Ex-Pakistan spy chief: Afghanistan war 'lost cause' 
[and pre-planned, w/o evidence of Bin Laden 9/11 role] 

The attacks of September 11 were a pretext to a war already under 
consideration, Gul said. "I think some of the neocons, who were very close 
to President [George W.] Bush, they wanted that he could embark on a 
universal adventure of Pax Americana, and they thought that the world was 
lying prostrate in front of them," he said. The 2001 terrorist attacks 
helped win the public support for the neocon plans, he said. 

There was no legitimate reason for the United States to attack Afghanistan, 
Gul said, because the FBI had no solid evidence that Osama bin Laden was 
involved in the attacks on New York and Washington. "Why has not a single 
individual connected to 9/11 been caught in America so far, and why hasn't 
Osama bin Laden been charged?" With no evidence anyone in Afghanistan was 
involved, there is no way to legitimize the U.S. occupation, Gul said." 

http://afghanistan.blogs.cnn.com/2010/08/06/ex-pakistan-spy-chief-afghanistan-war-lost-cause/
 
August 6th, 2010 
Ex-Pakistan spy chief: Afghanistan war 'lost cause' 
The U.S.-led war in Afghanistan is a "lost cause," said a former Pakistani 
intelligence chief, and the United States needs to negotiate peace with 
Taliban leader Mullah Omar. "You have to talk to him, and I'm sure it will 
work out very well," Lt. Gen. Hamid Gul told CNN's Fareed Zakaria in an 
interview to air Sunday. 

U.S. intelligence documents published last week by WikiLeaks cited Gul and 
implicated Pakistani intelligence as supporting al Qaeda. Gul has denied the 
allegations. "I'm quite a convenient scapegoat," he said. "I don't support 
any one faction in Afghanistan. I support the Afghan nation." 

The career military officer, who supported the U.S.-backed Taliban 
resistance against Soviet occupation during the 1980s, called the U.S. 
occupation of Afghanistan "unjust" and said he sees legitimacy in the Afghan 
insurgency against Western forces. "This is a national resistance movement. 
It should be recognized as such," he said. "They are Mujahedeen of 
Afghanistan as they were during the occupation of Afghanistan by the Soviet 
Union." 

The attacks of September 11 were a pretext to a war already under 
consideration, Gul said. "I think some of the neocons, who were very close 
to President [George W.] Bush, they wanted that he could embark on a 
universal adventure of Pax Americana, and they thought that the world was 
lying prostrate in front of them," he said. The 2001 terrorist attacks 
helped win the public support for the neocon plans, he said. 

There was no legitimate reason for the United States to attack Afghanistan, 
Gul said, because the FBI had no solid evidence that Osama bin Laden was 
involved in the attacks on New York and Washington. "Why has not a single 
individual connected to 9/11 been caught in America so far, and why hasn't 
Osama bin Laden been charged?" With no evidence anyone in Afghanistan was 
involved, there is no way to legitimize the U.S. occupation, Gul said. 

The hunt for al-Qaeda does not justify the almost 9-year-old war either, 
because the global terrorist movement has moved on, Gul said. "The American 
strategists, the military thinkers, have got to wake up to the reality that 
al-Qaeda has succeeded in exhausting, drawing out into the wrong direction, 
to the wrong place, all the allied forces," Gul said, citing Yemen, Somalia 
and Africa. "For al-Qaeda the center of gravity all along was the Middle 
East." 

The United States and its allies won't win the war in Afghanistan, said Gul, 
who referred to U.S. NATO allies as "pallbearers." Supply lines through 
Pakistan are shaky, said Gul, who blamed U.S. ally India for contributing to 
his country's destabilization. Combined with what Gul termed poor U.S. 
intelligence and a home-field advantage for the Taliban, it all adds up to a 
losing combination for the United States in his estimate. "Time is on the 
side of the resistance," he said. 

"In such a situation, to hope to win would be absolutely hare-brained," Gul 
said. He expressed concern the U.S. military would never be willing to admit 
defeat. "I would advise President Obama - please, do not listen to your 
military, because militaries have [the] unfortunate tendency never to accept 
their defeat. They will say if we receive more proceeds, if we receive more 
logistics, if we receive more funds, then we will be able to overcome. This 
is a psychological problem." 

The only solution would be peace negotiations with Taliban leader Mullah 
Omar, not with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Gul concluded. "There is only 
one man who can give the guarantee that there will be no terrorism exported 
from Afghanistan," Gul said. "Don't talk to Karzai; he's a puppet." 

Omar represents the entire insurgency, Gul said. "There are other factions 
of resistance fighters coming under the banner of Mullah Omar." Scale down 
goals, negotiate with Omar, then move on and out of Afghanistan, was Gul's 
advice to the United States. 

=== 



Latest WikiLeaks-Release /Serving THE GLOBAL DOMINANCE GROUP? 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WarOnError/message/1864 

THE GLOBAL DOMINANCE GROUP AND 9/11 - audio 
http://www.radio4all.net/index.php/program/20380 

U.S.-Israel Relations 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WhoDid911/message/3642 

'The American Media Empire of Managed News' - audio + 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WarOnError/message/1887 

Beware Wikileaks, MS Media & 'Gullible-Apathy' Racket Hoopla 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WarOnError/message/1888 

Chris Floyd Skewers Wikileaks 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WarOnError/message/1876 

War Is a 'High-risk', Deadly, Stupid Enterprise ~ General Chiarelli 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WarOnError/message/1893 

'Lethal force awaits Iran aggressors' 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WarOnError/message/1891 




WhoDid911? 


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