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US spies killed in terrorist raid

NEW DELHI: Even though the Indian government has refrained from dragging Islamabad directly into the Mumbai terror attacks, insinuations suggest that diplomatic relations between the two countries may suffer in the aftermath of the attacks. It is believed that the terrorists identified and then killed two senior US intelligence officers staying at the Taj Mahal Hotel. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, in his address to the nation, pricked Pakistan thrice without naming it. The security agencies in New Delhi told reporters they suspected the role of Al Qaeda in the attacks. The agencies believed their suspicion arose from the way the terrorists captured Taj hotel and successfully identified two senior US intelligence officials by checking the passports of the foreigners who were staying there, sources said. iftikhar gilani


Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Then you must be our local agent who arranged the boat for us. RAW is a useless organization. We only appoint efficient organizations as local operators.

Think who created Bangladesh !!!!

Even if we prove that these terrorist are from pakistan i am sure that there wont be any action like what happen to Dawood he is still roaming in pakistan with blessings. what happen to all the three terrorist leaders released during the IA hijacked case ?
 
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Sophisticated attacks, but Al Qaeda link disputed

* Indian security official suggests links to Indian Mujahideen

Daily Times Monitor

LAHORE: They came wearing black hoods, firing automatic weapons and throwing grenades. They took hostages and attacked two hotels, a movie theatre, a café, a train station and other popular and undefended ‘soft targets’.

Who are they? The answer to that question remained disputed, as security officials and experts attempted to untangle the few clues to the attackers’ likely identity, a New York Times report said on Thursday.

An email message to Indian media outlets that claimed responsibility for the bloody attacks in Mumbai on Wednesday night said the terrorists were from the Deccan Mujahideen.

Almost universally, experts and intelligence officials said that name was unknown.

Deccan is a neighbourhood of the Indian city of Hyderabad. The word also describes the middle and south of India, which is dominated by the Deccan Plateau.

Mujahideen is the commonly used Arabic word for fighters. But the combination of the two, said Sajjan Gohel, a security analyst in London, is a ‘front name. This group is nonexistent’.

Some global terrorism experts with experience in South Asia said that based on the tactics used in the attacks, the group was probably not linked to Al Qaeda, although other experts challenged that assertion.

“It’s even unclear whether it’s a real group or not,” said Bruce Hoffman, a professor at the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University and the author of the book ‘Inside Terrorism’. “It could be a cover name for another group, or a name adopted just for this particular incident,” he said.

Indian Mujahideen: An Indian security official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the name suggested a link to a group called Indian Mujahideen, which was implicated in a string of bomb attacks that killed around 200 people this year alone.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Guys anyone has the video of people chanting "Vande Mataram" when the Marcos were getting in Taj. Seen it on TV yesterday. Please share it
 
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Guys anyone has the video of people chanting "Vande Mataram" when the Marcos were getting in Taj. Seen it on TV yesterday. Please share it

Yes, I saw that.

The cremation of ceremony of the Police Officers was also very rousing.

People were shouting "Bharat Mata ki Jai" and "Jai Hind" throughout.
 
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Think who created Bangladesh !!!!

Even if we prove that these terrorist are from pakistan i am sure that there wont be any action like what happen to Dawood he is still roaming in pakistan with blessings. what happen to all the three terrorist leaders released during the IA hijacked case ?

Don't drag the thread out of context just for hiding your own failures.

Terrorist come to your city, carry out their activity and your intelligence agencies are sleeping. However when they finally wake up they know every thing. Perhaps terrorists had sent a copy of their operations report to them as well for record keeping.
 
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Don't drag the thread out of context just for hiding your own failures.

Terrorist come to your city, carry out their activity and your intelligence agencies are sleeping. However when they finally wake up they know every thing. Perhaps terrorists had sent a copy of their operations report to them as well for record keeping.

The same happened in mariott right. What is going on in NWFP we all know. What your "efficient" agencies where doing then?
 
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Yes, I saw that.

The cremation of ceremony of the Police Officers was also very rousing.

People were shouting "Bharat Mata ki Jai" and "Jai Hind" throughout.

Need to seriously salute the spirit of mumbaikars. I have spoken with my relatives/friends there. They were not scared. But were sure that they will bounce back
 
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Don't drag the thread out of context just for hiding your own failures.

Terrorist come to your city, carry out their activity and your intelligence agencies are sleeping. However when they finally wake up they know every thing. Perhaps terrorists had sent a copy of their operations report to them as well for record keeping.

U said Raw is usless organization. Thats why i have to mention that .

So what happen during your Marriott Bombings or BB ? Is it your ISI's failure ?

Intelligence agency's are not god just to predict everything. They also depend on so many things. Its not good just blame them.

Its good if they find it before if not they have to stop it in the future not to happen again.
 
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First of all I send my condolences to all those families who have suffered because of this cowardly terrorist strike. This is a cowardly strike that can only be blamed on damn animals. This is anti islamic activity and anyone who tries to justify this act is an idiot.

My uncle was going f4m lucknow to Mumbai f4m train f4 a business trip. Hes ok likin everyone was afraid and stuff...

Anyway this is looking like either the result of frustration amongst the Indian muslims at the bias and discrimination they go through every single day in India and I hope the Indian government deals with their grievances and gives them their rights so that such attacks by local Indian groups like the Indian mujahideen and Deccan mujahideen can be avoided in the future. Otherwise it is just some hindu fanatical organization that knows in the end blame will fall on Pakistan and they organized this attack to ensure peace between our nations does not prevail and our relationship is riddled with distrust...

India and Pakistan have the same threats from the same terroristic bastards and fanatics. Only thing is India also needs to deal with fanatical terrorist hindu organizations as well for example the Shiv Sena and Bajrang dal. I have lost close people to their idiocy to say the least. Shiv Sena specially is just mad. They dont want ANY muslims in India.
 
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India’s Suspicion of Pakistan Clouds U.S. Strategy in Region

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The terrorist attacks in Mumbai occurred as India and Pakistan, two big, hostile and nuclear-armed nations, were delicately moving toward improved relations with the encouragement of the United States and in particular the incoming Obama administration.

Those steps could quickly be derailed, with deep consequences for the United States, if India finds Pakistani fingerprints on the well-planned operation. India has raised suspicions. Pakistan has vehemently denied them.

But no matter who turns out to be responsible for the Mumbai attacks, their scale and the choice of international targets will make the agenda of the new American administration harder.

Reconciliation between India and Pakistan has emerged as a basic tenet in the approaches to foreign policy of President-elect Barack Obama, and the new leader of Central Command, Gen. David H. Petraeus. The point is to persuade Pakistan to focus less of its military effort on India, and more on the militants in its lawless tribal regions who are ripping at the soul of Pakistan.

A strategic pivot by Pakistan’s military away from a focus on India to an all-out effort against the Taliban and their associates in Al Qaeda, the thinking goes, would serve to weaken the militants who are fiercely battling American and NATO forces in Afghanistan.

But attacks as devastating as those that unfolded in Mumbai — whether ultimately traced to homegrown Indian militants or to others from abroad, or a combination — seem likely to sour relations, fuel distrust and hamper, at least for now, America’s ambitions for reconciliation in the region.

The early signs were that India, where state elections are scheduled next week, would take a tough stand and blame its neighbor. In his statement to the nation, the Indian prime minister, Manmohan Singh, who in the past has been relatively moderate in his approach to Pakistan, sounded a harsh tone.

He said the attacks probably had “external linkages,” and were carried out by a group “based outside the country.” There would be a “cost” to “our neighbors,” he said, if their territory was found to have been used as a launching pad.

The prime minister did not name Pakistan. But everyone — certainly on Pakistani television news programs Thursday night — knew that is what he meant, and that the long history of Pakistani-Indian finger-pointing had returned.

The Hindustan Times, an influential Indian newspaper, reported Thursday that India’s security agencies believed that the multiple attacks in Mumbai were by an Islamic militant group, Lashkar-e-Taiba, operating out of Pakistan.

According to the newspaper, the special secretary at the Home Affairs Ministry, M. L. Kumawat, said that Lashkar-e-Taiba was a “distinct possibility.” The newspaper stopped short of saying that Pakistan’s premier intelligence agency, Inter-Services Intelligence, had helped Lashkar-e-Taiba plan and execute the Mumbai operation, a role that the Indian government has ascribed to the Pakistani intelligence agency in past terrorist attacks.

But if India discovers that the intelligence agency is connected to the Mumbai attacks — even rogue elements of the agency — the slightly warmer relationship that has been fostered between the neighbors would no doubt return to a deep freeze. And that may have partly been the motivation of whoever carried out the attacks.

“If the Indians believe this was Lashkar-e-Taiba and Al Qaeda, as they are suggesting, we could see a crisis like 2002 with enormous pressure to do something,” an American official said on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the matter. “The key will be if the Indians see an ISI hand.”

After a dozen people died in an assault on the Indian Parliament in New Delhi in December 2001, India blamed a jihadist group, Jaish-e-Muhammad, and said Inter-Services Intelligence had backed the operation. For the next year the neighbors remained on the brink of war with forces massed along their 1,800-mile border.

According to a new book, “The Search for Al Qaeda,” by Bruce Riedel, an adviser on South Asia to Mr. Obama, Osama bin Laden worked with the Pakistani intelligence agency in the late 1980s to create Lashkar-e-Taiba as a jihadist group intended to challenge Indian rule in Kashmir.

But the new president of Pakistan, Asif Ali Zardari, appears to be acting according to America’s playbook for better relations with India.

A businessman at heart, Mr. Zardari understands the benefit of strong trade between India and Pakistan. Now on life support from the International Monetary Fund, Pakistan would profit immensely from the normalization of relations.

Mr. Zardari has called for visa-free travel, a huge step from a situation in which there are not even scheduled flights between the nation’s capitals. Speaking to an Indian audience over a video link from Islamabad last weekend, Mr. Zardari proposed a “no first nuclear strike” policy with India. The idea came as a shock to the Pakistani Army, which has always refused to commit to a policy of no first use of nuclear weapons.

Going further, Mr. Zardari said South Asia should be a nuclear-weapon-free zone, which could be achieved by a “nonnuclear treaty.”

“I can get around my Parliament to this view, but can you get around the Indian Parliament to this view?” he asked.

Pakistani officials said the president’s sentiments did not reflect the policies of the powerful Pakistani security establishment, whose existence has been predicated since partition of the subcontinent 61 years ago on viewing India as the enemy.

It will take more than off-the-cuff remarks intended to please a dinner audience to change these longstanding policies, Pakistani newspaper editorials said.

“He wants improved relations with India,” said Sajjan M.Gohel, director for international security of the Asia-Pacific Foundation in London. “But Zardari needs the full support of the Pakistani security apparatus, and he doesn’t have it.”

Some of the moves toward improving the atmosphere between India and Pakistan were under way on the night of the Mumbai attacks. The Pakistani foreign minister, Shah Mahmood Qureshi, on a four-day trip to India, had just finished discussions with the Indian foreign minister, Pranab Mukherjee, on terrorism, trade and the loosening of visa restrictions when the terrorists struck.

Visibly moved by the attacks, Mr. Qureshi appeared on Indian television on Thursday, calling the attacks “barbaric.” He urged both sides not to resort to “knee-jerk” reactions and to drop the usual “blame game.” Across the board, senior Pakistani officials condemned the attacks.

But there was also immediate anxiety among Pakistanis about the Indian prime minister’s unequivocal tone. “It is unfair to blame Pakistan or Pakistanis for these acts of terrorism even before an investigation is undertaken,” said the Pakistani ambassador to the United States, Husain Haqqani. “Instead of scoring political points at the expense of a neighboring country that is itself a victim of terrorism, it is time for India’s leaders to work together with Pakistan’s elected leaders in putting up a joint front against terrorism.”

Unless care is exercised, one of the apparent goals of the Mumbai attack will be achieved, said Moonis Ahmar, a lecturer in international relations at Karachi University. And the new American agenda of reconciliation between India and Pakistan will be sacrificed. “It’s a well-thought-out conspiracy to destabilize relations between the two countries,” Mr. Ahmar said.


http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/28/world/asia/28diplo.html?hp
 
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Yes, I saw that.

The cremation of ceremony of the Police Officers was also very rousing.

People were shouting "Bharat Mata ki Jai" and "Jai Hind" throughout.

Flint you are also a mumbaikar right?
 
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Guys, terrorism is a common scourge for both our nations.

Appeal to the more reasonable members to not make it a slanging match. It is not India Vs. Pak. It should be India and Pak Vs. these cowards.
 
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Now second of all I would like to bring attention to this article in dawn news:

Who could be behind the Mumbai attacks and why?

MUMBAI: Militants armed with automatic weapons and grenades attacked luxury hotels, hospitals and a famous tourist cafe in India's commercial capital Mumbai late on Wednesday, killing at least 101 people.
* WHO IS BEHIND THE ATTACKS?
The attacks were claimed by a previously unknown group calling itself the Deccan Mujahideen in an e-mail to news organizations. Deccan is an area of southern India.
But it is not clear if the claim is genuine, and analysts say the bombings are almost certainly the work of a different group.
The most likely perpetrators, they say, are either the Indian Mujahideen or Lashkar-e-Taiba.

* WHO ARE LASHKAR-E-TAIBA?
Lashkar-e-Taiba is one of the largest Islamic militant groups in South Asia, based in Pakistan and fighting Indian rule in Kashmir. Security analysts say it is a well-funded and highly organized group that sympathizes with al Qaeda.
Lashkar-e-Taiba denied being behind the Mumbai attacks and said it condemned them.
The group was blamed for bomb attacks on markets in New Delhi that killed more than 60 people in 2005, as well as an assault on India's parliament in 2001 that brought India and Pakistan to the brink of a fourth war.

* WHO ARE THE INDIAN MUJAHIDEEN?
Indian police say the Indian Mujahideen is an offshoot of the banned Students' Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), but that local Muslims appear to have been given training and backing from militant groups in neighboring Pakistan and Bangladesh.
SIMI has been blamed by police for almost every major bomb attack in India, including explosions on commuter trains in Mumbai two years ago that killed 187 people.
Police said the Indian Mujahideen may also include former members of Bangladeshi militant group Harkat-ul-Jihad al Islami.
The group first emerged during a wave of bombings in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh in November 2007, sending an e-mail to media outlets just before some of the bombs exploded.
They have since claimed responsibility for multiple bomb attacks in Jaipur, Bangalore, Ahmedabad and New Delhi.

* WHO DOES INDIA BLAME?
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said the attacks were probably plotted by a group based in a neighboring country.
But Indian governments often blame neighboring Pakistan or sometimes Bangladesh for supporting or harboring militant groups which have launched attacks on Indian soil.

* WHAT CAN BE INFERRED FROM THE ATTACKERS' TACTICS?
The Mumbai attacks were unusual in that they involved coordinated attacks by gunmen on multiple targets, hostages were taken, and foreigners were specifically targeted.
Several analysts say these tactics point to Lashkar-e-Taiba as being involved. The attacks on symbolic targets designed to gather maximum publicity, and the specific targeting, point to a group following al Qaeda ideology and tactics.
The attacks also show a considerable degree of sophistication, another factor pointing to an experienced group like Lashkar-e-Taiba.
The Indonesian Mujahideen have also surprised police with the sophistication of their attacks, however, although until now these have always been bomb attacks on Indian targets.

In May, the Indian Mujahideen made a specific threat to attack tourist sites in India unless the government stopped supporting the United States in the international arena.
The threat was made in an e-mail claiming responsibility for bomb attacks that killed 63 people in the tourist city of Jaipur. The mail declared ‘open war against India’ and included the serial number of a bicycle used in one of the bombings.

* WHAT CAN BE INFERRED FROM THEIR DEMANDS?
A man speaking Urdu with a Kashmiri accent phoned an Indian TV station, offering talks with the government and accusing the Indian army of killing Muslims in Kashmir. This suggests the attackers are involved with a Kashmiri group like Lashkar-e-Taiba.
The demands of the Indian Mujahideen — like their targets — have always tended to be much more domestic. The group issued an e-mail threat in September to attack Mumbai but directed its anger at the Mumbai police anti-terrorist squad, accusing them of harassing Muslims.

‘If this is the degree your arrogance has reached, and if you think that by these stunts you can scare us, then let the Indian Mujahideen warn all the people of Mumbai that whatever deadly attacks Mumbaikars will face in future, their responsibility would lie with the Mumbai ATS and their guardians,’ it said.

What the hell is this? The coverage by dawn news of the particular event is especially stupid. They are either retarded or completely mad. This attack was clearly launched by locals. Did'nt u see the big mumbai kid with an AK47 caught on tape?

Our own news is biased. Their coverage has been so negative of Pakistan and it seems they are particularly trying to find a link between Pakistan and the terror attack.

Also this is another article by idiots @t dawn news:
Commandos battle to regain Mumbai: Blame game begins, allegations levelled against Pakistan; death toll put at 119 with over 300 injured

By Anand Kumar


MUMBAI, Nov 27: As commandos of India’s elite anti-terrorism force, the National Security Guard (NSG), were engaged in fierce battles with terrorists at some places till late Thursday night, officials claimed that terrorists had been flushed out from the five-star Taj Hotel, one of the landmarks of the country’s financial and commercial capital.

The commandos who went into action immediately after the city was attacked on Wednesday night, were engaged in clashes with the terrorists holed up in the Taj, another five-star hotel, Oberoi-Trident, and a synagogue-cum-Jewish education centre, all located in south Mumbai.

The terrorists, whose identity is still not known, although one of them told a TV channel that they belonged to the so far unknown Deccan Mujahideen, launched the audacious attack, firing indiscriminately from their AK-47 rifles at about half a dozen places.

The toll was put at 119 at Thursday midnight with about 300 people having been injured. The dead included about 15 policemen, including two top officers, 10 foreigners and seven terrorists.

Maharashtra Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh said that about 25 terrorists were suspected to be involved in the attack on the mage-city, which was virtually crippled on Thursday with government and private offices, banks, schools, colleges and other establishments remaining closed. Stock markets also remained shut.

NSG commandos began hunting the terrorists who had occupied the Taj Mahal Hotel and Oberoi-Trident Hotel in south Mumbai, besides Nariman Bhavan, which houses a Jewish study centre and also serves as a synagogue. About seven militants had occupied the five-storeyed residential building on Wednesday, holding an Israeli rabbi, his wife and child as hostage. The local head office of the orthodox Jewish group, Chabad-Lubavitch, is popular among Israeli tourists visiting India, and many of them stay there for a few weeks.

When the commandos planned to launch an attack on the building, one of the terrorists panicked and tried to escape to an adjoining building. But he fell, got injured and later died. However, the remaining six terrorists continued firing at the commandos, delaying their entry into the building.

The commandos were successful at the Taj Mahal Hotel, where all the hostages were rescued and most of the guests were evacuated.

According to A.N. Roy, Maharashtra’s police chief, there were no more hostages at the Taj Mahal Hotel, though about two or three terrorists were still there in one of the rooms.

But at the Oberoi-Trident Hotel, there were about 40 hostages being held by nearly a dozen terrorists. Another 200 guests were also stranded in the high-rise hotel, adding to the problems of the NSG commandos.

According to an Indian Navy spokesman, about two dozen terrorists had landed in Mumbai after travelling in a merchant vessel, the MV Alpha, from Karachi. The Indian Navy intercepted the vessel on Thursday. The Navy spokesman said that further probe was under way.

Police sources say the terrorists landed in rubber boats near the Gateway of India and headed straight for the half a dozen destinations, armed heavily with weapons and explosives. They even commandeered two police vehicles, firing indiscriminately on the way.

Agencies add: Indian security forces arrested three militants, including a Pakistani national, inside the Taj Mahal hotel, the Press Trust of India news agency reported early Friday.Quoting official sources, the agency report identified the Pakistani national as Ajmal Amir Kamal, a resident of Faridkot, Multan. It also said the militants were members of Lashkar-i-Taiba -- a Pakistan-based group best known for an assault on the Indian parliament in 2001.

The report said the Pakistani detainee told Indian investigators that the group of 12 militants had been dropped off by a merchant vessel 10 nautical miles outside Indian waters, and had reached Mumbai in a small speedboat.

Helicopters buzzed overhead and crowds cheered as the commandos, their faces blackened, moved into the Trident-Oberoi, where 20 to 30 people were thought to have been taken hostage and more than 100 others were trapped in their rooms. Huge flames billowed from an upper floor.

Dipak Dutta told NDTV news after being rescued that he had been told by troops escorting him through the corridors not to look down at any of the bodies. “A lot of chef trainees were massacred in the kitchen.”

Security officials said that seven hostages had been rescued from the Jewish complex. But an Israeli diplomat said that those freed had come from “other buildings” and that there remained an uncertain number of people still trapped in the Jewish centre.

“We’ve recovered seven hostages from the complex. Sweeping operations are ongoing,” a security told reporters outside the complex.

A militant holed up at the complex phoned an Indian television channel to offer talks with the government for the release of hostages, but also to complain about abuses in Kashmir.

“Ask the government to talk to us and we will release the hostages,” the man, identified by the TV channel as Imran, said.

“Are you aware how many people have been killed in Kashmir? Are you aware how your army has killed Muslims? Are you aware how many of them have been killed in Kashmir this week?”

Australian actress Brooke Satchwell, who starred in the Neighbours television soap opera, said she narrowly escaped the gunmen by hiding in a hotel bathroom cupboard.

“There were people getting shot in the corridor. There was someone dead outside the bathroom,” the shaken actress told Australian television. “The next thing I knew I was running down the stairs and there were a couple of dead bodies across the stairs. It was chaos.”

“We threw ourselves down under the reception counter,” Esperanza Aguirre, head of Madrid’s regional government, said.

“I took off my shoes and we left being pushed along by the hotel staff,” she said.

“I didn’t see any terrorists or injured people. I just saw the blood I had to walk through barefoot.”

This article is by an Indian and I question what the hell it is doing in a Pakistani news site even though it is blaming us. Why did'nt musharraf teach dawn news a lesson? :disagree:
 
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Still the Indians pointing finger at Pakistan and soon probably Bangladesh -

Attributes Suggest Outside Help

Analysts Cite Scale, Compared With Previous Onslaughts

BERLIN, Nov. 27 -- Counterterrorism officials and experts said the scale, sophistication and targets involved in the Mumbai attacks were markedly different from previous terrorist plots in India and suggested the gunmen had received training from outside the country. But they cautioned it was too soon to tell who may have masterminded the operation, despite an assertion from a previously unknown Islamist radical group.

Officials in India, Europe and the United States said likely culprits included Islamist networks based in Pakistan that have received support in the past from Pakistan's intelligence agencies.

Analysts said this week's attacks surpassed previous plots carried out by domestic groups in terms of complexity, the number of people involved and their success in achieving their primary goal: namely, to spread fear.

"This is a new, horrific milestone in the global jihad," said Bruce Riedel, a former South Asia analyst for the CIA and National Security Council and author of the book, "The Search for Al Qaeda." "No indigenous Indian group has this level of capability. The goal is to damage the symbol of India's economic renaissance, undermine investor confidence and provoke an India-Pakistani crisis."

Several analysts and officials said the attacks bore the hallmarks of Lashkar-i-Taiba or Jaish-i-Muhammad, two networks of Muslim extremists from Pakistan that have targeted India before. Jaish-i-Muhammad was blamed for an attack on the Indian Parliament in 2001.

Both groups have carried out a long campaign of violence in the disputed territory of Kashmir, which India and Pakistan have fought over for six decades. The roots of the long-running conflict are religious: A majority of India's population is Hindu, while most Pakistanis are Muslim.

A U.S. counterterrorism official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said Lashkar-i-Taiba, which means "Army of the Pious," and Jaish-i-Muhammad, or "Soldiers of Muhammad," are "the thing people are starting to look at. But I can't caution enough to treat it as a theory, a working assumption. It's still too early for hard and fast" conclusions.

"What the Indians have in their favor," the official added, "is that they've got some of these guys. It seems logical that they can expect to work their way back reasonably quickly." Indian officials said several gunmen were captured.

In its Friday editions, the newspaper the Hindu reported that at least three of the suspects held by police were members of Lashkar-i-Taiba and that the assailants had arrived in Mumbai on a ship from Karachi, Pakistan.

Earlier, Pakistan's government condemned the attacks and warned India against jumping to conclusions about who was responsible. Lashkar-i-Taiba issued a statement denying involvement.

India has been plagued by a wave of terrorist attacks in recent years, many sparked by friction between Hindu nationalists and minority Muslim groups. The shootings in Mumbai were far from the worst to strike India's financial capital; bombings in 1993 and 2006 each killed more than 180 people.

A group calling itself the Deccan Mujaheddin asserted responsibility for the attacks in e-mails sent to Indian media organizations Wednesday. Officials said they had never heard of the group.

Television footage showed that the assailants carrying automatic rifles and backpacks filled with ammunition and grenades. Analysts said the fact that the gunmen quickly fanned across the city and were able to hold off Indian security forces over three days suggested that they had received training at organized camps.

"What is striking about this is a fair amount of planning had to go into this type of attack," said Roger W. Cressey, a former White House counterterrorism official in the Clinton and Bush administrations. "This is not a seat-of-the-pants operation. This group had to receive some training or support from professionals in the terrorism business."

Some experts said the operation bore some resemblances to plots orchestrated by al-Qaeda, in that it involved multiple, simultaneous attacks targeting foreigners. In this case, according to witnesses, the gunmen sought out Americans and Britons, and also took hostages at the local headquarters of an Orthodox Jewish group.

Others said they were dubious of a connection to Osama bin Laden's organization. They said al-Qaeda has relied on suicide bombers, not gunmen, and is not known to have cells in India.

David Miliband, Britain's foreign secretary, told reporters that it was "premature to talk about links to al-Qaeda" and that it was still unclear who the intended targets were. "This is only the latest in a series of attacks in India over the last year or two," he said, adding: "Terrorism is not just a war against the West."

Peter Neumann, a terrorism analyst at King's College in London, noted that dozens of gunmen were involved. "This doesn't mean it's al-Qaeda, or they take orders from bin Laden, but I'm pretty sure it's not some leaderless, grass-roots thing."

On Wednesday, al-Qaeda's propaganda arm released a video on the Internet featuring an interview with Ayman al-Zawahiri, the network's deputy leader. He made no mention of the attacks in Mumbai; it was unclear when the video was produced.

Other experts warned that there is a long list of suspects who could have played a role. For instance, Indian officials have blamed the 1993 bombings in Mumbai, which killed 257 people, on Dawood Ibrahim, an organized crime figure who remains on the run.

"Anything could be in the cards," said Magnus Ranstorp, a terrorism analyst at the Swedish National Defense College. "With most terrorist attacks, it's relatively clear-cut who is involved. In this case, it could be all sorts of constellations that are at work."

washingtonpost.com
 
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