Al Qaeda In GHQ, Rawalpindi
- International Terrorism Monitor--Paper No.335
By B. Raman
Since 9/11, there has been hardly any
jihadi terrorist strike anywhere in the world in which there
was no Pakistani connection.
2. Since 2002, there has been hardly
any jihadi terrorist strike in Pakistani territory in which
there was no connection of the General Headquarters (GHQ) of
the Pakistan Army. By GHQ, one does not mean the entire
army. One means some elements in the GHQ.
3. The first wake-up call about the
possible presence of one or more sleeper cells of Al Qaeda
in Rawalpindi came in March, 2003, when Khalid Sheikh
Mohammad (KSM), who allegedly orchestrated the 9/11
terrorist strikes in the US, was found living in the house
of a woman's wing office-bearer of the Jamaat-e-Islami in
Rawalpindi. She had relatives in the army, including an
officer of a Signal Regiment.
4. The second wake-up call came after
the two attempts to assassinate President Pervez Musharraf
in Rawalpindi in December, 2003. The Pakistani authorities
have not so far taken their public into confidence regarding
the details of the two plots. All that they admitted was
that four junior officers of the Army and six of the Air
Force were allegedly involved. One of the army officers
named Islamuddin was court-martialed and sentenced to death
even before the investigation was complete. Another army
officer named Havaldar Younis was sentenced to 10 years
rigorous imprisonment. Much to the discomfiture of the
authorities, one of the Air Force officers, a civilian,who
was being held in custody in an Air Force station, managed
to escape.
5. There are still many unanswered
questions about the conspiracy to kill Musharraf. Who took
the initiative in planning this conspiracy? The arrested
junior officers of the Army and the Air Force or the
leaders of the suspected jihadi organisations? When was the
conspiracy hatched? How did Pakistan's Inter-Services
Intelligence (ISI) and the Intelligence Directorates-General
of the Army and the Air Force remain unaware of this
conspiracy despite the fact that the conspirators had
allegedly held some of their preparatory meetings in their
living quarters in military cantonments and Air Force
stations? Was there a complicity of some in the intelligence
establishment itself? If so, at what level? Why was the
Government unable to identify those in the intelligence
establishment involved in the conspiracy? Was there an
involvement of the Hizbut Tehrir?
6. These questions re-surfaced in the
wake of the arrest of Abu Faraj al-Libi of Al Qaeda and the
re-arrest of the civilian employee of the Air Force
involved in the conspiracy, who had managed to escape from
custody in November, 2004, while under interrogation. That
there were apprehensions in the minds of those close to
Musharraf over the role of sections of the intelligence
establishment in the entire conspiracy and over the failure
of the investigating agencies to unravel the entire
conspiracy became evident from an interview given by
Dr.Aamir Liaqat Hussain, the then Minister of State for
Religious Affairs, to the "Daily Times" on May 5, 2005.
7. The Minister warned that Musharraf
had a lot of enemies ‘within’ who could make an attempt on
his life again at any time. He said that there were certain
elements within the forces who could attack the General. He
added: “No common people could attack President Musharraf,
but certainly there are elements in the forces who can
launch yet another attack against him. There is an ISI
within the ISI, which is more powerful than the original and
still orchestrating many eventualities in the country.” He
added that he feared a threat to his own life because he
supported Musharraf's call for an enlightened and moderate
Islam and had been given the task of preparing the texts of
sermons advocating enlightened and moderate Islam to be used
at all mosques of the Armed Forces.
8. Well-informed sources in Pakistan
said that apart from the failure of the intelligence
establishment to identify and weed out the pro-jihadi
elements in the Armed Forces and the intelligence
establishment, another cause for serious concern was the
continuing failure of the intelligence establishment to
identify all the Pakistani leaders of the highly secretive
Hizbut Tehrir (HT) and its supporters in the Armed Forces
and arrest them. The HT ideology and operational methods
were imported into Pakistan from the UK by its supporters in
the Pakistani community in the UK in 2000. It was said that
within five years it was able to make considerable progress
not only in setting up its organisational infrastructure,
but also in recruiting dedicated members in the civil
society as well as the Armed Forces. It was also reported
that no other jihadi organisation had been able to attract
as many young and educated members and as many supporters in
the Armed Forces as the HT.
9. Physical security regulations in an
office of the ISI at Rawalpindi exempt officers of the rank
of Brigadier and above coming in their own vehicle from
frisking at the outer gate. They undergo a frisking only
after they have entered the premises, parked their car in
the space allotted to them in the garage and then enter the
building in which their office is located. Officers below
the rank of Brigadier undergo frisking twice, whether they
are in their own vehicle or in a bus ----at the outer gate
and again inside before they enter the building. At the
outer gate, they have to get out of their vehicle, undergo
frisking and then get into their vehicle and drive in.
10. Since all officers travel in
civilian clothes in unmarked vehicles, which cannot be
identified with the Army or the ISI, there is a special hand
signalling system for Brigadiers and above by which the
security staff at the outer gate can recognise their rank
and let them drive in without undergoing frisking. This hand
signalling is changed frequently.
