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Terrorism in India & the Global Jihad
BRUCE RIEDEL
Targets of Mumbai attacks—Americans, Israelis & Indians—fit exactly into the profile that Al Qaeda vilify & plot against
The attacks on multiple targets
in downtown Mumbai in
late November 2008 is only
the latest in a long series of
horrific terrorist operations
in India. Terrorism in India is a complex
phenomenon with numerous
perpetrators.
The most dangerous
terrorist menace comes from groups
with intimate connections to the
global jihadist network centred
around Osama bin Laden and al-
Qaeda and its allies in the Pakistani
jihadist culture. While it is too soon
to draw firm conclusions about
responsibility for the attacks in
Mumbai in November 2008, the odds
are good that the terrorists and the
masterminds behind their plot are
connected to the global jihad.
India has been a target for Al
Qaeda and the global jihadist movement
for over a decade. India has
often been listed by bin Laden and
his accomplice Ayman Zawahiri as a
part of the ‘Crusader-Zionist-Hindu’
conspiracy against the Islamic
world. The targets of the killers in
Mumbai—Americans, Brits, Israelis
and Indians—fit exactly into the profile
Al Qaeda and its partners vilify
and plot against. Both bin Laden and
Zawahiri have spoken about the
“US-Jewish-Indian alliance against
Muslims.”
The National Counter Terrorism
Centre noted earlier this year that
India had the second largest number
of casualties from terrorism in 2007,
just behind Iraq. Now it almost certainly
will have the highest casualty
number in 2008. Many different
groups use terror as a tool in India,
including separatist movements in
the north east, rural Maoists called
Naxalites in the Centre and east of
the country, extremists in the
Muslim minority and extremists in
the Hindu majority. Mahatma
Gandhi was a victim of Hindu
extremist violence himself. These
indigenous groups are responsible
for much of the low intensity violence
in the country.
But the most dangerous terror
menace comes from Kashmiri
groups based in Pakistan with long
and intimate connections to Al
Qaeda and bin Laden. The group
which has been linked by initial
Indian assessments of the Mumbai
attack, Lashkar-e-Taiyabba (literally
the army of the pure or righteous),
was founded in Afghanistan and
Pakistan in the late 1980s and early
1990s by a group of Kashmiri
activists with the assistance of the
Pakistani intelligence service, the
Inter Services Intelligence
Directorate or ISI.
Osama bin Laden
was an early supporter of the group
and provided some of the initial
funding for its start. The ISI was an
enthusiastic supporter of the
Kashmiri insurgency and wanted to
use asymmetric warfare, i.e. terrorism
to undermine Indian control of
Kashmir.
LeT was banned in Pakistan in
2002 but continues to operate there
under a number of cover names
including Jamaat-ud-Dawah. Its self
professed goal is to create an Islamic
state in all of south and central Asia,
not just Kashmir. Its operatives have
worked closely with Al Qaeda and
the Taliban in Afghanistan and there
are reports of LeT volunteers fighting
in Iraq. Like Al Qaeda it has
raised funds in the Gulf states.
The
extent of its continuing relationship
with the ISI is much debated. The
Pakistani authorities claim none
exists but the fact is that the organisation
has been tolerated in Pakistan
despite the 2002 ban. It still has is
leadership there and trains its fighters
in both Pakistani Kashmir and
the badlands along the Afghanistan-
Pakistan border.
Since 9/11 several key Al Qaeda
operatives arrested in Pakistan have
been found in safe houses run by
LeT. The first major Al Qaeda lieutenant
caught after 9/11, Abu
Zubayda, was apprehended in an
LeT safe house in Faisalabad.
Gary
Schroen, who served as a CIA chief
of station in Pakistan and led the
first CIA team into Afghanistan after
9/11, has noted that “since 2002
whenever a raid has been conducted
in Pakistan against Al Qaeda, Al
Qaeda members are found being
hosted by militant Pakistanis, primarily
from the LeT group, supporters
of the Kashmir insurgency.”
Also like Al Qaeda, the LeT
recruits actively among the
Pakistani diaspora in the United
Kingdom.
Some 800,000 strong,
many with Kashmiri roots, the
British Pakistani community is an
attractive target for many reasons
not the least the fact that second
and third generation members have
British passports and can thus travel
more easily in the West. LeT has
been linked to numerous terrorist
attacks in India including the massacre
of dozens of Sikhs in Kashmir
in March 2000 during President
Clinton’s visit to India, bombings in
New Delhi in 2005
and bombings in
Varanasi and
Mumbai in 2006.
TheMumbai metro
bombings on July
11, 2006 killed over
two hundred.
Bin Laden was
also a key figure in
the creation of
another Kashmiri
group that works
closely with global
jihadists, the Jaishe
Muhammad (Army of
Muhammad). In December 1999
Kashmiri militants hijacked an
Indian commercial airliner, IA 814,
from Kathmandu, Nepal, and flew it
to Kandahar, Afghanistan, then the
de facto capital of the Taliban’s
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
The
hijackers demanded the release of
several terrorists held in Indian jails,
including Maulana Masoud Azhar,
wanted for several previous terrorist
atrocities. The hijackers were
allegedly assisted by the ISI station
in Nepal, they were received as
heroes by the Taliban in Kandahar
and the plot was reportedly planned
by bin Laden. Osama hosted the victory
dinner when India reluctantly
gave in to the hijackers’ demands to
save the 155 hostages.
