Mumbai Investigation Focuses on Local Links
Evidence of Pakistani Roots of Terror Plot Abounds; Indian Officials Demand Islamabad Turn Over Most-Wanted Suspects
MUMBAI -- Indian officials investigating last week's terror attacks on Mumbai say all 10 gunman they killed or captured appeared to be Pakistanis, but they are focusing on whether the attackers received local assistance in the city they targeted.
"They had good knowledge of the place," Mumbai Police joint commissioner for crime, Rakesh Maria, said in an interview, adding that the militants "were so well-aware of the general layout" of their targets. "We are looking at who helped them gain this knowledge," he said.
Investigators also are probing whether the militants carried out an earlier reconnaissance mission from abroad to scope out targets and prepare the attacks. The examination of possible insider help is significant. Indian officials have increasingly focused on groups within Pakistan as responsible. Officials demanded Monday that Islamabad hand over two key terror suspects and warned that relations between the nuclear-armed rivals would suffer if swift action isn't taken.
Diplomats and political analysts say the demands suggest that India is using the international outrage over the carnage in Mumbai to pressure Pakistan into a broader crackdown against Islamist militant groups believed to be targeting India, which has suffered more than a dozen terror bombings in the past three years.
The Bush administration is pushing for Pakistan's cooperation in the investigation of last week's attacks, hoping to avoid a repeat of tensions that nearly set off a war between Pakistan and India in 2002.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is traveling to New Delhi on Wednesday. "What we are emphasizing to the Pakistani government is the need to follow the evidence wherever it leads," Ms. Rice told reporters in London.
The terrorists killed at least 172 people, holding off security forces for three days of pitched battles at two luxury hotels and a Jewish center that ended Saturday. The one terrorist in police custody, identified by Commissioner Maria as 21-year-old Mohammed Ajmal Mohammed Ameer Kasab, told investigators he and his cohorts were members of Pakistan-based terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba. He also said he had never been to Mumbai before, the commissioner said.
The terrorists tried to give an impression of being a homegrown Indian Muslim radical movement rather than a group of Pakistani infiltrators. A previously unheard-of movement, Deccan Mujahideen, claimed responsibility for the attacks, and, according to Commissioner Maria, the gunmen carried on their bodies fake student cards from several Indian universities -- and no other identity documents.
Some 150 million Muslims live in India, and, while radicals represent only a small minority, there have been numerous cases of Indian Muslim involvement in terrorism. After a series of bombings in 1993 -- the deadliest previous terror attacks in Mumbai -- India named as the main culprit the local Muslim organized-crime kingpin, Dawood Ibrahim, who is believed to now be in Karachi, Pakistan, where he is said to run businesses and own property.
On Monday, India demanded that Pakistan turn over Mr. Ibrahim and another top fugitive, cleric Maulana Masood Azhar. The leader of the banned Pakistani militant group Jaish-e-Mohammed, Mr. Azhar was once jailed in India. He was freed in 1999 as part of a deal that ended the hostage standoff over an Indian plane hijacked to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan. Neither man has been directly implicated with last week's Mumbai outrage.
Indian officials told Pakistan's senior envoy to New Delhi of the demands after summoning him to the foreign ministry, said an official familiar with the meeting.
"He was informed that the recent terrorist attack on Mumbai was carried out by elements from Pakistan," the Indian foreign ministry said in a statement after the meeting. India "expects that strong action would be taken against those elements, whosoever they may be, responsible for this outrage."
The U.S. fears tough talk from New Delhi could put Pakistan's 10-month-old civilian government, its first in almost a decade, on the defensive, a situation that could easily spiral out of control. India and Pakistan have fought three wars since they won independence from Britain in 1947, and almost had a fourth confrontation after a 2001 terrorist attack on the Indian Parliament killed 15 people.
Nothing among the Mumbai terrorists' possessions pointed to a direct link with Pakistan: In addition to guns, bullets and Chinese-made grenades, the militants carried bundles of Indian rupees, packets of raisins and nuts to keep their energy high, and roaming cellphones with numbers that were neither Indian nor Pakistani, Mumbai's Commissioner Maria said.
The Pakistani connection would have been almost impossible to prove if not for the capture of Mr. Kasab, at a roadblock on Mumbai's Chowpatty beach after a long shooting spree Wednesday night. Mr. Kasab, who is cooperating with the investigators, is providing leads for the additional main directions of inquiry, such as how bombs got onto two Mumbai taxis that exploded that night, and what additional attacks may be planned against the city, Commissioner Maria said.
Most of what Mr. Kasab has said so far has proven accurate, the commissioner said. After his capture, the young man had become resigned to helping the Indian police, said Commissioner Maria: "He knows the game is up for him." The key piece of evidence he provided is information about the hijacked fishing vessel that ferried terrorists from near Pakistan to waters off Mumbai.
On the fishing trawler, investigators discovered -- just as Mr. Kasab said they would -- the slain lead crewman who had been thrown in the engine room, a satellite phone, and a global positioning device for navigating. Another GPS unit recovered in Mumbai suggested that the terrorists planned to return to the vessel if they survived the attacks, Commissioner Maria said.
Mr. Kasab was part of the pair that entered Mumbai's main railway station to start a murderous rampage through the city.
On Monday, R.R. Patil, the man in charge of security in Maharashtra state where Mumbai is located, resigned over security failures, following the lead of federal Home Minister Shivraj Patil, India's top internal security official, who resigned on Sunday.
Mumbai Investigation Focuses on Local Links - WSJ.com