11. On the morning of November 24,
2007, a car reached the outer gate and the man inside showed
a hand signal, which was in use till the previous day. It
had been changed on November 23 and a new signal was in
force from the morning of November 24, 2007. He was not
aware of it. The security staff got suspicious and did not
allow the car to drive in. They asked the man driving it to
get out for questioning and frisking. He blew himself up.
12. As he did so, an unmarked chartered
bus carrying over 40 civilian and junior military employees
of the ISI reached the outer gate and stopped so that those
inside can get out for frisking. The bus bore the brunt of
the explosion, which caused the death of about 35
persons---- from among those inside the bus as well as the
security staff. The Pakistani authorities admitted the death
of only 18 persons.
13. Around the same time, a man driving
a vehicle towards the premises of the GHQ in another part of
Rawalpindi was stopped by the security staff at a physical
security barrier. He blew himself up killing two of the
security staff. These two well-synchronised suicide strikes
in Rawalpindi, the sanctum sanctorum of Pakistan's
military-intelligence establishment, came about six weeks
after a similar attack targeting the ISI and the Army at
Rawalpindi at the same time. On September 4, 2007. A suicide
attacker blew himself up after boarding a bus carrying ISI
employees. A roadside bomb went off near a commercial area
in Rawalpindi, while a car carrying an unidentified senior
Army officer to the GHQ was passing. Twenty-five persons
died in the two attacks. The Army officer escaped unhurt. On
October 30, 2007, a suicide bomber blew himself up at a
checkpoint several hundred yards from the GHQ killing seven
persons, most of the from the security staff.
14. The two attacks directed at the
ISI and another at a Pakistan Air Force bus at Sargodha
were based on inside information. In the case of the
explosion at the outer gate of the ISI complex on November
24, 2007, the suicide bomber was aware of the hand
signalling code for Brigadiers and above. However, he was
not aware that the signal code had been changed the previous
day. Since these codes are communicated personally to
Brigadiers and above, their existence is supposed to be
known only to Brigadiers and above and the physical security
staff. The suicide bomber's inside accomplice was either an
ISI officer of the rank of Brigadier or above or a member of
the physical security staff.
15. There are two alarming aspects of
the security situation in Pakistan. The first is the upsurge
in acts of suicide terrorism directed against security and
intelligence personnel and their establishments. These give
clear evidence of the penetration of pro-Al Qaeda jihadi
elements inside the Armed Forces, the intelligence agencies
and the Police. The second is the inability or unwillingness
of the Police to vigorously investigate these incidents,
including the attempt to kill Mrs. Benazir Bhutto in Karachi
on October 18, 2007. Nobody knows definitively till today
who are responsible for these suicide attacks---- tribal
followers of Baitullah Mehsud of South Waziristan or those
of Maulana Fazlullah of the Swat Valley or the
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ), the anti-Shia sectarian
organisation, or Al Qaeda and its Uzbek associates or the
angry students of the two madrasas run by the Lal Masjid in
Islamabad?
16. The Rawalpindi cantonment where the
headquarters of the Army and other sensitive units of the
Pakistan Army and the ISI are located, and the adjoining
Islamabad, the capital, where the headquarters of the
federal Government and the National Assembly are located,
had seen terrorist strikes even in the past. Amongst them,
one could mention the 1989 explosion in the Rawalpindi
office of Dr. Farooq Haider, the then President of one of
the factions of the Jammu & Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF),
which was attributed to a rival faction led by Amanullah
Khan; the explosion outside the Egyptian Embassy at
Islamabad in the 1990s, which was attributed to some
Egyptian opponents of President Hosni Mubarak; the grenade
attack inside an Islamabad church frequented by the
diplomatic community in March 2002 in which the wife of a US
diplomat and their daughter were killed; the unsolved
assassination of Maulana Azam Tariq, the Amir of the
Sipah-eSahaba, Pakistan, the political wing of the
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, at Islamabad in 2003, the terrorist
attack on a a group of workers of the Pakistan People's
Party (PPP) of Benazir Bhutto in Islamabad earlier this
year, the alleged firing of a rocket on Musharraf's plane
from the terrace of a house in Islamabad again earlier this
year and the alleged firing of rockets by unidentified
elements from a park in Islamabad last year.
17. If one leaves aside the JKLF
factional politics, the only terrorist organisations which
had operated in the Islamabad-Rawalpindi area in the past
(before July 2007) were the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ), which
was blamed for the church grenade attack; the Sipah
Mohammad, the Shia terrorist organisation, which was
suspected in the murder of Azam Tariq; and Al Qaeda. Many
Pakistani and Kashmiri jihadi organisations such as the
Lashkar-e-Toiba, the Hizbul Mujahideen, the
Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM) etc have their offices in
Rawalpindi, but do not indulge in terrorist activities
there.