Former
Indian Foreign Minister Jaswant
Singh, who flew to Kandahar to
arrange the hostage release and
negotiated with the Taliban, has
labelled the IA
814 operation the
“dress rehearsal”
for 9/11 because it
involved so many
of the same characters
behind
9/11. After the
release of Azhar
the ISI took him
to Pakistan for a
hero’s welcome
and a fund raising
tour through the
country to help
found a new group, JeM.
In December 2001 JeM, possibly
with help from LeT, was behind an
attack on the Indian parliament.
This attack was designed to create a
crisis between India and Pakistan by
killing the senior echelon of the
Indian government and legislators.
It succeeded in provoking a tense
standoff that would last over a year
and during which more than a million
Indian and Pakistani soldiers
were deployed in forward positions
along their border.
By focusing
Pakistan’s army on its eastern border
with India the attack also left the
western border with Afghanistan
open to the retreating Al Qaeda and
Taliban leadership including bin
Laden, Zawahiri and Mullah Omar
who were fleeing the American
Operation Enduring Freedom forces
in Afghanistan. This was undoubtedly
not a coincidence. Like LeT,
Jaish has been outlawed in Pakistan
but continues to operate under various
cover names. The extent of its
existing ties to the ISI is also much
debated.
The Mumbai attacks displayed a
level of sophisticated planning that
marks another milestone in the global
jihad. Multiple targets within an
urban environment, trained and
armed killers intent on operating in
small teams or alone targeting
Americans, Brits, Israelis as well as
Indians, careful casing of the targets
ahead of the attack and the use of
small boats to get close in to the targets
are signs of the continuing evolution
of terrorist planners.
Hotels have
long been a favourite target of Al
Qaeda and its allies from the multiple
hotel bombings in Amman by Al
Qaeda’s Iraq franchise in November
2005 to the attack on the Serena Hotel
in Kabul this January and the bombing
of the Marriott hotel in Islamabad
in September.
Many accounts of the incident say
the terrorists arrived by sea from the
Pakistani megacity port of Karachi.
Karachi has long been a favourite hide
out of the global jihad syndicate.
Khalid Shaykh Mohammad, the tactical
mastermind of 9/11, trained most
of the Saudi hijackers in Karachi in a
safe house. KSM also watched the collapse
of the World Trade Centre towers
from an internet café in Karachi
on the day of the attack. The
December 2001 attack on the Indian
parliament was planned and orchestrated
from Karachi, perhaps with
KSM’s involvement.
Much still needs
to be learned about the Mumbai
attacks. According to some Indian
accounts, a captured terrorist has
already confessed to being a member
of LeT. Several Indian (B. Raman for
example) and Pakistani (Ahmad
Rashid) experts have suggested an Al
Qaeda hand in the attacks behind
LeT. But we should be careful not to
draw conclusions too early from an
incomplete investigation. There is
considerable confusion and contradiction
in the press accounts of what
transpired. The good news is that
Pakistan has offered to assist in the
investigation which could help prevent
the very crisis between India and
Pakistan that the plots masterminds
may have wanted.
For the last several months India
and Pakistan had been improving
their bilateral relationship. Pakistan’s
new President Asif ali Zardari had
made several positive statements
about his desire to ease tensions with
India, including a pledge that
Pakistan would adhere to a no first
use of nuclear weapons doctrine, a
major change in Islamabad’s position.
Trade has been opened across the line
of control in Kashmir, albeit in small
amounts, for the first time in sixty
years. Zardari has also promised to
get control over the ISI and to stop its
policy of both chasing and supporting
terrorism in Pakistan.
His ability to do
so is still very much in doubt.
AlQaeda and its allies like LeT and
JeM would see this easing of tensions
as a threat to their interests. They
want conflict between India and
Pakistan today just as they did in
2001. They thrive on the hatred the
Indo-Pakistan conflict produces. If
they are involved in the Mumbai
attacks it would be in part to disrupt
any chance at easing tensions in the
subcontinent and perhaps also to
divert Pakistan’s army away from the
badlands along the border with
Afghanistan to the border with India,
again as in 2001.
For over a decade, India has been in
the bull’s eye of both Al Qaeda and the
global jihadist syndicate that has its’
hide outs in Pakistan and
Afghanistan. In spite of horrifying terrorist
spectacles the Indian people
and India’s democracy have not been
terrified into defeat.
The people of
Mumbai in particular have risen time
and again from terrorist attacks that
would shake any other city to its core.
The terrorists who attacked Mumbai
have tried to break the morale of the
city that is at the Centre of India’s economic
renaissance and it cultural life.
They have failed before and will fail
again.
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