What's new

Secret Memo of Zardari to Adm. Mike Mullen

The ultimate responsibility for security of Pakistan and her assets (nuclear and otherwise) rests with Gen. Kiyani , de facto , and the onus is on him . Can a 'soldier of Pakistan' trust 'the symbol of federation of Pakistan' from now onwards as long as that tainted-incompetent-and-soon-to-proven-traitor symbol of federation lingers in the highest office of the state.
 
.
Hi,

Is this a 'new' news for you---I mean to say---is this something new for you to learn---just wanted to let you know that the rest of the world had known about it for many a decades ( about the american capabilities ).

Yes everybody knows except some of your Pak brothers. If you browse some threads regarding drone attack and OBL raid,,,, they were stating like USAF is doing all violations in coalition with GOP and PA.

and good to see that you accept US capablities.
 
.
MULLEN CONFIRMS MEMO:


WASHINGTON: Former Chairman US Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee Mike Mullen has confirmed receiving memo from Mansoor Ijaz but said he never paid any attention to it and took no follow up, prestigious US publication The Cable reported.

Mansoor Ijaz, US business tycoon alleged in an Oct. 10 op-ed in top UK daily Financial Times that on May 10, in the wake of Osama bin Laden's killing in Abbottabad, Zardari had offered to replace Pakistan's powerful military and intelligence leadership and cut ties with militant groups. Ijaz said he was directed to craft the memo by a senior Pakistani official close to Zardari. Ijaz has implied -- and the Pakistani press has speculated -- that this official was Haqqani.

Kirby told The Cable that Mullen now acknowledges that the Ijaz memo does exist, that he did receive it -- but that he never paid any attention to it and took no follow up action.

"Adm. Mullen had no recollection of the memo and no relationship with Mr. Ijaz. After the original article appeared on Foreign Policy's website, he felt it incumbent upon himself to check his memory. He reached out to others who he believed might have had knowledge of such a memo, and one of them was able to produce a copy of it," Kirby said. "That said, neither the contents of the memo nor the proof of its existence altered or affected in any way the manner in which Adm. Mullen conducted himself in his relationship with Gen. Kayani and the Pakistani government. He did not find it at all credible and took no note of it then or later. Therefore, he addressed it with no one."

Last week, The Cable published an exclusive report on Mullen's comments about the memo. "Adm. Mullen does not know Mr. Ijaz and has no recollection of receiving any correspondence from him," Mullen's spokesman Capt. John Kirby said Nov. 8."I cannot say definitively that correspondence did not come from him -- the admiral received many missives as chairman from many people every day, some official, some not. But he does not recall one from this individual."

Ijaz shot back in an article in Pakistan's The News, in which he published extensive Blackberry Messenger conversations with the Zardari-linked Pakistani official, allegedly Haqqani. He insisted that the memo did, in fact, exist, and that it was delivered from Ijaz to Mullen through another secret go-between, this one a senior US government official.

"There can be no doubt a memorandum was drafted and transmitted to Admiral Mullen with the approval of the highest political level in Pakistan, and that the admiral received it with certainty from a source whom he trusted and who also trusted me," Ijaz wrote.

In an interview late on Wednesday afternoon, Washington time, Haqqani confirmed to The Cable that he will travel to Islamabad and has sent a letter to Zardari offering his resignation.

"At no point was I asked by you or anyone in the Pakistani government to draft a memo and at no point did I draft or deliver such a memo," Haqqani said that he had written in his letter to Zardari.

"I've been consistently vilified as being against the Pakistani military even though I have only opposed military intervention in political affairs," Haqqani said that he wrote. "It's not easy to operate under the shadow of innuendo and I have not been named by anyone so far, but I am offering to resign in the national interest and leave that to the will of the president."

Haqqani declined to comment to The Cable whether or not he played any role in the controversy surrounding the memo -- for example, discussing it with Ijaz before or after the fact, as the scandal deepened. It's widely rumored that Haqqani and Ijaz have known each other for many years.

source: Mullen confirms existence of secret memo


Ready to hand over 26/11 culprits to India: Zardari to Mullen

WASHINGTON: Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari was so scared of a military coup after Osama bin Laden's death that he was ready to create a "new security team" favourable to Americans and promised the US to hand over Pak-based 26/11 perpetrators including those from its intelligence agency to India.

The promises were part of a secret memo to the then Chairman of the Joint US Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen.

