Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Detail Findings of Abottabad Commission of Enquiry on Osama Bin Laden




 Findings:
To ascertain the full facts regarding the presence of OBL in Pakistan following are some key findings in Q&A form.
Question : Was OBL present at the compound when the US operation took place on May 2, 2011?
Answer: This is despite the fact among the people of neighborhood in which the OBL Compound is located, there was near unanimity that he could not have been living with his family amongst them for so long without their getting wind of it. Their expectations of the local , provincial and federal police and security officials , as well as the military and intelligence authorities who were responsible for the security of the Pakistan Military Academy and other military institutions in Abbottabad Cantonment , were such that they could not believe they were all fooled for so long. These sentiments were more or less shared by most people of Pakistan, especially in the immediate aftermath of the incident.
However , DNA analyses , the testimony of OBL’s widows and daughters , the announcement of President Obama on May 2, the statement on the Al-Qaeda website on May 6,2011 the personal belogingings and diaries and writings of OBL that were discovered in the house where he was staying , the presence of items in the residence that were shown in video clips of OBL watching TV in his room which were shown to the Commission , the fact that there have been no contra indications of his not being present , etc. indicate an overwhelming probability that he was present in the house in Abbottabad on the night of the raid. If it is assumed the missing person was not OBL it would be necessary to to construct an explanation that would have a probability of near zero. The whole scene would have had to be elaborately set up including finding a whole family of impersonators to play the role of the wives and daughters of OBL, obtaining the body of a dead son of one of the female imposters who would have also to be the son of the missing allegedly killed person. In fact , CIA , ISI and Al-Qaeda would have to closely collaborate to construct such a fanciful scenario , Such a scenario would also have a near zero chance of being kept a secret.
Finding : OBL , was present at the Compound when the US operation took place.

Question: Was OBL killed ?
Answer : The family of OBL confirmed OBL’s identity and death after having seen his body. The inter-relationships of the family were confirmed through DNA testing of their blood and matching it with OBL’s blood found on the floor of his bedroom. Of course DNA testing alone cannot determine whether the person concerned was dead or alive.
The US President Obama confirmed the killing of OBL on May 2 and Al-Qaeda also confirmed OBL’s death on May 6. The lack of any development since May 2 that might suggest OBL may be alive also needs to be taken into account. Moreover , the amount of OBL’s blood that splattered his room and the discovery of brain matter which was also DNA tested more or less conclusively established the impossibility of his survival. Once again mathematically the probability of OBL’s death is less than 100 percent certain. But for all practical purposes it may be treated as effectively an absolute certainty.
Finding : OBL was killed by US Navy SEALS in the early hours on May 2,2011.

Question : Why was no evidence of OBL’s death public ?
Answer : This was a US decision. There are several possible explanations for it. OBL’s body was probably so gruesomely disfigured that it was feared public opinion in the Muslim world have been shocked , not so much by OBL’s elimination, but by the savage hatred with which the American soldiers murdered him which the pictures of his mutilated corpse would have clearly shown.

Question : How long had OBL been residing in Abbottabad?
Answer: Since August 2005, the diaries of OBL confirm this. Members of the neighborhood community in Bilal Town also saw the two couriers regularly over the nearly six years period. That would indicate OBL was there for the same period.
Finding : OBL was resident in Abbottabad for nearly six years.

Question : How long had he been resident in Pakistan ?
Answer : According to the testimony of the wives of OBL,Maryam - the wife of Ibrahim and the diaries discovered in the house , OBL arrived in Pakistan sometime in the spring or summer of 2002. Apparently he stayed in Haripur for approximately two years from 2003 to 2005 and in Abbottabad from august 2005 till his death on May 2,2011.
Finding : OBL stayed in Pakistan for more then 9 years.

Question : Where else did OBL and his family stay?
Answer : All the places in Pakistan where OBL stayed are not fully known. But it included FATA (South Waziristan and Bajaur), Peshawar, Swat and Haripur. If we include the family of OBL then Karachi , Quetta and the Iran-Pakistan border area must also be added the September 11,2001 attacks on the US .He may have gone to the Tora Bora region from where he either entered Pakistan or more likely , remained in Afghanistan until sometime in 2002. Shortly after September 11,2001 the family of OBL was shifted from Kandahar to Karachi. They were accompanied by Ibrahim and his wife Maryam.This does not appear to be consistent with Maryam’s account to the Commission in which she said she was married (presumably in Shangla from where they both came) and was then taken to Karachi where she first met Amal who , according to her husband , was the wife of a friend and had some trouble with her passport. The other two wives of the OBL were apparently living separately in Quetta or Karachi. Who was looking after them? Where did they stay? The intelligence agencies have not been able to provide answers to these questions. Apparently none of the residences of OBL and of his wives in Karachi , Quetta , Peshawar or Swat have been located. Only the residences of OBL in Haripur and Abbottabad are known.
According to the ISI interrogation report, in mid 2002 Ibrahim, his wife Maryam, and Amal, left Karachi for Peshawar where they were joined by OBL. Fairly thorough arrangements would have been needed to look after the other two wives of OBL, especially if they feared they were being tracked by intelligence agencies. (All these questions remain unanswered ). Moreover , the movement of OBL’s three sons, Khalid , Hamza and Saad within Pakistan remain largely unknown. Nor is anything known about whether Hamza or Saad ever visited their father in Haripur and Abbottabad. Nothing is also known about whether or not Hamza married a
local girl in Pakistan and if so , where she came from and what was her family background.
After September 11,2001, apparently Khairiyyah travelled from Kandhar to Quetta on her way to Karachi.From there she accompanied Sharifa to Quetta again.Subsequetnly , from Quetta possibly accompanied by her step son Saad , her son, Hamza , his wife , son and daughter , Khairiyyah travelled to Iran, apparently intending to go to Syria. However , they were arrested in Iran, probably Mahsad. The ladies were sent to Tehran while the men were kept in Mashad.Later theyjoined them in Tehran.Saad , apparently escaped or was released from prison in Tehran , landed up in Waziristan and was killed there. How? A drone attack? Special Operations? Accidentally ? Where was he buried? There are no answers available to any of these potentially important questions.
Sometimes later , Hamza and his family left Tehran, travelled by air to Zahidan and then preceded by road through Quetta to Waziristan.Khairiyyah stayed in Tehran for nearly eight years from 2002 to 2010 before being released. She had wanted to go to Qatar, but due to some disagreement between Qatar and Iran over the kind of travel documents she could carry, she could not go there. She then apparently travelled to Zahidan and then to Mashad.From these , according to some reports , she travelled via Kandahar or Zahidan to Quetta and Waziristan. There she received a letter or message from OBL informing her he was making arrangements for her to join him.She was then escorted to Abbottabad where she rejoined her husband after so stayed on in Quetta till mid 2003 and then joined OBL in Haripur.
Finding: OBL stayed in FATA (Bajaur and Waziristan), Peshawar , Swat , Haripur , Abbottabad and possibly other places in Pakistan. His family also stayed in Karachi , Quetta and Iran.

