Channels

Osama bin Laden

Year on, mystery still surrounds bin Laden's case

On first anniversary of raid the ended in infamous al-Qaeda leader's death officials say Islamabad still secretive as to its true knowledge of the case

One year since US commandos killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, Islamabad has failed to answer tough questions over whether its security forces were protecting the world’s most wanted terrorist.

 

Partly as a result, fallout from the raid still poisons relations between Washington and Pakistan, where anti-American sentiment, support for Islamist extremism and anger at the violation of sovereignty in the operation are still prevalent.

 

Related stories:

 

The Pakistani government initially welcomed the raid that killed bin Laden in his three-story compound, but within hours the mood changed as it became clear that Pakistan’s army was cut out of the operation.

 

Any discussions over how bin Laden managed to stay undetected in Pakistan were drowned out in anger at what the army portrayed as a treacherous act by a supposed ally.

 

 

That bin Laden was living with his family near Pakistan’s version of West Point – not in a cave in the mountains as many had guessed – raised eyebrows in the West. The Pakistani army was already accused of playing both sides in the campaign against militancy, providing some support against al-Qaeda but keeping the Afghan Taliban as strategic allies.

 

A week after the raid, President Barack Obama said bin Laden had a "support network" in Pakistan and the country must investigate how he evaded capture. Pakistan responded by announcing the formation of a committee to investigate bin Laden's presence in Pakistan as well as the circumstances surrounding the US raid.

 

Soon after it began its work, the head of the committee said he was sure that security forces were not hiding bin Laden. Other statements since then have also suggested the report will be more of a whitewash than a genuine probe.

 

Last week, committee spokesman retired Col. Mohammad Irfan Naziri said its findings were being written up but they might not be released publicly.

 

"We’re disappointed," said a US official about the investigation. "They promised to do it, but they haven’t yet."

 

The public line of the Obama administration is that no evidence has emerged to suggest bin Laden had high-level help inside Pakistan. Pakistan’s Inter-Service Intelligence agency said bin Laden’s long and comfortable existence in the country was an "intelligence failure."

 

But suspicions have increased following recent disclosures by one of bin Laden’s wives in a police interrogation report that the al-Qaeda leader lived in five houses while on the run and fathered four children, two of whom were born in Pakistani government hospitals.

 

"I just find the idea that he lived in a place like Abbottabad without the ISI’s knowledge strains credibility," said Shawn Gregory, director of the Pakistan Security Research Unit at Bradford University in the UK "It is ridiculous that he wasn't being protected."

 

Since the raid, Pakistan has tried to close one of the most notorious chapters in its history.

 

AP contributed to this report

 

 

  • Receive Ynetnews updates directly to your desktop

 


פרסום ראשון: 05.01.12, 10:22
 new comment
Warning:
This will delete your current comment