e-mail, the ISI said.

Hameed Haroon, the publisher of Dawn, an English-language newspaper and the head of the newspaper publishers’ association in Pakistan, said that the journalist had confided to him that “he had received death threats from various officers of the ISI on at least three occasions in the past five years.”

It was possible that Mr. Shahzad had become too cavalier, said Ayesha Siddiqa, a Pakistani columnist and author.

“The rules of the game are not completely well defined,” she said. “Sometimes friendly elements cross an imaginary threshold and it is felt they must be taught a lesson.”

The efforts by the ISI to constrain the Pakistani news media have, to a degree, worked in recent days. The virulent criticism after Mr. Shahzad’s death has tempered a bit.

A Pakistani reporter, Waqar Kiani, who works for the British newspaper The Guardian, was beaten in the capital after Mr. Shahzad’s death with wooden batons and a rubber whip, by men who said: “You want to be a hero. We’ll make you a hero,” the newspaper reported. Mr. Kiani had just published an account of his abduction two years earlier at the hands of intelligence agents.

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

I wonder why someone had to kill/silence him. Who acts on information printed by big newspapers from Pakistan , his was a tiny website on the net.
I honestly think nobody would demand any investigation because of his reporting and even if an investigation was conducted , it would prove him right.

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

It was neither first, nor last. We believed it from the day one, not because the US says it, just because it does happen in our country.

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

Unfortunately it is not just ISI who does it. Such culture is prevalent among all law enforcement agencies. Policemen have been found to keep people in illegal detentions. Some even have their own private torture cells.
I personally know a person who was picked up by police illegally and was tortured. And I also know a person who was kidnapped by one of these secret agencies.
We also saw how rangers killed that person due to personal enmity between two people.

It's an open secret.

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

hard to beleive both parties having such good repution!!

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

Situation is much complicated.
Pakistan: The worst is yet to come » http://www.newscenterpk.com/wp-content/uploads/cache/533_trnsFeaturedBottom.jpgimran 12:28 pm | By Brig Asif Haroon Raja The US in pursuit of its strategic and economic objectives in this part of the world arm twisted Gen Musharraf in September 2001…
July 5 2011 / Read More »

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

wow, Americans, the most deceptive nation on earth says something with whom It is not happy and it is taken as prove... says lot about the slave mentality and reason we are in such mess

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

Old tactic of America to malign agencies will America tell us who killed that journalist who was writing a book on underworld with the help saleem shahzad in India now did ISI killed him too?

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

The Indian wrote the book against Dawood Ibraheem
And D.I. is .............
Who can say
Chhoro, Muko مکو

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

Its been going on for a long time. They never said anything when they killed and abducted scores in Baluchistan. Only now that US has 'interest' in publicizing these things, they do it. If we are lucky, the US might start talking about human rights abuses in Saudi Arabia 20 years from now.

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

^ well i think the time is approaching fast when the Americans will start exposing Pakistan army's crimes in Balochistan

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

We all know the ground realities of our beloved citadel of Islam. ISI and Army are supreme power here. Since my childhood I have been listening that army is the real savior of Pakistan and without it we will be disintegrated. I question this notion that army was there even in 1971 and we lost our land and we still blame India. Anybody who knew little bit about Pakistan knew who has the power, will and resourses to eleminate a journalilst. Even now ppl says it is tactic of US to create a drift between army and citizens to Pakistan. Do Pakistani army consider's its citizens as humans? I doubt!

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

Sir don't speak the language of Indians remove army from the way India will take no time in destroying you sir all the journalist who are killed are all killed by ISI the answer is no sir you are doing the same thing which America is doing to make ISI and ARMY so whats the difference between you and our enemies and will you like to answer me who killed the journalist in India who was writing a book on ISI with the help of Saleem Shazad

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

There is a dead man with a family who was just doing his job.. let's say Americans killed him to make ISI look bad.. why don't ISI come with some transparent and conclusive evidence.. They can not exercise this silence and pretend nothing happened when a journalist criticizing ISI is killed under mysterious situation.

And if this report is even 20% true.. believe me our security agencies with these global agendas are becoming our biggest security threat..!!!

This poor chap was no lesser Pakistani than anyone else.. specially our men in uniform..!!!

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

You are right Ali, our army has turned our greatest liability. They need a strong opponent like US or India to show them their real face. They use Pakistan as their fiefdom. All the countries of the world have army, but in Pakistan, army has a country (lol).

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

People like you have always worshiped India but India will be taken out

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

Dear Mukobhai, we all know how Pakistan ISI and army works. Just by blaming others on our own fault will only help our enemies grow stronger. Do you think US, the real superpower in this world, is stupid and is oblivion with the ground realities. The believe that you are quoting here is our army's propaganda to keep the real power to themselves. Tell me in which country of the world, army in involved in commercial business as our army does? Which country's 75% of budget is consumed by armed forces and ISI that too without any accountability? For your information, the Indian journalist, Jyotirmoy Dey, was not killed by RAW. At least RAW is answerable to Indian PM. Pls keep your eyes open to see how our army has kept us in darkness to enjoy their perks and facility. Come out of Indophobia. Though I feel India is our biggest enemy but it has never attacked any of the countries barring the Portugal occupancy in Goa. India is a shrewd country, it wants to grow economically just like US and knew by trade and commerce it can rule the world. Unlike us who wanted to capture Kashmir and Afghanistan without any internal unity between states.

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

Madma I have many Relatives in ISI so don't tell me about ISI and only 15 % of the budget is used by Armed Forces and RAW is not answerable to Indian PM it is just a joke o really Indian captured Kashmir India attacked use in 1965 and 1971 India tried to attack us in 2002 India has suppported Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka what the hell are you talking about and ISI has nothing to do with Saleem Shazad case

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

hmmm...change of heart maybe :D

Re: US Intell: ISI killed Saleem Shahzad

^^ Oh mukho :smack:, i dont know where to start. not only your post is low on IQ, general knowledge but also lacks even basic facts about history.
look up AVM asghar khan on youtube. may be you can learn something .