Question: How were OBL and his family able to stay and travel in Pakistan without detection?
Answers : The explanation given to the Commission was that they had a minimum but dedicated support network that met their every need. They kept a very low profile and lived extremely frugally. They never exposed themselves to public view. They had the cover of the two Pakistan Pashtun couriers cum security guards. They had minimum security .OBL successfully minimized any “signature” of his presence. His minimal support group blended easily with the surrounding
community. His couriers made use of public call centers in towns at distance from Abbottabad. His wives, children and grandchildren hardly ever emerged from the places where they stayed. His couriers and protestors were two Pashtun brothers who had a cover story which was quite credible in the eyes of neighbours and local officials. No one ever visited them , not even trusted Al-Qaeda members , especially , after the arrest of Khalid Sheikh Mohammad.

Question: How was OBL able to stay within the limits of Abbottabad Cantonment?
Answers : The explanations were that Abbottabad was an “open” cantonment. Bilal Town was “civilian” area within the cantonment. A lot of recent immigrants had settled there as a result of the 2005 earthquake, floods and displaced persons from areas where counterterrorism operations were conducted. Some of them lived with their families in large secluded residences not unlike the OBL Compound. The OBL Compound and house were brought and constructed through a whole series of illegal and irregular transactions based on fake documents and false identities. There was also extensive complacency, inefficiency and negligence in the local civil administration, the police and the civil and military intelligence agencies and security authorities of the cantonment area.
According to the Commission’s findings, these explanations were credible up to a point. But they don not adequately account for the comprehensive and sustained failure of the intelligence and security agencies to detect any leads or abnormalities which if followed up professionally and systematically might have led to a completely different outcome form what happened on May 2,2011.
The house where OBL and his family stayed for almost six years was hardly normal.It was isolated , large with very high walls and barbed wire. It was very peculiarly designed. It was actually designed for four separate families.In places the walls were 18 feet high.The house had a most unusual 7 foot screen wall on the top floor.There were no visitors, no coming and going of cars , no Tv cable and no telephone connections , no rubbish collection, none of the children went to school. There were no security guards for a house designed for security . None of this served to attract any notice from our intelligence , security and military personnel for almost 6 years. But it took the CIA almost no time to conclude that the house was probably a hideout for a High Value Target.
Finding : OBL was able to stay within the limits of Abbottabad Cantonment due to a collective failure of the military authorities , the intelligence authorities , the Police and the civilian administration. This failure included negligence and incompetence and at some undetermined level a grave complicity may or may not have involved.

Question : What was the nature and extent of the OBL support network?
Answer: It was probably quite small. It comprised largely if not exclusively Al-Qaeda and Al-Qaeda associated groups. It probably had a wider group of less dedicated and less regular support from sympathetic Pakistani Jihadi groups and individuals. OBL would have needed to hide, to travel to feed himself and his family. This would have involved a number of services. Vehicles would need to be provided. Air tickets would have to be bought. Identity cards would be required. Bills would need to be paid. Security would need to be provided effectively but in very low key. Disguises would need to be assumed. Accommodation would need to be bought or hired. Complete and permanent cover for OBL would have to be arranged. Money and social contacts would be needed. A mobility for communications with Al-Qaeda operatives without exposing OBL’s location would be necessary. His guards and couriers would also have to hide their true identities in order to safely interact with the society around them and make all the necessary arrangements on a daily basis. They would have had to bribe officials to obtain various illegal permissions on the basis of false identity documents and in violation of procedures and regulations .The general weaknesses of the bureaucracy including corruption , negligence , irresponsibility etc.would have assisted them. But they could not completely rely on the whole system being dysfunctional all the time. A considerable degree of planning, logistics and outside assistance would also be needed. Arabs and Al-Qaeda would not be sufficient. Local Pakistani support would have been essential . A purely Arab support team could not possibly function or remain undetected in a Pakistani environment. The core support network of support for OBL would need to be kept quite small. But it would have had to be embedded in an enabling environment of both active and passive local support.
According to recent information reaching the Commission, Khalid Sheikh Muhammad , who was arrested on March 1, 2003 headed the Al-Qaeda support group for OBL in Pakistan. His other associates were Abu Musaab al Balochi , Umar Kathio alias Abdullah Al Sindhi , amal Ahmed Abul Fateh, Mustafa Muhammad Khan alias Hassan Gul , Ramzan alias Abu Harith , Ammar chottu and Dr.Akmal Waheed. All of these people were arrested in the period 2004-2006.It is not known who replaced them as members of the core group of Al-Qaeda support in addition to two Kuwaiti brothers for the period of 2006-2011.
In addition , the information givento the Commission with regard to the two houses in Karachi where the family of OBL stayed i.e. near the Drive-in Cinema in Gulistan-e-Jauhar and in Clifton respectively are not very helpful as these are extremely large areas..
While the immediate personal enablers of OBL have been identified up to the period 2004-2006 . almost nothing else has been uncovered about the wider support network which may not have been large but would have had to comprise a minimum number of dedicated persons including Pakistanis who may not have known whom they were helping.They would almost certainly be either Jihadis or people with strong Jihadi sympathies and good connections.
The existence of networks of Islamic militant throughout Pakistan is well known. They aer relatively concentrated in certain areas, and the Hazara region was known to be one of these regions in the settled areas. OBL‘s broader network of direct and indirect support was most likely drawn from this pool of militancy. Specific and detailed answers to questions about the nature , composition, size and connections of the support network that enabled OBL’s extended presence in Pakistan were not made available with the intelligence establishment. This again is a matter of great concern.
According to the Commission’s findings, OBL had a support network that could not possibly have been confined to the two Pashtun brothers who worked as his couriers, security guards and general factotums. There were others including Pakistanis who provided a full array of services for OBL within Pakistan on a full time or irregular basis. Most of such people would have been loyal and dedicated enough not to ask questions or to pass on information. Some may not have been so loyal or dedicated. Over a period of time an effective intelligence agency should have been able to contact, infiltrate or co-opt them, and to develop a whole case load of information. Apparently, this was not the case.

