Former US president Barack Obama has revealed that he deliberately kept Pakistan out of the attack launched on Osama bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad.
According to report published inย Dawn,ย the book titled โA Promised Land,โ was released on Tuesday in which the ex-president presented a detailed account of the 2011-raid carried out by American troops on Osama bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.
Explaining the importance of taking out the most-wanted al-Qaeda terrorist, Obama stated in his book that he had to order the military strike despite knowing that the move violated the sovereignty of Pakistan.
โWhatever we chose to do in Abbottabad, then, would involve violating the territory of a putative ally in the most egregious way possible, short of war- raising both the diplomatic stakes and the operational complexities,โ he wrote in the book, perย Dawn.
Obama also disclosed that his decision to launch an attack on OBL’s compound was opposed by the then vice-president Joe Biden and his defense secretary Robert Gates.ย
Once the US troops were successful in killing Bin Laden, Obama wrote that he called several world leaders to break the news. He also phoned the then president of Pakistan Asif Ali Zardari, who “showed genuine emotion, recalling how his wife, Benazir Bhutto, had been killed by extremists with reported ties to Al Qaeda,โ Obama stated.
โI expected my most difficult call to be with Pakistanโs beleaguered president, Asif Ali Zardari, who would surely face a backlash at home over our violation of Pakistani sovereignty. When I reached him, however, he expressed congratulations and support. โWhatever the fallout,’ he said, โitโs very good news’,” Obama wrote.
Aside from Zardari, US officials also called the then army chief of Pakistan Gen Ashfaq Pervez Kayani who requested the United States to come clean about the raid so that the Pakistani public’s reaction could be managed.
Obama further wrote that he preferred not involving the Pakistani government in the raid because he believed certain elements inside the country maintained links to the Taliban and al-Qaeda.ย
โBased on what Iโd heard, I decided we had enough information to begin developing options for an attack on the compound. While the CIA team continued to work on identifying the Pacer, I asked Tom Donilon and John Brennan to explore what a raid would look like,โ he wrote, perย Dawn.

