US-Pakistan Top Secret Military Talks
By B. Raman
The "New
York Times" reported as follows on August
28, 2008: "Top US and Pakistani army
commanders had a highly unusual secret
meeting on board an American aircraft
carrier in the Indian Ocean to discuss how
to combat the escalating violence along the
border between Afghanistan and Pakistan. The
leading actors in the day long conference
were Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Pakistan Army
Chief General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani. The
meeting had been convened on Tuesday (August
26) by the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff. While officials of the two allies
offered few details on Wednesday about what
was decided or even discussed at the meeting
- including any new strategies, tactics,
weapons or troop deployment- the
star-studded list of participants and an
extreme secrecy surrounding the talks
underscored how gravely the two nations
regarded the growing militant threat.".
2.The top secrecy
surrounding the talks between Admiral Mullen
and Gen. Kayani brings to mind a similar top
secret meeting between Gen. Jehangir Karamat,
the then Pakistani Chief of the Army Staff (COAS),
and Gen. Anthony Zinni, the then chief of
the US Central Command, on the tarmac of a
Pakistani airport before the US launched
Cruise missile strikes against Osama bin
Laden and the training camps of Al Qaeda in
Afghan territory in August,1998, in
retaliation for the Al Qaeda-organised
explosions outside the US Embassies in
Nairobi and Dar-es-Salaam.
3. The US had
fixed the Cruise missile strikes on a day
(August 20,1998) when bin Laden was expected
to visit a training camp to meet a group of
Al Qaeda volunteers, who had completed the
training. Nawaz Sharif was then the Prime
Minister of Pakistan. The US did not want
his Government to know in advance about the
planned Cruise missile attacks lest the
information leak to Al Qaeda. At the same
time, it was worried that if the Pakistani
Army detected the incoming Cruise missiles,
it might mistake them for missiles launched
by India and this could lead to a war
between India and Pakistan.
4. Just before
the launch of the missiles, Gen. Zinni
landed in a Pakistani airport secretly. Only
Karamat was informed in advance about his
landing. Zinni had requested him to meet him
secretly for a discussion on the tarmac of
the airport. He also asked Karamat to come
alone to the airport without being
accompanied by any of his officers. As the
two took a stroll on the tarmac, Zinni told
Karamat about the impending missile strikes
and asked him not to tell Nawaz or anybody
else about the strikes. Immediately
thereafter, Zinni took off. Shortly
thereafter, the missiles were launched from
US naval ships.
5. The missiles
destroyed only some training camps of the
Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM) of Pakistan in
Afghan territory. Al Qaeda camps had been
evacuated from the area targeted by the
Cruise missiles. Bin Laden had cancelled his
visit to one of the camps. He and his camps
escaped the strike.
6. Till today,
it has been a mystery as to how bin Laden
and his Al Qaeda came to know of the date
and time of the strike. Did they get their
information from their own sources? Or did
Karamat inform his officers and Nawaz in
violation of the assurance given by him to
Zinni and did any of them leak out? No
answer is available to any of these
questions.
7. Recently, US
military officers have been complaining in
their testimonies to the Congressional
committees as well as in their briefings of
the media that the collusion between
Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI)
and the Taliban has reached such an extent
that the Taliban and Al Qaeda had come to
know in advance in some cases about planned
strikes by US Predator aircraft on the
hide-outs of these organizations in
Pakistan. While some Predator strikes were
successful, many others were not.
8.It is learnt
from reliable Afghan sources that the NATO
officials based in Afghanistan suspect that
the leakages had been taking place not only
from the ISI and some sections of the
Pakistan Army, but also from some members of
the Pakistan Government headed by Prime
Minister Yousef Raza Gilani. The US
suspicions are particularly focused on the
Awami National Party of Afsandyar Wali Khan,
and the Jamiat-ul-Islam Pakistan of Maulana
Fazlur Rahman It is understood that this
matter of leakages of information was
raised by President George Bush with Gilani
when the latter visited Washington DC in the
last week of July, 2008.
9.It is likely
that one of the purposes of the top secret
meeting between Mullen and Kayani on board a
US aircraft-carrier was to discuss how to
prevent such leakages.
(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)