The Asian Age

Zardari hailed Osama killing: Book

It was obvious that US was going to do this, writes Obama’s aide

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Washington, June 7: When the then US President Barack Obama called his Pakistani counterpar­t Asif Ali Zardari to inform him about the killing of Osama bin Laden by the US forces in a raid in Abbottabad, the latter, according to a book, told him that this was a “good news”.

“Whatever the fallout, he ( Zardari) told Obama, it’s very good news. It’s been a long time. God be with you and the people of America,” Ben Rhodes, who was Obama’s close aide at the White House writes in his latest book, referring to the response of Zardari when the US President called him to inform about the American raid in Abbottabad on May 2, 2011.

Zardari was thrust into a leading role in Pakistani politics after his wife and prominent politician Benazir Bhutto was assassinat­ed by terrorists on December 27, 2007.

“Zardari was sure to face a backlash at home over America’s violation of Pakistani sovereignt­y,” writes Rhodes in his book The World as It Is: A Memoir of the Obama White House, which hit the book stores this week.

“But he wasn’t upset,” says Rhodes, giving his impression of the conversati­on between the two presidents, which happened before Obama went to address the nation informing his fellow Americans about the killing of Osama.

According to Rhodes, Obama had insisted that he would cross the border if the US had actionable intelligen­ce against Osama.

When his national security team were debating about crossing into the Pakistani territory to kill Osama, it was vice president Joe Biden who was reluctant to do so.

“It was obvious to me that Obama was going to do this. He had a way of looking straight ahead. I could tell that he had turned the intelligen­ce over and over in his mind (“this is a fifty- fifty call”), that he understood the risks with Pakistan,” writes Rhodes who Obama’s close aide.

“When he asked me what I thought, I simply said, ‘ You always said you were going to do this’. Because I’d lived through the debate on the campaign, I knew he had meant what he said about going into Pakistan,” the former White House official said.

Obama asked him to prepare for four scenarios: ( 1) bin Laden is at the compound and it’s a success; ( 2) bin Laden is at the compound and it’s messy — people killed, Pakistani security services, instabilit­y; ( 3) bin Laden is not there but we get in and out cleanly; ( 4) bin Laden is not there and it’s a mess.

“At the end of the meeting, Obama didn’t tip his hand, he just said he’d make his decision overnight,” Rhodes writes. was

 ?? — AP ?? President Donald Trump speaks at an iftar dinner, which breaks a daylong fast, celebratin­g Islam’s holy month of Ramadan, in the State Dining Room of the White House on Wednesday in Washington.
— AP President Donald Trump speaks at an iftar dinner, which breaks a daylong fast, celebratin­g Islam’s holy month of Ramadan, in the State Dining Room of the White House on Wednesday in Washington.
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