But then marketing techniques change. I was reminded of how street beggars have changed techniques over the years. While traditional street beggars would implore you for cash, newer ones ask you to buy them food and not necessarily give them cash. The more modern types come in the form of suited-booted men and women selling the story of having their bags stolen and if you could contribute money to help them get back home. It is all about winning confidence. No wonder the ISI directorates in most cities provide patronage to beggars’ networks as a source of intelligence and raising revenue.
The disclosure of identity and claiming that his agency did not know about his participation in Hazara demonstrations was to win confidence and then guide our entire conversation in one direction. But from experience, his claim is questionable as there are spooks watching spooks and it is not possible to have a Twitter ID of liberal pretence and go around all protests, be it for Rimsha Masih or Hazaras, with the agency not knowing anything. I was reminded of my once chance meeting with one DG (Analysis) ISI at a diplomatic reception. The gent didn’t encourage conversation, which I later found out was because of not wanting to blow up his chances of promotion as Lt General.
With a ‘trojan horse’ in our middle, it was not possible to have a sensible conversation. He tried to slip in his bright idea of stopping the Shia-Sunni conflict by reducing the gap between the military and intelligentsia. It is the new fixation with psy-ops and media as a tool of war. One wondered how many people does the agency want to buy? The ISI has tremendous access to all forms of journalists, columnists, academics, print and electronic media. As if tapping phone calls was not enough, the agency has eyes glued on social media as well. A well-informed friend once told me that spooks even watch the number of likes/retweets on your Facebook and Twitter comments and the nationalities of those that do so. Thus, if there are more Indians liking your comments, you are immediately seen as an enemy of the state. Such recipe stinks of low IQ and EQ as it reflects a lack of understanding of how the internet has made the world fairly transparent. To use this method to gauge someone’s nationalism is pathetic.
How does one even begin to take an agency that only uses people seriously? The spook, who was a colonel, was dismissive of the current caretaker chief minister of Balochistan accusing him of being part of a racket to destabalise the province. This is the same as rumours being spread about the ISI paying a couple of singers these days who have recently joined a political party. Even if it is for a good deed, the mere fact that such information is being disclosed is good enough to make such characters suspicious. Perhaps, a few years later, when these singers are in responsible positions as social and political icons and happen to defy the agency, another colonel will boast of knowing them “in and out” and how they were not reliable. Maligning sometimes helps in creating the perception of an agency’s neutrality. For instance, the spook discarded Jaish-e-Muhammad’s Masood Azhar as an Indian agent, despite the agency’s continued support to the jihadi leader. This is similar to the agency bad-mouthing a journalist of being a double agent after he was kidnapped, tortured and killed in May 2011.
Clearly, the intent of the colonel was to micro-manage debate on the critical issue of the murder of innocent citizens for the “sin” of being an ethnic and religious minority. He talked about the army not being on the same page as the ISI. This is in the same vein as spreading stories about inner disconnect within the organisation — since all directorates within the organisation operate independently, the officials of each reports to their respective director-generals but not to a single person at the top, which creates confusion. Or that “I as an individual have often supported liberal values but it is the top brass the needs to change”. Such impressions smack of a smart method to present the organisation on autopilot so one could never accuse it of anything. For example, it was a couple of days after Mumbai that the army and the ISI went to confess before foreign diplomats that there were a couple of junior officers who had links with the plan and not the organisation.
Not that the ISI and the army do not disagree or that everyone in the agency has knowledge of a central plan. Lt General (retd) Shahid Aziz confirmed that the ISI was out of the information loop during Kargil. Musharraf did not want to share information with an organisation headed by General (retd) Ziauddin Butt as he was close to Nawaz Sharif. A colonel may pretend to have extensive knowledge, which in reality is limited to what he is told. His knowledge of civilian life may also be limited because the gap between civil and military understanding of each other is fairly huge and real. We certainly need a meaningful civil-military dialogue and that certainly cannot happen with “iron curtains” — gagging conversation and spreading propaganda to malign people. Such an environment compromises rather than ensures security.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 4th, 2013.
COMMENTS (30)
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@Abdullah Hashmi: t is great to know those assigned to their jobs are so thorough about it…If the ISI is working so determinedly and smartly then all muslims and Pakistanis should feel proud and secure because of it. more powers to it..Muslims all over the world should be proud and thankful to it that it zealously and relentlessly exposes the westoxicated scum lurking and crawling amidst muslims.
Agreed. Good Analysis & Courageous words.
ISI zindabad..
Author..Thank you Indeed.
Author writes:"A well-informed friend once told me that spooks even watch the number of likes/retweets on your Facebook and Twitter comments and the nationalities of those that do so. Thus, if there are more Indians liking your comments, you are immediately seen as an enemy of the state. "
Where the elites, the rulers, the "servants", the leaders, are corrupt or westoxicated...it is great to know those assigned to their jobs are so thorough about it...If the ISI is working so determinedly and smartly then all muslims and Pakistanis should feel proud and secure because of it. more powers to it..Muslims all over the world should be proud and thankful to it that it zealously and relentlessly exposes the westoxicated scum lurking and crawling amidst muslims.
