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Inter-Services Intelligence

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Tracing its origins to the Soviet-Afghan War, HuJI is a terrorist outfit based in Pakistan with an affiliate in Bangladesh with strong links to Al-Qa'ida. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Inter-Services Intelligence


1
Inter-Services Intelligence
  • ISI

2
  • The Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence
    (more commonly known as Inter-Services
    Intelligence or simply by its initials ISI) is
    Pakistan's premier intelligence agency. It is the
    largest of the three intelligence agencies of
    Pakistan, the other being the Intelligence Bureau
    (IB) and Military Intelligence (MI).
  • ISI was established as an independent
    intelligence agency in 1948 in order to
    strengthen the sharing of military intelligence
    between the three branches of Pakistan's armed
    forces in the aftermath of the Indo-Pakistani War
    of 1947, which had exposed weaknesses in
    intelligence gathering, sharing and coordination
    between the Pakistan Army, Air Force and Navy.
  • ISI's headquarters are situated in Islamabad. It
    is currently headed by Lieutenant General Ahmad
    Shuja Pasha, who took over as ISI's Director in
    September 2008.

3
Organisation
  • Under the Director General, three Deputy Director
    Generals report directly to him and are in charge
    in three separate fields of the ISI which are
    Internal wing - dealing with counter-intelligence
    and political issues inside Pakistan, External
    wing - handling external issues, and Analysis and
    Foreign Relations wing.
  • The general staff of the ISI mainly come from
    paramilitary forces and some specialized units
    from the Pakistan Army such as the some chosen
    people from special services group(SSG) . While
    the total number has never been made public,
    experts estimate about 10,000 officers and staff
    members, which does not include informants and
    assets

4
Departments
  • Joint Intelligence X, coordinates all the other
    departments in the ISI. Intelligence and
    information gathered from the other departments
    are sent to JIX which prepares and processes the
    information and from which prepares reports which
    are presented.
  • Joint Intelligence Bureau, responsible for
    gathering political intelligence. It has three
    subsections, one divided entirely to operations
    against India.
  • Joint Counterintelligence Bureau, responsible for
    surveillance of Pakistani diplomats abroad, along
    with intelligence operations in the Middle East,
    South Asia, China, Afghanistan and the Muslim
    republics of the former Soviet Union.
  • Joint Intelligence North, exclusively responsible
    for the Jammu and Kashmir region.
  • Joint Intelligence Miscellaneous, responsible for
    espionage, including offensive intelligence
    operations, in other countries.
  • Joint Signal Intelligence Bureau, operates
    intelligence collections along the India-Pakistan
    border.
  • Joint Intelligence Technical
  • In addition, there are also separate explosives
    and a chemical warfare sections

5
Functioning
  • Collection of information and extraction of
    intelligence from information ISI obtains
    information critical to Pakistan's strategic
    interests. Both overt and covert means are
    adopted.
  • Classification of intelligence Data is sifted
    through, classified as appropriate, and filed
    with the assistance of the computer network in
    ISI's headquarters in Islamabad.
  • Aggressive intelligence The primary mission of
    ISI includes aggressive intelligence which
    comprises espionage, psychological warfare,
    subversion, sabotage.
  • Counterintelligence ISI has a dedicated section
    which spies against enemy's intelligence
    collection.

6
  • Critics of the ISI say that it has become a state
    within a state (since the Army is the one accused
    of being a state within a state), answerable
    neither to the leadership of the army, nor to the
    President or the Prime Minister. After much
    criticism, the Pakistani Government disbanded the
    ISI 'Political Wing' in 2008.

7
Operation history Afghanistan
  • (1982) ISI, CIA and Mossad carried out a covert
    transfer of Soviet-made weapons and Lebanese
    weapons captured by the Israelis during the
    Israeli invasion of Lebanon in June 1982 and
    their subsequent transfer to Pakistan and then
    into Afghanistan. All knowledge of this weapon
    transfer was kept secret and was only made public
    recently.
  • (19821997) ISI are believed to have access to
    Osama bin Laden in the past.ISI played a central
    role in the U.S.-backed guerrilla war to oust the
    Soviet Army from Afghanistan in the 1980s. That
    Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)-backed effort
    flooded Pakistan with weapons and with Afghan,
    Pakistani and Arab "mujahideen", who were
    motivated to fight as a united force protecting
    fellow Muslims in Soviet occupied Afghanistan.
    The CIA relied on the ISI to train fighters,
    distribute arms, and channel money. The ISI
    trained about 83,000 Afghan mujahideen between
    1983 and 1997, and dispatched them to
    Afghanistan. B. Raman of the South Asia Analysis
    Group, an Indian think-tank, claims that the
    Central Intelligence Agency through the ISI
    promoted the smuggling of heroin into Afghanistan
    in order to turn the Soviet troops into heroin
    addicts and thus greatly reducing their fighting
    potential.
  • (1986) Worrying that among the large influx of
    Afghan refugees that come into Pakistan due to
    the Soviet-Afghan war were members of KHAD
    (Afghan Intelligence), the ISI successfully
    convinced Mansoor Ahmed who was the
    Charge-de-Affairs of the Afghan Embassy in
    Islamabad to turn his back on the Soviet backed
    Afghan government. He and his family were
    secretly escorted out of their residence and were
    given safe passage on a London bound British
    Airways flight in exchange for classified
    information in regard to Afghan agents in
    Pakistan. The Soviet and Afghan diplomats tried
    their best to find the family but were
    unsuccessful.

