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REVEALED: Pakistan's generals sold Dr. Aafia Siddiqui to America for millions of dollars.
20 years later, a secret service agent just broke his silence.
He's risking his life to expose what really happened.
Here is the conspiracy he exposed (it's truly horrifying):
On March 30, 2003, Pakistani authorities abducted Aafia from Karachi.
But she wasn't alone.
They took her 3 children too:
• Ahmed, age 6
• Mariam, age 4
• Suleman, 6 months old
What happened next is quite disgusting:
The Pakistani military sold them to the CIA.
General Musharraf later bragged in his book about selling "hundreds" of people to Americans for bounties.
Aafia was one of them.
What happened to her children was even more revolting:
Ahmed was thrown in an Afghan prison for 5 years.
They told him his name was "Ihsan Ali."
And if he ever said he was Ahmed, they'd kill him.
He was 6 years old.
What about the second child Mariam?
Mariam was forcibly adopted by a white Christian American family.
She disappeared for 7 years.
Baby Suleman? He vanished completely.
To this day, no one knows if he's alive.
Aafia herself was taken to Bagram Air Force Base's underground black site:
Multiple witnesses have now confirmed she was held there.
She was tortured. She was raped.
This went on for 5 years.
The CIA showed her fake photos of her boys covered in blood:
They tortured children behind one-way glass, claiming they were hers.
She told them whatever they wanted to hear.
They didn't stop.
In 2008, they finally realized she was nobody important and they had brutally tortured someone innocent.
But there was a problem:
If she returned to Pakistan with her story, it would end Musharraf's government.
So they planned her murder:
They sent her to Ghazni, Afghanistan with a promise:
"Go there and you'll get your daughter back."
They first dressed Ahmed (her son) as a suicide bomber:
Then Afghan police were tipped off about a "terrorist attack."
The plan was simple:
Police would arrive and shoot her on sight.
No questions asked.
But one man, Muhammadi, spoke to her in Urdu and stood between her and the guns.
That's when the Americans showed up:
They shot her in the stomach, then claimed SHE fired at them.
The evidence? Two bullet holes in the wall.
But video from earlier that day shows those holes already existed.
No shells from the gun were found:
She was convicted of attempted murder and sentenced to 86 years.
The second longest sentence in US history for this charge.
She's been in solitary confinement in Texas ever since.
The prison has the worst sexual assault rate in America:
Now an ISI whistleblower has given a sworn affidavit confirming everything:
The abduction. The children. The cover-up.
Pakistan's establishment has spent 22 years threatening anyone who speaks out.
Dead bodies have been left outside her sister's door.
But here's what gives a ray of hope:
Ahmed survived and was returned.
Mariam was found after Afghanistan's government forced her release.
And Suleman? He might still be alive, possibly adopted somewhere in America.
The search continues.
This week on The Thinking Muslim, we have Clive Stafford Smith on the podcast to discuss the case of Dr Aafia Siddiqui, including the troubling role of Pakistani authorities in her abduction, the heartbreaking seizure of her children, and the broader issues of state complicity.
I want to share an observation based on personal experience and familiarity with the system. Most Pakistani Army officers, JCOs, and NCOs come from ordinary families and generally reflect the values of ordinary Pakistani society. Around 85–90% of officers retire at or below the rank of Colonel, and only a small percentage, maybe 10–15%, move beyond that level.
Where the Problems Start
In the Army, promotion to Major is straightforward. But once an officer reaches that rank, those with strong academic records or excellent performance go to Staff College in Quetta. This is where long-term career paths begin to shift. The institution is very secular and used to send top officers for further education or training to places like Sandhurst, West Point, or various U.S. military schools.
In my view, this foreign training is unnecessary. The Pakistan Army has enough real battlefield experience to train its own officers. The purpose of sending officers abroad often seems less about training and more about identifying and shaping future senior leadership, sometimes influenced by foreign interests.
Promotion Path
After Staff College, a Major returns to his unit as Second-in-Command (2IC). Later, as a Lt. Colonel, he gets his first chance to command a battalion. About 80% of officers retire at this rank. Some continue to Colonel, and a few move on to Brigade command and become Brigadiers.
