“The  current CIA station chief is a true pro, someone who knows how to work  well with foreign partners and is looking to strengthen cooperation with  Pakistani intelligence,” one of the US officials said.  
WASHINGTON: The Central Intelligence Agency has no  intention of bringing home its chief operative in Pakistan despite an  apparent attempt by the Pakistani media to unmask his identity, US  officials said on Monday.
While the Pakistani media  reports apparently were inaccurate, US officials said they believe the  leak was a calculated attempt to divert attention from American demands  for explanations of how Osama bin Laden could have hidden for years near  Pakistan’s principal military academy.
US special forces killed bin Laden a week ago.
American  officials suspect the attempted outing of the CIA station chief in  Islamabad — the second incident of its kind in six months — was the work  of someone in the Pakistani government, possibly Pakistan’s principal  spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence directorate (ISI).
The  tense relationship between the CIA and the ISI has deteriorated further  with the revelation that bin Laden lived for five years in Abbottabad,  close to Pakistan’s capital.
The Obama administration has demanded  access to ISI operatives and to bin Laden’s wives, who are in Pakistani  custody, to try to map out the al Qaeda leader’s support network.
A  private Pakistani TV network and a newspaper published what they said  was the real name of the top CIA representative in Islamabad.
Two  US officials familiar with dealings between Washington and Islamabad  indicated that the name the TV channel aired was wrong, and that the  real station chief would remain at his post.
“The current CIA  station chief is a true pro, someone who knows how to work well with  foreign partners and is looking to strengthen cooperation with Pakistani  intelligence,” one of the US officials said.
This week’s incident follows a similar, more damaging leak to the Pakistani media in December.
In  that incident, the man then serving as the CIA’s station chief in  Islamabad left the country after his name appeared in local media  accusing him of complicity in missile attacks in which civilians were  killed.
US officials said they believed the exposure of the  station chief was deliberate retaliation by elements of ISI who were  upset that their agency and some of its officers had been named as  defendants in a lawsuit filed in the US courts.
It was filed by  the families of Americans killed by Pakistani militants in attacks on a  Jewish center and other civilian targets in Mumbai, India in November  2008.
Allegations about ISI’s alleged relationship with the  Lashkar e Taiba, a Pakistan-based group accused of carrying out the  Mumbai attack, are expected to be aired at the trial in Chicago this  month of a businessman accused by US authorities of involvement with the  militant group.
The new attempt to disclose the CIA officer’s  identity is a fresh blow to Pakistani-US relations, which were strained  close to breaking point even before the raid last Monday in which US  Navy SEAL commandos secretly flew across Pakistani territory, attacked  his Abbotabad hide-out, killed the al Qaeda leader, and spirited away  his body for burial at sea.


 



 
 
 
 






 
 
 
