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How Deep is Pakistani Involvement in the Mumbai Attack?
By ISHAAN THAROOR / MUMBAI Ishaan Tharoor / Mumbai – Thu Dec 4, 5:35 pm ET

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice landed in Islamabad on Thursday walking on a diplomatic tight-rope. She had just been through India and knew that New Delhi wanted Washington's help in getting Pakistan to crack down on groups implicated in last week's terror attack on Mumbai. But she also knew that such a crackdown would be unpopular in Pakistan and could very well destabilize its weak civilian government. How then to mollify India's saber-rattling public while getting Pakistan's officials to act against their own interest? The two nuclear-powered nations of the subcontinent have been to war against each other three times, and tempers are now rising on both sides of the border.


The moment has been made all the more delicate by the intricacies - and mysteries - of the investigation of the Mumbai massacre. Meeting the press in Islamabad, Rice shied away from pointing a finger at Pakistan, saying only that Pakistan had a "special responsibility" in dealing with the aftermath of the attacks. This was despite the claims of an anonymous American defense official in the New York Times linking the Islamist militant group, Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), which allegedly trained the Mumbai attackers, to ex-officers in the Pakistan's intelligence service. Indian officials believe that the LeT masterminded these attacks, as well as previous ones on the country's Parliament building in 2001 - grounds, some suggest, for targeted strikes against the group's base camps within Pakistan. (See pictures of Mumbai's days of terror.)


Rice has urged Pakistan's President Asif Zardari and his government to act "with resolve and a real sense of transparency" in dealing with the terrorist groups Pakistan harbors. Zardari, for his part, denied having received any evidence of Pakistani involvement. But the civilian government in Islamabad, like almost all others before it, wields little real power in a state that has always been dominated by the military. "Zardari's government was born with its hands tied," says B. Raman, a noted Indian commentator and columnist.


Indian investigators say they can pin the attacks on Pakistan for a number of reasons: the GPS coordinates of the fishing boat the terrorists used to land in Mumbai lead back to the Pakistani city of Karachi; e-mails as well as a phone call claiming responsibility for the attack trace back to Lahore, also in Pakistan, where the LeT has its civilian front.


Most important, though, is the testimony of the sole surviving attacker, Ajmal Amir Kasab, 21, who allegedly revealed his Pakistani identity to police interrogators after being captured. Kasab, who gunned down dozens at Chhatrapati Shviaji Terminus on Nov. 26, is being kept in an unknown location in the state of Maharashtra, where Mumbai is the capital. He has not been granted access to a lawyer yet, but will be charged in due course, say state government sources. According to the police, Kasab left his impoverished parents in Faridkot, Pakistan, and joined up with the LeT. The group allegedly trained him in weapons and drafted him into its marine detachment, supposedly organized to infiltrate India by sea. According to the transcript of his statement, supplied by the police, Kasab said: "We were told that our big brother India is so rich and we are dying of poverty and hunger." His family, Kasab claims, was promised some $4,000 were his operation - essentially, a coordinated suicide strike - a success.


As of now, it has been impossible to verify the police account of Kasab's confession independently; and that has been one of the reasons why Pakistan has yet to act on the incendiary implications. The details are key and they seem to fluctuate depending on who is narrating the tale. Indian media have even give the surviving attacker conflicting last names. Some say it is Iman, not Kasab. "There are many doubts that people will have," says Bhushan Gagrani, Maharashtra government spokesman. "But I don't see a reason not to believe the police."


Not everyone in India is comforted by simply hounding culprits over the border in Pakistan. Some worry about a deeper and closer conspiracy. Media reports on Thursday had the attackers carrying at least three SIM cards purchased on the Indian side of the border with Bangladesh, pointing to some local collusion, a possibility the police had tried to rule out when they first publicized Kasab's testimony. Lapses in policing since the attacks have infuriated the public. Newspapers ran stories this past week about how, even after the attacks, truckers bringing contraband into the city were allegedly able to bribe cops at checkpoints for less than $1. A full week after the attackers stomped around the ticket booths of the train station, inspectors found bags of RDX explosives left over from the assault - they had been lying among discarded parcels. "It is an unfortunate incident," says Gagrani. "Next time, we will survey it better." with reporting by Hussain Zaidi/Mumbai


View this article on Time.com

How Deep is Pakistani Involvement in the Mumbai Attack? - Yahoo! News
 

what the hell is this, were those terriorist killing people with bricks and rocks?
 
the band the terrorist was wearing was safron in colour.

and the one shoaib akhtar is wearing is red and is available in most of the shops

my dear friend an armband is a fashion accesory (as you are yourself are admitting) and anyone can wear it and of any color. It is ridiculous to associate it with any religion
 
what the hell is this, were those terriorist killing people with bricks and rocks?

They r home guards. Part of Civil Defence and not supposed to fight terrorists.

They are supposed to control people (rioters) who come with bricks and rocks.

Hope you understand.
 
These were the same rifles used in the filming for Planet of the Apes.

