Jeremy R. Hammond
Foreign Policy Journal
India
The Mumbai Attacks: More Than Meets the Eye
As details emerge about who was responsible for the terrorist attacks in Mumbai last week, the evidence points to a militant group and network of associates that can be linked to a number of intelligence agencies, including the ISI, the CIA, and MI6.
November 4, 2008
Details
have emerged regarding who was responsible for the recent terrorist
attacks in Mumbai, India, with the evidence pointing to the
Pakistani-based terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT).
Indications of a coming attack were reportedly received by intelligence
agencies well in advance. US signals intelligence (SIGINT) picked up a
spike in “chatter” indicating something was brewing, which was supported
by information from assets in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Some of the
information that was received by US intelligence was passed on to India
as early as September.
The details were specific. The CIA station chief in Delhi reportedly met
with his counterpart at India’s intelligence agency, the Research and
Analysis Wing (RAW), to pass on intelligence that LeT was planning a
major attack that would come from the sea.
Less than a week before the attacks, a U.S. airstrike in Afghanistan
purportedly killed a British citizen of Pakistani descent named Rashid
Rauf, who was suspected of planning to blow up commercial airliners
flying from Britain to the U.S. He fled Britain in 2002 after being
suspected of stabbing to death his uncle, Mohammed Saeed. He settled in
Bahawalpur, Pakistan, and married a relative of Maulana Masood Azhar,
the leader of another militant group, Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM).
Besides being linked to JeM, he was also suspected by some intelligence
sources of having connections to the ISI. Pakistani authorities arrested
him in Bahawalpur in August 2006 at the behest of British authorities,
but he escaped police custody when they allowed him to enter a mosque
ostensibly to say afternoon prayers. While police waited outside, Rauf
walked out the back door. He may have just escaped, but there were also
rumors that he was secretly taken into custody by the ISI in a plan that
kept him under wraps while preventing him from being extradited to
Britain.
The location of Rauf was reportedly given to U.S. officials by the
Pakistani government, and may have been a move calculated to appease the
U.S. over charges that elements of the ISI are still assisting militants
engaged in cross-border attacks into Afghanistan. Earlier this year,
terrorists bombed the Indian embassy in Kabul, and both India and the
U.S. claimed that the ISI had been involved in the attack.
The airstrike that killed Rauf may also have been the result of early
information obtained on the attack on Mumbai, as intelligence agencies
reportedly had learned that he was involved in the planning of a major
upcoming terrorist event.
Indian intelligence had obtained its own warnings of an attack. One
indication was a request from a LeT operative to obtain international
SIM cards for an upcoming operation. There was also information that a
LeT team was training at a camp near Karachi, and that part of their
training was to prepare for launching attacks from the sea. The team was
trained under Zakir-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, also known as “Chacha”. Also among
the information received was that the Taj Mahal hotel was pinpointed as
a major target.
As a result, security at the hotel was increased, but was lessened again
just a week prior to the attacks because of complaints from the hotel’s
clients. Ratan Tata, chairman of the Tata Group, which owns the hotel,
acknowledged that warnings of a possible attack had been received.
The Tata Group is also invested in the energy sector, and stands to gain
from the recent deal between the U.S. and India, which would provide
India with nuclear resources outside of the framework of the nuclear
non-proliferation treaty (NPT) and International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) safeguards system. Pakistan has voiced its opposition to the U.S.
deal with its nuclear-armed neighbor.
On November 18, RAW intercepted a satellite phone conversation made to a
number in Lahore, Pakistan, known to be used by the military commander
of LeT known alternatively by the names Yusuf Muzammil or Abu Hurrera,
also known as “Yahah”. The caller notified his handlers that he was
heading for Mumbai with unspecified cargo.
As a result of the intelligence it had received, India’s Navy and Coast
Guard were on the lookout for suspicious ships entering Indian
territorial waters, and were specifically told to watch for an
unidentified ship coming from Karachi.
Only
one of the terrorists in the Mumbai attacks was captured alive, Azam
Amir Kasab, a resident of the territory of Punjab in Pakistan. According
to reports, he has told his interrogators a great deal about how the
attacks went down.
Kasab confessed to being a member of LeT. He and his fellow terrorists
were instructed to target foreigners, particularly Americans, British,
and Israelis. They had set out from Karachi in a ship called the “MV
Alpha”, which is allegedly owned by Dawood Ibrahim, a terrorist wanted
by India in connection with bombings in Bombay in 1993 that resulted in
250 deaths. Ibrahim is also wanted by Interpol, and has been designated
a global terrorist by the U.S.
