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India's Revenge: RAW Attacks Cricketers in Pakistan

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Grande Strategy: India's Revenge: RAW Attacks Cricketers in Pakistan

In a terrorist attack reminiscent of the Mumbai attacks, 6 Sri Lankan cricket players were lightly injured while a third umpire was critically injured while on their bus. The incident took place outside the Qaddafi Stadium in Lahore, the capital of Pakistan's Punjab province. Five people have been confirmed dead from the security detail. While the Mumbai attack showed confusion and cowering Indian security forces, the Pakistani reaction, in contrast was swift, taking casualties but effectively repulsing an organized and surpise attack.

The attack was well organized and involved two bomb blasts followed by small arms firing. While five security guards were killed and several injured, the security forces managed to repulse the attack. The attackers numbered 12 and came on motorcycles, fired indiscriminately and then fled, leaving back ammunition bags and weapons. The firing continued for about 25 minutes.

Bags of ammunition was left in front of Al-Fatah store in neighborhood of Gulberg. Weapons left behind included 84mm Carl Gustav recoiless rifles, controversially a standard issue weapon to the Indian Army, a weapon not typically found with the Taliban.

Carl Gustavs are of Swedish origin and exported to the Indian army and never exported to the Mujahideen. RPG-22 rocket propelled anti-tank grenades, another standard issue for the Indian special forces (and another weapon less typical for the Taliban who more typically prefer RPG-7s) was also used. A senior defense correspondent, while remaining anonymous, states that the choice of weapons as well as other evidence, clearly indicates India's hand in the present attack and is being seen as a "response" to the Mumbai attacks.

Terrorist attacks perpetrated by RAW have many previous precedents but given the present sensitivities and the Indian reaction to the Mumbai attacks, they could prove to be a catalyst for heightened tensions between the two belleaguered neighbors.

Sri Lankan cricketers Kumar Sangakkara, Ajantha Mendis, Thilan Samaraweera and Tharanga Paranavithana received minor wounds. The Third Umpire is seriously injured and The cricket team has been recalled by Sri Lanka in light of these attacks.

Gavin Scovell, a sports producer and a witness to the attacks applauded the security detail for their rapid and calm response. In a press release, he stated:

"The guards were brilliant. They weren't panicking. They were very calm," Scovell said. "It must have been a terrifying experience, but they handled it well."

Meanwhile, two unidentified bodies have been found but it has not been released yet if these are of the attackers or of civilians.

So far there is only one name on everyone's lips, so lets explore the possibility of RAW's implication in the matter. Lets keep it mature and emotions to a minimum.
 
The Enemy’s Fingerprints

The Media Line

You can’t ignore the symbolism: Commando-style trained young men with backpacks, carrying automatic machine guns and armed with grenades and rocket launchers, bearing a shocking resemblance to the video footage released by the Indian government of the Mumbai attackers in November.

The Indian connection, even if indirect and unintentional, cannot be ignored:

Lahore is the same city where Pakistani antiterrorism police arrested several Indian citizens and their Pakistani accomplices in the past few weeks and paraded them in public with evidence linking them to India’s spy agency Research & Analysis Wing, or RAW. Lahore lies a few kilometers away from the Indian border and has bore the brunt of India’s covert operations in the 1970s and 1980s, mostly randomly planted bombs in public places designed to spread terror.

Pakistani security officials had received a report that at least ten Indian operatives have crossed the border into Lahore 48 hours before the attacks.

India spearheaded a campaign to convince several countries to sever sports relations with Pakistan and put tremendous pressure on Sri Lanka not to send its cricket team to play here.

India has a history of supporting the terrorist LTTE group and arming it with sophisticated weapons to fight the Sri Lankan government and army. Pakistan, on the other hand, has been supporting Sri Lanka against this terrorism. India has long been disturbed by the close relationship between Colombo and Islamabad. In this connection, Sri Lanka’s foreign minister’s statement is important. He said he won’t point fingers but said ‘terrorism has no borders’, an implied suggestion that the Sri Lankans believe the perpetrators came from outside Pakistan.

