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Warren Weinstein, American Man, Abducted In Eastern Pakistan (VIDEO)

First Posted: 08/13/11 11:37 AM ET Updated: 10/13/11 06:12 AM ET

K.M. Chaudhry and Nahal Toosi, Associated Press

LAHORE, Pakistan -- Gunmen kidnapped an American development expert after tricking his guards and breaking into his house in Pakistan on Saturday, a brazen raid that alarmed aid workers, diplomats and other foreigners who already tread carefully in this country rife with Islamic militancy and anti-U.S. sentiment.

The U.S. Embassy identified the victim as Warren Weinstein. Weinstein is the Pakistan country director for J.E. Austin Associates, a development contractor that has received millions of dollars from the aid arm of the U.S. government, according to a profile on LinkedIn, a networking website.

Police declined to speculate on the motive, and no group immediately claimed responsibility. But kidnappings for ransom are common in Pakistan, with foreigners being occasional targets. Criminal gangs are suspected in most abductions, but Islamic militants, are believed to also use the tactic to raise money.

Lahore has seen a number of militant attacks, and the Punjab region where it is located is home to several of Pakistan's top militant networks, some of which are suspected of ties to Pakistani intelligence.

Police said the American, believed to be in his 60s, had returned to his home in the eastern city of Lahore the previous night from the capital, Islamabad. He had told his staff that would be wrapping up his latest project and moving out of Pakistan by Monday, police officer Tajammal Hussain said.

According to Pakistani police, two of the kidnappers showed up at Weinstein's house Saturday and told the guards inside the gate of the walled compound that they wanted to give them food, an act of sharing common during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which started early this month.

The guards opened the gate, and five other men suddenly appeared. The armed assailants overpowered the guards and stormed into the house. Some gunmen are believed to have entered through the back. They snatched the American from his bedroom but took nothing else.

Security forces were checking vehicles in and around Lahore in hopes of finding Weinstein, said Ghulam Mahmood Dogar, a top police official.

In Washington, the State Department said it was in touch with Weinstein's family and that U.S. officials in Pakistan were working with local authorities on the case. Spokeswoman Joanne Moore would not comment further, citing privacy concerns.

Weinstein headed a program trying to strengthen the competitiveness of Pakistani industries, according to the biographical section of his company's website, which was taken down late Saturday. The LinkedIn profile says Weinstein has been in Pakistan for seven years.

Calls to the company headquarters in Virginia were not immediately answered, but its website describes Weinstein as a development expert with 25 years experience and a Ph.D. in international law and economics.

"He's a short, funny man with a quick wit," said Raza Rumi, a Pakistani columnist who said the American could speak a fair amount of Urdu. "He's a very laid-back guy, not too worried about security issues, not really paranoid at all."

The audacious nature of Saturday's abduction raised the likelihood that diplomatic missions, aid groups and contracting companies would further tighten security. Already, many groups severely restrict where their international staff can travel because of kidnapping fears.

The security concerns heavily impact U.S. aid programs and have served to slow down the disbursement of billions of dollars in promised funds because they limit where American diplomats are allowed to go and what projects can be undertaken safely.

Americans in Pakistan are considered especially at risk because militants oppose Islamabad's alliance with Washington and the war in Afghanistan. The unilateral U.S. raid that killed al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden on May 2 in northwest Pakistan only added to tensions between the two countries.

"They've become very, very brazen," Zahid Elahi, managing director in Pakistan for Development Alternatives Inc., another U.S.-based contracting firm, said of the kidnappers. "We just need to get our heads together because it's only just happened."

He said he would definitely advise international colleagues to lay low in the coming days.

A Western aid worker said the raid on Weinstein's home is "a new wrinkle." He called it especially worrying because companies such as J.E. Austin Associates tend to spend a great deal on security for their staff, even more than many humanitarian groups.

"They really, really are risk averse," the aid worker said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of security concerns.

Several other foreigners have been abducted in Pakistan in recent years.

John Solecki, an American with the U.N.'s refugee agency in southwest Baluchistan, was held captive by ethnic Baluchi separatists for more than two months in early 2009. A 5-year-old British boy, Sahil Saeed Naqqash, was kidnapped for two weeks from his grandparents' house in central Pakistan in March 2010.

The Pakistani Taliban claim to be holding a Swiss man and woman kidnapped earlier this summer from Baluchistan. The militant group, which is based in the northwest tribal belt bordering Afghanistan, says it will free the pair if the U.S. releases a Pakistani woman convicted of trying to kill Americans.

The U.S. State Department recently issued a travel warning for its citizens saying that American diplomats are facing increased harassment and they, along with aid workers and journalists, have been falsely identified as spies in the local media.

U.S. citizens also have come under greater scrutiny by the Pakistani government this year, especially since January, when an American CIA contractor shot to death two Pakistanis he said were trying to rob him in Lahore.

American lawmakers and officials have made a slew of trips in recent weeks to try to maintain the relationship with Islamabad.

On Saturday, U.S. Sen. John McCain arrived in Islamabad and met with top officials including Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and President Asif Ali Zardari. In statements afterward, Gilani and Zardari said Pakistan desires an enduring, multidimensional partnership with the United States.

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K.M. Chaudhry and Nahal Toosi, Associated Press LAHORE, Pakistan -- Gunmen kidnapped an American development expert after tricking his guards and breaking into his house in Pakistan on Saturday, a ...
K.M. Chaudhry and Nahal Toosi, Associated Press LAHORE, Pakistan -- Gunmen kidnapped an American development expert after tricking his guards and breaking into his house in Pakistan on Saturday, a ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dawns6
nothing matters and what if it did ?
07:27 AM on 08/15/2011
Why dont we just pull out the 1.8 B ? That would put a stop in them and lets bring all our Troops home !Enough is enough, I do hope they find this man alive and well and bring him home safely.
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obinna000
An imperfect being creating a perfect World
07:11 AM on 08/15/2011
Hope this is resolved in a bloodless manner and does not degenerate into a Deja vu bizarre scenario, like “this poor victim being held captive for years, right next to a secrete C:I:A prison in the outskirts of Karachi.”.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cerebrogasm
The sleep of reason produces monsters. - Goya
06:51 AM on 08/15/2011
Can we actually trust Pakistan? Pakistan has the second largest Muslim population after Indonesia, and we know what the Koran teaches about unbelievers and infidels (in other words, the West, which includes us). Now, after harboring bin laden for years 40 miles from the capital, Pakistan is giving China a tour of our downed high-tech helicopter used in the raid: what a nice R&D bump for China. While American corporations keep outsourcing practically everything we'v ever made or invented to China, along with our labor force, China repays us by investing heavily in Pakistan - that's nuclear armed Pakistan. We send them a ridiculous amount of money to use their roads to aide in conducting another ridiculous effort: keeping the Taliban out of Afghanistan & trying to convince them to stop producing another kind of weapon of mass destruction: opium (i.e., heroin) of which they are the world's largest producer. My take is that we formerly get out of both countries but watch them carefully - very carefully. Pakistan is obviously manipulating us - and I get the impression that Islamic countries like the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, really do want to wipe us off the planet. How can we ever trust countries that feel this way about us? As far as Weinstein goes, I do suspect he was working for the Company, & if proven so - someone in Langley needs to take responsibility for this inept operation.
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SheilaKhani
can't read between the lines
01:26 AM on 08/15/2011
Is Mr. Weinstein Jewish? If so, then is not the right place for him to be. It's a sad truth.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gattic619
09:56 PM on 08/14/2011
Pakistan is not our ally nor freind....they take out money, but are playing both sides. They cannot be trusted....they tried to make us belive thaey didnt know where Bein LADEN was....They killed DANIEL PEARL.......because he knew their secret police were paid off....and were in Washington right before 9/11 He was going to expose them...so he was killed...but, people in our government called the hit as well.
Pakistan is a sewer. The people and government cannot be trusted. We need to get out of Afganistan.....and IRAQ.. we lost enough already.....thousands of our children, and most of our economy. Dont we have a few xtra ABOMBS
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SheilaKhani
can't read between the lines
01:20 AM on 08/15/2011
Daniel Pearl's horrific murder was an act of a psycho terrorist who lured him into Pakistan to do exactly that...Most people in the region and around world know that Pakistan is no Sweden. Of course their gov't is corrupt and mixed up with militants and terrorist groups (may be Sweden is too who knew about Norway's Separatists, ha?). It would be very naive of anyone to assume Pakistani gov't is trust worthy. It doesn't help though bombing their country (border of Afghanistan) almost everyday with our drones and killing civilians.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gattic619
10:06 AM on 08/15/2011
Pearl discovered the relationship with the PAkistani croooked secret police, whose head was in WASHINGTON on 9/11 and got paid off for "information" or involvement. There was complicity between PAKISTAN....and some of our own people(traitors) Pearl was to expose this...or at least interview the head of the secret police) He didnt make it.......
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
07:45 PM on 08/14/2011
Home office in Arlington, Va., works closely with USAID (a known storefront) -- come on, these people know the score. When you go to work for The Company you take that chance. You can bet the Pakistani ISI tipped them off. Is Congress going to be allowed to declare war or are we going to pretend we're not involved in another illegal covert war? This will play out just like the station chief who was arrested for shooting civilians in Pakistan: at first the U.S. will act incredulous and demand the release of a "contractor" and then the negotiations will begin with everyone in the world but American citizens knowing what's up. It's come to be widely assumed (and proven) that American embassies are not much more than bases for intelligence operations. I pray for Mr. Weinstein's release but let's cut the games.
05:03 PM on 08/14/2011
They don't want us thee' All Americans should. When they are all out we should kick their butts out of the USA. Millions of cab diver jobs would open up.
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Lenape105
Austerity is fiscal terrorism
02:24 PM on 08/14/2011
If my last name was Weinstein, I probably would think twice about working in Pakistan.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yasser Yousufi
Parthian
01:48 PM on 08/14/2011
Pakistanis never asked for America's money. USA uses the shortest possible supply route to Afghanistan through their roads and airports. If they stopped allowing Americans to use their land and air routes their trillion dollar war in Afghanistan would probably have cost 5-6 Trillion. So its Americans who should be thankful to the Pakistanis for their munificence. They take the ire of Talibans in return for letting your arms go through. Plus, if Pakistan was bombing Drug Mafia people in Miami and New Mexico through drones everyday and killing 10 innocents for taking out every drug trafficker, you wouldn't exactly be cheering for them would you?
01:06 PM on 08/14/2011
not good for world peaceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
01:02 PM on 08/14/2011
Did Mr. Weinstein not learn anything from the death of Daniel Pearl?
12:04 PM on 08/14/2011
yasser. perhaps you should read more than just the huffington post. we fund their military. maybe you should try google news .http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=does+the+united+states+send+pakistan+finacial+aide#sclient=psy&hl=en&source=hp&q=what+aide+does+the+united+states+give+pakistan&pbx=1&oq=what+aide+does+the+united+states+give+pakistan&aq=f&aqi=&aql=&gs_sm=e&gs_upl=109513l117367l1l117601l46l33l0l0l0l0l260l4759l5.21.6l32l0&fp=1&biw=933&bih=667&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.&cad=b BILLIONS
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yasser Yousufi
Parthian
01:28 PM on 08/14/2011
The link doesn't work, kinda like your brain~!
01:38 PM on 08/14/2011
Hit your listed site and got a blank page...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patrick Fogarty
12:01 PM on 08/14/2011
Pakistan is an oxymoron , We need them but not the trouble our relationship causes. They need us and want our money but not our intervention . But without uninvited intervention we incur risk to the security of our people working in that country as well as the risk of intervention of forces that are constantly undermining our efforts next door in Afganistan. That very uninvited intervention , that we know to be necessary , to protect our people and investment in the area , is that thing that damages the cooperation we are expecting from that Nation . Where and what is the solution??
01:13 PM on 08/14/2011
Remove the $180B annually that we pay for their "friendship and cooperation"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yasser Yousufi
Parthian
01:45 PM on 08/14/2011
Hmmm $180B!!!! Thats a bit of stretch no?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patrick Fogarty
02:13 PM on 08/14/2011
I have a tendency to agree with that . But I am affraid there is more to solving the problem . I do sympathize with your thinking though . Thanks for your comment .
11:48 AM on 08/14/2011
stop the aide let the famine kick in they will be to weak to move then DESTORY THEM!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yasser Yousufi
Parthian
11:53 AM on 08/14/2011
LOL......some rednecks in serious need of education here~! There's no Aid to Pakistan only reimbursements for using their airports and roads to launch America's war of revenge in Afghanistan. Pakistan is the 27th biggest economy in the world. All that Aid (which never materialized) wouldn't even have made 1% of Pakistan's GDP.
01:17 PM on 08/14/2011
ignorance, thy name is yasser
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yasser Yousufi
Parthian
01:42 PM on 08/14/2011
LOL @ yet another Graduate of Fox Madrassa
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captainindustry
then that will be my story.
11:45 AM on 08/14/2011
I guess they couldn't find a Pakistani who could do the same job. I mean how hard could it be to get checks from the USA and deposit them?