Pakistan and the Assassination of Bin Laden
  Killing the Golden Goose
  By TARIQ ALI
  
  Blinded by the thirst 
for vengeance, the United States targets and kills another enemy. Its 
citizens celebrate. And functionaries of the George W Bush period tell 
us that what it proves is torture at Guantánamo worked, after all. 
Europe applauds. Vassals elsewhere (including Pakistan's president) 
congratulate the US on mission accomplished.

  This is slightly bizarre, given that Bin Laden had 
apparently been in a safe house near the Pakistan military academy for 
six years. Nobody believes this could have happened without the 
knowledge of senior intelligence officials. A meeting with one such 
person in 2006, which I recounted in my last book on Pakistan, confirmed
 that Bin Laden was in the country and being kept safe. The person 
concerned told me the Americans only wanted Bin Laden dead, but that it 
was in Pakistan's interest to keep him alive. In his words: "Why kill 
the goose that lays the golden eggs?" – a reference to the billions in 
aid and weaponry being supplied to the army. At the time I wasn't sure 
whether my informant was fantasising to amuse or misinform me; he was 
obviously telling the truth.

  Pakistan is in the grip of a fierce debate, its 
politico-military establishment damned whatever the case. If they admit 
they were in the know, they stand condemned within their own ranks. 
There is a great deal of dissension among junior officers and soldiers 
unhappy about border missions in which they are forced to target their 
own people. If it turns out that the US didn't even bother to inform the
 Pakistanis that helicopters were on the way to clip Bin Laden, they 
stand exposed as leaders who permit the country's sovereignty to be 
violated at will.

  The departing CIA chief Leon Panetta has said the 
decision was made early not to tell Pakistan so as not to compromise the
 operation. But stories are changing rapidly, and nothing can be taken 
at face value. As WikiLeaks revealed, there was a US-Pakistan agreement,
 that while the latter would tolerate drone attacks they would be forced
 to denounce them because of public anger. On the other hand, given that
 within the CIA the ISI is referred to as a terrorist organisation, 
there may have been anxiety about leaks. The helicopters that entered 
Pakistan airspace would have been cleared as part of routine 
reconnaissance, though in the past Pakistani radar has been jammed to 
facilitate raids. This time it was not.

  Reliable sources in Pakistan are insistent that the 
army had no prior knowledge of this raid. Since there is absolutely no 
way Pakistan could have come out of this looking good, the ISI, had it 
known, would undoubtedly have attempted a pre-emptive move as this event
 will almost certainly affect future US aid. If the Pakistani army or 
intelligence were involved they could have easily moved the final 
showdown to a less embarrassing location – the mountains in Waziristan, 
for instance. Furthermore it has handed both India and Afghanistan a 
major opportunity to settle scores in the propaganda wars.

  In reality, Bin Laden's death changes nothing, 
except perhaps to ensure that, economy permitting, Barack Obama is 
re-elected. The occupation of Iraq, the Af-Pak war and Nato's Libyan 
adventure look set to continue. Israel-Palestine is stalemated, though 
the despotisms in the Arab world that Obama has denounced are under 
pressure – except the worst of them all, Saudi Arabia.

  In Afghanistan, the Taliban leaders will be relieved
 that they can no longer be tarred with the Bin Laden brush, but his 
killing does not change the situation there one bit. The insurgents 
might not be in a position to take Kabul, (they never could even during 
the Russian occupation) but elsewhere they control a great deal. The US 
cannot win this war. The sooner it gets out, the better. Until it does, 
it will remain dependent on Pakistan, the ally Americans love to hate.

  Tariq Ali’s latest book “The Obama Syndrome: Surrender at Home, War Abroad’ 
is published by Verso.
http://www.counterpunch.org/tariq05062011.html

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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