16083805 In Pakistan, detained passed Bin Laden CIA informants
Pakistan's security services have detained five informants of the Central Intelligence Agency, which helped locate the leader of al-Qaeda Osama bin Laden, reports The New York Times. Among those detained was the Pakistani army, and Major, who gave the U.S. information about numbers of cars entering the bin Laden mansion in the city of Abbottabad. Exactly when informants were arrested by the CIA and what they are accused, not reported. An anonymous source at the CIA said that the head of the agency Leon Panetta raised this issue in early June during a visit to Islamabad. Bin Laden was eliminated on the night of May 2 at his mansion in Pakistan during the U.S. special forces operations. Pakistani authorities were not notified about the operation and had no reliable data on the whereabouts of bin Laden. In particular, it pointed out that the U.S. kept the operation secret for fear that it will talk about the environment of bin Laden and the terrorists will be able to escape. The leader of Al Qaeda residing in Abbottabad for several years. After its destruction the U.S. special services requested by Pakistan dossiers on several employees of Pakistani intelligence, which presumably could be involved in harboring "terrorist number one". Pakistan, in turn, rejected the possibility that bin Laden harbored secret service, but launched an investigation into the circumstances in which a terrorist could freely enter the country for such a long time. Eliminating bin Laden has led to a cooling of cooperation between the intelligence agencies of Pakistan and the United States. So, Islamabad did not allow the CIA to the interrogation of members of the family bin Laden. Subsequently, the deputy director of the CIA Mile Morrell praised the cooperation with Pakistan on the "three" on a ten-point scale. Panetta, head of the ministry at a meeting in Islamabad, directly stated that Pakistan's intelligence agencies cooperating with the militants.