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ISI Questions & Discussions

One person i can confirm was recruited in ISI but he did only office work,and those who do real work in ISI are from i guess SSG.

how to join SSG through army or through another source
or if i join army then how can i join SSG plsssssss tell me
and plsssss also send me mail at muj334@gmail.com with answer
becoz it is:undecided really difficult to find my answer from here:undecided::crazy:
 
One person i can confirm was recruited in ISI but he did only office work,and those who do real work in ISI are from i guess SSG.

how to join SSG through army or through another source
or if i join army then how can i join SSG plsssssss tell me
and plsssss also send me mail at muj334@gmail.com with answer
becoz it is really difficult to find my answer from here:::crazy:
:undecided:
 
One person i can confirm was recruited in ISI but he did only office work,and those who do real work in ISI are from i guess SSG.

how to join SSG through army or through another source
or if i join army then how can i join SSG plsssssss tell me
and plsssss also send me mail at muj334@gmail.com with answer
becoz it is really difficult to find my answer from here:
 
I have a question, maybe not related but jut thought I'd ask. I know someone who's brother is in the Army. I checked with him about my knees which slightly touch each other, and he said its not accepted in Army. So, is he right or wrong, and if he's right, how can I fix it?
 
I have a question, maybe not related but jut thought I'd ask. I know someone who's brother is in the Army. I checked with him about my knees which slightly touch each other, and he said its not accepted in Army. So, is he right or wrong, and if he's right, how can I fix it?

Do "Horse riding". It will certainly help.
 
Just wondering why people are rejected for knees touching? In fact I have only heard about this from Pakistan, my dad corrected this problem I had from age 8, I was forced to do horse riding.
 
Just wondering why people are rejected for knees touching? In fact I have only heard about this from Pakistan, my dad corrected this problem I had from age 8, I was forced to do horse riding.

Because it is a mild skeletal deformity and a sign of malnourishment. If a person has flat feet, knock knees or scoliosis these are usually caused by the mother eating junk food during pregnancy or overdosing on artificial vitamin supplements and/or the child being raised with a starchy diet supplemented with artificial vitamins or too much cod liver oil which mess up the growth of the skeleton, nervous system and immune system. The result is that a soldier's stamina and reflexes are substandard thus he is rejected and healthier ones recruited instead.
 
The jobs are advertised once in year in newspapers and on FPSC website although it is not clearly mentioned that the job is for ISI or IB but there are indications. Check ::: FPSC ::: for futher info.
 
Dr bro, if u r really interested to join any of our intel agency, strive to go for this.:bounce:The pattern of civilians hired by ISI and IB differs alot. Recruitment in ISI takes place every after two years and this process is held by ISI and ISPR authorities. They recruit ADs, Inspectors, Sub-Inspectors and ASIs as civilians officers. Whereas, selection of ADs in IB is made by the FPSC. These jobs are advertised by the FPSC itself. U just need to keep urself in touch with newspapers to know of job openings in these organizations. Onething more i must share with u is that both these organizations are currently holding the process of selection of ADs which is believed to come to an end this year. Aa regards MI, its a purely military service. Civilians have nothing to do with it. This organization does not hire civilians as only serving military personnel are at work there. Wish u good luck.
 
Pakistan's intelligence service briefly opens its doors
By David Ignatius

The headquarters of Pakistan’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence directorate is a black-ribbed stucco building in the Aabpara neighborhood of the capital. Its operatives, described by wary Pakistanis as “the boys from Aabpara,” play a powerful and mysterious role in the life of the country. Their “tentacles,” as one ISI officer terms the agency’s spy networks, stretch deep into neighboring Afghanistan.

The ISI agreed to open its protective curtain slightly for me last week. This unusual outreach included a long and animated conversation with Lieutenant General Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the agency’s director general, as well as a detailed briefing from its counterterrorism experts. Under the ground rules, I cannot quote Pasha directly, but I can offer a sense of how his agency looks at key issues – including the Afghanistan war and the ISI’s sometimes prickly relationship with the United States.

At an operational level, the ISI is a close partner of the Central Intelligence Agency. Officers of the two services work together nearly every night on joint operations against Al-Qaeda in Pakistan’s tribal areas, perhaps the most dangerous region in the world. Information from the ISI has helped the CIA plan its Predator drone attacks, which have killed 14 of the top 20 targets over the past several years.

But on the political level, there is mistrust on both sides. The US worries that the ISI isn’t sharing all it knows about Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan. The Pakistanis, meanwhile, view the United States as an unreliable ally that starts fights it doesn’t know how to finish.

A test of this fragile partnership is the debate over the new Afghanistan strategy proposed by General Stanley McChrystal. The ISI leadership thinks the US can’t afford to lose in Afghanistan, and it worries about a security vacuum there that would endanger Pakistan. But at the same time, the ISI fears that a big military surge, like the up to 40,000 additional troops McChrystal wants, could be counterproductive.

ISI officials believe the US should be realistic about its war objectives. If victory is defined as obliteration of the Taliban, the US will never win. But Washington can achieve the more limited aim of rough political stability, if it is patient.

In the ISI’s view, America makes a mistake in thinking it must solve every problem on its own. In Afghanistan, it should work with President Hamid Karzai, who, for all his imperfections, has one essential quality that American strategists lack – he’s an Afghan. ISI officials suggest that Karzai should capitalize on the post-election ferment by calling for a cease-fire so that he can form a broadly based government that includes some Taliban representatives.



ISI officials say they want to help America with political reconciliation in Afghanistan. But they argue that to achieve this goal, the US must change its posture – moving from “ruler mode” to “support mode” – so that Afghan voices can be heard.

The American suspicion that ISI is withholding information about the Taliban, or is otherwise “hedging its bets,” makes ISI leaders visibly angry. Pakistanis have the most to lose from a Taliban victory in Kabul, they argue, because it would inevitably strengthen the Taliban in Pakistan, too. A Pakistani version of Mohammad Omar is anathema to them, the ISI leaders say.

As for American allegations that the ISI maintains direct links with Siraj Haqqani, a key ally of the Taliban, the ISI officials insist it isn’t so. They do have a network of agents within the insurgent groups and tribes, but that’s part of a spy agency’s job. America’s suspicion that Pakistan secretly pulls the Taliban’s strings is many years out of date, they contend.

One ISI analyst loudly calls my name at the end of a briefing and then recites a summary of Pakistani casualties since September 11, 2001, from terrorism. The list totals 5,362 dead and 10,483 wounded. “Trust us,” says another ISI official, referring to this casualty toll. “Do not interfere in a way that infringes on our sovereignty and makes us look bad in the eyes of the public.”

Talking with ISI leaders, I am reminded of something you see around the world these days. People want to help America more than we sometimes think. But they want to be treated with respect – as full partners, not as useful CIA assets.

Trust is always a conditional word when you are talking about intelligence activities, which are built around deception. But in this case, where America and Pakistan share common interests, the opportunities are real.
 
There are 7 branches of ISI. Civilian can apply for 3 of them rest for are limited for the personnel from armed forces.
 

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