ABSTRACT

This book is the first comprehensive study of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI).

The rise of Pakistan-backed religious extremist groups in Afghanistan, India, and Central Asia has focused international attention on Pakistan’s premier intelligence organization and covert action advocate, the Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate or ISI. While ISI is regarded as one of the most powerful government agencies in Pakistan today, surprisingly little has been written about it from an academic perspective. This book addresses critical gaps in our understanding of this agency, including its domestic security mission, covert backing of the Afghan Taliban, and its links to al-Qa’ida. Using primary source materials, including declassified intelligence and diplomatic reporting, press reports and memoirs, this book explores how ISI was transformed from a small, negligible counter intelligence outfit of the late-1940s into the national security behemoth of today with extensive responsibilities in domestic security, political interference and covert action. This study concludes that reforming or even eliminating ISI will be fundamental if Pakistan is to successfully transition from an army-run, national security state to a stable, democratic society that enjoys peaceful relations with its neighbours.

This book will be of interest to students of intelligence studies, South Asian politics, foreign policy and international security in general.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part I|47 pages

ISI's Early Days

chapter 1|12 pages

ISI's Origins

chapter 2|14 pages

ISI and Anglo-American Intelligence

chapter 3|10 pages

Covert Action in Northeast India

chapter 4|10 pages

Intelligence and the 1965 War

part II|47 pages

ISI at War

chapter 5|8 pages

ISI's Domestic Missions under Ayub

chapter 6|13 pages

Intelligence Failures in East Pakistan

chapter 7|13 pages

Intelligence and the 1971 War

chapter 8|12 pages

ISI under Zulfikar Ali Bhutto

part III|31 pages

Overreach

chapter 9|14 pages

Zia ul-Haq, Afghanistan and ISI

chapter 10|16 pages

ISI's Afghanistan War

part IV|69 pages

Adrift

chapter 11|15 pages

Intelligence and Democracy

1988–1999

chapter 12|15 pages

Insurgency in Kashmir and Punjab

chapter 13|9 pages

Escalating Tensions with India

chapter 14|14 pages

Pakistan's Afghan Quagmire

chapter 15|15 pages

ISI and Osama Bin Laden

part V|92 pages

Confrontation

chapter 17|14 pages

ISI–CIA Liaison after 9/11

chapter 18|14 pages

Friction in ISI–CIA Relations

chapter 19|15 pages

ISI's Internal Security Missions

chapter 20|11 pages

US Operations in Pakistan

chapter 21|13 pages

ISI and the Demise of Bin Laden

chapter |14 pages

Conclusions