Former NSA James Jones says he delivered memo to Mullen

November 21, 2011 12:05 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 11:56 pm IST - Islamabad

Former United States National Security Advisor James Jones. File photo

Former United States National Security Advisor James Jones. File photo

Former United States National Security Advisor James Jones has said that he was the intermediary who delivered to former military chief Admiral Mike Mullen a secret memorandum that Pakistani-American businessman Mansoor Ijaz purportedly drafted on behalf of the Pakistan government.

Mr. Jones confirmed to the Pakistani media that he received the memo from the Pakistani-American businessman and delivered it to Mullen in May.

Mr. Ijaz has claimed that he drafted the memo on the instructions of Pakistan’s Ambassador to the U.S. Husain Haqqani, a charge denied by the envoy.

However, Mr. Jones said he was neither a serving U.S. government official or associated with the Obama administration in any way when he delivered the memo to Mr. Mullen.

“I was not in government when I forwarded the message to Admiral Mullen on May 10,” Mr. Jones, who was the NSA of President Barack Obama from January 2009 to October 2010, said in an email sent to some Pakistani journalists.

Mr. Jones further said he had confirmed his role as the intermediary to The Financial Times four days ago.

Haqqani has been at the centre of what the media is referring to as the “Memogate” controversy since Mr. Ijaz claimed last month that the memo delivered to Mr. Mullen had sought American assistance to prevent a possible military takeover in the wake of the US raid that killed Osama bin Laden on May 2.

Though Mr. Ijaz claimed he drafted the memo on the instructions of Mr. Haqqani, the envoy has said he played no role in drafting or delivering the memo to Mr. Mullen.

Mr. Haqqani arrived in Islamabad on Sunday after being called back by the government to explain his position on the memo.

Before leaving Washington, Mr. Haqqani said he would appear before a Pakistani parliamentary committee which would be headed by a religious scholar who was also a lawmaker.

He said the panel would hold a full inquiry into the issue and try to “sift facts from fiction“.

Mr. Haqqani said he would urge the committee to investigate why “the statement of a doubtful individual was blown out of proportion“.

He said the enemies of democracy were behind the scandal and wanted to “use it as an excuse to undo democracy“.

Reports have said the powerful military is pressuring the weak civilian government to remove Mr. Haqqani from his post.

Mr. Haqqani has always had an uneasy relationship with the military for his pro-democracy stance.

Mr. Haqqani, a close aide of Zardari, has served as a vital link between the Pakistan government and the Obama administration and played a key role in resolving several recent crises in bilateral relations, including the stand-off over CIA contractor Raymond Davis, who was arrested after he shot and killed two men in Lahore earlier this year.

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