Questions : Did it include personnel or former personnel of the Pakistan government including the military , intelligence and security agencies?
Answer : No finding to this effect can be made in view of a lack of conclusive evidence. However , given the length of stay and the changes of residence of OBL and his family in Pakistan , and the extended stay in Haripur and later in the Abbottabad Cantonment area , the possibility of some such direct or indirect and “plausibly deniable’ support cannot be ruled out, at least, at some level outside formal structure of the intelligence establishment. The extent of “radical Islamist” influence in the armed forces has certainly been exaggerated by some foreign and Pakistani commentators. But it has assuredly been under estimated by senior military officials whom the Commission met.
Finding: No

Question: Which ministry, department or agency of the government of Pakistan had the primary responsibility for ascertaining whether or not OBL was in Pakistan , and if so , for tracking him down?
Answer: Intelligence Bureau (IB) and the Ministry of Interior had direct and indirect responsibility respectively for counterterrorism .But , the ISI was given effectively exclusive responsibility for all matters relating to the presence of OBL in Pakistan. This responsibility was based on administrative decisions and not on law. In reality, the formal and primary responsibility belonged to the Prime Minister’s office (PMO) to which the IB and ISI both reported.
Finding : The ISI.

Question : was there any intelligence sharing with the US in the search for OBL ?
Answer : There was considerable cooperation including intelligence sharing between the ISI and the CIA with respect to hunting down and apprehending High Value Targets until 2005.This included exchange of information about the possible whereabouts of OBL and the provision by the CIA of possible leads in the search for him , all of which turned out to be false.

Question: Did the CIA share intelligence with the ISI after it got into the track of OBL?
Answer: The CIA shared telephone numbers in 2010 without indicating their relevance and significance. They didn’t inform the ISI when they finally located the Al-Kuwaiti brothers and eventually tracked them to their residence in Abbottabad. Nor did they inform the ISI of the likely presence of OBL in the al-Kuwaiti brothers residence ( locally know as Waziristan Kothi) in Bilal Town. In general , after 2005 the CIA received information from the ISI but did not share the results of their analysis of the information , nor did they share the ‘mosaic of information’ they had built up which enabled evaluation of any new information. The US had an international legal obligation to share such information with Pakistan.

Question : If not , why not ?
Answer: The Americans suggest they had lost confidence in the reliability of the ISI. The ISI had allegedly been “selective’ in its cooperation in apprehending High Value Targets (HVT’s).Some HVT’s allegedly escaped capture due to a leakage of information shared by the CIA with the ISI. The ISI denied this. The Commission was told that the US wanted the exclusive credit of eliminating OBL for itself. They wanted to isolate Pakistan and discredit the ISI etc.
Finding : The implicit assumption that only the CIQ had the ability to find OBL in Pakistan indicated a complete lack of confidence by the ISI and the intelligence establishment in their own ability to do so. While the CIA certainly had the superior technical intelligence capabilities, the ISI was operating in its own environment which should have given it a huge advantage over the CIA. It should
not have been paralyzed by the CIA’s lack of cooperation including sharing of intelligence.

Question : In view of the fact that a number of HVT’s were raided or apprehended in and around Abbottabad , how did OBL’s Compound, which was large and to an extent set apart with high walls and barbed wire , fail to attract the attention of intelligence and security officials over the years?
Answer: We have referred to the explanations that were offered. The fact that they were not very satisfactory does not of course mean they were necessarily untrue. It was said that building , contrary to reports , was neither exceptionally large nor very different from other large “Pashtun” residences in the area. The cover presented by the two Pashtun brothers was credible. Abbottabad Cantonment was an “open” Cantonment where civilians were allowed to purchase and construct residences within rules approved by the Cantonment Board. These rules were routinely violated. The military security arrangements were largely limited to the military institutions and the exclusively military part of the Cantonment area. The proximity of OBL’s compound to the Pakistan Military Academy was accordingly, not as significant as it might appear. These explanations would have been more credible if OBL was a transient visitor instead of a long time resident in Abbottabad. As noted , the compound had several peculiar features that should have been attracted attention. While the local community may not have paid much attention to these oddities, the police and intelligence officials had a professional duty to check out the background of the somewhat mysterious and aloof Pashtun brothers, especially since militants were known to have either come into the area or to have located their families there. There was a strange absence of curiosity even among those officials whose duty it was to have basic information about residents moving into the locality.
Finding : It is clear that someone from the civil administration , police , security and intelligence services should have notices, but did not notice, anything odd about the compound over so many years. This in itself was an extraordinary example of intelligence and security incompetence and laxity at the very least. To crown it all , the OBL house was enumerated in a house survey with the comment that it was ‘be-chiragh” i.e. uninhabited ! Since August 2005, there were never less than 25 people living in it ! The extent of incompetence, to put it mildly, was astounding, if not unbelievable.

Question : Was OBL betrayed by his security guards or by someone within his family ?
Answer : There has been speculations on this questions. Some stories have been circulated but without any evidentiary support. However given the inevitable stresses and strains of a large family living in fear, suspicion , extreme caution and
in cramped conditions for over a decade, it would be surprising if significant family tensions did not exist. On this basis it is easy to develop hypothetical scenarios in which someone could have got fed up with the whole situation. Khairiyya had been asked to go back home to Syria by OBL and spent over seven years in Iran. The Iranians released her son Hamza then her step son Saad and finally herself. Any of them could have been tracked after their release. There has been speculation that one or both of the All Kuwaiti brothers once tracked down by the CIA may have spilled the beans in return for some consideration. Loyalties , however fierce , have their breaking points. There could be others in the immediate OBL’s support network who provided vital information to CIA network in Pakistan. The U.S is thought to have “water boarded” the initial information about the existence and significance of All Kuwaiti from a prisoner from Guantanamo Bay. There is room for endless speculations but there is no credible evidence available to support any specific story of betrayal. Of course , this does not rule out the possibility that betrayal of some kind did occur.
Finding : Anything is possible but so far the more likely explanation is that the ISI helped the CIA to build the mosaic of intelligence and US for torture at Guantanamo Bay and other places led the US to discover the phone numbers of Ibrahim and Abrar. These were communicated to the ISI. But ISI did not thoroughly monitor them. As a result, while the CIA got on to the trial of All Kuwaiti brothers which led to OBL, the ISI failed to do so.

