| The
Mumbai attacks have, once again, drawn international attention
towards the Pakistan military’s Inter-Services Intelligence
(ISI). Many around the world believe that this organisation
is behind many of the terrorist attacks taking place all over
the world. While some have referred to it as a rogue institution,
others view it as a highly professional organisation. The ISI
shot into the limelight following 9/11. It was accused of having
connections with the Taliban and other militant outfits. Domestically,
the organisation was under attack for keeping tabs on politicians
and even ordinary people. It is, indeed, one of the most feared
outfits in the country.
The
ISI drew fresh attention even before the Mumbai attacks, when
the new government tried to change its command-and-control mechanism
by bringing it under the ministry of interior, a decision which
was reversed within 24 hours. This, in turn, further strengthened
the perception that the organisation was more powerful than
one had imagined. Many a Pakistani and foreigner would like
to unearth the mystery known as the ISI. Who controls it? What
kind of human resources does it have? What is the financial
and operational power of the ISI? And finally, is it as powerful
as it is stated to be?
Technically
speaking, the ISI is a tri-service organisation meant to collect
strategic intelligence for the armed forces and conduct counter-intelligence
operations as well. Its role is different from that of the other
three military intelligence organisations, namely the Military
Intelligence (MI) which serves only the army, Air Intelligence
(AI) and Naval Intelligence (NI). These three organisations
are supposed to gather tactical intelligence for their respective
services. Although the ISI was established after 1947, its political
role was initiated by General Ayub Khan and further expanded
during the five-year-rule of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. This was done
through a notification that was never withdrawn and has not
come to an end, despite claims made by the present Foreign Minister,
Shah Mehmood Qureshi, regarding the end of the ISI’s political
role.
Operationally,
the intelligence agency was never strictly under civilian control,
despite the fact that the prime minister appoints the head of
the ISI and its director-general is supposed to report to the
head of the government. The organisation’s power was built
gradually due to three reasons. First, its political role allowed
it greater power internally. Keeping an eye on political parties,
politicians and other citizens gave it a role in political policymaking
and in determining policy direction. This role was never withdrawn
(the reason that the foreign minister claimed that the ISI’s
political role was wound up is not because the role was withdrawn,
but because the organisation was not tasked by the present government
to spy on its opponents).
Second,
the end of the Bhutto government in 1977 dovetailed into the
military takeover by General Zia-ul-Haq, who used the organisation
for political and military purposes. During the period between
1977-88, Zia-ul-Haq destroyed all institutional mechanisms that
were created by the Bhutto government for the command and control
of the military. The enhanced power of the ISI was a critical
part of the political strengthening of the armed forces in this
gap, created due to the aforementioned breakdown of control
structures.
Third,
the ISI’s involvement in the first Afghan war during the
1980s gave the intelligence agency further power. It had total
control over establishing contact with the various Afghan warlords
and in dispersing financial and other resources. This was also
the period during which the ISI gained organisational strength
and built a reputation for itself.
The
first effort to curtail the organisation’s power was during
Benazir Bhutto’s first government, when the prime minister
appointed Kallu, a retired army general, as the DG ISI who replaced
General Hamid Gul. However, the plan did not work. Reportedly,
Kallu was denied information by his own organisation. Clearly,
the retired general had returned to active service but was not
in sync with the rest of the military. Kallu’s experience
also helps emphasise the point that retired personnel do not
have any relevance for the organisation, unless they are to
be used for a particular end. The military and its serving officers
have a greater say in using the retired personnel rather than
the other way around. General Khwaja Ziauddin met a similar
fate. Despite the fact that he was the head of the ISI and now
claims to have observed the movement of the 111 brigade, months
before the actual October 1999 Musharraf coup, he failed to
see that the entire army could be manipulated by a handful of
officers supporting Musharraf. Apparently, Generals Aziz Khan,
Shahid Aziz, Mehmud Ahmed, and a few other officers including
the (late) Maj. General Amir Faisal Alavi were part of the 1999
coup plan. Even General Usmani, who later changed sides, had
sent a congratulatory note with a cake to General Ziauddin Butt
after the latter was appointed as the army chief by Nawaz Sharif.
The
above-cited anecdotal evidence raises questions about who actually
controls the ISI. Considering that there is very little information
available on the intelligence agency, this is an extremely difficult
line of inquiry. However, the power definitely does not reside
with the prime minister. The army chief, who plays a key role
in selecting the head of the organisation, has greater clout
as far as the ISI’s command and control is concerned.
The army chief’s influence is due to the greater political
significance of his service and also because the bulk of the
military personnel deputed to the ISI are from the army. The
DG ISI is always an army general and is not taken from the other
two services. But there are two opinions about the organisation’s
human resources. First, a lot of personnel are from the army.