Confronted with increased naval patrols that were boarding and searching
suspect vessels, the team hijacked a fishing trawler called the “Kuber”,
registration number 2303, and killed most of its crew except for
Amarsinh Solanki, whom they kept alive to help navigate.
On November 26, as the terrorists neared their target destination, they
killed Solanki by slitting his throat. An associate of Ibrahim’s in
Mumbai had arranged to pick the team up in inflatable rubber dinghies.
They went ashore at about 9pm. Witnesses reported seeing them land in
the dinghies, which were unusual among the common wooden fishing boats,
and unloading a number of large bags.
Once on shore near the Gateway to India, Mumbai’s main landing point
near the Naval dockyard, the team split up. Four men went to the Taj
Mahal hotel, where an advance team had already checked in on November 22
and set up a control room. Two went to the Nariman House, the Mumbai
headquarters of Chabad Lubavitch, an ultra-orthodox Jewish group.
Another acquisitioned a taxi and drove to the railway station. Two
others headed to the Leopold restaurant, a hot spot for foreign visitors
to Mumbai.
At about 9:20pm, one team arrived at the Nariman House, where they took
hostages, while another opened fire at the Leopold café. At 9:45,
terrorists entered both the Taj Mahal and Trident Oberoi hotels, where
hostages were again taken. At 10:15, two of the men began firing
indiscriminately outside the Cama hospital. At 10:30, terrorists entered
the Chhatrapati Shivaji railway station and again opened fire.
According to Pakistan’s Daily
Times, the terrorists identified and killed two U.S. intelligence
officers at the Taj Mahal hotel.
Indian officials are now saying that just 10 men were responsible,
indicating that two-man teams were able to strike one target and move on
to the next. Teams held out under siege the the Nariman House and the
hotels, with the Taj Mahal the last to be cleared. By the end, it had
taken Indian forces 60 hours to kill or capture the attackers, with
their reign of terror finally ending on the 29th with nearly
200 people reported dead.
According to police, the men were aged 18 to 28. They were found to have
drugs in their system, and traces of cocaine and LSD were found at one
or more scenes of their attack, which they apparently had taken for an
additional adrenaline boost to keep them going for the long siege and
battle with Indian special forces.
A Mauritian government identity card was discovered with the terrorists
who attacked the Taj Mahal hotel, along with credit and debit cards of a
number of different banks, including HSBC (headquartered in London and
named after its founding member, the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking
Corporation, with global branches), HDFC, and ICICI (both banks in
India).
They
were reported to be using AK-47 assault rifles. Photos shown in the
press reveal what appear to be variants with a folding stock. They were
also reported to have handguns and grenades. Additionally, police
recovered sub-machine guns used by the terrorists. An Associated Press
photo of the confiscated guns reveals what appear to be Heckler & Koch
MP5-N sub-machine guns. The “N” model is a version of the MP5 designed
specifically for the U.S. Navy and used by Navy Seals teams.
BlackBerry cell phones were also recovered from the terrorists,
containing international SIM cards investigators believe correlate with
the early intelligence further connecting the team to LeT. During the
attacks, they received calls from outside the country, which is
apparently among the evidence leading government officials to early on
state publicly that the terrorists had ties to a foreign nation.
A global-positioning system (GPS) and satellite phone were found in the
abandoned Kuber fishing trawler. Navigation routes plotted in the GPS
revealed the planned route from Karachi to Mumbai and back again,
indicating that the terrorists hoped they might possibly be able to
escape and return to Pakistan. Investigators determined that this was
the phone used to contact Muzammil, the LeT military commander. Calls
from the phone were also traced to Lakhvi, the LeT training specialist.
The MV Alpha was also intercepted after the attacks by the Indian Navy.
Responsibility for the attacks was claimed via e-mail by a previously
unknown group calling itself Deccan Mujahideen. This appears to be a
front, apparently designed to direct blame upon groups within India and
give the appearance of a home-grown terrorist attack. Deccan may refer
to a neighborhood in the city of Hyderabad or to the Decaan Plateau that
dominates the middle and south of India.
The RAW traced IP addresses used to send the e-mail to an account in
Russia that was opened on the Wednesday just prior to the attack and
used to relay the message to media in India. The e-mail was further
traced to a computer in Pakistan, and investigators have also said that
it was generated by dictation using voice recognition software.
India has called for Pakistan to hand over 20 individuals it has alleged
were involved in the attacks. Among the wanted men are Dawood Ibrahim,
Hafiz Saeed, and Maulana Masood Azhar.
Ibrahim is the son of a police constable and worked as a police
informant, only to become involved in crime. He rose through the ranks
of the underworld in Bombay (now Mumbai) to become one of the city’s
leading organized crime bosses. He later fled to Pakistan, where he is
believed to have stayed in Karachi under the protection of Pakistan’s
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency. Some Indian analysts have
suggested that it was at the behest of the ISI that Ibrahim planned the
Mumbai attacks. Pakistan has denied that he is in the country.
