Pak Army summons ex-ISI head over book co-authored with ex-RAW chief
May 26, 2018 15:08Pakistan's powerful army has summoned former Inter-Services Intelligence chief Asad Durrani on May 28 to seek clarification over a book he co-authored with India's ex-spy chief A S Dulat, accusing him of 'violating' the military code of conduct.
Lieutenant General Durrani (retd) , who headed the ISI agency from August 1990 till March 1992, along with Dulat has written The Spy Chronicles: RAW, ISI and the Illusion of Peace.
The book was released on Wednesday.
The Pakistan Army in a statement said that Durrani, 77, was being called to General Headquarters (GHQ) on May 28 and 'will be asked to explain his position on views attributed to him in book Spy Chronicles''.
'Attribution taken as violation of Military Code of Conduct applicable on all serving and retired military personnel,' according to the statement issued last night.
Durrani was summoned after ousted Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif yesterday demanded an urgent meeting of the high-powered National Security Committee to discuss the content of the book.
Durrani made certain observations in the book, including a claim that then prime minister Yousaf Raza Gillani was fully on board regarding the Abbottabad US Navy Seals operation against Osama Bin Laden and that a special deal had been struck between the US and Pakistani governments over it, media reports said.
He also went on to suggest that Pakistan mishandled the case of Indian national Kulbushan Jadhav, sentenced to death by a Pakistani military court on spying charges. Former chairman Pakistan Senate Raza Rabbani criticised the book by rival spy chiefs.
"Had a politician done the same thing he would have been labelled a traitor," he said. -- PTI
Lieutenant General Durrani (retd) , who headed the ISI agency from August 1990 till March 1992, along with Dulat has written The Spy Chronicles: RAW, ISI and the Illusion of Peace.
The book was released on Wednesday.
The Pakistan Army in a statement said that Durrani, 77, was being called to General Headquarters (GHQ) on May 28 and 'will be asked to explain his position on views attributed to him in book Spy Chronicles''.
'Attribution taken as violation of Military Code of Conduct applicable on all serving and retired military personnel,' according to the statement issued last night.
Durrani was summoned after ousted Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif yesterday demanded an urgent meeting of the high-powered National Security Committee to discuss the content of the book.
Durrani made certain observations in the book, including a claim that then prime minister Yousaf Raza Gillani was fully on board regarding the Abbottabad US Navy Seals operation against Osama Bin Laden and that a special deal had been struck between the US and Pakistani governments over it, media reports said.
He also went on to suggest that Pakistan mishandled the case of Indian national Kulbushan Jadhav, sentenced to death by a Pakistani military court on spying charges. Former chairman Pakistan Senate Raza Rabbani criticised the book by rival spy chiefs.
"Had a politician done the same thing he would have been labelled a traitor," he said. -- PTI