Pakistani media aired the name of a man they said is the Central  Intelligence Agency's station chief, prompting questions about whether  the Pakistani government tried to out a CIA operative in the wake of the  killing of Osama bin Laden.
The U.S. is looking into the matter. There are no plans at this time  to withdraw the station chief. If the government had attempted to  publicize the name, that would be the second such outing in the past six  months, a sign of how deeply U.S.-Pakistan relations have soured.
The CIA declined to comment. Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency didn't respond to a request for comment.
Tensions, which have been building between the two countries for  months, exploded after the bin Laden strike, which sharply embarrassed  the Pakistani government. In another source of strain, the U.S. is  pressing the Pakistanis for access to bin Laden's three wives, who are  being held in Pakistani custody. The Pakistani government isn't  complying with the request, a U.S. official said.
The Islamabad station chief is one of the CIA's most critical and  sensitive assignments. The position oversees the agency's covert  programs, including the drone campaign that targets al Qaeda and Taliban  leaders, as well as fighters who cross the border into Afghanistan.
The purported name of the CIA's station chief was first reported  Friday by ARY, a private Pakistani television channel. The station was  reporting on a meeting between the director of Pakistan's spy  service—the Directorate of Inter-Services Intelligence—and the station  chief. 
"If we did not mention the man's name, the credibility of the story  would have been reduced," said ARY's Islamabad bureau chief, Sabir  Shakir.
Mr. Shakir wouldn't discuss who had provided the name, but said he had "one-plus" sources.
The story was picked up by the Nation, a right-wing newspaper that  has often accused American diplomats and private citizens in Pakistan of  working for the CIA. The Nation's editor, Salim Bokhari, said he didn't  know how the name became public. 
"It has to have been released by some government agency," said Mr. Bokhari. "Who else would know such information?"
A former senior U.S. intelligence official said any outing of agents  would be Pakistan's "own little way of retaliating," given how "very,  very upset and embarrassed" the government remains over the raid and its  aftermath.
The chief's name printed Saturday in the Nation wasn't accurate. Mr.  Shakir, of the ARY television station said, "I believe we have the right  name."
The strain between the CIA and ISI first became public in December  when a lawsuit filed in Pakistan blew the cover of the then-station  chief and forced the CIA to pull him out of the country.
Some U.S. officials suspected the move was ISI retaliation for the  naming of its chief, Lt. Gen. Ahmad Shuja Pasha, in a U.S. lawsuit  relating to the Mumbai terrorist attacks. Since then, Pakistan and the  CIA have tussled over a CIA contractor's shooting of two armed  Pakistanis under disputed circumstances.
The U.S. has given Pakistan billions of dollars in aid since 2001 and  has repeatedly expressed frustration that Pakistanis are sometimes  reluctant partners in counterterrorism—going after some militants and  not others.
Speaking on CBS's "60 Minutes" Sunday night, President Barack Obama  said, "We think that there had to be some sort of support network for  bin Laden inside of Pakistan.… [T]hat's something that we have to  investigate and, more importantly, the Pakistani government has to  investigate."
The Pakistanis, for their part, suggested the U.S. should ease up.  "Could the pattern of bullying and then trying to give a lot of honey  after having served a lot of vinegar, is that partly the reason why the  patient is unwell?" said Husain Haqqani, Pakistan's ambassador to the  U.S., on a separate CNN show.
Speaking on ABC News, Mr. Haqqani sidestepped a question about U.S.  access to the bin Laden wives. "This is a moment for me to be very  diplomatic," he said. "What we do, Mr. Donilon will know."
On Saturday, the U.S. government released five never-before-seen  video clips of bin Laden seized by Navy SEALs during the raid, providing  the first visual evidence of what officials described as the al Qaeda  leader's "active command-and-control center" in Pakistan. The U.S. said  the evidence so far shows bin Laden at the center of al Qaeda planning,  not the peripheral figure some had assumed he had become.
The videos were part of what a senior U.S. intelligence official  called "the single-largest collection of senior terrorist materials  ever" obtained by the U.S.
Materials discovered so far by analysts include internal  communications between al Qaeda's leadership in Pakistan and its  far-flung affiliates. Al Qaeda has branches in Yemen and North Africa.
By SIOBHAN GORMAN                And MATTHEW ROSENBERG  taken from http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703730804576311153848904130.html?mod=WSJ_hp_MIDDLETopStories
 
 
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