These are officers who serve in the organisation for a select
period and then return to their parent organisation. Second,
the bulk of the manpower is civilian. These are either retired
military personnel or civilians inducted from the market. Apparently,
a civilian employee had risen to a grade-21 position during
the end of the 1990s. These are possibly the people who are
keepers of the institutional memory of the organisation.
This is not to argue that the ISI is a rogue institution. In
fact, it is a sub-organisation of the military which is primarily
influenced by the army chief. In fact, sources claim that the
senior management of the army and the ISI takes 70% of the decisions
with 30% left for the local area commanders who are only authorised
to take tactical decisions. So, if General Mehmud, as many argue,
tried to warn Mullah Omar about American plans after 9/11, it
was not necessarily because the general was operating independently.
He was possibly implementing the strategic policy whereby the
Taliban and some of the militant organisations were considered
as assets rather than a liability. It was later that the policy
regarding the Taliban started to change due to a shift in the
perception of the army’s top brass.
Over the years, the ISI has expanded from a federal and provincial
structure to the level of districts as well. As far as the power
of the army chief is concerned, he has the option of using both
the ISI and the MI. For instance, it has been argued that General
Aslam Beg gave a lot of tasks to the MI as well. In fact, after
9/11, certain roles circulated between the ISI and the MI. Such
an interchange of roles also gives rise to friction and competition
between the two intelligence agencies. Apparently, the MI gained
greater significance, especially during Musharraf’s last
days in service, because the organisation’s head was related
to the army chief and could bypass the military protocol through
his direct links with Musharraf. The present army chief, General
Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, who was the head of the ISI then, chose
not to raise the issue despite the fact that being the DG ISI,
he was meant to have greater access to the service chief than
the DG MI.
Similar
stories will only surface when there is a neutral examination
of the intelligence agency. Musharraf, it is also claimed, had
done some restructuring of the intelligence agencies. For instance,
the ISI was responsible for coordinating activities while the
MI was tasked with carrying out the operation against Nawab
Akbar Bugti, which eventually led to his death. Such views underscore
the larger argument that the army controls the ISI and the service
chief has a major role to play in the agency’s strategic
decision-making. So, when Ziauddin Butt said that each army
chief brings his own style to the organisation, he is partly
right because a lot depends on the service chief rather than
the head of the ISI alone.
The
argument regarding the army chief’s control of the ISI
also raises questions about the claim that the militant outfits
are encouraged by rogue elements of the intelligence agency.
During his last years as the service chief, Musharraf had tried
to encourage the idea that the militants were being helped by
former ISI chiefs such as Hamid Gul. The former ISI chief certainly
has connections with the Taliban and other militants outfits,
but it would be unfair to overestimate his influence, or that
of any other retired military officer. Given that the military
is like any bureaucratic institution where those in command
of decisions try to establish their own legacy rather than follow
that of their predecessors, the ISI and the MI follow a more
structured policy on militancy rather than just follow a former
general.
One
of the reasons for the ISI’s power lies in its financial
autonomy. To date, there is no clear assessment of what the
agency spends annually. Lt. General (retd) Asad Durrani, who
is also one of the former ISI chiefs, once claimed that the
government spends on the organisation as much as it would in
purchasing a fighter aircraft. This means an annual budget of
US$25-35 million that is part of the budget listed as ‘Inter-Services
Organisations’ in the overall breakdown of annual defence
spending revealed this year to the parliament. However, this
approximate figure does not speak of the real estate forcibly
acquired by the agency or its off-budget financing through many
types of barons. One source claimed that the different business
mafias and even the drug barons were some of the undisclosed
sources of funding for the ISI. In any case, the American CIA
and the ISI had tapped into drug smuggling during the first
Afghan war to raise funds for many covert operations. In fact,
during an interview, Nawaz Sharif once claimed that General
Beg had approached him to authorise a drug-smuggling operation
to finance a secret project. One wonders if Sharif would ever
talk about this now. But more interesting is the about-turn
of many in Pakistan regarding their opinion of the ISI.
Since the mounting US pressure to curtail the power of the intelligence
agency, there are many who have now begun to consider the ISI
as the saviour of national sovereignty and integrity. The question
is, is this because such analysts and media people believe in
its organisational integrity or is it due to the fear of the
ISI? Not to mention the fact that over the past so many years
the ISI has made critical inroads in the world of the media.
Incidentally, buying off the media is not an anomaly. The tradition
of paying journalists, politicians or significant members of
the civil society is an old technique. It is just that the tool
has now been perfected.
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