The timing of the attack shows the professional planning. Lahore administration was in a flux after the change of provincial government. Lahore was also the last Pakistani city that has not yet been affected by the fallout from America’s failed and disastrous war in Afghanistan. This incident effectively brings chaos to Lahore as well. The rest of Pakistan is already being destabilized by foreign intelligence operatives working from the Afghan soil, inserting professional saboteurs and flushing the country with money to recruit criminals and activating them under the guise of religious extremists.

An important point to note here is that whoever planned this attack made sure that the terrorists look similar to Mumbai attackers. This can be an attempt to spark more conflict between Pakistan and India. In this case, if evidence is found, it might be interesting to probe the possibility of a third party trying to push both countries to war. And it’s not just religious elements in Pakistan that want this. There is an organized terrorist infrastructure inside India, manned by Hindu terrorist groups with recruits from Indian military intelligence. The same Indian elements are also active in Kabul and other Afghan cities, using the Afghan soil to export terrorism inside Pakistan. American reports have also linked these Indian elements to attacks on U.S. and NATO soldiers and blame them on Pakistan.

There is enough circumstantial and physical evidence that involves India’s intelligence agencies in terrorism inside Pakistan.

The Pakistani military must realize that this is an organized and not a guerrilla war that is being waged against Pakistan. This terrorism is deceptively hiding itself behind the label of religious extremism, and has links with those countries that are actively destabilizing Pakistan from the inside.

It is time now that patriotic Pakistanis and the Pakistani military sit up and take notice of the apologetic statements of this U.S.-installed government in Islamabad which, like the Indians, wasted no time in linking the Lahore attack to the Mumbai attacks, which means linking it to Pakistanis (which is not proven except in the minds of India, their American backers and their backers in Pakistan, i.e. President Zardari, Rehman Malik, Sherry Rehman, and the former advisor Mehmud Durrani.) In this case, if the Zardari government is accusing ‘Mumbai attackers’ of this latest attack, then this government is indirectly accusing the Pakistani military and our intelligence of attacking the Sri Lankans in Lahore. This is in continuation of the covert efforts by elements in this government to cause a confrontation between the Pakistani military and the world at large.

Pakistan’s response must be methodical. This is the time to expose Indian terrorism. There is stunning evidence available with Pakistani authorities about Indian activities in Afghanistan, inside Pakistan’s tribal and border areas and inside the rest of Pakistan. The Zardari government will not bring this evidence forward. It is the responsibility of the Pakistani military and its spy agencies to force this government to unmask the Indian activities. Enough of this apologetic attitude toward India. We urge Pakistan to publicly demand that Indian’s sponsorship of terrorism be curbed.

The Indians should also brace for retaliation. If Indian military and security forces are using terrorism against Pakistan in multiple places, then Indians from these organizations should be a fair game for retaliation.
 
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Oh comeon! dont be so stupid. Citing weaponary doesnt prove your case. THere are hundreds of armies using RPG 22/ RPG 7. That is as stupid as saying they were wearing a dress which you saw being made in India.
 
Oh comeon! dont be so stupid. Citing weaponary doesnt prove your case. THere are hundreds of armies using RPG 22/ RPG 7. That is as stupid as saying they were wearing a dress which you saw being made in India.
So what you saying? We shouldn't even investigate RAW's hand?

Like it or not, RAW is the chief suspect here. Hopefully, for the good of both of our nations, investigations would prove otherwise.
 
Pakistan Attack on Sri Lankan Cricket Team: Echoes of Mumbai? - TIME

Echoes of Mumbai?: TIME

In a commando-style operation, a dozen gunmen attacked the Sri Lankan cricket team in the heart of Lahore, Pakistan's cultural and political hub, at 8:45 Tuesday morning. The attackers fired rockets, grenades and multiple rounds of ammunition at the team's bus and police escorting it, killing eight people and injuring six. To some eyewitnesses, it was last November's Mumbai attacks replayed on Pakistani soil. (See pictures of the terror attack in Pakistan.)

