July 4, 2017

Pakistani spy agencies 'angry' over Raymond Davis memoir

Pakistanis took blood money to release Raymond Davis



Pakistan intelligence and security officials reacted angrily Sunday to the release of a memoir by an ex-CIA contractor, saying his 2011 acquittal in a high-profile murder case and subsequent return to the U.S. was an arrangement between Pakistan and the U.S., not among individuals.

Raymond Davis made headlines this week when his book exposed the alleged role of Pakistan’s former spy chief Shuja Pasha in quashing a murder trial against Davis by paying $2.4 million to the families of two men Davis killed while working for the CIA in Pakistan in 2011.

The incident triggered a diplomatic crisis when police arrested Davis for the killings. But, seven weeks later, the families of the slain men told a court that they pardoned Davis, ending a tense showdown between the U.S. and Pakistan, America’s ally in the war on extremism.

Sunday’s reaction came after Davis released “The Contractor: How I Landed in a Pakistani Prison and Ignited a Diplomatic Crisis.” In the book, Davis says he considered the two Pakistanis a threat when they rode their motorcycle near his car and one of them had a gun in his hand.

“I had never killed anyone before,” he writes. “Thankfully, all ten rounds I fired found their intended targets.”

A Pakistani intelligence official acknowledged the country’s spy agency helped the CIA to remove Davis from Pakistan, but said that no such help would be given the CIA in the future. The intelligence official spoke on the condition of anonymity in accordance with agency policy.

“(Davis’) release was an arrangement between two states and not two individuals. It was based on goodwill between two agencies or two states and it helped the CIA get their man out through legal means, but in a confidential arrangement,” said the official.

A security official familiar with the interrogation of Davis after his arrest confirmed that Pakistan helped to facilitate Davis’ release. He said he was also angry over the publication of the “scandalous memoir.” He, too, spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to the media on the record.

“If the objective was to turn Pakistani and (its spy agency’s) favor into a vilification campaign, then Raymond Davis and his sponsors achieved it for a short period. But Pakistan and its intelligence agencies will not be obliged to repeat such favors in future,” the intelligence official told The Associated Press.




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