Pakistanis say US hoards intel on Taliban in Balochistan
* US newspaper quotes defence official as saying intelligence provided by Karzais government insufficient
Daily Times Monitor
LAHORE: Despite the countrys growing success targeting the Taliban in NWFP, the US is refusing to share intelligence with Pakistan about Al Qaeda and Afghan Taliban leaders thought to be hiding in Balochistan, The Washington Times claimed three senior Pakistani officials as saying on Monday.
According to the newspaper, the officials, two of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity, suggested that some of the blame for the failure to capture Osama Bin Laden, Mullah Omar and other Taliban leaders lies with the US.
"The CIA has not shared any actionable intelligence with the Pakistan government on Al Qaeda in Balochistan since 2006 and 2007, the newspaper quoted a Pakistani defence official. Islamabad is pushing for more intelligence sharing after a string of terrorist attacks including a weekend strike on the General Headquarters ended with at least 19 deaths.
A suicide car bomb on Friday killed more than 50 civilians at a crowded market in Peshawar, and an attack on a UN office a week ago killed five aid workers.
Insufficient: The official said that dated intelligence delivered by Afghan President Hamid Karzai to Pakistan months ago that Al Qaeda leaders and the Taliban leadership led by Mullah Omar were in Quetta, is too flimsy to act on.
Now the US intelligence says that Al Qaeda is holed up in Quetta, the newspaper quoted the official.
Has any US intelligence agency given us any actionable intelligence with Pakistan? No. This is only talk, he added. There have been concerns that the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) still contains sympathisers with the Afghan Taliban, the newspaper said.
In a recent assessment of the Afghanistan war that was leaked to the press, Gen Stanley McChrystal noted reports that ties remain between the ISI and the Afghan Taliban, something that Islamabad denies.
Asked about the situation in Quetta, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi told reporters and editors at The Times last week the US must trust Pakistan for the fight against terrorism to succeed.
If you are working for a common objective, the more you share real-time intelligence, the more effective your operations will be, he said.
We consider the US to be a friend and we want to be friends, Qureshi said. But we want to be equal friends. We want to be friends with a common objective. Youve got to trust us; only then will we trust you, he added.
Later, he told the US Council on Foreign Relations, We have no liking for the Quetta Shura and what it stands for. Collectively we can do a better job. We will have to build a relationship of trust and confidence. If you keep doubting our intentions and we keep doubting your intentions, then where is this partnership going?
The Washington Times quoted a senior US counter-terrorism official as saying the US took exception to the notion that information on the Quetta Shura hadnt been shared with the government of Pakistan.
The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, added that on matters related to terrorism, there is regular information sharing with the Pakistanis at all levels of their government.
The Pakistani defence official said Islamabad had the military and intelligence capabilities in Quetta that could target terrorists with US help.
Although US drone attacks have been increasingly successful, US officials say, Pakistani militants whose groups were supported by the ISI in the past are helping Al Qaeda recruit new operatives.
A US defence official said that the ISI may have lost enormous control over these organisations.
Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
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"The Washington Times quoted a senior US counter-terrorism official as saying the US took exception to the notion that information on the Quetta Shura hadnt been shared with the government of Pakistan.
The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, added that on matters related to terrorism, there is regular information sharing with the Pakistanis at all levels of their government."
The US CT official 'took exception' to the argument that the US has not provided any new information to Pakistan on the alleged Quetta Shura, but note also that the official avoids answering the question itself, resorting to a very vague 'there is regular information sharing with the Pakistanis at all levels of their government'.