By country Afghanistan • 1982–1997: ISI is believed to have had access to
Osama bin Laden in the past. B. Raman, former
Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW) officer, claims that the Central Intelligence Agency through the ISI promoted the smuggling of heroin into Afghanistan to turn Soviet troops into heroin addicts and thus greatly reduce their fighting potential. • 1986: Worrying that among the large influx of
Afghan refugees who had come into Pakistan because of the Soviet–Afghan War were members of
KHAD (Afghan Intelligence), the ISI convinced Mansoor Ahmed, who was the
chargé d'affaires of the Afghan embassy in Islamabad, to turn his back on the Soviet-backed Afghan government. He and his family were secretly escorted out of their residence and given safe passage on a London-bound British Airways flight in exchange for classified information in regard to Afghan agents in Pakistan. The Soviet and Afghan diplomats did not find his family. • 1990: According to
Peter Tomsen, the United States
Special Envoy to Afghanistan, neighboring Pakistan had tried to bring
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar to power in Afghanistan against the opposition of all other mujahideen commanders and factions as early as 1990. In October 1990, the ISI had devised a plan for Hekmatyar to conduct a mass bombardment of the Afghan capital
Kabul, then still under communist rule, with possible Pakistani troop reinforcements. According to Pakistani Afghanistan expert
Ahmed Rashid, "between 1994 and 1999, an estimated 80,000 to 100,000 Pakistanis trained and fought in Afghanistan" on the side of the Taliban. • 2008: Militants attacked the Indian Consulate General in Jalalabad in 2007. According to Afghanistan's National Directorate of Security, individuals arrested by the Afghan government stated that the ISI was behind the attack and had given them ₹120,000 for the operation. • 2001 onwards: American officials believe members of the Pakistani intelligence service are alerting militants to imminent American missile strikes in Pakistan's tribal areas. In October 2009, Davood Moradian, a senior policy adviser to foreign minister
Rangeen Dadfar Spanta, said the British and American governments were fully aware of the ISI's role but lacked the courage to confront Islamabad. He claimed that the Afghan government had given British and American intelligence agents evidence that proved ISI involvement in bombings. • 2010: A new report by the
London School of Economics (LSE) claimed to provide the most concrete evidence that the ISI is providing funding, training, and sanctuary to the
Taliban insurgency on a scale much larger than previously thought. The report's author, Matt Waldman, spoke to nine Taliban field commanders in Afghanistan and concluded that Pakistan's relationship with the insurgents ran far deeper than previously realised. Some of those interviewed suggested that the organisation even attended meetings of the Taliban's supreme council, the
Quetta Shura. A spokesman for the Pakistani military dismissed the report, describing it as "malicious". General
David Petraeus, commander of the US Central Command, refused to endorse this report in a US congressional hearing and suggested that any contacts between ISI and extremists are for legitimate intelligence purposes; in his words, "you have to have contact with bad guys to get intelligence on bad guys". • 2021: The
Fall of Kabul was seen as a major strategic victory for ISI that has long been seeking a pro-Pakistan government in
Kabul. The ISI has always aspired to see Islamists as the rulers of Afghanistan. The rise of
Taliban in Kabul was considered as an achievement for ISI's
strategic depth in Afghanistan. • 2021: It was reported that ISI mediated talks between different factions of
Taliban on the power sharing. ISI ensured
Haqqani Network holds lion's share in the Taliban's
Cabinet of Afghanistan.
Bosnia • 1993: The ISI was involved in supplying arms to the Bosnian mujahideen in Bosnia-Herzegovina to prevent a total genocide of Muslims at the hands of the Serbs.
