Pakistani-American businessman Mansoor Ijaz at the centre of "memogate" controversy has alleged that 'S Branch' of Pakistan's military-run ISI is so powerful that it can't be controlled by anyone and wants the US to take the lead to leash it.
Saying that the branch along with counter-terrorism section were critical wings of the ISI, Ijaz has alleged that the S Branch conspires intervention in other countries like Afghanistan as well as manipulate elections, politicians and groups within Pakistan.
The businessman was recently in news after he made a sensational disclosure that he submitted a memorandum to the then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, on behalf of the President Asif Ali Zardari, that was highly critical of the Pakistan Army and the ISI.
Zardari has denied of having any knowledge of that said memo.
"It's sort of the arm of the ISI that does everything from political interventions in other countries, for example, Afghanistan, which is what they're doing through the Haqqani Network and the Taliban right now," Ijaz told Fareed Zakaria of the CNN in an interview.
"They do a lot of political interventions in their own country. You know, there are many times when it has been reported in the past and authentically reported and authoritatively reported by the Pakistani press that S branch was involved in manipulating elections and doing things of that nature inside Pakistan," Ijaz said.
The US-based businessman against whom Islamabad has asked Washington to take action has said that S Branch "was an organ of the state that nobody can control, and it is essentially the organ of the state that the army and the intelligence wings are using to shall we say coordinate or obstruct what it is that the political side of the government, the civilian side of the governments do in Pakistan."
"It is my view and it is still my view today that section S of the ISI has been involved in some very, very nefarious activities, and so since nobody was able to get their arms around that, the United States had to take the lead on that. The United States has done this in Iran," he said.
Ijaz said that the Americans had been very hard on similar organisations worldwide and wanted Washington to take the lead in reining in the ISI.
The Pak-American businessman claimed said he has been involved in different operations in Pakistan for a very long time.
"I helped Benazir (Bhutto) come back together with the Clinton administration as a part of the larger Pakistani-American community," he said.