Question : Was OBL active and in command of Al-Qaeda operations from his hideouts in Pakistan?
Answer : There is documentary evidence that OBL was in communication with some Al-Qaeda leaders through the All Kuwaiti brothers (Ibrahim and Abrar) and their immediate Al-Qaeda contacts. But all the indications are that he no longer wielded control over Al-Qaeda operations which had passed to Ayman Al Zawshiri and more generally , become decentralized.OBL was in touch with Al-Qaeda and provided range of practical and impractical advise. As noted, he was able to communicate with Khairyya, but he apparently had no operational control of the Al-Qaeda. Given his circumstances, he could either maximize his personnel security or try to maintain active command. His refusal to remain totally passive fatally exposed him eventually.

Question : what were the mechanism, modality and process adopted by the government of Pakistan for determining whether or not OBL was in Pakistan and for tracking him down.
Answer : It was left more or less exclusively to the ISI to deal with everything concerning OBL.The ISI had apparently set up its own cell and followed up leads that upto 2005 were provided by the CIA and other intelligence agencies. Like other
intelligence agencies the ISI presumably developed its own intelligence. At no stage its seems were the Prime Minister the Cabinet, the Defense Cabinet Committee, the Ministry of Interior, Ministry of Defense, the civilian intelligence agencies or the provisional and local authorities actively involved or even regularly briefed. Nor did they take any active and sustained interest in determining whether or not OBL was hiding in Pakistan, and if so, where? There were apparently few if any meetings called specifically for discussions, briefings or updates on the subjects. Nor it seems were any written reports asked for or submitted.
The President, the Prime Minister and the Army Chief - all of whom declined to meet the Commission - may or may not have discussed the issue in their , “troika” meetings with each other. No record of such meetings seems to be kept. While the DG ISI and the Chief of Army Staff met regularly, he hardly ever had a formal meeting with the Prime Minister to whom he officially reported. So, outside of the ISI, which had no formal mandate for counter terrorism, there was no dedicated governmental mechanism, modality or process with respect to the search for OBL. The ISI neither briefed the government leadership on the status of its information on OBL, nor was it asked to do so.
Finding : There was no regular and sustained mechanism, modality or process with regard to locating OBL.

Question ; Apart from media reports, the discussions and communications between the Pakistan political, military and intelligence leadership and the US leadership on the specific subjects of the possible presence of OBL in Pakistan take place?
Answer: No record of such discussions is available. The Commission was told that after 2005, all cooperation between the CIA and ISI regarding OBL ceased. The US did not respond to questions put to it by Commission on this subject however, since US leaders, publically communicated their concerns over the suspected presence of OBL in Pakistan, the Commission does not find the assertions that Americans never raised the subject of OBL in official meetings and communication with the government of Pakistan to be credible. This is one of the many questions which the Commission would have put to political and military leaders that unfortunately were unable to meet despite repeated requests.

Question : What was the priority regarding the search for OBL?
Answer: The matter may have been given priority for a while after the US invasion in Afghanistan and the dispersal of the Taliban government. But later the impression in the ISI developed the tale of OBL had gone cold. The US had lost interest and its attention seemed to have turned to Iraq. This was especially after cooperation between the CIA and the ISI regarding the search for OBL had almost ceased. The impression seemed to have developed that the US administration had effectively closed the file on OBL. A statement by President Bush seemed to give
credence to this impression. The ISI said it turned its attention towards countering domestic terrorism.
Finding : There were no real and sustained priority given to the search for OBL, although from time to time the US leaders raised the issue in an accusatory manner and relations with the US were, to put it mildly, increasingly strained over this and other counter terror issues.

Question : Several senior foreign political, military and intelligence officials had regularly alleged or suggested that OBL was being protected in Pakistan by elements of its intelligence community. Apart from denying these allegations, was any serious effort ever made to check them out? Were policy options on how to address US concerns and threats discussed among the Pakistani leadership?
Answer : Apparently not. At least no record of such discussions is available. This may at best have been done on a contingent, Ad hoc and un coordinated basses. It was certainly not done on a regular systematic and recorded basis. The fact that the country was faced with situation of no good military options in the face of developing the US military threat was never appreciated, let alone discuss. Unplanned and reactive policies always have a narrow range of feasible policy options. Only proactive policies, based on analytical anticipation of scenarios and proper policy planning can maximize the range of available and effective options even in difficult and unequal circumstances. These issues apparently never came up in cabinet or ministerial meetings. The records of Defense Cabinet Committee or “troika” meeting (The President, Prime Minster and Chief of Army Staff are called troika in Pakistan) were either not kept or were not made available. The overwhelming probability is that neither American threats nor any allegations were ever systematically checked out or discussed at any level within the government in months leading up to the US raid on May 2,2011 in Abbottabad. Whether they were conversationally or “informally” discussed among the leaders is not known, and in any case would have been completely inadequate. They would not reflect any consistent will to address the situation. This was just another instance of a message and irresponsible lack of due diligence by the de jure and de facto governmental leadership.
Finding : Neither accusations by foreign leaders and intelligence officials were taken seriously, nor were there possible military implications ever seriously considered. This was unprofessional behavior.

Question : Was the failure to track OBL a result of negligence, incompetence or complicity at some level within the government and its security organizations and intelligence agencies?
Answer: Culpable negligence and incompetence at almost all levels of government can more or less be conclusively established by the testimonies of witnesses contained in this report. But connivance, collaboration and cooperation at some levels cannot be entirely discounted. If such connivance existed, it could not have been established in the circumstances in which the Commission operated. Some degree of connivance on a plausible deniability basis outside governmental structures was possible, some would even say likely. But no evidence of this has been furnished to the Commission. Even the US has not made a charge of connivance against the government or any of its agencies. But informed individuals (including administration officials, former officials, briefed media persons etc.) who often reflect actual administration thinking have suggested connivance at some level in the broader structures of the intelligence community in Pakistan. The ‘treasure trove” of information that the US took form the OBL Compound has so far not revealed any evidence of connivance, although only a small fraction of the data from the OBL Compound and none of the information gathered from the eight-month, 24/7 US aerial surveillance of the OBL Compound have been made public. To summarize, negligence and Connivance at no level can be established even if at some level it cannot be ruled out. Complicity is the most grievous charge that can be brought against an individual or group of individuals. No findings of this can be made. But incompetence and negligence are the most serious charges that can be brought against any institution-especially those that have national security responsibility.
A finding to this effect is made by the Commission.
Investigate the circumstances and facts regarding the US operation in Abbottabad on May 2, 2011?