India Indian intelligence agencies have claimed they have proof of ISI involvement with the
Naxalites. ISI is also reportedly engaged in supporting Khalistani Separatism in India. A classified report accessed by the Indian newspaper
Asian Age said "the ISI in particular wants Naxals to cause large-scale damage to infrastructure projects and industrial units operating in the interior parts of the country where ISI's own terror network is non-existent". • 1965: The
Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 in Kashmir provoked a major crisis in intelligence. When the war began, there was a complete collapse of operations across all intelligence agencies. They were unable to locate an Indian armored division because of their preoccupation with political affairs.
Ayub Khan set up a committee headed by General
Yahya Khan to examine the agencies' workings. • 1969–1974: According to Indian spymaster
B. Raman, the Central Intelligence Agency and ISI worked with the
Nixon administration to assist the
Khalistan movement in
Punjab. • 1980: An Indian agent captured by the PAF Field Intelligence Unit in Karachi said the leader of the spy ring was being headed by the food and beverages manager at the Intercontinental Hotel in Karachi and a number of serving Air Force officers and ratings were on his payroll. The ISI decided to question the manager to see who he was in contact with, but the former president of Pakistan, Zia-ul-Haq, intervened and wanted the manager and anyone else involved in the case arrested immediately. The manager was proven completely innocent afterwards. India mounted
Operation Meghdoot and captured the entire glacier. • 1988: The ISI implemented
Operation Tupac, a three-part action plan for covertly supporting Kashmiri militants in their fight against Indian authorities in
Kashmir, initiated by President Zia-ul-Haq in 1988 After the success of Operation Tupac, support of Kashmiri militants became Pakistan's state policy. ISI is widely believed to train and support militancy in the Kashmir region. • 2014: In February (disclosed in March 2015), the then-Indian chief of army staff General Bikram Singh issued orders to deploy troops along the borders with Pakistan in the Rajasthan and Jammu-Kashmir regions, but the ISI got the information in a few hours and in reaction the Pakistan Army deployed its troops near the Indian borders, which alarmed Indian authorities. : 2016: Home Minister Balochistan, Pakistan,
Sarfraz Bugti stated on 26 March that a serving Indian Naval officer,
Kulbhushan Yadav, was arrested in Balochistan by the ISI.
Pakistan The ISI was accused of being involved in the
Mehran bank scandal, in which high-ranking ISI and Army officers were allegedly given large sums of money by Yunus Habib, owner of the Mehran Bank, to deposit the ISI's foreign exchange reserves in his bank. • 1980: The ISI became aware of a plot to assassinate Zia-ul-Haq and launch a coup to depose replace the government with an Islamic one. The attempted assassination and coup were planned for 23 March 1980, during the annual 23 March Pakistan Day Parade. The masterminds behind the coup were high-ranking military and intelligence officers, and were led by Major General Tajammal Hussain Malik; his son Captain Naveed; and his nephew Major Riaz, a former military intelligence officer. The ISI decided against arresting the men outright because they did not know how deep the conspiracy went, and kept them under strict surveillance. As the date of the annual parade approached, the ISI was satisfied that it had identified the major players in the conspiracy and arrested the men along with some high-ranking military officers. • 1990: The 1990 elections were widely believed to have been rigged by the ISI in favor of the
Islami Jamhoori Ittehad (IJI) party, a
conglomerate of nine mainly
rightist parties by the ISI under
Lieutenant General Hameed Gul, to ensure the defeat of Bhutto's
Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) in the polls. • 2000s: The ISI engaged with Pakistan armed forces in the
War in North-West Pakistan against
Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, and is reported to have lost 78 ISI personnel. • 2006:
Rangzieb Ahmed brought a civil claim against MI5 for suggesting the ISI arrested him in 2006 and colluded in torturing him by submitting questions which were put to him under torture in Pakistan. • 2011: The ISI arrested five Pakistanis who worked as CIA informants who passed information that led to the
death of Osama bin Laden. However, among them in particular, the US was trying to seek the release of
Shakil Afridi, who ran a fake vaccination campaign that provided critical intelligence for the raid on the bin Laden compound. However, the Pakistani government and military establishment refused to release Afridi, who has since been serving a 33-year prison sentence.