Amid thick morning traffic in Lahore's Liberty Square, the gunmen ambushed the bus as it approached the Gaddaffi cricket stadium. "I heard the attack and spun around," recalls Abdul Ghani Butt, 30, a foreign currency dealer who was on his way to work at the time. "It was just like the Mumbai attacks. They were young, about 25-30 years of age, coming from different directions. Some were clean-shaven, others bearded. They were wearing tracksuits and carried backpacks. One of the men then put down his rocket launcher, and pulled out a rifle. He changed the magazine so quickly that it could only have been done by a professional. The others were walking around so calmly, across the grass in the roundabout." (See pictures of the Mumbai attack.)

The gunmen killed five policemen, two bystanders and a bus driver. Six members of the Sri Lankan cricket team were injured. Two of the cricketers were shot, while others sustained minor injuries from flying debris. The reserve umpire for the ongoing test match, Ahsan Raza, a Pakistani, is in critical condition. "It was horrifying," Nadeem Ghouri, the Pakistani umpire told Reuters. "There were bullets flying around us and we didn't know what was happening. When the firing started we all went down on the floor of the coach. Our driver was killed instantly from a shot from the front."

On the edge of the roundabout lies one of the half a dozen police vehicles that were escorting the bus between the team's hotel and the stadium. The windscreen of the blue Punjab Elite Police pickup bears six large bullet holes. The roof is badly damaged. On the driver's seat, amid broken shards of glass, is a blood-stained cap belonging to one of the dead police commandos. Blood is also smeared across the steering wheel, and forms small pools in the back seat. Bullet casings lie nearby. According to eyewitnesses and police accounts, the police commandos and the attackers were locked in a gun battle for 15 minutes. "One of the police commandos came out into the open and began firing at them," says Mohammed Waqas, 25, a travel agent who was also on his way to work. "I don't think he survived. The other commandos used their cars for protection. But the gunmen escaped."

Salmaan Taseer, the Governor of Punjab who took control of the province last week, says that a search operation is underway. "It was a similar type of attack to Mumbai," he told TIME. "They were well armed and well trained. They had rocket launchers, grenades and Kalashnikovs. They were also well trained in the use of explosives. The police have discovered a vehicle that was used by the gunmen that was packed with explosives. The engine was running with the key in. If anyone turned off the car, it would have blown up. We are not afraid, the people of Lahore are not afraid. We'll get the bastards who did this."

Police say they have arrested suspects in the Model Town area of Lahore, but none of those detained are believed to be gunmen. The Interior Ministry has announced that an investigation is underway.

The sophistication of the operation raises questions not only about the identity of its authors, but about the failure to afford the visiting cricket team sufficient protection. Foreign teams, including Australia, England India have all refused to play in Pakistan in recent years because of security fears. But Pakistani authorities have insisted that security is fine. It will be harder to do that now. "The happiness and joy that cricket brought to our country has been destroyed by the violence we saw today," says Ali Shujaat, owner of the Lahore Cricket Academy. "We have got infrastructure worth millions of dollars and we now see no future for professional cricket in Pakistan. Who will play us now?" "This was a major lapse of security," cricket legend turned politician Imran Khan told TIME. "Having guaranteed the Sri Lankan team security, they failed to provide them even with the type of security given to a government minister. This could have been a mammoth tragedy. If the grenades hit them inside the bus, it could have blown up the whole team. And astonishingly, how were they allowed to get away?"

In the wave of terror attacks that has scarred Pakistan over the last two years, the perpetrators have normally used improvised explosive devices, bomb-laden vehicles and individual suicide bombers. A full frontal assault is new. The resemblance it bears to the Mumbai attacks, with young men with backpacks openly brandishing their weapons, suggests to some analysts the possible involvement of Lashkar-e-Toiba, the Pakistan-based militant group based near Lahore. (See pictures of Mumbai picking up the pieces.)

Others are pointing to the Pakistani Taliban, al-Qaeda and the Kashmiri separatist group Jaish-e-Mohammed, who have bases in southern Punjab. "My own assessment is that it is a Pakistani militant group," says retired general turned analyst, Talat Masood. "Whether it is Lashkar-e-Toiba or Jaish-e-Mohammed, I can't say." Sri Lankan officials say that the Tamil Tigers, who are behind an insurgency in their country, are not believed to be responsible. (Read TIME's brief history of the Tamil Tigers.)

A local television channel captured glimpses of the attackers mounting the attack. Prominent in the footage are a pair of men, moving around together, crouching on their knees as they open fire. One appears to be a clean-shaven man young enough to be a teenager and wearing a t-shirt, jeans and sneakers. His companion is a taller man who appears to be in his 20s, wearing a brown shalwar kameez (traditional Pakistani dress) and a beard. One senior police officer in Lahore was quoted by the local media as speculating that the men were Pashtun in appearance, members of the ethnic group dominant in Pakistan's militancy-wracked northwest and parts of Afghanistan.

The brazen nature of the attack and its high-profile targets will sink Pakistan's reputation further, analysts say, driving away foreign investment and delivering a blow to the country's much-celebrated national sport. The Pakistani rupee and the main stock exchange both have dipped at the news. "It's a very serious incident that escalates the present state of affairs," says Masood, the retired general. "It gives an idea of how the frontiers of terrorism are expanding in Pakistan. It also shows how Pakistan is vulnerable. It is no longer capable of hosting international events."

The attack also comes at a sensitive time for Pakistan, and Punjab in particular. The country's largest and wealthiest province was plunged into turmoil last week after its most popular politician, opposition leader and former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, was barred from holding elected office by the Supreme Court in a controversial ruling. The decision sparked angry protests across the province and opened up a major rift with the government. Sharif has held political rallies across Punjab, urging supporters to join this month's lawyer-led "long march" to Islamabad to demand the reinstatement of deposed chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry. Over the weekend, the government staged a vast counter-demonstration in the port city of Karachi. Political analysts fear that as the fresh phase of political uncertainty consumes politicians' energies, the divide is proving a distraction from the unremitting advance of Islamist militancy.

In a sign of the growing threat, militants have crossed the Indus River from the northwest in recent weeks to mount attacks in the Punjabi towns of Mianwali and Bhakkar. Lahore itself was long considered removed from the threat, not suffering its first suicide bombing until January 2008. Since then, it has seen a spate of major bombings, including attacks on the Naval College and the headquarters of the Federal Investigation Agency.

— With Reporting By Vivian Salama / Lahore
 
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Track Suits, Back packs, AK - 47, yes similarities. But then so can be called about bomb blasts, C4, TNT,RDX...but they arent called similarities.

So lets leave whats convenient.

Yes India looks the biggest beneficiary, but that alone isnt good enough, or is it?

Why did the terrorist who came armed tooth to toe leave without exhausting the ammo and leaving rocket launchers, bombs, grenades, magazines behind?

These very much might be the anti-pakistan Taliban, as per your definition. As the police officer has claimed that they looked like pashtunis.
 
Why did the terrorist who came armed tooth to toe leave without exhausting the ammo and leaving rocket launchers, bombs, grenades, magazines behind?
Most commentators so far on TV have said that the ammo was purposely left at supermarkets, as alternative attacks were also planned. The only thing that they seemed to have goofed up here is leaving behind the RPG-22, which is a tad bit out of the range of the Taliban. They've yet not used it on tank operating in the tribal areas, but here they found it necessary to use it on a bus.

These very much might be the anti-pakistan Taliban, as per your definition. As the police officer has claimed that they looked like pashtunis.
Whom every man, woman and child in Pakistan is dead convinced to have RAW's blessing.
 
So what you saying? We shouldn't even investigate RAW's hand?

Like it or not, RAW is the chief suspect here. Hopefully, for the good of both of our nations, investigations would prove otherwise.

Oh Common Asim .. NOT from you man .... you very well know that this will just create flames on speculation. What will you achive from a thread on the usual suspect? Why not start the thread to explore other candaidates ... lets do some lateral thinking here man.
 
Oh Common Asim .. NOT from you man .... you very well know that this will just create flames on speculation. What will you achive from a thread on the usual suspect? Why not start the thread to explore other candaidates ... lets do some lateral thinking here man.
Investigations are never liked by suspects.

