(ISI), but another branch, and was now residing in the United States.
Another former official, ex-ISI chief Hamid Gul, told AFP he was also aware of the defector.“That is in my knowledge, that someone defected,” he said. “There was too big a reward, he became a mole and agent to put in practice their plan.”
The US had placed a $25-million-dollar bounty on information leading to the capture or killing of Bin Laden — a sum Washington has said it never paid because no human informants were used.
According to Hersh’s report, the US learned that Pakistani authorities had Bin Laden in their custody and were hoping to use him as a shield against al-Qaeda and Taliban attacks.Later, Hersh reported, the US convinced Pakistan to stage a fake raid to kill Bin Laden, providing a boost for US President Barack Obama — then in his first term — while also allowing the Pakistanis to deny having anything to do with the killing.
Both former Pakistani officials, however, and several other serving officials, have dismissed the allegation that such a deal had been brokered.The then-serving senior military official said that in the aftermath of the raid, “the mood here and the reaction here was of great frustration even at the top level.
“If the top guys had been part of the plan — they were the worst hit. They were almost forced to resign.“With the kind of bad name and reputation that came with such a great risk, it wasn’t worth it.”
A leaked Pakistani government report in 2013 said Bin Laden arrived in Pakistan in the spring or summer of 2002 — after the 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan — and settled in Abbottabad in August 2005.
The report, which coined the term “governance implosion syndrome” to explain the extent of official failures to detect him, said he was once stopped for speeding and enjoyed wearing a cowboy hat.Qazi Khalilullah, Pakistan’s Foreign Office spokesman, meanwhile said the government was investigating Hersh’s account and would announce its reaction soon.