Libya • 1978: The ISI spied on the residence of Colonel Hussain Imam Mabruk, who was a
military attaché to the
Libyan embassy in Islamabad, after he made some inflammatory statements about the military regime of Zia-ul-Haq. Mabruk was seen talking with two Pakistani men who entered and left the compound suspiciously. The ISI monitored the two men, who were later identified as Pakistani exiles who hated the current military regime and were Bhutto loyalists. They had received terrorist training in Libya and were ready to embark on a terrorist campaign in Pakistan to force the Army to step down from power. All members of the conspiracy were apprehended before any damage could be done. • 2016:
Uzair Baloch, a gangster of the Lyari Gang War who holds Iranian nationality, was arrested in an intelligence-based operation by
Sindh Rangers. In his handwritten confession, Baloch stated that officials of Iran's
Ministry of Intelligence offered him an all-expenses-paid residence in
Tehran in exchange for providing sensitive information about the Pakistan Army's operations in Karachi. He says that the offer came through a third-party while he was staying in Iran's port city of
Chabahar. • 2021: Iranian
Ministry of Intelligence also known as VAJA adopting ISI model to curb the internal dissent which Iranian regime is facing. It was believed that VAJA wants to promote same discipline as ISI to better fight with threats that Iran is facing from the internal chaos.
Qatar • 2023:
Qatar' State Security arrested eight former
Indian Navy officials working for
RAW who were spying on Qatar's stealth submarine programme at the behest of
Israel. It was alleged by Indian media that Qatar was able to unearth spy network with the information provided by the ISI.
Iraq • 2017: After
ISIS's
defeat in Mosul, Iraqi envoy to Pakistan, Ali Yasin Muhammad Karim, held a press conference where he expressed his government's appreciation for Pakistan's help during the fight against the terrorist organization. He praised the intelligence-sharing of the ISI and expressed interest in continuing the intelligence cooperation between the two countries.
France • 1979: The ISI discovered a surveillance mission at the
Kahuta Research Laboratories nuclear complex on 26 June 1979 by the French Ambassador to Pakistan Le Gourrierec and First Secretary Jean Forlot. Both were arrested and their cameras and other sensitive equipment were confiscated. Documents intercepted later showed that the two were recruited by the CIA.
United Kingdom United States • 1980s: The ISI intercepted two American private-sector weapons dealers during the Soviet-Afghan war of the 1980s. One American diplomat lived in the F-7/4 sector of Islamabad and was spotted by an ISI agent in a seedy part of
Rawalpindi, drawing attention because of his automobile's diplomatic plates. He was bugged and subsequently trailed and found to be in contact with tribal groups and supplying them with weapons for their fight against the Soviet Army in Afghanistan. The second American weapons dealer was Eugene Clegg, a teacher in the American International School. One American International School employee and undercover agent, Naeem, was arrested while waiting to clear a shipment from Islamabad customs. All of them were put out of business. Former director general
Ashfaq Parvez Kayani is also reported to have said, the "real aim of U.S. [war] strategy is to denuclearize Pakistan". • 2011: In the aftermath of a shooting involving American CIA agent
Raymond Davis, the ISI became more alert and suspicious about the CIA's spy network in Pakistan, which had disrupted ISI-CIA cooperation. At least 30 suspected covert American operatives have suspended their activities in Pakistan and 12 have reportedly left the country. : A Chinese woman believed to be an ISI agent, who headed the Chinese unit of a US manufacturer, was charged with illegally exporting high-performance coatings for Pakistan's nuclear power plants. Xun Wang, a former managing director of PPG Paints Trading in Shanghai, a Chinese subsidiary of United States-based PPG Industries, Inc., was indicted on a charge of conspiring to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act and related offences. Wang was accused of conspiring to export and re-export specially designed, high-performance epoxy coatings to the
Chashma 2 Nuclear Power Plant in Pakistan via a third-party distributor in the People's Republic of China. Alleged ISI operative Mohammed Tasleem, an attaché in the New York consulate, was discovered to be issuing threats against Pakistanis living in the United States to prevent them from speaking openly about Pakistan's government in 2010 by the FBI. US officials and scholars say the ISI has a systematic campaign to threaten those who speak critically of the Pakistani military.