Up to this point, promotions are mostly merit-based. But once officers enter the ranks of Brigadier and above, politics can start shaping careers as much as performance. History shows examples of this:
General Zia-ul-Haq was seen by many as an average officer but was promoted over several more capable generals by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.
General Pervez Musharraf, widely regarded as more professionally competent, was passed over by Nawaz Sharif in favour of someone perceived as more politically convenient.
Both eventually imposed martial law, though with different styles, Zia using an Islamic narrative and Musharraf a secular one but both maintained close ties with the United States.
Impact on the Rank and File
Meanwhile, the vast majority of officers and soldiers, easily 85% or more are simply dedicated professionals who fight, bleed, and sacrifice for Pakistan. They have no foreign connections and no political ambitions. They are the ones who suffer the most, including at the hands of militant groups like TTP, despite having no involvement in high-level decisions that shape national policy.
These juniors (officers, NCOs and JCOs) obey the tactical commands on their Captains, Majors occasionally Lieutenant Colonel and die.
The system makes it extremely difficult for any openly religious or “pro-Islam” Brigadier to rise further. By the time an officer reaches 1-star rank, his entire career and profile are well known, including to foreign partners.
What’s the Short-term Solution?
If the system is flawed, it will keep producing flawed outcomes. A few practical steps could help straighten things out, similar to what President Erdogan did in Turkey:
Break up the power of a single COAS by establishing four regional 4-star commanders (South, Central, East, West), each with 3-star corps commanders under them.
Give equal 4-star authority to the Navy and Air Force.
Stop the practice of extended terms for top military officers.
End foreign military training in the UK and US, since local institutions are fully capable.
The recent 27th Amendment works completely against these kinds of reforms.
Why Doesn’t the Military Do This?
Because concentrating so much power in one office, the COAS serves the interests of external actors who prefer Pakistan to remain manageable and predictable. A single powerful individual is easier to influence than a balanced institution.
I understand that majority of people on this forum see these issues in simple black-and-white terms “with us or against us” but the reality is far more complex. My aim is only to explain how the system works and why it keeps producing the same outcomes.
In order to think, you need to have knowledge of history of how British created the "Indian Army" on what basis, how they trained them and how loyalty was instilled.
How Indians (Sikhs, Pushtuns, Balocks and Gorkha) shot and killed their own fellow Indians at Jallianwala Bagh
Takfeeri religious zealots cannot understand how to build Institutions an example is Taliban 2.0. US left 7 billion USD worth of weapons and if someone had a vision they would train the next cadre of officers, JCO and NCO to usher Afghanistan into the next era and serve the Ummah, instead you have Talibs driving around Humvees and flying air Assets like a Taxi. Taliban 2.0 have never and will never be able to fight a war because the terrain and tactics suit hit-and-run operations while melting back into population or escape across the border.
The capabilities to fight as a cohesive military takes decades to master! There are huge militaries around the world (India, Europe etc) with massive budgets which under perform while Turkiye and Pakistan with a much smaller budget continue to run circles around them, why is that?
Study the Serbian bombings ordered by Bill Clinton and see how only US, UK and Turkish Airfroce was able to enforce Non-fly zone over Serbia and rest of NATO couldn't do it.
The only issue here is not just "Islam vs Secularism" although this is the only lens which majority of people on this forum have.
What the Muslim Ummah needs is a Naval and Airforce professionally able to project power hundreds and thousands of miles away for the sake of Islam and protect Muslims. How do we get there in the long term? How does the Ummah enforce Naval blockade?
Basically, everything the Ummah was able to do 150 years ago when France tried to publish caricatures of Nabi Muhammad ﷺ
How does the Ummah deploy to anywhere in the globe within 24-48 hours of an Earthquake or Flood or Tsunami and establish field hospitals and provide first response.
Taliban 2.0 have no capability, no clue, no desire and no pathway to do anything of that scale and leadership of Muslims is Secular and "Anti-Islam" so no hope there either.
But we remain hopeful in the Mercy of Allah Ta'ala because it is his Deen and Allah Ta'ala will take care of it. Allah Ta'ala will correct the heart of Mahdi (AS) in one Night!
This cannot be undone and I am sure it will be greatly appreciated.
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