Very Courageous article. Thank you.
I hope the new government bring some changes in Pakistan. Thats the only hope for me at the moment.
ISI-phobia
This wonderful piece of writing by one of our acclaimed intellectuals highlights two important aspects of our national character. Firstly, we are very clever, and secondly we are quite focused. It is a separate matter that our focus is on the negativity of our life and patriotic outlook.
If only our enormous energies were concentrated on a few creative and peace-promoting activities, just imagine what we could do for this benighted nation and the world at large.
Enough of conspiracy theories.
A great Op Ed. My previous comments were not included, just wanted to say I agree with you.
Such obsession is unhealthy in the least. No where else are intelligence agencies or indeed the armed forces subjected to such intense criticism, only in Pakistan. I don't read anything about RAW in Indian papers, nothing, maybe because they are such angels., or maybe because our agencies allow us this liberty and theirs doesn't. Or maybe our so called liberal, intellectually dishonest elites, are easily bought for a few pieces of silver or in some cases a pat on the back by foreign think tanks.
ISI and other military intelligence agecies have come into limelight due to the long spells of martial laws in pakistan. Had there been a legitimate civilian rule like india or any other democratic country the military including its alled agencies would never have dared to dictate the country.
Your first line is incorrect. Why are you stating Hazara and Shia killings as two separate things? There lies the problem. You need to accept that it is one and the same thing and state it as it is. Afterall Hazaras are being killed only because they are Shia.
@ozzy: The lady who wrote this piece is an internationally recognised authority on the subject if Pakistan's military apparatus and its interface with society. I, for one would be loath to dismiss her assertions as nonsense. What exactly are your credentials to be so utterly dismissive of what she said.
I wonder if the beggars network is a metaphor for some other network such as the Sahafi Network. Nature of the work is pretty similar. Lifafas and handouts go together.
"No wonder the ISI directorates in most cities provide patronage to beggars’ networks as a source of intelligence and raising revenue." When are these conspiracy theories going to stop. ISI using beggars to collect intelligence? This is absurd. Our intelligence agency is there to protect us. We don't know how many lives their hard work might have saved. Please stop slandering these brave souls. They might have made mistakes, that does not give us the right to concoct ridiculous theories.
Oh come on stop picking on them!
No wonder Pak is still insecure when agents probe intellectual gatherings discussing minority plight instead of capturing the actual terrorists and letting them off the hook. That agency needs to be held accountable and set its priorities right. Stop betraying the nation and reform or be dismantled. Bad enough that its been recklessly incompetent, indulging in dangerous ideological extremist political and militant strategies, but then it tries to waste time in denials and cover-ups with ridiculously dishonest and stupid conspiratorial propaganda lies and ultimately worse criminal antics.
Please stay safe, Ayesha Siddiqa.
Brave.
Ayesha you are one courageous person! many a politician, social activists and journalist would make peace with the spooks and enjoy all its benefits, but not Ayesha! May the force be with you Ayesha
Amazing how the Army and ISI finds so many unpatriotic people amongst its citizens. Apparently, they seem to forget that everyone else is not in the military and thus doesnt have to agree with everything that they are told.
Ayesha - Interesting article. But I somehow feel you didn't cover the core issue of conversation with the colonel in detail. You are tieing too many divergent pieces of information to arrive at your conclusion. This op-ed won't surprise me if it were to come from an average person but I would expect a scholar of your stature to provide more substance.
Good analysis
ISI is so sweet and innocent looking.
Well Will I be hold accoutable for speaking my heart in the comment window:)?
Totally agreed.the hazards are victim of ISI's flawed policies and it is Now open secret.good analysis.
great piece ayesha as usual.
the army usually labels its enemies as non muslims to boost the morale of the armed forces and the general population when it sees a need for any military operation or intervention.
Before any Military operation, it is a tendency of the army to label its adversaries as Indians or Zionist agents. This is because the army is predominantly trained and indoctrinated to fight against the Hindus (“infidels Indians”).
A common exploitative tactic is to give a conflict a religious context e.g. by presenting the ‘enemy’ as enemies of Islam. Before the 1971 operation for East Pakistan (operation searchlight) Bengalese were targeted by issuances of fatwas for their ‘infidel activities’, thus painting the Bengalese as unfaithful and conspirators against Islam. This ideological manipulation influences the public sentiment by projecting a unislamic and imperialist image of foreign country/peoples. Prejudiced and censored history also makes the public vulnerable, making it easy to get their support for a military operation. The 1992 operation against MQM is a textbook case. Members of the MQM were portrayed as traitors who were secretly plotting to create a separate state with the help of the Indians. Similar strategy is employed in Swat and Waziristan operations where with the help of conspiracy theorists such as Zaid Hamid, the army is successful in gaining public support and motivation for troops.
Absolute relevant column with some thought provoking facts.
Brave words
I can bet a lot of amount that this person was a normal social network freak or some excited curious twitter follower... the writer is obsessed with military bashing, and now i think even more than major tricky sharma