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Ex-Pentagon official says ISI, Pak Army may have
trained Mumbai
terrorists
Washington:
A former Pentagon official in Washington, who
spoke on condition of anonymity, has claimed that
American intelligence analysts suspect that the terrorists
who attacked Mumbai last week were trained by former
officers of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence
(ISI) and the Pakistan Army. The comment comes even
as the Pakistani leadership consistently maintains
that it has no concrete evidence of Pakistani involvement
in the attacks that led to the death of nearly 200
people and injuries to another 300. According to the
New York Times, American officials have not been able
to establish a direct link to between the terrorists
and federal authorities in Islamabad. But this has
not stopped US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
from coming to India and Pakistan, and demanding that
Pakistan unequivocally extend all possible support
to India to track down the perpetrators of the incident.
Fingers are being pointed at the Lashkar-e-Taiba,
which Indian and American officials say carried out
the Mumbai attacks. Though officially banned, the
group has hidden in plain sight for years. It has
had a long history of ties to Pakistan's intelligence
agencies.
The
evidence of its hand in the Mumbai attacks is accumulating
from around the globe: According to the Indian police,
the one gunman who survived the terrorist attacks,
Mohammad Ajmal Kasab, 21, told interrogators that
he trained during a year and half in at least four
camps in Pakistan and at one met with Mohammad Hafeez
Saeed, the Lashkar-e-Taiba leader. . And according
to a Western official familiar with the investigation
in Mumbai, another Lashkar leader, Yusuf Muzammil,
whom the surviving gunman named as the plot's organizer,
fielded phone calls in Lahore from the attackers.
Today, the Lashkar-e-Taiba operates openly in Lahore.
Its militant wing, Western officials say, has used
camps in Pakistani-controlled Kashmir and Pakistan's
tribal areas to change from a group once focused primarily
on Kashmir into one now determined to join the ranks
of a global jihad. Critics in Pakistan of the ISI
maintain that the intelligence agency still protects
Lashkar. "We're not saying there's a direct hand in
it but you have to think there's some learning going
on, emulation going on, there are influences or contacts
of some kind," a senior American official said.
- Dec
4, 2008
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