Question Afghanistan Intelligence Pakistan.

Pakistan's intelligence agency should have known Osama bin Laden is hiding not far from the capital, Afghan Defense Ministry said on Wednesday (05/04/2011). This is the first direct comment on the alleged inability of Kabul's neighbors to track down Al Qaeda leaders. Defense Ministry spokesman, Zaher Azimy, said the case raises question about Pakistan's ability to adequately protect nuclear weapons.
Osama bin Laden, architect of 11 September 2001 attacks in the United States, were killed in an attack by U.S. Navy commandos in military action in the military garrison city of Abbottabad, 60 miles north of Islamabad, on Monday (02/05/2011).
The members of the U.S. House of Representatives requesting review aid to Pakistan after it was revealed that bin Laden could live in that house, not far from Pakistan's main military academy, for five or six years. "When we talk about the location of the house and a military academy near it ... at least the country should know about the activities in the house and who lived there," said Azimy a news reporter.
"If Pakistan's intelligence agency does not know about a house near the academy, the institution needs to be questioned. If I were a security analyst, I will raise very important issues," he said.
Pakistan's Inter-Intelligence Agency (ISI) and military mum about the attack. This fact raises questions about whether they knew long ago where Osama was hiding.
ISI is also accused of maintaining links with the guerrillas who are trying to attack U.S. troops on the border with Afghanistan. Kabul and Islamabad have long had a difficult relationship.
Azimy said the death of Osama also raises broader questions about the ISI and the Pakistan military, including the ability to secure its nuclear weapons. "If the intelligence agencies that Osama did not know how many there for six years, how the agency can protect senjta-strategic weapons?" he said.
"How the world can be convinced that weapons are important and the atom would not be a danger in the future?" he said again.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai is indirectly related to bin Laden in his first statement on Monday, said it proved the global war against extremists is not in Afghan villages.

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