We're not going to stop speculating against the CHIEF suspect, just not to hurt their feelings. RAW is the name on every Pakistani drawing room discussion, I can guarantee that to you.
 
FOXNews.com - Pakistan Says It Arrests 3 Alleged Indian Agents - International News | News of the World | Middle East News | Europe News

Three Indian Agents arrested in Lahore: January report

LAHORE, Pakistan — Police arrested three men Thursday who they alleged carried out a deadly bombing in 2006 in Pakistan on the orders of India's intelligence agency, a top officer said.

Lahore police chief Pervaiz Rathor told reporters the three Pakistanis had also been told to attack mosques as well as the virulently anti-Indian Muslim organization blamed for the terror attacks in Mumbai last November.

The allegations come amid souring relations between the nuclear-armed neighbors in the wake of the Mumbai attacks, which killed 164 people.

India says the Mumbai attackers were Pakistanis belonging to Lashkar-e-Taiba and have repeatedly insinuated that Pakistani intelligence agents were involved.

Islamabad accepts that the sole attacker captured alive is Pakistani, but denies any state links with the militants.

Rathor said the three men were arrested in a village close to the Indian border in eastern Pakistan on Thursday.

"They were trained by the Indian intelligence agency," he said. "They have told interrogators that they had been given tasks to target mosques, offices and one of the main centers of Lashkar-e-Taiba," Rathor said.

He also alleged they were involved in a bus stop bombing outside a college in the eastern city of Lahore in 2006 that killed two people and wounded several others.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars since they got independence from British rule in 1947. Ties between the countries have never been good and both frequently accuse each other of illegal activities on each others soil.

On Sunday, Indian police said they had shot and killed two armed Pakistani militants close to the capital, New Delhi.
 
Most commentators so far on TV have said that the ammo was purposely left at supermarkets, as alternative attacks were also planned. The only thing that they seemed to have goofed up here is leaving behind the RPG-22, which is a tad bit out of the range of the Taliban. They've yet not used it on tank operating in the tribal areas, but here they found it necessary to use it on a bus.

They might have used it for conveniance, as its easier to carry say compared to some other ****.
 
WHO WAS BEHIND LAHORE 3/3 Terror Attacks??

I have one theory like every one here does...
Here it goes like this...
guys its clearly done by LET or jaish group who did 26/11 in mumbai backed by ISI & pakistan army.
Now the question is why ISI would archestrate this attack at cost the image of pakistan??

well, my theory is simple, its to defame the civilian govt & prove to the world their gross inefficiency in running a volatile nuclear state like pakistan.
Ur Army surely hates india ,but in current cicumstances hate ur civilian politicians like no one else.If one consider how one military dictator like Gen musharraf was ousted from power ,i think some section among the top brass of the pak army holds deep sitted grudge aganist ur politicians.

Now its whether its military men or civilian politians ,every body loves power and no one easily renounces it.

If u have noticed there have been far more terrorists attacks in pakistan during this civilian rule than Gen musharraf times.why??

Its because ur military guys wants create an atmosphere in pakistan that pakistani public & even outside international community in general would look at Pak Army with expectations and may even celebrate when the brass goes out for the next coup in pakistan.

If u ask indian govt ,they would luv to have musharraf era back any day than tolerate pathetic ppp politicians...
 
Oh comeon! dont be so stupid. Citing weaponary doesnt prove your case. THere are hundreds of armies using RPG 22/ RPG 7. That is as stupid as saying they were wearing a dress which you saw being made in India.

i agree here. let say if raw planned attack then why will they use weapons which indicates involvement of RAW or India. they are smarter than this:agree: they will simply use the weapons which are not common in Indian army. planning is good but no matter how well the plan is there is always a chance to go wrong so for precaution they wont use same weapons.

i suspect people, who want RAW to be prime suspect behind this so they can create more tension between two countries as they have tried in mumbai attack but failed.

wrong move from Pakistan can create a very big misunderstanding. investigation has to be done without presumption of involvement of particular party.
 
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