Pakistan Ambassador Defends Arrest of CIA Informants
Husain Haqqani Says Individuals Who Helped Track Bin Laden Not Being Punished
WASHINGTON, June 19, 2011 -- Pakistani Ambassador to the United States Husain Haqqani defended his nation's decision to detain five informants who aided the CIA in tracking down Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.
"Pakistan has rounded up more than 30 people as part of the investigation about the Osama bin Laden compound," Haqqani said. "As far as the concern that there are people amongst the people that we have rounded up who are informants for the CIA, we will deal with them as we would deal with a friendly intelligence service, and we will resolve this to the satisfaction of our friends, as well as to our own laws."
Haqqani said the government took such action to get a better grasp of the operation's details.
"No one has been punished," Haqqani said. "Basically this is an exercise in trying to find out what has happened."
The Pakistani Ambassador maintained that Pakistani intelligence aided in the capture and killing of bin Laden, and assured that both the U.S. and Pakistani militaries are making the capture of the newly-named head of al Qaeda Ayman al-Zawihiri a top priority.
"The U.S side and Pakistan are working together on any information that any side has," Haqqani said. "Whatever we do, we will do jointly."