Sri Lanka • 2000s: ISI played pivotal role in crushing
Tamil Insurgency in Sri Lanka which was being supported by India's
RAW to carve out separate Tamil country for the Tamils of Sri Lanka. ISI, in response to the RAW's machinations, started to equip, train and provide logistical support to the
Sri Lankan Armed Forces in their war against Tamil rebels. ISI supplied multi-barrel rocket launcher systems and other weaponry, which halted the offensive. ISI, by supplying high-tech military equipment such as 22 Al-Khalid main battle tanks, 250,000 rounds of mortar ammunition and 150,000 hand grenades, and sending army officers to Sri Lanka, played a key role in the ultimate defeat of Tamil Tigers in May 2009. The victory of Sri Lankan Armed Forces on Tamil Tigers ultimately strengthened
Pakistan-Sri Lanka ties. • 2011: ISI started to train
State Police of Sri Lanka and Sri Lankan
State Intelligence Service on intelligence gathering.
Al Qaeda and Taliban militants captured •
Ramzi Yousef: One of the planners of the
1993 World Trade Center bombing and the
Bojinka plot. Pakistani intelligence, and the Department of State –
U.S. Diplomatic Security Service (DSS) Special Agents, captured Yousef in Islamabad, Pakistan. On 7 February 1995, they raided room number 16 in the Su-Casa Guest House in Islamabad and captured Yousef before he could move to
Peshawar. •
Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi: A Libyan paramilitary trainer for
Al-Qaeda, attempted to flee Afghanistan in November 2001 following the collapse of the Taliban, precipitating the
2001 U.S. invasion of Afghanistan. He was captured by Pakistani forces. •
Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh: A British-born terrorist of Pakistani descent who was arrested by Pakistani police on 12 February 2002 in
Lahore for his involvement with the Pearl kidnapping. Pearl had been kidnapped, had his throat slit, and then beheaded. He was named the chief suspect, but claimed he had surrendered to the ISI a week earlier. •
Abu Zubaydah: An Al-Qaeda terrorist responsible for conceiving multiple terrorist plots, including sending
Ahmed Ressam to blow up the Los Angeles airport in 2000. He was captured on 28 March 2002, by ISI, CIA, and FBI agents after they raided several safe houses in
Faisalabad, Pakistan. •
Ramzi bin al-Shibh: An Al-Qaeda terrorist responsible for planning the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the
USS Cole bombing, and the 2002
Ghriba synagogue bombing in
Tunisia. On 11 September 2002, the ISI captured Ramzi bin al-Shibh during a raid in
Karachi. •
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed: The principal architect of the 9/11 attacks and other significant terrorist plots over the last twenty years, including the
World Trade Center 1993 bombings, the Bojinka plot, an aborted 2002 attack on the
U.S. Bank Tower in Los Angeles, the
Bali nightclub bombings, the failed bombing of
American Airlines Flight 63, the
Millennium Plot, and the murder of
Daniel Pearl. On 1 March 2003, the ISI captured him in a joint raid with the CIA's
Special Activities Division paramilitary operatives and
Diplomatic Security Service Special Agents in
Rawalpindi, Pakistan. • Abu Faraj Farj al-Liby: Mastermind of two failed attempts on President Pervez Musharraf's life in May 2005. •
Maulvi Omar: Senior aid to
Baitullah Mehsud, who was captured by the ISI in August 2009. •
Abdul Ghani Baradar: The Taliban's deputy commander who was captured by Pakistani intelligence forces in or near Karachi, Pakistan, in early 2010. ==Reception==