8
Operation history Afghanistan
  • (1994) The Taliban regime that the ISI supported
    after 1994 to suppress warlord fighting and in
    hopes of bringing stability to Afghanistan proved
    too rigid in its Islamic interpretations and too
    fond of the Al-Qaeda based on its soil. Despite
    receiving large sums of aid from Pakistan, the
    Taliban leader Mullah Omar is reported to have
    insulted a visiting delegation of Saudi Prince
    Sultan and an ISI general asking that the Taliban
    turn over bin Laden to Saudi Arabia. Following
    the 9/11 attack on the United States allegedly by
    Al-Qaeda, Pakistan felt it necessary to cooperate
    with the US and the Northern Alliance.
  • (2001 onwards) American officials believe members
    of the Pakistani intelligence service are
    alerting militants to imminent American missile
    strikes in Pakistan's tribal areas. There is also
    evidence that the ISI helped plan the July 7,
    2009, bombing of the Indian embassy in Kabul.
    This conclusion is based on signals intelligence
    between Pakistani intelligence officers and
    militants. In October 2009, Davood Moradian, a
    senior policy adviser to foreign minister Spanta,
    said the British and American governments were
    fully aware of the ISI's role but lacked the
    courage to confront Islamabad.
  • (2010) A new report by the London School of
    Economics (LSE) claimed to provide the most
    concrete evidence yet that the ISI is providing
    funding, training and sanctuary to the Taliban
    insurgency on a scale much larger than previously
    thought. The report's author Matt Waldman spoke
    to nine Taliban field commanders in Afghanistan
    and concluded that Pakistan's relationship with
    the insurgents ran far deeper than previously
    realised. Some of those interviewed suggested
    that the organization even attended meetings of
    the Taliban's supreme council, the Quetta Shura.

9
Operation history India
  • (1950s) The ISI's Covert Action Division was used
    in assisting the insurgents in India's
    North-East.
  • (1960s) In the late 1960s assists the Sikh Home
    Rule Movement of London-based Charan Singh
    Panchi, which was subsequently transformed into
    the Khalistan Movement, headed by JagjitSingh
    Chauhan in which many other members of the Sikh
    diaspora in Europe, United States and Canada
    joined and then demanded the separate country of
    Khalistan.
  • (1965) The 1965 war in Kashmir provoked a major
    crisis in intelligence. When the war started,
    there was a complete collapse of the operations
    of all the intelligence agencies, after the
    commencement of the 1965 Indo-Pakistan war, was
    apparently unable to locate an Indian armored
    division due to its preoccupation with political
    affairs. Ayub Khan set up a committee headed by
    General Yahya Khan to examine the working of the
    agencies.
  • (19691974) The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency
    and ISI worked in tandem with the Nixon
    administration in assisting the Khalistan
    movement in Punjab
  • (1980) The PAF Field Intelligence Unit at their
    base in Karachi in July 1980 captured an Indian
    agent. He was interrogated and revealed that a
    large network of Indian spies were functioning in
    Karachi. The agent claimed that these spies, in
    addition to espionage, had also assassinated a
    few armed personnel. He also said the leader of
    the spy ring was being headed by the food and
    beverages manager at the Intercontinental Hotel
    in Karachi and a number of serving Air Force
    officers and ratings were on his payroll.