The secret memo from Zardari, was apparently handed over to Mullen by Mansoor Ijaz, a Pakistani-American businessman, in May this year in the aftermath of the May 2 killing of bin Laden in a safe house in Abbottabad.

The information about this secret memo was first leaked by Ijaz himself in an op-ed in the Financial Times last month.

According to this memo, Zardari, leading a civilian government wanted to create a new national security structure.

Ijaz has claimed that this memo was drafted by the Pak Ambassador to the US Husain Haqqani, who has denied these allegations, but has tendered his resignation to Zardari over the same.

Capt John Kirby, who was Mullen's spokesman, told Pentagon reporters yesterday in a statement.

"Neither the contents of the memo nor the proof of its existence altered or affected in any way the manner in which Adm Mullen conducted himself in his relationship with Gen Kayani and the Pakistani government," he said.

"He (Mullen) did not find the memo at all credible and took no note of it then or later. Therefore, he addressed it with no one," Kirby said.

The content and a copy of the said sacred memo was posted by The Foreign Policy's blog Cable late last night.

The memo further said, "Request your direct intervention in conveying a strong, urgent and direct message to gen Kayani that delivers Washington's demand for him and Gen Pasha to end their brinkmanship aimed at bringing down the civilian apparatus - that this is a 1971 moment in Pakistan's history."

"Should you be willing to do so, Washington's political/military backing would result in revamp of the civilian government that, while we weak at the top echelon in terms of strategic direction and implementation (even though mandated by domestic political forces), in a whole sale manner replaces the national security adviser and other national security officials with trusted advisors that include ex-military and civilian leaders favorably viewed by Washington, each of whom have long and historical ties to the US military, political and intelligence communities.

"Names will be provided to you in a face-to-face meeting with the person delivering this message," it said.


Please don't hand them to India or else again Indian govt. will spend our tax money on their Biryani. We do not need a few more Kasabs to drain our resources. But the important point is --Who is ZARDARI? Does he have any power whatsoever? The real President of Pakistan in General KYANI. ZARDARI does not matter at all. :rolleyes:
 
.
But the important point is --Who is ZARDARI? Does he have any power whatsoever? The real President of Pakistan in General KYANI. ZARDARI does not matter at all. :rolleyes:

Kayani lost his status among soldiers the day he was granted extension by the present government; and to most analysts he is just another of Zardari's puppet...
 
.
Secret Pakistan-US memo: President promised to create a "new security team" favorable to Americans
Submitted 1 hr 29 mins ago
Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari was so scared of a military coup after Osama bin Laden's death that he was ready to create a "new security team" favorable to Americans and promised the US to hand over top al Qaeda and Taliban officials residing in Pakistan.
The promises were part of a secret memo to the then Chairman of the Joint US Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, according to The Foreign Policy's blog Cable.
The content and a copy of the said sacret memo was posted by The Foreign Policy's blog Cable late last night.
According to The Cable the memo offered to reshape Pakistan's national security leadership, cleaning house of elements within the powerful military and intelligence agencies that have supported Islamic radicals and the Taliban, drastically altering Pakistani foreign policy -- and requesting U.S. help to avoid a military coup.
The secret memo from Zardari, was apparently handed over to Mullen by Mansoor Ijaz, a Pakistani-American businessman, in May this year in the aftermath of the May 2 killing of bin Laden in a safe house in Abbottabad.
The information about this secret memo was first leaked by Ijaz himself in an op-ed in the Financial Times last month.
According to this memo, Zardari, leading a civilian government wanted to create a new national security structure that would be favorable to the Americans.
In the Memo President Zardari also promised the US to hand over top al Qaeda and Taliban officials residing in Pakistan , including Ayman Al Zawahiri, Mullah Omar, and Sirajuddin Haqqani, or give U.S. military forces a "green light" to conduct the necessary operations to capture or kill them on Pakistani soil, with the support of Islamabad. "This commitment has the backing of the top echelon on the civilian side of our house," the memo states
"Civilians cannot withstand much more of the hard pressure being delivered from the Army to succumb to wholesale changes," reads the memo, sent to Mullen via an unidentified U.S. interlocutor by Ijaz. "If civilians are forced from power, Pakistan becomes a sanctuary for UBL's [Osama bin Laden's] legacy and potentially the platform for far more rapid spread of al Qaeda's brand of fanaticism and terror. A unique window of opportunity exists for the civilians to gain the upper hand over army and intelligence directorates due to their complicity in the UBL matter."
The memo -- delivered just 9 days after the killing of bin Laden -- requests Mullen's help "in conveying a strong, urgent and direct message to [Pakistani Army Chief of Staff] Gen [Ashfaq Parvez] Kayani that delivers Washington's demand for him and [Inter-Services Intelligence chief] Gen [Ahmad Shuja] Pasha to end their brinkmanship aimed at bringing down the civilian apparatus."
"Should you be willing to do so, Washington's political/military backing would result in a revamp of the civilian government that, while weak at the top echelon in terms of strategic direction and implementation (even though mandated by domestic political forces), in a wholesale manner replaces the national security adviser and other national security officials with trusted advisers that include ex-military and civilian leaders favorably viewed by Washington, each of whom have long and historical ties to the US military, political and intelligence communities," the memo states.
The memo offers a six-point plan for how Pakistan's national security leadership would be altered in favor of U.S. interests. President Asif Ali Zardari would start a formal "independent" inquiry to investigate the harboring of bin Laden and take suggestions from Washington on who would conduct that inquiry. The memo promised this inquiry would identify and punish the Pakistani officials responsible for harboring bin Laden.
The memo also promises a new Pakistani national security leadership that would bring transparency and "discipline" to Pakistan's nuclear program, cut ties with Section S of the ISI, which is "charged with maintaining relations to the Taliban, Haqqani network" and other rogue elements, and work with the Indian government to punish the perpetrators of the 2008 terrorist attack in Mumbai.
Secret Pakistan-US memo: President promised to create a "new security team" favorable to Americans | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online
 
