Posted on 11/27/2008 2:37:25 PM PST by MyTwoCopperCoins
WASHINGTON: Strategic gurus and security analysts in the US and from across the world are examining Pakistan's role in terrorism following yet another terror episode in India ending with fingers pointed at its widely-reviled neighbour.
While initial reports from India suggested the Mumbai carnage was a localised attack by militant malcontents in India because of the "Deccan Mujaheddin" decoy that was used to claim responsibility, evidence cited by Indian army and security experts based on phone intercepts, nature of weaponry, mode of entry by sea etc., has quickly focused the attention on Pakistan.
The statement by India's normally cautious and restrained prime minister, Manmohan Singh, that groups based across the border, a thinly-disguised reference to Pakistan, has also galvanized the strategic and security community into examining Islamabad's role in the region that has already been subjected to scrutiny in the past.
"From a tactical perspective most terrorist attacks in India have been carried out through the use of improvised explosive devices planted on bicycles, motorcycles and cars, and triggered by timers or mobile telephones. In contrast, according to press reports, the attackers involved in the latest Mumbai violence were armed only with Kalashnikov assault rifles, principally, and hand grenades," Jane's Country Risk Daily Report noted in an assessment on Thursday that discounted an internal insurgent attack.
The report also said the apparent focus on killing or capturing foreign businesspeople, specifically US and UK nationals, which has never occurred before, also suggested "a wider global anti-Western agenda." This stands in contrast to the national issues that appeared to motivate Indian Mujahideen, it said.
Experts also said the heavy weaponry, grenades, and the sustained attack pointed to intense training and planning beyond the scope of indigenous groups.
Other intelligence experts and websites also zeroed in on Pakistan's role in the region. "There have been reports from credible sources for years that Pakistani intelligence has used terrorist groups to conduct war-by-proxy against traditional rival India. With the latest horrific attacks throughout Mumbai, evidence continues to accumulate that may add new substance to such reports," the website Washington Examiner noted.
US officials and lawmakers refrained from naming Pakistan, but their condemnation of "Islamist terrorism" left little doubt where their anxieties lay. "It is often said that India and America have a natural bond as the two largest democracies. Today, we share a bond of a common enemy: what the 9/11 Commission identified as Islamist terrorism. Islamist ideology is spreading across South Asia, and must be stamped out," California Congressman Ed Royce said.
What has added potency to the latest charges against Islamabad is the Bush administration's own assessment - leaked to the US media - that Pakistan's intelligence agency ISI was linked to the bombing of the Indian Embassy in Kabul some weeks back that killed nearly 60 people including a much-admired Indian diplomat and a respected senior defense official.
This time, the US scrutiny is more intense because American, Israeli, and other western nationals appear to have been singled out during the carnage. Hundreds of Indians have died in dozens of terrorist attacks in India in the past two decades without Washington losing too much sleep over it. In fact, Indian officials have often complained in private that successive US administrations have been incredibly indulgent about Pakistan's brazen involvement in fomenting terror in India, believing it would not touch the US.
Part of the coddling goes back to US patronage of the ISI during the Afghan war. As a result, Washington has done little to bring to book Dawood Ibrahim, a terrorist charged with masterminding the serial bomb blasts in Mumbai in 1993 that took 258 lives, although Indian intelligence agencies have identified him as living in Karachi under ISI protection.
The US has also said Dawood Ibrahim is linked to al-Qaida. While all major terror attacks in India are typically accompanied by knee-jerk charges from India and shrill denials by Pakistan, analysts point to mounting evidence that the Pakistan state, especially under its military, has done little to combat the scourge of terrorism. Several terrorist and extremist leaders such as Masood Azhar and "Prof" Hafeez Mohammed Saeed, continue to thrive in Pakistan, often under official patronage. Extremists openly preach terrorism in jihadi gatherings overseen by ISI.
The Pakistani establishment has also dragged its feet on prosecuting Omar Saeed Sheikh, an accused in the Daniel Pearl murder because of his influential connections in the higher echelons of the ISI. Another terrorist Rashid Rauf, also known as the shoe-bomber, was killed last week in a US predator strike, months after he 'escaped' from Pakistani police custody while being escorted for a hearing. Western and Indian intelligence communities believe men like Sheikh and Rauf are protected by the ISI or rogue elements in the ISI.
The Bush administration has pressed for a purging of the ISI of its rogue and extremist elements, but the new civilian government in Pakistan, which has made better relations with India a priority, is finding it hard to do it. Hard-line militaristic elements in Pakistan have fuming about the overtures made by both President Asif Ali Zardari and opposition leader Nawaz Sharief towards India.
The Pakistani military, which controls the ISI, has resisted any attempt to make it subservient to the civilian government because the army uses it both as a fighting arm for its proxy war against India and also to spy on its own civilian government.
Among the several question that security experts are grappling is the motive behind the latest attack and who stands to gain by it. The terrorists have notably not even raised the Kashmir issue for their action to be linked to the separatist cause. Nor did they attempt to extract any specific concession in exchange for hostages, other than to demand the release of "all mujaheddin," according to one report.
They seemed intent on causing mayhem and dying in the same suicidal jihadi manner that was evident in the attack on Indias parliament and on the Akshardham temple earlier in this decade. Their victims, besides the scores of people who died, included Indias booming economy and tourism, both of which was the envy of a troubled neighbourhood.
Mumbai Mourns After Deadly Terror Attack | |
Mumbai 27 November 2008 |
Thibodeaux report - Download (MP3)
Thibodeaux report - Listen (MP3)
Related video by Anjana Pasricha - Download (WM)
Related video by Anjana Pasricha - Watch (WM)
Police in Mumbai continue sifting through the wreckage left by the deadly terror attack that left more than 100 people dead and hundreds of others injured. Shocked residents and tourists at the city's luxury hotels watched in horror as the scene unfolded, many of them trapped by the fighting between police and the gunmen. Raymond Thibodeaux has this report from Mumbai.
Schoolchildren pay tribute to the victims of the Mumbai terrorist attacks in Ahmadabad, 27 Nov 2008 |
It was a day of funerals for many of those killed in one of the city's most brazen terrorist attacks. One funeral was for Shashank Shinde, a senior police inspector killed by a gunman at the city's Central Railway Station early Wednesday night. He is one of at least 12 police officers killed in the terror attacks, one of the deadliest days for Mumbai's police force.
Sanjive Piwandakar was a close friend of the slain officer.
"I'm feeling very
I can't express it. I am angry and I have lost one of my closest friends. To me he was like a godfather," he said
The funeral procession leads down a normally busy street. Like Piwandakar, the city of Mumbai appears to be in a state of shock after a night of violence. The attackers targeted the symbols of modern India. Its posh hotels, a café, and a busy train station where there are usually high concentrations of foreigners.
The wave of attacks that began Wednesday night have virtually shut down much of the city. Now, the streets are relatively empty. Many businesses are closed for the day. Mumbai, known as the Maximum City, partly for its constant rush of traffic and noise, is mostly quiet.
Police in flak jackets are patrolling the districts hit by the violence.
Indian commandos take positions close to where Jewish families have been taken hostage in Mumbai, 27 Nov 2008 |
Crowds gathered near a Jewish outreach center in the heart of Mumbai early Thursday, where police commandos and Indian army troops worked to end a hostage crisis in which at least three gunmen were holding captive about six Israeli tourists.
Nearby is the crumpled wreckage of several cars and motorcycles from grenade attacks earlier in the night.
Sanjay Kokate, 35, is a local resident. He was one of the first eyewitnesses as attackers took control of the Jewish outreach center late Wednesday night. He said gunmen opened-fire into a nearby building, killing several residents.
"After one hour or so the cops came. But after that they [the gunmen] kept firing. They fired into the opposite building. So some people in that building died. An old woman and some children. We took out some of the bodies at night," he said.
Little is known about the Deccan Mujahideen, the group that has taken responsibility for the attacks. Some experts said they are linked to the Indian Mujahideen, an Islamist terror group that has claimed responsibility for several recent attacks against civilians in India.
V.N. Athawalla is a police commander posted at the J.J. Hospital in central Mumbai, where many of the injured were taken.
He said these attacks were some of the most violent he's seen in Mumbai. Shooting and bomb blasts have happened before, but this was groups of terrorists firing at people in the streets. They were firing indiscriminately, trying to kill as many people as they could. This hasn't been seen in Mumbai before, he said.
India has been rocked by several terrorist attacks in recent months.
For now, many here worry that anger might set in once the shock of the attacks wears off. The possibility of communal violence is on the minds of many people across the country.
But as one man at Shinde's funeral said: "The way to honor those who were killed in the attacks is to try to carry on normally."
These terrorists can’t possibly be Islamic .
Islam is a religion of peace and tolerance.
(puking)
So, what do they want...? All women to wear that silly gear and all men to pray five times a day to that maniac they call a profit?
Don’t they know THAT will never happen??? So, what do they really want?
As the world focuses its atention on whether Pockiston is nefariously involved with anti-Western terrorism, can someone find out what the heck Nobama Hussein was doing in Pockistan back in the 80s?
They want to take over the world..
I feel better knowing we gave Pakistan Billions of dollars. /s
>>>>WASHINGTON: Strategic gurus and security analysts in the US and from across the world are examining Pakistan’s role<<<<<
There were reports from India early on that the army/police had captured at least six terrorists, and there also were detailed and quite plausible accounts of the the terrorists had been using.
Early today (US east coast time) it seemed that the Indian authorities had gotten decent tactics and procedures info from six or more captured terrorists, some of which was reported.
Those same reports also mentioned linkages with Pakistan, presumably obtained from the terrorists themselves.
Sorry no link, things were going too fast this morning.
They don't want us to negotiate. They want us to die.
Dont they know THAT will never happen???
Turkey, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, and Iraq all used to be Christian. Now they are Muslim. They are advancing in Central Asia, Europe, Sudan, Ethiopia, and West Africa. More recent they have taken Bosnia, and Kosovo.
They have every reason to believe it will happen.
If Pakistan is behind this they should be made to pay a terrible price.
Pakistan’s government mainly exists in name only and for show for the world to see. The groups in Pakistan along with Al Quaeda run Pakistan and probably run what little of the police or intelligence service that remains in Pakistan. Sad, but Pakistan in essence no longer exists. Afghanistan and Pakistan are now pretty much the same country.
If India imprisoned all its domestic Muslims and bombed the cr*p out of Pakistan, I would get over it very quickly.
I dont think Pakistan has anything to do with the attacks in the face of already troubled environment contained within its borders. It would be instead an obvious mistake to do it especially at a time once its running after getting financial aid from international orgs. What seems obvious is that western powers have much more interests vested in this whole scenario (cause if a war breaks out between the two countries would boost the arms sales).. Its virtually pointless to prematurely target Pakistan because it has become a fashion that wherever the evil al qaida / terror strikes people rather than professionally investigating the matter down to the core, try to save face by hiding behind such arguments such as it must have been done under the supervision of Pakistan..
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.