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Intelligence agencies arrested Al-Qaeda commander Abu-Yahya in Karachi

Suspect arrested in Pakistan not Gadahn: officials | PINDITUBE
KARACHI: Pakistani security agents denied on Monday that an American al Qaeda spokesman wanted in the United States for treason had been arrested, saying there had been confusion over the identity of a detained suspect.

Some Pakistani officials had said on Sunday that Adam Gadahn, a California-born convert to Islam with a $1 million US bounty on his head, had been arrested on the outskirts of the city of Karachi.

But a senior government official and two security agents said on Monday the suspected al Qaeda operative picked up in Karachi was not Gadahn.

“Our initial impression was that the guy was Adam Gadahn but that information now looks incorrect,” said one security official, who declined to be identified.

The arrested man was believed to be an American who goes by the alias Abu Yahya, the officials said. Gadahn is known to have used a similar alias.

“Probably the name and his origin caused the confusion,” the first official said.

He declined to speculate about the identity of the arrested man except to say he was apparently an American al Qaeda operative.

“We don’t know yet how big a catch he is,” he said.

While ruling out another big offensive soon, Pakistan has arrested several senior members of the Afghan Taliban in recent weeks, including a top military commander, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar.

But Islamabad has only officially confirmed Baradar’s arrest.

Gadahn has been involved with al Qaeda’s as-Sahab media wing and has appeared in al Qaeda videos wearing robes and a turban and warning the United States that it would face attacks if it did not heed al Qaeda demands.

On Sunday, a video was released on Islamist websites in which Gadahn called for Muslims in the United States to launch attacks to undermine the economy, according to a website that monitors al Qaeda announcements.

The FBI has been seeking to question Gadahn since May 2004, and the U.S. government has offered up to $1 million in reward money for information leading to his arrest.

The 2006 treason charge against him carries a maximum punishment of death.

Separately, a senior Pakistani Taliban commander linked with al Qaeda who the government said last week may have been killed in a Pakistani air raid telephoned a Reuters reporter to say he was alive.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik said on Saturday senior Pakistani Taliban commander Faqir Mohammad may have been among 16 insurgents killed when helicopter gunships attacked a militant hideout in the Mohmand region on Friday.

“I’m fine. It’s just propaganda,” said the man on the telephone who identified himself as Mohammad. The reporter has spoken to Mohammad before and said he recognised his voice.

“I was in Bajaur, not Mohmand that day. None of our commanders were killed in the attack. We lost some fighters and women,” the man purporting to be Mohammad said, referring to another region on the Afghan border.
Suspect arrested in Pakistan not Gadahn: officials | PINDITUBE
 
Asia Times Online :: Pakistan delivers but doubts remain

ISLAMABAD - Pakistan has once again come up with a big fish for the United States with the arrest in the southern port city of a senior al-Qaeda operative.

Although there is some confusion as to the identity of the man, the arrest again underscores the importance of Pakistan in the US's struggle in Afghanistan.

On Sunday evening, Pakistan's security agencies leaked a report of the arrest of al-Qaeda operative Abu Yahya Azzam, but later information began circulating that the man was in fact another al-Qaeda operative, Adam Gadahn, an American-born convert to Islam whose Muslim name is Adam Yahiya Azzam. By Monday morning, security agencies clarified that the arrested person is indeed Abu Yahya Azzam, who is of Arab origin. The claims could not be independently verified.

The regime of former president Pervez Musharraf was adept at producing key al-Qaeda figures at critical junctures with the US. Islamabad, that is, the military, is doing the same now. On the one hand it wants to win US backing for an extension to the term of army chief Ashfaq Parvez Kiani, who is set to retire this year. Kiani is very popular with the US military establishment.

The military also wants to ensure that it gets a central role in the end game in Afghanistan, in particular in any negotiations with the Taliban. For its part, Washington wants to keep Pakistan subservient to Washington's policies.

The latest arrest follows other recent captures in Pakistan, notably those of Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban's supreme commander, and Mustasam Agha Jan, a close aide of Taliban leader Mullah Omar.

Washington will most certainly be delighted with this string of arrests, but it still treats anything that happens in Pakistan with some caution, as it did in Musharraf’s time in the years after Pakistan joined the "war on terror" in 2001.

United States special AfPak envoy Richard Holbrooke said in an interview with the Financial Times following the arrest of Baradar that he was not convinced that Pakistan had decisively turned against the Afghan Taliban. He declined to say whether the US was getting good intelligence from the joint interrogation of Baradar, but he said he had "no problems" with the Lahore High Court's denial of a request last week to transfer the Taliban commander to Afghanistan.