Look at the bright side. A RPF Jawan single handedly faught with 2 of the militiants at CST which foiled the original plan to hold CST with hostages.

Both Kasav and his friend ran away once Constable Yadav counter fired with his WW era .303 against the armed militants with AK-47/56.

Sometimes its not guns its courage.
 
i heared in geo that indian american commision in america will put pressure on t congress leaders of their area and ask them for stopping pakistani aid if they wont stop terrorist why our president is lack luster for giving answers to india and stop going for america pakistan has enough power to run it self without any foreign aid maslla ya ha ka humara leaders ko haram khori ki ada pad gaye ha we need to get out of american friendship which gave us a lot aq lot of probleums even they r our friends but they r supporting india
 
Look at the bright side. A RPF Jawan single handedly faught with 2 of the militiants at CST which foiled the original plan to hold CST with hostages.

Both Kasav and his friend ran away once Constable Yadav counter fired with his WW era .303 against the armed militants with AK-47/56.

Sometimes its not guns its courage.

..Or overwhelming manpower. You guys lost quite a lot of honorable servicemen due to poor equipment, and you're defending the old crusty rifles? Kasav(b) and his friend should have been dead long before constables armed with muskets had to subdue these dimwits.
 
..Or overwhelming manpower. You guys lost quite a lot of honorable servicemen due to poor equipment, and you're defending the old crusty rifles? Kasav(b) and his friend should have been dead long before constables armed with muskets had to subdue these dimwits.

Nobody is doubting or debating on the issue.
 
As things are anything can happen, the fragile peace can continue or a war can break out. There are simply too many factors that are shaping or influencing the events. For Pakistan the best course of action will be to hope for the peace and prepare for a war.
 
Indian media under fire for Mumbai attacks coverage

Fri Dec 5, 2008

By Rina Chandran

MUMBAI (Reuters) - Round-the-clock news coverage of the Mumbai attacks has made Indians nervous but analysts said on Friday it was also stoking anti-Pakistan public opinion and risks shaping policy before elections due by May.

Psychiatrists in India's financial hub are reporting increased cases of panic attacks and insomnia after last week's attacks, telecast live into millions of homes, by Islamist militants who killed 171 people.

"There was no sense of balance or reasoning. The coverage was so jingoistic and nationalistic, they've pushed public opinion on Pakistan to a point of no return," said Atul Phadnis, chief executive of consultancy Media e2e.

In the days since the attacks, the Indian flag is often used by broadcasters as a visual backdrop, with viewers' text messages expressing anger at politicians or Pakistan ticking across the bottom of screens.

Pakistan has condemned the attacks and denied any state involvement, as well as vowing to help the Indian probe.

A big protest in Mumbai on Wednesday, organised by text messages and on Internet social network Facebook and radio, was proof of growing media influence on opinion, said B. Manjula, chair of the Centre for Media and Cultural Studies at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences.

"Everyone is being led to believe that by lighting a candle or carrying a poster they've done their part as a dutiful citizen without questioning whose opinion they are pandering to ... their actions only make for great visuals for TV," she said.

There are more than 60 English and regional-language news channels fighting for the attention of 80 million Indian homes.

Most were launched in the last three years when a booming economy helped drive advertising revenues. But the fierce competition has also meant that less experienced journalists have been thrust into the field, Manjula said.

"This is a complex issue with various dimensions to it. Simply reducing it to 'politicians are villains' and 'Pakistan is the enemy' without discourse or debate is a deep failing of the media, but it does influence public opinion," said Manjula.

Across the border, the Pakistani media decried what it saw as the undue haste with which India blamed Pakistan for the assault, but is not urging the government to take a particular line.

The liberal Daily Times newspaper said in an editorial on Friday the distrust and hostility engendered by "black-and-white" media opinion on both sides would block proper communication.

The News, Pakistan's biggest English-language newspaper, said in an editorial on Thursday an outbreak of jingoism in Indian media was being matched by only a slightly less severe one in Pakistan.

"We need the media to tread a cautious line, support our government in its efforts to take the heat out of the situation and not to inflame our already tinder-box population," it said.

(Additional reporting by Robert Birsel in ISLAMABAD)
 
Wat a shame how can there be peace with this kind of thoughts from the Indians i understand the anger and i was upset at the same time sad for the lost lives but HATERED is a very serious word and action there will be no peace until people start to move forward and leave hatered behind i was watching the whole thing via indian channels since the first day all this began and i was upset to see the reaction from the people there without any proof the hatered is unreal STOP the hate STOP the blood shed for GOD's sake and lets live in peace.
 
china should do somethingh about the terrorists in indian kashmir. wich sometimes call themselves INDIAN ARMY
 
For your perusal.

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this shows, how much "intelligent" and "smart" u r!!

come on, this is shoab akhter, the most controversial man in the sub continent, hes running lose in all the things!!!, he seeks bollywood more than his carrer!!, he likes indian night clubs, and hangs around with indian girls, two indian girls at a tym, in his arms.
 
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