Wanted along with Ibrahim for the 1993 Bombay attacks is Aftab Ansari,
also an Indian national. Ansari is linked to Omar Saeed Sheikh, a
British national of Pakistani origin. Omar Sheikh is an associate of
Osama bin Laden and has been accused of masterminding the kidnapping and
murder of Daniel Pearl, a journalist for the
Wall Street Journal.
Omar Skeikh was also the paymaster of the 9/11 hijackers and wired
$100,000 to Mohammed Atta in Florida. According to Indian intelligence,
working with the FBI a link was established between Omar Sheikh and the
head of Pakistan’s ISI, Lt. Gen. Mahmud Ahmed. Sources revealed to the
media that the evidence obtained from Omar Sheikh’s cell phone indicated
that it was at the behest of Mahmud Ahmed that the money was sent to
finance the 9/11 hijackers. While this has widely been reported
internationally, including by the
Press Trust of India, Pakistan’s
Dawn newspaper,
Agence France-Presse, and
UK’s The Guardian and
The Times, it has not
received any mention in the U.S. mainstream media.
Hafiz Saeed is the founder of LeT. He travelled to Peshawar to join the
CIA-backed effort to overthrow the Soviet-backed government of
Afghanistan. Peshawar served as the command base for both the CIA and
Maktab al-Khidamat (MAK). Haiz Saeed became the protégé of Abdullah
Azzam, who, along with Osama bin Laden, founded MAK to recruit and train
foreign fighters to join the mujahedeen. The CIA worked closely with the
ISI to finance, arm, and train the mujahedeen.
By about 1988, MAK had been evolved into the group known as al-Qaeda by
bin Laden. The name “al-Qaeda” literally means “the base”, and may
either refer bin Laden’s base of operations for the mujahedeen war
effort or the actual database of names of jihadist recruits. While
numerous terrorist attacks have been attributed to al-Qaeda over the
years, it isn’t so much a centralized organization as a loose network of
individuals and affiliate groups having roots or otherwise associated
with the CIA-backed effort against the Soviet Union.
Maulana Masood Azhar is the head of Jaish-e-Mohammed, and is also wanted
by Interpol. Like LeT, JeM is said to have close links with the ISI,
which has used the groups to wage a proxy war against Indian forces in
Kashmir.
Like Hafiz Saeed, Azhar was numbered among the veterans of the
Soviet-Afghan war. He was educated at Jamia Binoria, a madrassa
(religious school) in Karachi that also served as a recruitment center
for the mujahedeen.
He later became a leader of Karkat-ul-Mujahideen, a Pakistani militant
group, and was captured by India in Kashmir in 1994. He was tried and
acquitted, but spent six years in jail before being freed in exchange
for the release of the crew and passengers of a hijacked Indian Airlines
plane in 1999. He formed JeM after returning to Pakistan.
Omar Saeed Sheikh was also caught and imprisoned by India for
involvement in that hijacking, and was likewise released in exchange for
the hostages. Like Azhar, Omar Seikh is reported to have close links to
the ISI and, according to former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf,
was also an agent of MI6, Britain’s spy agency, which sent him to engage
in operations in the Balkans.
Relations between India and Pakistan also reached a crisis point in
December 2001, when gunmen attacked the Indian parliament. JeM and Let
were held responsible for that attack as well, and both countries
amassed troops on the border, a situation that led to fears of war
between two nuclear-armed countries. The U.S. helped mediate an end to
the crisis, pressuring Pakistan to crack down on militant groups and
setting in motion the plan to assist India with its nuclear program that
was finally realized this year.
LeT was banned in Pakistan in 2002 following the attack on the Indian
parliament, but remained active in the country nevertheless. The group
has denied responsibility for the attacks in Mumbai last week.
Pakistan has on one hand said it would formulate a response to India’s
request to turn over the 20 wanted men, and on the other hand indicated
it would not do so, insisting that the men are either not in Pakistan or
that they have been under Pakistani surveillance and no indication seen
that they were in any way involved.
While the evidence strongly points to LeT and a network of associates affiliated with the group or with each other, that web also includes the CIA and MI6. One early report said that some of the Mumbai terrorists were, like Rashid Rauf, British nationals. This was picked up by numerous press accounts around the globe, but the Indian government official this information was attributed to denied ever having said such a thing.
Theories that this was a false flag operation have already begun to spread around the internet, with varying culprits and motives. Whatever the truth is, what is clear from the facts one is able to piece together from media accounts is that there is more to the Mumbai attacks than meets the eye.