Jihadis Strike at Pak Army &
ISI again-International Terrorism Monitor---Paper No. 313
By B. Raman
Physical security regulations in the office of Pakistan's
Inter-Services Intelligence (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.
2. 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.
3. 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.
4. 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 have admitted the death of
only 18 persons.
5. Around the same time, a man driving a vehicle towards
the premises of the General Headquarters (GHQ) of the
Pakistan Army 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. The offices of
Gen. Pervez Musharraf in his capacity as the Chief of the
Army Staff (COAS) and of Gen. Ashfaq Pervez Kiyani, the Vice
Chief of Army Staff, are located in the GHQ.
7. These two well-synchronised suicide strikes in
Rawalpindi, the sanctum sanctorum of Pakistan's
military-intelligence establishment, have come 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.
8. Since the Pakistan Army's commando raid into the Lal
Masjid of Islamabad from July 10 to 13, 2007, there have
been two targeted attacks near the GHQ in Rawalpindi, two
attacks on the ISI also at Rawalpindi, one attack on
officers of the Special Services Group (SSG), the US-trained
and US-assisted special forces unit to which Musharraf
himself used to belong, in their mess at their headquarters
in Tarbella and one attack on a bus carrying Air Force
officers to the Pakistan Air Force base in Sargodha. There
were many attacks targeting police officers too. These were
the targeted attacks outside the tribal belt. There have
been many more suicide attacks targeting security and
intelligence personnel inside the tribal belt.
9. The two attacks near the GHQ were not based on any
inside information. The suicide bomber took his chance
hoping that he would not be frisked at the security barrier.
When the security staff insisted on frisking him, he blew
himself up. The two attacks directed at the ISI and the PAF
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. According to sources, the
suicide attack in the SSG mess was carried out by a Pashtun
officer of the SSG while taking dinner in the mess with his
colleagues. The SSG had carried out the raid into the Lal
Masjid.
10. The twin bombings of November 24, 2007, came three
days after the Attorney-General of Musharraf's Government
had told the rubber-stamp Supreme Court bench hearing a
petition agains the imposition of the Emergency that the
security situation had improved after the imposition of the
Emergency on November 3, 2007, and that suicide attacks in
non-tribal areas had stopped. This was one of the arguments
used by the court to dismiss the petition against the
Emergency.
11. 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 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?
12. 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.
13. 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.
14. 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).
15. 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.
16. 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 National Assembly and
the public to these pamphlets, was ordered to be arrested by
Musharraf on a charge of treason.
17. Then followed the two serious assassination attempts
on Musharraf as he was commuting between Rawalpindi and
Islamabad. The first on December 14, 2003, was made
immediately after he had returned by air from Karachi. The
second on December 25, 2003, was made when he was doing one
of his daily commutings between his residence in Rawalpindi
and his office in Islamabad, a distance of about 12 miles.
18. 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.
19. 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. Pakistani investigators
claimed to have established that the two unsuccessful
attacks on Musharraf were jointly carried out by Al Qaeda
and the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JEM), with the complicity of some
junior officers of the Army and the Air Force, who were
identified and arrested.
20.Pakistani Police sources also say that apart from Al
Qaeda and its associates, the Hizbut Tehrir (HUT) has also
many followers and sympathisers in the lower and middle
levels of the Armed Forces, but it has not so far indulged
in any act of terrorism in Pakistani territory. Its
terrorism has been confined to the Central Asian Republics.
21. It is intriguing that after the
March, 2002, attack on some Americans inside an Islamabad
church, there has been no terrorist strike or attempted
strike targeting US nationals or interests in the Islamabad
area. Attacks targeting Americans have been confined to the
Karachi area. No explanation for this has been forthcoming.
(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 )