Questions:
How was the US special operations mission to kill OBL in Abbottabad successfully carried out without any apparent detection or response by the Pakistan defense forces, especially as it involved staying within Pakistan’s airspace and territory for over 3 hours, penetrating Pakistani territory up to a distance of over 100 miles, and carrying out a 35-minute raid on a residence within a cantonment area?
Answer: The explanations of officials cover a number of points. The US raid was total surprise, a “betrayal” and “a stab in the back” as the two countries were allies in a War on Terror and had together captured a significant number of High Value Targets (HVT’s) which the ISI handed over to the CIA.
According to the Defense Policy of 2004 and the Joint Strategic Directive of 2007 – both of which were still operative – the only designated hostile country was India. The two documents specially directed the armed forces to maintain good relations and avoid confrontation with the US. Pakistan’s defense capabilities were designed and developed for a one front conflict situation. Despite tensions, including several border raids and differences on a number of issues, neither the political leadership nor the defense policy planners could imagine the US would actually stoop to such a low blow as they inflicted on Pakistan on May 2,2011. On this assumption, Pakistan’s air defense capabilities on the western border were deployed in “peace time’ mode.
Moreover, there was tremendous military asymmetry and technological gap between the armed forces of the two countries. This enabled the IS to avoid Pakistan’s air defense capabilities and deterred Pakistan from taking any action that risked escalating the situation beyond control. The US attack helicopters were equipped with stealth technology, night vision, sound suppression, and fast and low flying nap of the earth flight capabilities. The US intruders were backed by US AWACS and F-16 fighters across the border ready to respond to any sign of a Pakistan Air Force (PAF) interception attempt.
During the killing they used silencers. The noise of the Chinooks was heard over Abbottabad but because of the Abbottabad Valley acting as an echo chamber it was not easy to detect the direction from where the sound came. It was only after the loud explosion of the destruction of the downed Black Hawk that the whole town became aware of some untoward developments. By then the US mission had completed its work and had departed the scene. By the time the Chief of Army Staff was alerted the US helicopters were exiting or about to exit Pakistan airspace. The PAF would normally be alerted by radar detection and would scramble in accordance with its Standard Operating Procedure (SOP’s) . But on this occasion the radars were unable to pick up anything for the reasons explained. The first time that the PAF came to know was when the Chief of Army Staff contacted the Chief of Air Staff (CAS). By then any opportunity to intercept the American intruders had gone. It was case of military and technology asymmetry.
In this regard there was the assertion that even if a significant US military raid had been anticipated as a possible scenario, there was little that Pakistan could have done to avert or counter it given the massive military imbalance between the US and Pakistan.
Finding: This is where the crucial weakness of the security mindset and planning in Pakistan showed up. While military options may indeed have been limited, non military options including stepping up the search for High Value Targets, dismantling extremist infrastructure in Pakistan, preventing the use of Pakistani territory for the launching of Mujahideen attacks on occupying NATO forces in Afghanistan, diplomatic mitigation of threat perception, policy reviews to address US concerns without compromising national sovereignty or violating international
law etc. could have been utilized to minimize the likelihood of such an anticipated scenario. None of this was done. There was no pro-active anticipatory policy or policy planning. There was only a policy to reacting to developments after they had occurred. Under these circumstances the factor of military asymmetry could not be taken account of and countered or mitigated.

Question : Given that US-Pakistan relations were seriously strained over US allegations of safe havens in Pakistan, a number of previous US raids and intrusions involving loss of Pakistani military and civilian personnel had taken place, and warnings of a possible unilateral strike were publically made by no less a person than President Barak Obama, why did May 2, 2011 came as complete surprise?
Answer: While the political relationship was strained, the situation was not considered threatening enough to warrant an expedited review of the long standing threat identification of the Defense Policy of 2004 and the Joint Strategic Directive (JSD) of 2007. Militarily, the technology gap was decisive US warnings, including President Obama’s public warnings were amazingly discounted and ignored as being addressed only to US public opinion. One senior military official said as Obama’s remarks were not conveyed in writing to Pakistan, they were not considered to be policy statements. While the military and intelligence leadership might be forgiven such a simplistic deduction, the political and diplomatic leadership had no business being so incompetent and irresponsible as to ignore such high level specific and precise warnings.
Finding : The Commission is of the view that these warnings were almost certainly conveyed at the highest levels even in private. The Pakistani military and political leadership displayed a degree of incompetence and irresponsibility that was truly breathtaking and indeed culpable.

Question : Is it official or unofficial defense policy not to attempt to defend the country if threatened or even attacked by a military superpower like the US?
Answer : The Pakistan Air Force says it responded as soon as it was made aware of the intrusion and attack. Its radar coverage was evaded, and by the time the Chief of Army Staff informed the Chief of Air Staff about what happened in Abbottabad, it was already too late to intercept the intruders. The Pakistan air Force said it gave shoot down orders to the PAF fighter pilot if they encountered aircraft flying over the Abbottabad area. Nevertheless it was acknowledge that militarily engaging the United States was generally not a good option. In fact, it was acknowledged that militarily engaging the US was generally not a good option. In fact, it was specifically admitted that the PAF had limited capability to ensure that another US special operation against a HVT in Pakistan could be thwarted even with stepped up
surveillance and defense resources in place. All Pakistan could do was to respond with unspecified diplomatic and political measures in the event of a repetition of May 2, 2011.Even such measures would be limited by the inevitable need to limit diplomatic escalation with the US, as the subsequent Salala incident clearly demonstrated.
Finding : There was an overall policy bankruptcy for which the political leadership was ultimately responsible although the PAF and military leadership also share responsibility.
Submission to a military threat or military aggression from a militarily superior power without military resistance, whatever the military costs, has existential implication for Pakistan.

Question : Did the PAF radars and air defense system completely fail to pick up the US helicopters at any time during whole period in which they flew in and flew out of Pakistan airspace?
Answer: The radars were neither jammed nor switched off although they were reportedly in a mode of “rest” since it was not economical to have them permanently switched on the western border, especially when defense deployment was in “peace time mode.”. The Commission flew the route supposedly taken by the American helicopters and visited the Air Defense Command Center, Chaklala. There was apparently no compelling evidence to conclude that any non-routine pattern of aircraft movement was picked up by Pakistan radars in the vicinity of the border on the night of the raid. Moreover , none of the helicopters flying in and out of Pakistan were picked up by the radars. There were reports and even the testimony of a very senior former PAF officer that some of the radars did in fact pick up unusual activity across the border and that the PAF had not made all the defense preparations on the west which could have made it much more difficult for even so-called stealth helicopters and low flying terrain-hugging techniques to completely escape detection by a properly planned and deployed air defense system which should not have been in peace time mode because of the developing threat on the Western border. There were F-16s and an AWACS flying close to the border ready to respond to any PAF reaction. This was picked up by PAF radars but was not seen as a non-routine pattern of US aircraft along Pakistan’s border. For counter terror air operations inside Afghanistan, an AWACS would be unnecessary. May be this should have been seen as non-routine air activity across the border and communicated as such to Air Defense Command.
Finding: The Commission was unable to obtain any conclusive evidence to support a finding of non-routine air activity despite the cogency of argument to the country. With regard to the criticisms of air defense planning that were brought to the attention, the Commission finds merit in some of the criticism but not in all of them.
Even it was unfair to suggest the Pakistan Air Force was “asleep” on the job, it certainly should have done a better job in providing its inputs for overall defense planning.

Question : If US technology and flying techniques made it possible for Pakistan’s air defense to detect the US mission, why was there such a feeling of despondency and failure in the PAF after the incident.
Answer : There seem to be some suspicion among PAF personnel that the PAF for some reason deliberately took no action against the intruders, possibly in response to some kind of communication from the US to the Pakistani leadership. The PAF leadership took measure to allay any such misgivings by providing a technical briefing to PAF personnel who were affected by the bitter media criticism of the Pakistan defense forces , especially the PAF, in the immediate aftermath of the incident. Moreover the PAF leadership told the commission that there was no way to edit out suppress radar tracings of unusual activity or to act on a directive not to respond to a foreign attack without the information becoming known to PAF personnel who would have reacted very strongly.

Question : Did the US at any time and at any level get in touch with the Pakistani political or military leadership before or during the raid to ensure against the military response from Pakistan which could have resulted in the loss of life and aircraft and an even more serious political crisis between the two countries?
Answer : This has been answered by the PAF in negative. There were wide spread rumors and many well informed and well connected persons with PAF backgrounds who privately allege that a communication was indeed received because there was always a possibility of something going wrong during the operation ( and something actually did go wrong with one of the helicopters) . It was accordingly, considered important by the US to engage in political damage control in advance. As mention this has been strongly denied by all the senior PAF officers the Commission met. It is possible to understand if not agree with the US decision to unilaterally implement its special operations mission. But it is much more difficult to understand the rationale for it not sending any communication to Pakistan at any time before or even during the operation in view of the inherent and irreducible risks of detection by the Pakistan Air Defense System, and the US political imperative to minimize any risk of capture or injury to its Navy SEALs. However the Commission was not presented any conclusive evidence of any communication from the US warning Pakistan of either an imminent or ongoing operation. More importantly the leaders at the helm of affairs, who were in a position to provide the most reliable information did not meet with the Commission which would have put questions on this and other unanswered questions directly to them.
The PAF apparently received its first information about the incident at 02:07 hours on May 2,2011.
The US helicopters apparently arrived at the OBL compound between 0030 and 0040 hours. The blast destroying the downed helicopter was at 01:05 or 01:06 hours. It still took one hour for the Chief of Air Staff to be informed by the Chief of Army Staff, by which time it was too late. In fact before the blast, one Chinook helicopter and one Black Hawk were circulating around Abbottabad valley for around half an hour before they return to the compound on the completion of the kill and search mission. Given the time of 90 minutes between the arrival of the helicopters over Abbottabad and the blast of the destruction of the crippled helicopter, it is surprising that no one brought the matter to the attention of the military command, specially as it was known that Pakistani helicopters seldom, if ever flew at night.
Why was the garrison not aware that something serious was taking place until it heard the blast?
Why was the Chief of Air Staff not directly informed about helicopters flying at night over Abbottabad?
Why did he have to first learn of the incident from Chief of Army Staff?
Both the US and Pakistani governments denied any collaboration and prior understanding regarding the raid. Admiral Mullen’s phone call to Chief of Army Staff at 05:00 hours on May 2 was said to be the very first US communication to Pakistan on the subject. Nevertheless, as indicated there is room for some skepticism on this issue. Minimizing the risk for the US Navy SEALs was an obligation of the US military and of the US President. In fact, the US attorney general is trying to legally justify the killing of an unarmed OBL argued that no possible risk to the lives of the SEALs could be entertained. There would have been a far greater risks to the safety of the SEALs had the armed forces of Pakistan detected their intrusion and tried to intercept it at any stage of their mission in Pakistan which lasted more than 3 hours. Despite the technology advantage, this could not be eliminated unless some prior communication from the US requesting non interception was received.
Finding: Nevertheless, there was no conclusive evidence made available to the commission that would support a finding of prior communication although there have been unsubstantiated reports to the contrary. If indeed contact was made it is likely to be revealed at sometimes in the futures, when there is lesser risks of further destabilizing the bilateral relationship and the government in Islamabad.

Question: Was Pakistan at anytime offered the option of the joint operation against OBL as had been the case with the apprehension of previous High Value Targets?
Answer: Both governments deny this. However there were some speculative reports in the weeks after the raid which suggested this possibility.
Finding: No evidence warranting any such conclusion has come to light.

Question: Was there a CIA network of ground support for the location of OBL and for the US operation to kill him?
Answer: There were in all probability fairly extensive networks. One network would have been for the location of OBL’s hideout, and another would be to confirm whether or not he was actually hiding there. There were several reports of OBL’s sighting on Pakistani territory up until 2005 and both CIA and ISI personnel check them out that whether without success. So there was already a known CIA network on the ground in Pakistan which was built up since 9/11. Given the knowledge of such CIA network in Pakistan it is all the more surprising how the ISI assumed the CIA had closed the file on OBL. However with the decline and effective end of cooperation between the CIA and ISI in the search for OBL in 2005, the Pakistani authorities lost control over the entry of the Americans in Pakistan. The Director General of ISI protested against the uncontrolled influx of Americans of unchecked backgrounds but to no avail. Ambassador Haqqani may have issued no more visas then he should have. But most of the CIA infiltration took place under the guise of NGO personnel like USAIDE etc.
There was almost certainly also a subsequent and separate network of CIA personnel, recruits and possibly unwitting Pakistani accomplices to facilitate the killing operation itself. The vehicles that emerged from US embassy Islamabad on the evening before the raid and which were seen heading the direction of Abbottabad before they were last sight of along with later reports of similar vehicles seen in Abbottabad close to the OBL compound lends further credibility to this supposition. Some of the neighbors spoke of individuals telling them the Pashtu and Urdu to stay indoors and or away from the compound as a security operation was underway. There were reports of the community being told a day before to stay indoors and of school children not going to school. The cutting of the trees next to the boundary wall of the OBL compound was also, according to some, mend to facilitate the approach of the helicopters. There were also reports a CIA safe house in the immediate neighborhood.
Dr. Shakeel Afridi was of course part of the CIA effort to confirm the identities of the residence of the OBL compound. It seems clear that the CIA did have ground support before or during the operation. More importantly, the ISI had no idea despite the fact that much of this ground support would have been in place much before May 2. Even after the incident, very little has emerged regarding any of the two support systems:
The Support network for CIA operations.
The Support network for OBL extended stay in Pakistan.
Too many questions remained unanswered.
Why were the trees cut and who cut them?
Was there a safe house?
Who kept the public from entering the house when the helicopter crash landed, etc, etc?
All this once again added up to a major intelligence failure to develop adequate information regarding the CIA network of support, which certainly existed, both before and during the incident. The US has not been concerned to deny the extensive CIA network it had developed in Pakistan. After the May 2 incident the government of Pakistan sought to significantly reduce the number of CIA personnel in Pakistan, whatever their guise.
Finding: while the ISI has failed to disclose specific details of extent and nature of the CIA networks that were in place for the location and killing of OBL, the existence of these networks in not in doubt. The Director General of Inter Services Intelligence frankly told the Commission that Pakistan had become, “too weak” and dependent on the US to take necessary actions to defend itself against the US policies.

Question: Was there a safe house set up by the CIA in the neighborhood of OBL compound?
Answer: Unfortunately, this is another instance of ISI failing to confirm or locate what was almost certainly a fact, I.e. the existence of the safe house in close proximity to the OBL’s compound. Since the house was not specifically located and shown to the Commission this is a conclusion that has to be drawn despite less than 100 percent certainty. US accounts, the testimonies of the witnesses from the neighborhood and the informed opinions of military personnel as well as the ISI’s acceptance of its likely hood to leave little doubt about its existence. Whether it was the same house that was rented for the fake vaccination program conducted by Dr.Shakeel Afridi or it was another house rented by an NGO fronting for the CIA is not certain. Even the house of Shamrez can’t be ruled out as a possible observation post for CIA personnel seeking to confirm the presence of OBL in the neighboring residence. Reportedly President Obama was not ready to give the go ahead for the mission unless ground intelligence confirmed a very high degree of probability that the OBL was actually there.
Finding: Despite the absence of conclusive evidence, the strong probability is that safe house was established in Bilal Town which had a direct line of sight to the OBL compound.

Question: How did the ISI and other civil and military intelligence agencies completely miss both the OBL and the CIA support net works?
Answer: The usual explanations of low profile, minimum signatures, a dedicated if small scale support network, excellent cover and clever choice of location offer with regard to the presence of OBL and his family. As for the CIA network, it is apparent that apart from the ISI protesting the lose visa regime which had over the past decade contributed to its spread, none of the other political, security and intelligence agencies had the knowledge, the will or the authority to combat the spread of the CIA’s tentacles all over the country. So the extent, to which the support net work for OBL was genuinely “missed”, ignored or possibly facilitated by rogue elements which were directly or indirectly associated with the security / intelligence establishment, can’t be determined with any confidence in the circumstances in which the Commission operated. As for the CIA network, there was culpable negligence and incompetence as for connivance; it has not been established at any level as mentioned. Although, the possibility of some degree of connivance inside or outside the government can’t be entirely discounted, no individual can be identified as guilty of connivance.
Finding: It was probably more case of negligence, inefficiency and incompetence rather than complicity. But for an institution such as ISI, negligence and incompetence are far more serious charges then possible connivance by rogue elements.

Question: How was the CIA able to set up an extensive network in Pakistan not just to track OBL but very likely to secure other vital intelligence affecting the dense and security interests of Pakistan?
Answer: This question has been covered by answers to previous questions. But it is correct to say that while the Commission’s mandate is confined to issues related to the May 2 incident, it cannot but note that the establishment of a parallel and more effective CIA intelligence network in Pakistan, has rendered the country’s national security fragile, vulnerable and uncertain.
Finding: This has been a case of nothing less than a collective and sustained dereliction of duty by the political, military and intelligence leadership of the country. This is a devastating but unavoidable finding on the performance of the entire national leadership.

Question: While India may be the primary and permanent threat to Pakistan, why was it in effect considered the only possible threat to Pakistan’s security, especially in view of the volatile relationship with the US, including its threats and several border raids against Pakistan’s forces on the west?
Answer: This question has been partially addressed. There was no National Security Policy. The Defense Policy of 2004 emanated from a non-existent National Security Policy which was one reason why it was so inadequate. The Joint Strategic Directive derived from an almost unchanging Defense Policy. From a Pakistani strategic doctrine point of view, the world stood still for almost a decade. The reason for this state of affairs was that policy of Pakistan, according to several international and national polls over the past decade, regarded the US, correctly or incorrectly, as a much greater immediate threat to Pakistan that India. Despite a growing American threat including actual border raids, drone strikes, special operations, the spread of a hostile spy network, public and private warnings of the limits of American patience with Pakistan’s alleged support for militants attacking American soldiers in Afghanistan, etc. All of this was systematically ignored or discounted even when explicit threats were communicated by President Obama. So India, and not the US, remained the focus of our security planning even when the western border had become far more immediately threatening that the eastern border. Needles to say, the eastern front deserved the necessary security attention in view of the history and state of Pak-India relations –but it should never have been at the expense of the far more immediate, if lesser threat that had emerged on the west, especially after 9/11 and more especially after the American invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, and its threatening chant of “do more’ to Pakistan.
Finding: This was because threat identification process was conducted on a more or less exclusively military and non-scientific basis instead of a comprehensive national security basis.
Determine the nature, background and causes of lapses of concerned authorities, if any

