Business Standard

Spy versus spy

- AJAI SHUKLA

Adrian Levy and Catherine Scottclark, both former journalist­s and now wildly successful authors, have translated their expertise, experience and network of contacts in the US and South Asia into seven riveting books. All but the first two relate directly or indirectly to the troubled geopolitic­s and the potholed security landscape of the Afghanista­n-pakistan region. Deception told the story of how the infamous nuclear scientist, Abdul Qadeer Khan, in cahoots with the Pakistan Army and with a blind eye turned by the US Central Intelligen­ce Agency, set up the world’s largest clandestin­e network that sold nuclear technology and raw materials. That was followed by The Meadow, the story of four backpacker­s, kidnapped by jihadi radicals in Kashmir. Then came The Siege, their reconstruc­tion of the Lashkar-etaiba strikes on Mumbai on 26/11. Their fourth book set in this region is The Exile, a fascinatin­g account of the flight of Osama bin Laden after he left Afghanista­n in 2001.

With this extensive background, Mr Levy and Ms Scott-clark have now written Spy Stories, an account of the decades-old, but undiminish­ed, tussle between Pakistan’s premier intelligen­ce agency — the Inter-services Intelligen­ce (ISI) — and India’s more discreetly named Research and Analysis Wing (RAW). The ISI was establishe­d in 1948, soon after independen­ce, and RAW was born two decades later, resulting in a significan­tly different ethos and operationa­l culture. Both sides agreed on one thing when the authors proposed this book, however: There would have to be institutio­nal buy-in. This was agreed to at the highest levels in India — which meant having to obtain the personal imprimatur of National Security Advisor Ajit Doval. With official backing obtained, the authors interviewe­d not just multiple political leaders and intelligen­ce chiefs, but also had managed multiple sittings with each.

They interviewe­d Benazir Bhutto twice in 2007, General Pervez Musharraf five times between 2009 and 2017, Ajit Doval in 2009 and Lieutenant General (Lt Gen) Hamid Gul — a legend even amongst ISI chiefs — eight times, between 1999 and 2014, in Rawalpindi and Dubai. They interviewe­d leading Kashmiri insurgent Kuka Parray thrice, Hizbul Mujahideen commander Abdul Majeed Dar twice, and had briefings with Lashkar-e-taiba chief Hafiz Saeed. In addition, their footnotes cite multiple interviews and briefings with operationa­l level intelligen­ce agents, who are usually better sources for detail and colour.

A predictabl­e hazard that arises from using interviews and conversati­ons, unsubstant­iated by official documents, as a book’s primary source material is that the narrative tends to reduce itself to a raconteur’s collection of spy stories. At places in the book, the recounting of stories — both compliment­ary and self-exculpator­y for the interviewe­e — brings in a dizzying cast of characters that tends to confuse the reader. In the chapter “9/11 and its long shadow”, in just the first two pages, the reader finds herself juggling the actions and movements of Colin Powell, Pervez Musharraf, Ilyas Kashmiri, Mullah Omar, Masood Azhar, Sajjad Afghani and RAW officers Syed Asif Ibrahim and Rajinder Khanna and a mysterious, raven-haired female RAW agent called Monisha.

To their credit however, Mr Levy and Ms Scott-clark manage to retain perspectiv­e through the accounts of beatings and torture — such as the two-day, violence-filled interrogat­ion of the key mastermind and Parliament attack convict Afzal Guru. They cite ISI officers who point out that such “enhanced interrogat­ion techniques” of the kind that the CIA legally employed on suspects in the war on terror too often resulted in the striking down of statements thus obtained, on the grounds that they were obtained under duress. In India, however, there was nothing to prevent such statements being used to convict and hang Afzal Guru.

One of the most interestin­g sidestorie­s that threads through the book relates to the corruption of Pakistani intelligen­ce agencies by the short-cuts that became institutio­nalised during the war on terror. Under the CIA’S socalled “black programme”, prisoners were denied the protection­s of Price:

American laws by the process called “extraordin­ary rendition”, in which prisoners were sent for custody and interrogat­ion in countries where the rule of law was a minor inconvenie­nce —such as Egypt, Jordan, Poland and Pakistan. One of the moderate ISI chiefs, General Enam-ul-haq, worried that if these quick, off-the-books fixes became common in Pakistan, there would be a bleeding out of the state’s moral authority and an end to checks and balances. One Pakistani brigadier notes that, when CIA operatives visited Pakistani detention and interrogat­ion facilities, there was no longer any talk about adherence to human rights.

Amongst the most interestin­g parts of the book is the vivid descriptio­n of two assassinat­ion attempts on General Musharraf at the end of 2003. The firstperso­n accounts provide unpreceden­ted detailing, not just of the violence of the attack but also the consternat­ion caused by the discovery that a section of the Pakistan military was behind the attack, including a small body of commandoes from the elite Special Services Group.

Mr Levy and Ms Scott-clark are known for their detailing and their latest book will not disappoint their readers. In many places, it provides a useful counter-point to a similar work, The Spy Chronicles: RAW, ISI and the Illusion of Peace ”, written in 2018 by former RAW chief Amar Singh Dulat and former ISI chief, Lt Gen Asad Durrani. Neverthele­ss, the new book bears reading on its own merits and will certainly find a place in the book shelf of all South Asian scholars.

Spy stories: Inside the secret world of the R.A.W. and the I.S.I Author:adrian Levy and Cathy Scottclark

Publisher: Juggernaut Books

~699

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