. .
I have as much contempt as anyone else for Hussain Haqqani but this Mansoor Ijaz guy is also very shady. How do we know Ijaz didn't just make up the memo?
 
. .
Indians as much as you'd want us to dislike PA.Let me put it this way - Zardari, Gilani etc are just personalities.The majority of Pakistani Nations Loves Pakistan Army as a institution.We owe our freedom to brave soldiers of Pakistan Armed Forces - We have seen your arrogance in threads where something bad happens to Pakistan and your arrogance against poor Bangladeshis or Srilankas who cannot defend themselves against Indian Aggression.
 
.
We just need a leader who can guide the nation to a right path; don't care if IK is working on his own or the establishment is helping him...
Very true ... We just need a 'clean/honest' leader ...doesn't matter if establishment supports him or not ... establishment is not my headache , my headache is corruption/bad governance/institutional erosion/inflation .
 
.
Why every dummy bharti-minion act like an expert on internal affairs of Pakistan? Get a life dudes, check the mess in your own bloody backyard. anna hazarey's revolution is still very much alive. You still need to focus your attention to make toilets availbe for half your population. Only a healthy India will produce people with healty brain.
 
.
Army should take an action against such people.If the memo is really from zardari,kayani should directly confront zardari over this issue and ISI itself be given the task to investigate this matter. Everyone knows the importance of S section and its real significance which is obviously not only the dealing with Haqani,Taliban etc network.
 
. .
I'm very upset with Kayani not taking any action. He should've done something a long time ago.
Based on what legal and constitutional grounds?

I dislike and distrust Zardari and his coterie as much as anyone, but Pakistan needs to start addressing these issues legally and constitutionally.

---------- Post added at 08:18 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:17 AM ----------

One of the great fears of the military-intelligence establishment is that with your stealth capabilities to enter and exit Pakistani airspace at will, Pakistan’s nuclear assets are now legitimate targets.

It also shows lack of capabilities to counter USAF violation of PAK airspace.... NO?
It refers to the opinions of Haqqani/Zardari regarding the views/fears of the military-intelligence establishment, and not necessarily the actual views of the military-intelligence establishment.
 
.
I have as much contempt as anyone else for Hussain Haqqani but this Mansoor Ijaz guy is also very shady. How do we know Ijaz didn't just make up the memo?
Cyril Almeida made an interesting observation, that for an administration that won't officially acknowledge drone strikes or the 14 page report Kayani delivered to Obama, outlining Pakistan's position on Afghanistan, Mullen acknowledged the existence of the memo rather quickly.

Could the US actually be hoping for a military coup to 'shake things up' regionally, and give it more leverage over Pakistan by rallying the international community against 'military dictatorship in Pakistan'?
 
.

Latest posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom