| MATT DRUDGE // DRUDGE REPORT 2002� 
 
  
 
 
 
 MAG:   SECRET PAKISTANI AIRLIFT AIDED TALIBAN, AL QAEDA FIGHTERS
 Sun Jan 20 2002 12:15:41 ET
 
 American intelligence officials and high-ranking military officers say that
Pakistani Army military and intelligence advisers who had been working with the
Taliban  in Afghanistan were flown to safety in Pakistan during the siege of
Kunduz last November, in a series of nighttime airlifts by the Pakistani Air
Force!
 
 Controversial Seymour Hersh returns to the pages of the NEW YORKER, according to publishing sources,  in the January 28, 2002 edition, hitting racks Monday.
 
 The airlifts "were approved by the Bush Administration," Hersh reports.
 
 The  evacuation, which had been conceived of as a limited operation, "apparently slipped out  of control, and,  as an unintended consequence, an unknown number of Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters managed to join in  the  exodus."
 
 MORE
 
 One  American  defense adviser tells Hersh, "Everyone brought their  friends  with  them.  You're  not going to leave them behind to get their throats cut."
 
 As one senior intelligence official puts it, "Dirt got through the screen."
 
 Indian  intelligence officials tell Hersh that they number the escaped officials and fighters at four or five thousand; American intelligence officials put  the  total  far lower. But "the Bush Administration may have done more than simply  acquiesce  in  the  rescue effort," Hersh reports.
 
 "At the height of the standoff,  according  to  both  a C.I.A. official and a military analyst who has worked  with  the  Delta  Force...the  Administration  ordered the United States Central  Command  to  set  up  a  special air corridor help insure the safety of Pakistani  rescue  flights from Kunduz to the northwest corner of Pakistan."
 
 The Department of Defense did not respond to a request for comment.
 
 Pakistani leader Pervez  Musharraf  won  American  support  for the evacuation, Hersh reports, by warning  that losing a large number of Pakistanis would jeopardize his political survival.
 
 In India, a recently retired Indian diplomat tells Hersh, the feeling is  that  "Musharraf  has two-timed you. What have you gained? Have you captured
Osama  bin  Laden?"
 
 A senior Indian intelligence official says, "Musharraf can't afford to keep the Taliban in Pakistan. They're dangerous to his own regime. Our reading  is  that  the  fighters  can  go  only to Kashmir."
 
 Kashmir remains  the flashpoint. "The situation is bloody explosive," a senior Pakistani diplomat says, suggesting that Musharraf has not been given enough credit by the Indian  government  for the "sweeping changes" he's brought to Pakistan.
 
 A retired C.I.A. officer who  served  as a station chief in South Asia tells Hersh he found it especially disturbing  that  each  country  had  "imperfect  intelligence" about the other.  "Couple  that  with  the  fact  that these guys have a propensity to believe the worst  of  each other, and have nuclear weapons, and you end up saying, 'My God, get me the hell out of here.'"
 
 Developing...
 
 
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