18. There was no evidence to show that
the Egyptians responsible for the explosion outside the
Egyptian Embassy were then the followers of Osama bin
Laden. The first indication of some local support for Al
Qaeda in Rawalpindi came in March, 2003, when Khalid Sheikh
Mohammad (KSM), supposedly the man who co-ordinated the 9/11
terrorist strikes in the US, was arrested from the house of
a women's wing leader of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JEI) in
Rawalpindi by the Pakistani authorities and handed over to
the USA's Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
19. KSM was living in Karachi till
September, 2002, when he fled from there to Quetta in
Balochistan following the arrest of Ramzi Binalshibh,
another Al Qaeda operative there. From Quetta, he shifted to
Rawalpindi in the beginning of 2003, fearing betrayal by
the Shias of Quetta. After his arrest, no thorough
enquiries would appear to have been made either by the ISI
or the Police to determine why he took shelter in Rawalpindi,
a highly guarded military cantonment. Did he and/or Al
Qaeda have any other accomplices in Rawalpindi, in addition
to the JEI leader and the members of her family, who
included one junior Army officer belonging to a signals
battalion, who was also detained for interrogation? Did Al
Qaeda or the Pakistani organisations allied to it in the
International Islamic Front (IIF) have a sleeper cell or
cells in the cantonment? If they had, the sleeper cells
could have functioned undetected only with the complicity of
at least some in the Armed Forces.
20. After the arrest and the
handing-over of KSM to the US, anti-Musharraf and pro-jihadi
pamphlets typed on the official letter-head used in the army
offices in the General Headquarters (GHQ) in Rawalpindi
started circulating in Rawalpindi and Islamabad. The ISI
and the Police were unable to determine who was circulating
these pamphlets and no arrests were made in this connection.
Instead, a leader of the Nawaz Sharif-led faction of the
Pakistan Muslim League, who drew the attention of the
Parliament and the public to these pamphlets, was ordered to
be arrested by Musharraf on a charge of treason.
21. After the April, 2003, arrest in
Karachi of Waleed bin Attash of Al Qaeda, one of the
suspects in the case relating to the Al Qaeda attack on the
US naval ship USS Cole at Aden in October, 2000, many of the
Al Qaeda members living in Karachi were reported to have
shifted to the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP),
Balochistan , the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA)
and Rawalpindi.
22. Their shifting to Rawalpindi and
taking shelter there would not have been possible without
the complicity of not only the Pakistani jihadi groups, but
also supporters in the Armed Forces and the police. The
Pakistani security agencies have not been able to identify
and dismantle Al Qaeda and IIF cells in the Rawalpindi
cantonment. The fact that the perpetrators of the two
attacks of December, 2003, on Musharraf , whether they
belonged to Al Qaeda or to any of the Pakistani components
of the IIF, chose to act on both the occasions from
Rawalpindi instead of Karachi where Musharraf was before the
first attack on December 14 showed their confidence in being
able to operate undetected from Rawalpindi rather than from
Karachi.
23. I do not believe Musharraf had
prior knowledge of the plot to kill Benazir in Rawalpindi.
But he has to be held responsible for failing to provide
effective physical security to her. He and his officers kept
disregarding her growing fears about threats to her
security. He failed to ensure a vigorous investigation of
the first attempt to kill her at Karachi on October, 18,
2007.
24. The infiltration of traditional
fundamentalist political parties into the GHQ started under
the late Zia-ul-Haq. Since Musharraf took over, there has
been an infiltration of Al Qaeda into the Pakistani Armed
Forces and into their sactum sanctorum in Rawalpindi. These
elements are against Musharraf too, but they were much more
against Benazir because of the fact that she was a woman
and she had been saying openly that she would allow the US
to hunt for bin Laden in Pakistani territory and the
International Atomic Energy Agency at Vienna to interrogate
A.Q.Khan, the nuclear scientist. Al Qaeda and the pro-Al
Qaeda jihadis wanted to eliminate both Musharraf and her
because they were seen as apostate and as collaborators of
the US.
25. They have succeeded in killing her.
They will now step up their efforts to eliminate Musharraf.
Whoever was responsible for killing her could not have done
it without inside complicity. If Al Qaeda is already having
sleeper cells in the GHQ, there is an equal danger that it
already has sleeper cells inside Pakistan's nuclear
establishment too.
26. Musharraf is either knowingly
dishonest or is living in a make-believe world of his own,
unaware of the ground realities. Only a few days before
Benazir's assassination, he was bragging to officer trainees
in the Defence Services Staff College in Quetta that he had
defeated the terrorists outside the tribal belt and would
soon be defeating them in the tribal belt too. His
reluctance to order an enquiry into the extent of
infiltration of Al Qaeda into the GHQ is disturbing. He has
convinced himself that not only he is the most popular
leader of Pakistan, but also that the entire Armed Forces
are devoted to him. Anybody who says otherwise is treated by
him as a traitor, arrested and harassed.
28. It is high time he and the US
realise that Al Qaeda is not just in the tribal belt. It is
right under their nose in Rawalpindi.
(The writer is
Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of
India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For
Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)