Benazir's Death: Army, ISI Keep Low Profile - International
Terrorism Monitor: Paper No. 341
by B. Raman
The Pakistan Army and Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI)
have been maintaining a discreet silence on the
assassination of Mrs. Benazir Bhutto by as yet unidentified
elements at Rawalpindi on December 27,2007. Gen. Ashfaq
Pervez Kiyani, the Chief of the Army Staff (COAS), was on a
visit to Army establishments in Karachi at the time of her
assassination. He immediately cancelled his engagements and
returned to Rawalpindi. He and his officers in the General
Headquarters (GHQ) as well as in the ISI have avoided any
comments or statements or background briefings for the media
on her killing. Gen. Kiyani is keeping a tight control over
his officers in order to ensure that they do not add to the
messy sequel as a result of the loose talk emanating from
the Ministry of the Interior, which was responsible for her
protection.
2. Most of the controversy relating to the circumstances
surrounding her killing, the cause of her death and the
alleged responsibility of Baitullah Mehsud for her death,
which has been denied by a spokesman of Baitullah, has been
caused by the retired Army officers, who were inducted into
the Ministry of the Interior and the Police by Gen. Pervez
Musharraf after he seized power in 1999.After coming to
power, Musharraf had inducted a large number of retired
military officers into the police of the provinces as well
as into the Intelligence Bureau (IB), which is part of the
Interior Ministry, and into the Ministry itself. He
appointed Brig. (retd) Ijaz Shah, who was the Home Secretary
of Punjab at the time of the kidnapping and murder of Daniel
Pearl, the US journalist, in January-February, 2002, as the
Director of the IB. Omar Sheikh, the principal accused in
the Pearl case, had surrendered to him in Lahore when he was
the Home Secretary.
3. Musharraf also inducted Brig. (retd) Javed Iqbal
Cheema, another crony of his, into the Interior Ministry and
made him in charge of the crisis management cell in the
Ministry, which also co-ordinates counter-terrorism actions
and investigations. Many other retired military officers
were inducted at different levels of the Ministry and the IB.
Of course, Mr.Nawaz Sharif also, as the Prime Minister
(1990-93), had made Brig. (retd) Imtiaz, a highly
controversial retired army officer known for his dislike of
Benazir, as the DIB, but there was no systematic
militarisation of the IB under Nawaz, similar to what one
had been seeing under Musharraf.
4. As a consequence of Musharraf's policy of
militarisation of the Police and the IB, there was a steep
fall in the professionalism of these agencies. They were
neither able to prevent the increasing number of acts of
suicide terrorism nor successfully detect them. The number
of acts of suicide terrorism have shot up from six in 2006
to 55 in 2007, including the one involving the murder of
Benazir. Most of them have so far remained undetected.
5. The police in Rawalpindi, where she was killed,
come under the dual control of the Ministry of the Interior
and the Punjab Government, both hotbeds of Zia-ul-Haq
loyalists. Chaudhury Pervez Elahi, who was the Chief
Minister of Punjab till December, 2007, and his cousin
Chaudhury Shujjat Hussain, who is the leader of the
pro-Musharraf Pakistan Muslim League (Qaide Azam), have
always been bitter enemies of the Bhutto family. Ijaz Shah
and Lt. Gen.(retd) Hamid Gul, who was the Director-General
of the ISI for some months during her first tenure as the
Prime Minister (1988 to 90), are also known Zia loyalists.
6. There are presently not many remnants of the coterie
of Zia loyalists among the serving senior officers (Lt.
Gens. and above) of the Army and the ISI. Most of the
remnants are to be found in the Ministry of the Interior,
the IB and the Punjab administration. That is why Benazir
apprehended a threat to her security to emanate from these
elements. In a letter to Musharraf written before she
returned to Pakistan on October 18,2007, she had allegedly
named three in particular---- Ijaz Shah, Pervez Elahi and
Hamid Gul. Musharraf disregarded her allegations and
concerns and entrusted the responsibility for her security
to the very elements from which she apprehended a threat to
her security.
7. A careful reading of the comments of Mr. Asif Ali
Zardari, her husband, and other leaders of the Pakistan
People's Party (PPP), known to have been close to her, would
indicate that they have been taking care not to implicate
the Army and the ISI as institutions in her murder. Instead,
they have been directing the needle of suspicion at the
persons named by her.
8. There has been a steady infiltration of Al Qaeda and
pro-Al Qaeda elements at the lower and middle levels of the
Army and the Air Force and into the GHQ itself. Al Qaeda and
pro-Al Qaeda organisations were unhappy with her statements
that she would allow US troops to hunt for bin Laden in
Pakistani territory and the International Atomic Energy
Agency at Vienna to interrogate A. Q. Khan, the nuclear
scientist. Benazir and her associates were aware of the
threat to her security from these Al Qaeda and pro-Al Qaeda
organisations such as the Jaish-e-Mohammad and the anti-Shia
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ), but they strongly believed that
these organisations would not be able to carry out their
threat without the complicity of the Zia loyalists in the
physical security apparatus.
9. While there is no evidence so far of any active
complicity by the Zia loyalists, there is clear-cut evidence
of glaring negligence in physical security, which made the
assassination possible. In their frantic efforts to cover up
their responsibility for her death, the retired military
officers in the Interior Ministry and the
Police----particularly Javed Iqbal Cheema--- have been
disseminating one contradictory version after another.
During an interaction with the media on December 31, 2007,
Mr. Mohammadmian Soomro, the caretaker Prime Minister, is
reported to have indicated his embarrassment over the clumsy
manner in which Cheema had handled the sequel to her
killing. But, intriguingly, Musharraf has remained silent in
the midst of all this controversy and not taken any action
against these officers.
(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)