MUMBAI 26/11: BBC'S UNLIKELY STORY
By B. Raman
Under its "Newsnight" programme, British Broadcasting
Corporation 2 is reportedly planning to show at 10-30 PM on
June 29, 2009, an investigative story on the Mumbai
terrorist attack of November 26, 2008, by Richard Watson,
its correspondent. An advance version of the programme
disseminated to the media in the UK and India shows that as
a result of his investigation, Watson came to the
conclusion that spotters belonging to a Mumbai-based
sleeper cell of the Lashkar-e-Toiba ( LET) must have been
communicating to the LET's controlling officers in
Pakistan details of the police deployments and movements in
and around the targeted areas on the basis of which they
were able to give precise instructions to the terrorists
participating in the multiple attacks. He questions the
Mumbai police version that the controllers were able to
give such instructions purely on the basis of their visual
observations from the TV coverage of the attacks as they
were taking place.
2.
As reported by "TheTelegraph" of the UK, Watson says as
follows: "How did the leaders know the police positions in
such detail? Mumbai police say they were watching live TV
in Pakistan. But these instructions seem remarkably precise
for that. I know the kind of live-shots used in these
situations and they would be unlikely to yield that kind of
detail. It is far more likely that they had spotters on the
ground who were feeding back information to their leaders
about the police movements. If this is true then it means a
Lashkar e-Taiba cell in Mumbai which played a crucial
role in the attacks which is still undiscovered."
3.
His conclusion is based on his assessment of the
communications intelligence collected by the police and not
on the basis of any independent evidence collected by him in
addition to what the Mumbai Police had collected.
4.
The fact that the LET has been having sleeper cells in
Mumbai is well known since the twin explosions of August,
2003. It is also a reasonable possibility that the Mumbai
Police has not been able to identify and neutralise all the
sleeper cells of the LET in Mumbai. That is why acts of
terrorism keep taking place from time to time despite the
neutralisation of many cells in Mumbai and other cities.
Recently, a sleeper cell headed by a Nepal-based LET
operative was neutralised by the Delhi Police.
5.
To say that the LET must still be having unearthed sleeper
cells in Mumbai is one thing and to assert that the spotters
of an LET sleeper cell in Mumbai must have been passing on
details of police deployments around the targeted areas to
the controllers in Pakistan during the attack in
November, 2008, is something totally different.
6.
The Mumbai terrorist attack lasted nearly over 60 hours.
Nationals of many Western countries and Israel were among
those taken hostage by the terrorists. The intelligence
agencies of at least India, the US and Israel were
electronically monitoring the telephone calls from and to
the attacked areas on a minute-to-minute basis. Of all the
intelligence agencies of the world, the National Security
Agency (NSA). the electronic intelligence agency of the US,
has deployed the maximum technical assets in the Af-Pak
region since 9/11 to monitor the communications of Al Qaeda,
the LET and other associates. Once the terrorist attacks
started, the NSA must have turned all its assets in the
region towards Mumbai to monitor all in-coming and out-going
communications. So too, the Indian intelligence.
7.
The Indian and the US intelligence agencies were able to
intercept all communications passing between the terrorists
who had occupied the two hotels and the Narriman House and
their controlling officers in Pakistan. In addition to
contemporaneously monitoring telephone conversations,
intelligence agencies have also arrangements for automatic
recording of all conversations in a terrorism situation so
that if they contemporaneously miss any conversation, they
can refer to the recordings.
8.
Had there been LET spotters around the areas targeted, who
were in independent communication with the controllers in
Pakistan their conversations---- whether through the
Internet or otherwise--- must have also been intercepted
contemporaneously or recorded and noticed subsequently. No
intelligence agency----neither Indian nor the US nor of any
other country--- has spoken of any such conversation with
Pakistan by elements not participating in the attacks. This
would show that apart from the 10 terrorists of the LET, who
participated in the attacks, nobody else was in independent
communication with the controllers in Pakistan.
9.
The terrorist attacks were covered from different camera
angles by camera teams from over 50 TV channels of the
world. If the controllers in Pakistan had been able to see
all their live transmissions, they would have had the
minutest details of the police deployments. During the Black
September kidnapping of some Israeli athletes during the
Munich Olympics in 1972, the terrorists, who had taken up
position with the hostages inside a house in the games
village, were able to get details of the police
deployments by watching the TV inside the house. At that
time, there were hardly half a dozen channels and their
technical equipment was not very good. If they were able to
get so many details by watching so few channels, it should
not be surprising that the Pakistan-based controllers of the
Mumbai attacks were able to get a lot more details in such
precision.
(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 )