10
Operation history India
  • The ISI decided to survey the manager to see who
    he was in contact with, but then President of
    Pakistan Zia-ul Haq superseded and wanted the
    manager and anyone else involved in the case
    arrested immediately. It was later proven that
    the manager was completely innocent.
  • (1983) Ilam Din also known as Ilmo was an
    infamous Indian spy working from Pakistan. He had
    eluded being captured many times but on March 23
    at 3 a.m., Ilmo and two other Indian spies were
    apprehended by Pakistani Rangers as they were
    illegally crossing into Pakistan from India.
    Their mission was to spy and report back on the
    new military equipment that Pakistan will be
    showing in their annual March 23 Pakistan day
    parade. Ilmo after being thoroughly interrogated
    was then forced by the ISI to send false
    information to his RAW handlers in India. This
    process continued and many more Indian spies in
    Pakistan were flushed out, such as Roop Lal.
  • (1984) ISI uncovered a secret deal in which naval
    base facilities were granted by Indian Prime
    Minister Indira Gandhi to the USSR in Vizag and
    the Andaman Nicobar Island and the alleged
    attachment of KGB advisers to the then Lieutenant
    General Sunderji who was the commander of
    Operation Bluestar in the Golden Temple in
    Amritsar in June 1984.

11
Operation history India
  • (1984) ISI failed to perform a proper background
    check on the British company which supplied the
    Pakistan Army with its Arctic-weather gear. When
    Pakistan attempted to secure the top of the
    Siachen Glacier in 1984, it placed a large order
    for Arctic-weather gear with the same company
    that also supplied the Indian Army with its gear.
    Indians were easily alerted to the large
    Pakistani purchase and deduced that this large
    purchase could be used to equip troops to capture
    the glacier.
  • (1985) A routine background check on various
    staff members working for the Indian embassy
    raised suspicions on an Indian woman who worked
    as a school teacher in an Indian School in
    Islamabad. Her enthusiastic and too friendly
    attitude gave her up. She was in reality an agent
    working for the Research and Analysis Wing
    (RAW). ISI monitored her movements to a hotel in
    Islamabad where she rendezvoused with a local
    Pakistani man who worked as an nuclear engineer
    for Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission. ISI then
    confronted her and were then able to turn her
    into a double agent spying on the Indian Embassy
    in Islamabad.
  • (1988) ISI implemented Operation Tupac a three
    part action plan for covertly supporting the
    militants in their fight against the Indian
    authorities in Kashmir, initiated by President
    Zia Ul Haq in 1988 after the failure of
    "Operation Gibraltar". After success of Operation
    Tupac, support to militants became Pakistan's
    state policy.ISI continues to train and support
    militants. Hundreds of training camps are known
    to be operated by ISI to train militants.

12
Operation history India
  • (at present) The Karachi Project
  • If Indian intelligence sources are to be
    believed, Indian Mujahedeen(IM) serves as the
    vanguard of the ISI sponsored 'Karachi Project',
    which allegedly uses groups like the LeT and HuJI
    to train Indian operatives to carry out blasts in
    major urban centres as part of a continuous
    offensive against India. Tracing its origins to
    the Soviet-Afghan War, HuJI is a terrorist outfit
    based in Pakistan with an affiliate in Bangladesh
    with strong links to Al-Qa'ida. Theses suspicions
    are supported by David Coleman Headley, also
    known as Daood Gilani, the prime suspect in LeT's
    Chicago conspiracy, who has allegedly informed
    the FBI about 'the LeT and ISI sheltering chief
    IM operatives like the Bhatkal brothers and
    serving and retired Pakistan Army officers being
    part of the project'. Headley is a
    Pakistani-American businessman implicated by the
    FBI for his role in plotting the 2008 Mumbai
    attacks in association with LeT.
  • The unconfirmed presence of Indian Mujahedeen(IM)
    bases in neighbouring countries may provide some
    clues about the contours of the 'Karachi
    Project'. If indeed an operational reality, the
    strategy would have three major objectives
    firstly, to give an Indian face to the bombing
    campaign without raising suspicions of Pakistani
    involvement secondly, to undermine India's
    rising economic profile by targeting major
    economic centres thus curbing foreign direct
    investment and thirdly, to provoke tougher
    anti-terrorist laws and major communal tensions
    between the Hindu and Muslim communities creating
    a fresh crop of disgruntled recruits for the
    Jihadist cause. The aim would be to create
    widespread mayhem to stall the Indian economic
    engine and weaken the writ of the state.
  • The allegations about the 'Karachi Project' are
    indicative of Islamabad's continued reluctance in
    clamping down on cross-border terrorism against
    India. US National Intelligence Director (Retd)
    Admiral Dennis Blair attributes this to
    'Islamabad's conviction that militant groups are
    an important part of its strategic arsenal to
    counter India's military and economic
    advantages'. While a spectacular attack like the
    one witnessed in Mumbai may not be on the cards
    due to the possibility of sparking a major
    Indo-Pakistan confrontation, a series of blasts
    targeting major urban centres and high-profile
    events such as the Indian Premier League and the
    forthcoming 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi is a
    real threat for the Indian establishment
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