After thoroughly running background checks, Ahmad identified the suspected mole, and that eventually led to 'Operation Rising Sun', a sting operation that resulted in the successful arrest and conviction of a local Pakistani CIA agent, declaration of a few undercover CIA agents and diplomats at the U.S. Consulate General in Karachi as persona non-grata, and their return to the United States.[15][16]
The details and veracity of this assignment has been criticized in an editorial written in Dawn, whose investigations identified the engineer who was working for the Karachi Electric (KE) electric power transmission, and who had been a prominent member of the Pakistan Peoples Party, not working for the KANUPP nuclear power plant as claimed by Ahmed.[17]
In 1989, Brig. Imtiaz, in a secret conversation with MajorAmir Khan, talked on sponsoring the Members of Parliament (MPs) belonging to the PPP to bring about a vote of no-confidence movement to remove Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in order to bring the Pakistan Muslim League (N) (PML(N)), led by its then-President Fida Mohammad Khan and his chief secretary Nawaz Sharif, into the administration.: contents [23]: 146 [24] The plan backfired when the conversation was apparently videotaped by the IB and ISI, and was released to the public, which eventually led to General Mirza Aslam Beg, then-Army Chief, to allow Military Intelligence (MI) to conduct the inquiry in such manner.: 146 [24]
After his discharge in 1989, Ahmed was reportedly employed by then-Chief Minister of Punjab, Nawaz Sharif, as his Additional Chief Secretary in the Government of Punjab, which he served as until 1990.: 30–31 [26]: 151 [4]
After the resignations of Prime Minister Sharif and PresidentGhulam Ishaq Khan, Ahmed resigned from the directorship of the Intelligence Bureau. He termed his resignation as "on principle" on 19 April 1992.: 29 [30]
In 1997, Ahmed was appointed by Prime Minister Sharif as Director-General of the Federal Investigation Agency but the appointment did not come through.: 38–39 [4] In October 1997, Ahmed took over the chairmanship of Network Television Marketing, appointed by its board of directors amid controversy when NTM's chairman Faisal Sher Jan was fired from the channel.[31]: 38 [4] He chaired the channel until 1999.: 40 [4]
Controversies and allegations
The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) secured the plurality after the 1993 Pakistani general election, and Prime Minister Bhutto opened the investigation and inquiry when authorizing the arrest warrants of Imtiaz Ahmed on charges of indulging in illegal activities in 1994.: 159–160 [32] The case against him was marked on the political motives, and he was later released due to lack of evidences.: 159–160 [32]: 9–10 [33]
After the 1999 Pakistani coup d'état by General Pervez Musharraf, the inquiries led by NAB indicted Ahmed on large-scale corruption and misappropriation of funds while serving as the Director of IB, eventually finding him guilty in 2001.[34] He was sentenced to eight years imprisonment for corruption, and was released in 2008–09.[34]
On 21 September 2010, Imtiaz Ahmed was again arrested along with Adnan Khawaja, the former chairman of the Oil and Gas Development Company (OGDC), and was shifted to Adiala Jail.[35] In a Supreme Court bench headed by then-Chief Justice of PakistanIftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, who heard the NRO implementation case, Ahmed was arrested from the court by order of the Supreme Court during the hearing of a case relating to the implementation of the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO).[35]
On 25 September 2010, the Supreme Court eventually released Ahmed as he already had served his time.[36][37][38] His release was given on grounds of his age and medical condition, as he reportedly suffered from coronary artery disease.[35]
In 2009 Humayun Akhtar Khan, the former Commerce Minister and son of Gen. Akhtar Abdur Rahman, had leveled accusations when he reportedly marked: Brig. Imtiaz is the man who encouraged my father to board on the C-130 aircraft which later met an accident. I ask Brig. Imtiaz to explain what led him to play a role in my father's killing, Humayun Akhtar maintained.[39]
Jinnahpur plan controversy
After his release in 2009, Ahmed became an intelligence commentator and gave several television interviews on intelligence management. He revealed that the Jinnahpur conspiracy was fabricated while giving more information on the Operation Midnight Jackal secret funding of political parties against the PPP.[40][41]
^Malik, I. (1996). "Security Agencies against Citizens". State and Civil Society in Pakistan: Politics of Authority, Ideology and Ethnicity. Washington DC, U.S.: Springer. p. 330. ISBN9780230376298. Retrieved 18 November 2017 – via Google Books.
^Ahmed, Khaled (2002). Pakistan: The State in Crisis. Vanguard.
^Khan, Tahir Hassan (31 August 2009). "The politics of Brigadier 'Billa'"(webarchives). thenews.com.pk. Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan: Tahir Hassan Khan's report at The News International. The News International. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
^Hoodbhoy, Nafisa (2011). "News is what the rulers wants to hide"(google books). Aboard the Democracy Train: A Journey Through Pakistan's Last Decade of Democracy. Karachi, Pakistan: Anthem Press. ISBN9780857289063. Retrieved 20 November 2017.