Self-Styled Indian
Mujahideen Strikes in New Delhi-
International Terrorism Monitor--- Paper No. 444
By B. Raman
The so-called Indian Mujahideen (IM) has once again,
through an E-mail sent to some media offices, claimed the
responsibility for a series of five explosions in three
crowded market places of New Delhi between 6-45 PM and 7 PM
on September 13, 2008. At least nine persons are reported to
have been killed and many injured. The message is reported
to have been sent five minutes before the explosions took
place. It speaks of nine Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs)
planted in different places. Five of these have exploded.
Three are reported to have been detected by the police
before the explosion could take place. One remains
unaccounted for.
2. One has to await details of evidence regarding the
IEDs before one could comment on their similarity, if any,
with the earlier blasts in three cities of Uttar Pradesh
last November, in Jaipur in May and in Bangalore and
Ahmedabad in July, but the means of communication used to
claim responsibility for the blasts and to provide
authenticity of the claim are the same. The use of E-mails
signed by similar kuniyats (assumed names such as al-Hindi
or al-Arabi) and similar-sounding E-mail addresses indicate
the same organisation has been responsible.
3. It is already quite clear that a wide area pan-Indian
network of terrorists has come up in our midst and has
managed to train a number of Indian Muslims not only in
assembling IEDs, but also in clandestine methods of
operation and communication. From what one heard of the
contents of the message from the IM about the New Delhi
blasts, there is an element of bravado in it. It taunts the
security experts for not being able to establish who are
behind these messages. It shows a certain confidence that
the police are not yet on the trail of those sending these
messages.
4. The success of the UP Police in identifying some of
those involved in the blasts of last November did not
prevent the blasts that followed in other cities. Similarly,
the success of the Ahmedabad and Jaipur Police in arresting
many of those responsible for the blasts in their cities has
not come in the way of the successful strike in New Delhi.
5. Normally, timely preventive intelligence comes either
from intercepts of communications and/or penetration of the
terrorist organisations. The IM has apparently been using
the Internet for its internal communications and not
telephones. If so, this highlights our inadequacies in
intercepting Internet communications. Since we still do not
know the identity and organisational structure of the IM,
penetrating it would have been understandably difficult. We
were presuming before the UP blasts of last November that
all terrorist strikes must be the work of the Pakistan-based
Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET) or the Pakistan/Bangladesh based
Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI). Since November last, we
have been focussing on the Students Islamic Movement of
India (SIMI). It is possible that elements from all these
organisations are involved. It is equally possible that
there are other Indian Muslim elements who had not come to
the notice of the police earlier/. It is important to keep
an open mind and establish the composition and structure of
the IM. Only then penetration would be possible.
6. Preventive intelligence also comes from the thorough
interrogation of those arrested in connection with the
previous blasts. All the arrests made so far, whether in UP
or Jaipur or Ahmedabad , were mainly of those involved in
those blasts. They apparently did not enable us to identify
and arrest those trained with a capability for assembling
IEDS, but who had not yet participated in any terrorist
strike.
7. It should be apparent by now firstly, that we have
only identified the tip of the jihadi iceberg in our midst.
The iceberg itself remains unexposed. Secondly, we have not
yet been able to identify the command and control of the IM.
Thirdly, like Al Qaeda, the IM is divided into a number of
autonomous cells each capable of operating independently
without being affected by the identification and
neutralisation of the cells involved in previous blasts.
8. All these years, our focus was on the training camps
for jihadi terrorists in Pakistan and Bangladesh.
Interrogation of those arrested since the beginning of this
year has brought out that many training camps had been held
in different parts of India by the SIMI. We were apparently
oblivious of the details of these camps and the identities
of those trained. It is important to have a common
investigation cell for the whole of India to identify the
various elements involved in this wide area network and
neutralise them. Piecemeal investigation in different States
ruled by different political parties each with its own
partisan perception and agenda will result in our continuing
to bleed at the hands of this network
(The writer is
Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of
India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For
Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com )