Over the past year, Pakistan has mounted several major military operations in the tribal areas against militants, with some success, and recently it claimed to have killed top Taliban commanders including Moulvi Faqir Mohammad and Qari Ziaur Rahman. These deaths have not been verified by independent sources. (For a face-to-face interview with one of the Taliban's most dangerous commanders, see A fighter and a financier Asia Times Online, May 23, 2008.)

However, suspicions linger in Washington that Pakistan still aims to keep some space for itself for a final maneuver and that, if Pakistan's military apparatus is not taken under firm control, Washington will not get its desirable results in Afghanistan.

These fears have been heightened by the Lahore court's decision not to hand over suspects; previously, people were passed on without question, many destined for the US detention centers at Guantanamo Bay or Bagram air base near Kabul.

Controlling Pakistan's military
A Pashtu-speaking retired Pakistani general and a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, Ehsan ul-Haq, was the eyes and ears of his then-chief of army staff, Musharraf, before the October 12, 1999, military coup that brought Musharraf to power.

After the coup, Haq was promoted to Corps Commander Peshawar and soon after was made chief of Pakistan's premier intelligence agency - the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). Musharraf was convinced of his loyalty.

However, when it became a question of appointing Haq vice chief of army staff and making him a full general, Musharraf saw in him an over-ambitious officer. He promoted him to be a four-star general and gave him the largely ceremonial position of chairman of the Joint Chiefs of the Staff Committee.

This marked Haq's parting of the ways with Musharraf and his close military officers, including Kiani, who was then the director general of the ISI. Haq nevertheless developed good ties with American officials. Kiani, being Musharraf's spy master, warned that Haq was maneuvering against Musharraf and was trying to win favors in Washington.

Haq eventually ended up at a Washington think-tank, but continued to promote himself in Pakistan, using two of his closest friends - Saiful Islam, a son of Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, and Prince Ahmad, the chief of the armed forces of Bahrain.

As a rule in Pakistan, foreign companies with investment in Pakistan appoint a non-Pakistani as chairman, with the managing director being Pakistani. However, due to Saiful Adil's influence, Haq was appointed chairman of Pak-Libya Holding Company, which has large investments in Pakistan. This consolidated Haq's clout in Pakistan. Although he is disliked by the incumbent military leadership, Washington used Haq in setting up back-channel dialogue between Pakistan and India.

Haq using his friendship with Prince Ahmad to convince the Saudi rulers that he (Haq) should be the point man for consultations on the South Asian "war on terror" theater. King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia therefore recently summoned Haq to Riyadh for an audience.

The next step, security sources tell Asia Times Online, will be a strong push by Washington to get Haq appointed as national security advisor to President Asif Ali Zardari in an attempt to get the military establishment fully under control. Although the military gets on very well with its counterpart in the US, there are clearly still those lingering doubts that Pakistan's generals will always put their own interests first.

Military headquarters in Rawalpindi are apparently ready to fiercely oppose any such oversight moves.

Syed Saleem Shahzad is Asia Times Online's Pakistan Bureau Chief. He can be reached at saleem_shahzad2002@yahoo.com
 
We don't care about anyone's doubts, period!

Pakistan started an action against extremism in 1999, much before 9/11 and today we have secured FATA and other ares from militants.

Today, Pakistanis are more clear and educated about Islam and are far more united against extremism and fundamentalism. This is an achievement in itself as this change will allow Pakistanis to understand the true Islam and follow the true Islam.

We as a nation, will continue to fight extremists and will continue to show the world that Pakistanis and their brave armed forces have achieved victory over a brutal enemy. An enemy which has yet to be defeated by the ISAF and the NATO despite all of their resources.


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Officials yet to confirm arrest of Gadahn
By Tahir Niaz

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani officials are yet to confirm the arrest of an American-born spokesman for al Qaeda, Adam Yahiye Gadahn, who was reportedly arrested from Karachi by Pakistani intelligence officials a few days back.

Gadahn is placed 14th on FBI’s list of most wanted terrorists for treason and arms support to al Qaeda. He was indicted in the Central District of California for various terrorist activities and material support to the group.

Gadahn was reportedly arrested during a raid in Karachi a few days ago, but the authorities on Monday rejected reports that the detained man was the US-born al Qaeda spokesman Adam Yahiye Gadahn.

“Yes two foreigners had been arrested from Karachi two days ago but we are unable to confirm the validity of the reports involving the arrest of Adam Yahiye Gadahn,” government officials said.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 

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