A
slightly more balanced one from the WP:
Top CIA spy in Pakistan pulled amid threats after public accusation over attack
By Karin Brulliard and Greg Miller
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, December 17, 2010; 4:36 PM
ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN - The CIA's top spy in Pakistan has been pulled from his post after a Pakistani tribesman publicly accused him of responsibility in the deaths of three civilians in a drone-fired missile strike in the militant-heavy northwestern borderlands, a U.S. intelligence official said Friday.
The CIA station chief is returning to the United States, the official said, after "terrorist threats against him in Pakistan . . . of such a serious nature that it would be imprudent not to act."
The Associated Press first reported the development Friday morning, citing current and former U.S. intelligence officials.
CIA drone strikes against militant hideouts in the semiautonomous tribal areas bordering Afghanistan are tacitly approved by Pakistan. But the drone campaign, which the Obama administration has escalated dramatically this year, is unpopular among Pakistanis, many of whom believe that the strikes kill civilians.
Last month, a resident of the North Waziristan tribal agency - the epicenter of Islamist insurgents in Pakistan and the target of nearly all strikes by unmanned U.S. aircraft this year - identified and threatened to sue the CIA station chief if he was not compensated for what he said were the deaths of his brother, his son and a friend in a 2009 drone strike. The station chief's name was then widely published in Pakistani media.
This week, the accuser, Kareem Khan, asked police to file a criminal complaint against the station chief and prevent him from leaving the country. Khan and hundreds of other residents of the tribal areas staged a protest against drone strikes last weekend in Islamabad, the capital.
"Our station chiefs routinely encounter major risk as they work to keep America safe, and they've been targeted by terrorists in the past," George Little, a CIA spokesman, said Friday. "They are courageous in the face of danger, and their security is obviously a top priority for the CIA, especially when there's an imminent threat."
Mirza Shahzad Akbar, Khan's attorney, said Friday that 12 other North Waziristan families who claim to have lost property and relatives to drone strikes have agreed to join Khan in what amounts to a class-action lawsuit. He said the suit would soon be filed in Pakistani courts because U.S. officials had failed to respond to Khan's demand for $500 million in damages.
Akbar said he plans to file yet another suit against the Pakistani government for its tacit support for CIA drone strikes.
"They're not directly participating in it. The planes are operated by the CIA. The spy network is operated by the CIA," he said, explaining why Khan did not initially name the Pakistani government as a plaintiff. "And honestly, we don't think that the Pakistan government is going to pay us any kind of compensation."
Akbar said that as he was preparing the case, he decided to ask journalists in Islamabad for the name of the station chief. Two Pakistani print reporters gave him the same name, he said, so "I assumed that was his name and . . . decided to go on with it." He declined to name the journalists.
Akbar said he thought the station chief was probably removed because of U.S. worries about the potential success of the lawsuit, not because of threats.
"I thought he would be pulled out, but I didn't think he would be pulled out this fast," he said. "There are hundreds of lawsuits against the American government . . . and the CIA. They don't change their positions. Why are they changing their position in Islamabad?"
Although Akbar had asked police to prevent the station chief from leaving the country, he said he considered the departure "a big achievement for me, a big achievement for the case."
The combination of virulent anti-Americanism among the public and a muscular Islamist insurgency has made Pakistan among the most hostile working environments for U.S. government officials.
The U.S. Embassy in Islamabad - often derided in the Pakistani media as a "fortress" - is ensconced along with other embassies inside a highly secured walled enclave. Although U.S. diplomats live in private homes, many travel in armored vehicles.
Because of U.S. security concerns and Pakistani government rules, American diplomats and aid workers face strict restrictions on where they can travel outside Islamabad. Many are unable to see in person the projects they work on during their postings.
Nationalist segments of Pakistan's media have deepened the peril at times, U.S. officials say, by publishing photos of U.S. diplomats' homes. On Tuesday, PakNationalists, a Pakistani Web site, urged readers to submit photos of the CIA station chief.
The threats have been particularly acute for U.S. officials working in the volatile northwest. In April, insurgents attacked the U.S. Consulate in the city of Peshawar with car bombs, rifles and grenades, killing eight people, none of them American. Three U.S. soldiers were killed in a roadside bombing in the tribal areas in February.
An American aid worker, Stephen D. Vance, was fatally shot while driving to work in Peshawar in November 2008, three months after the U.S. consul general there escaped a similar attempt on her life.
Last week, the U.S. consul in Peshawar left her post after reports of threats from the Taliban; State Department officials denied those reports, saying she departed for personal reasons.
In 2006, a suicide bombing outside the U.S. Consulate in the southern port city of Karachi killed four people, including one American diplomat, a day before a visit by President George W. Bush.
Despite those incidents, U.S. officials say they are striving to make their work more public in an effort to improve the way the Pakistani public views the United States.
"One thing that we ought to do at this embassy is try as hard as we can . . . to have closer ties to people, make sure that the symbolism at the embassy is not one of a fortress, and to keep going out," a senior U.S. official recently told foreign journalists in Islamabad. "It's also a gesture to Pakistani people that we're not scared of them."
brulliardk@washpost.com millerg@washpost.com
Miller reported from Washington.