Question: Did the US raid on Abbottabad on May 2, 2011 represent a major failure to protect the sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence of Pakistan?
Answer: As a result of US raid on May 2, 2011, the country was seen by its people as unable or unwilling to defend itself against a threat that should have been anticipated and might very well have been averted through more responsible governance, national security planning and diplomacy. The US military action was not inevitable. While the US is exclusively responsible for the policies it chooses to implement, it is also the case that an awareness of the increasingly criminal and pathological nature of US policies would have enabled Pakistan to avert or minimize its adverse consequences.
Finding: Yes. Because of the policy shortsightedness of the Pakistani political and military leadership, the events of May 2, 2011 were the greatest humiliation visited upon the country since its breakup in 1971.
Question: Was this failure avoidable?
Answer: The buildup of American aggressiveness and hostility towards Pakistan were noted but the policy implications were simply not dealt with seriously. This in no ways justifies American actions. But there are other countries in the region that are in fact faced with even graver threats from the US. They are skillfully seeking to minimize worst outcomes through a range of military, economic and diplomatic options without compromising their policy principles and perceived national interests. They may or may not be successful but they are not guilty of any dereliction of duty in the face of such threats. No such leadership skill or responsibility was in evidence in the buildup to the American assault on Abbottabad. All the political and military disasters that have be fallen of Pakistan and could have been avoided through more responsible governance in the service of people rather than in the service of irresponsible renter elite. Technical and policy specific flaws happen in every society. But they do not normally add up to disastrous national outcomes unless the fundamentals of good and participatory governance have been missing for several decades. This has been the case in Pakistan.
Finding: Yes, if there was a willingness to recognize the developing threat and determination to avoid the worst possible outcomes through the use of a broader range of policy options.

Question: Was it a professional and technical failure or a policy and leadership failure?
Answer: As recorded in the Commission’s report, there were many individual performances that narrated disapproval and strictures, and there were many institutional capacity constraints and resource limitations. There was a general lack of due diligence by responsible individuals and insufficient consultation and coordination between institutions. But all of these should not have added up to systemic failure. They did so only because of a consistent and cumulative lack of good governance which itself was rooted in gross irresponsibility that was widespread among highest levels of political and government leadership. Tragically almost every government in Pakistan has inherited this legacy of irresponsible governance from its predecessors. Decent leadership may not immediately reverse deep rooted trends or quickly resolve complicated and long standing problems. But its absence most certainly exacerbates them. It minimizes the possibility of effectively addressing deficiencies in institutional and individual performances. Its costs are cumulative and eventually overwhelming. A stage comes where the disease become irreversible at that stage, mere survival is considered an indication of “resilience”.
Finding: The events of May 2,2011 were an outcome of professional and technical failure up to a point. It was far more a result of policy and leadership failure which provides the environment in which the policy decisions are taken at every level below it.

Question: Can the failures, shortcomings, lapses, incompetence, etc. of relatively junior officials with limited responsibilities cause major national security failure?
Answer: Only up to a point they can have cumulative impact that is damaging on a national scale. They need to be addressed through a range of corrective and enabling measures. They also need to be addressed in a political, security, administrative and above all, governance environment that is conducive to institutional reform and improved individual performance. None of these can happen without minimally competent and dedicated political leadership whose priorities are rooted in the interest of the people.
Finding: The shortcomings at the lower, local and provisional levels of the bureaucracy taken together certainly contributed to the creation of the conditions that facilitated both the extended stay of OBL in Pakistan and the failure to detect CIA activities in support of the military raid on May 2, 2011. But they were not the primary cause of the national tragedy.

Question: Can the political military and intelligence leadership be absolved of responsibility for a national security failure?
Answer: In any systemic failure it is the leadership of a major policy making and decision making institutions who are far more accountable then subordinate officials. A political or military leadership that exempts itself from such accountability cannot and will not defend or serve the vital interest of the country.
Finding: No. The political, military, intelligence and bureaucratic leadership cannot be absolved of their responsibility for the state of governance; policy planning and policy implementation that eventually rendered this national failure almost inevitable.

Question: Was May 2, 2011 stand alone failure or was it part of a series of national security failures, proceeding and following it.
Answer: May 2, 2011 was the worst failure since 1971. But it was not a standalone failure it was tragically a symptom of a much deeper national malaise that has ensured national humiliations and set backs at regular intervals from which few if any lessons have been drawn. The malaise, to put it bluntly has been the refusal of the ruling elite to see Pakistan as an independent value and overriding priority in itself. Instead, the policy and decision making elites have tended to see Pakistan as an instrument for the gratification of personnel, group, institutional and power interests. These interests have systematically taken priority over the national interest. At times these interests have been falsely equated with the national interests.
Finding: May 2, 2011 was not a standalone failure it did not represent an exception to the rule. It was the rule.

Question: What is meant by May 2, 2011 being a “national tragedy” does this refer to the killing of OBL in Pakistan?
Answer: It refers to the illegal manner in which he was killed along with three Pakistani citizens and, for more importantly, it refers to the American act of war against Pakistan on May 2, 2011 and contemptuous disregard of Pakistan’s sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity in the arrogant certainty of its unmatched military might. The US acted like a criminal thug but above all, the tragedy refers to the comprehensive failure of Pakistan to detect the presence of OBL on its territory for almost a decade or discern the direction of US policy towards Pakistan that culminated in the avoidable humiliation of the people of Pakistan.
Finding: It did not refer to the killing of OBL even though he had admirers in Pakistan. It refers to the comprehensive failures of Pakistan’s policies on several fronts.
Question: Would it be credible for the commission to reach a conclusion that for lack of“one hundred percent” hard evidence no institution or individual can be held responsible and accountable for the political, military, security and intelligence failures that culminated in a night of shame on May 2, 2011.
Answer: There is a difference between a commission of inquiry and a trial court which determines the guilt or innocence of an accused. For the letter, the burden of proof is much higher. “Incontrovertible evidence” is required, whether it is direct or circumstantial. For the former, the balance of probability for which credible reasons must be provided, is sufficient to make a finding on the basis of which further legal or political actions can be recommended that is why it is vital to know the political environment in which a commission of inquiry operates and tries to discharge its mandate.
Finding: No , It would not be credible to cite the lack of “100 percent hard evidence” as a reason not to identify personnel and institutional failures that contributed to May 2,2011.
Ends.
(The Jung Pakistan daily)

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