Terrorist Attacks in Mumbai, India, and Implications for U.S. Interests

Wi ki Leaks D o cum ent R ele ase
http: //wi kil eaks. org/wiki /CR S-R40087
Febr uary 2, 2009
Congres sional R ese arch Se rvic e
Re p or t R40087
Terrorist Attacks in Mumbai, India, and Implications for
U.S. Interests
K. Alan Kronstadt, Sp e cialist in South Asian Affairs
Dec emb e r 19, 2009
Abstra ct . Pote ntial is sues for the 111th C ongre ss with regard to India i nclude legi sl ati on that woul d foster
greater U. S.-India counterterroris m relati ons . With regard to Paki stan, congress ional attention has fo cus ed and
is l ikel y to rem ai n fo cus ed on the programm ing and p ote ntial furthe r condi tioning of U. S. fore ign ass is tance,
incl uding that rel ated to security and counterterrori sm . Al so, m a jor U. S. arms sale s to b oth countrie s are li kely
to b e prop ose d, and these would req uire the (i mpl ici t) endorsem ent of C ongre ss. Thi s rep ort rev iews the m ost
recent m a jor inci dence of te rrori sm in Indi a and its p oss ibl e conne cti on to el eme nts i nsi de Pak is tan. It the n
consi ders some i mpl icati ons for b oth countries , as well as for U. S. interests.



Wi ki Leaks D o cum ent R ele ase
http: //wi kil eaks. org/wiki /CR S-R40087
Febr uary 2, 2009
Congres sional R ese arch Se rvic e
Re p or t R40087
Terrorist Attacks in Mumbai, India, and Implications for
U.S. Interests
K. Alan Kronstadt, Sp e cialist in South Asian Affairs
Dec emb e r 19, 2009
Abstra ct . Pote ntial is sues for the 111th C ongre ss with regard to India i nclude legi sl ati on that woul d foster
greater U. S.-India counterterroris m relati ons . With regard to Paki stan, congress ional attention has fo cus ed and
is l ikel y to rem ai n fo cus ed on the programm ing and p ote ntial furthe r condi tioning of U. S. fore ign ass is tance,
incl uding that rel ated to security and counterterrori sm . Al so, m a jor U. S. arms sale s to b oth countrie s are li kely
to b e prop ose d, and these would req uire the (i mpl ici t) endorsem ent of C ongre ss. Thi s rep ort rev iews the m ost
recent m a jor inci dence of te rrori sm in Indi a and its p oss ibl e conne cti on to el eme nts i nsi de Pak is tan. It the n
consi ders some i mpl icati ons for b oth countries , as well as for U. S. interests.









Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress



On the evening of November 26, 2008, a number of well-trained militants came ashore from the
Arabian Sea on small boats and attacked numerous high-profile targets in Mumbai, India, with
automatic weapons and explosives. By the time the episode ended some 62 hours later, about 165
people, along with nine terrorists, had been killed and hundreds more injured. Among the
multiple sites attacked in the peninsular city known as India’s business and entertainment capital
were two luxury hotels—the Taj Mahal Palace and the Oberoi-Trident—along with the main
railway terminal, a Jewish cultural center, a café frequented by foreigners, a cinema house, and
two hospitals. Six American citizens were among the 26 foreigners reported dead. Indian officials
have concluded that the attackers numbered only ten, one of whom was captured.
The investigation into the attacks is still in preliminary stages, but press reporting and statements
from U.S. and Indian authorities strongly suggest that the attackers came to India from
neighboring Pakistan and that the perpetrators likely were members and acting under the
orchestration of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) terrorist group. The LeT is believed to
have past links with Pakistan’s military and intelligence services. By some accounts, these links
are ongoing, leading to suspicions, but no known evidence, of involvement in the attack by
Pakistani state elements. The Islamabad government has strongly condemned the Mumbai
terrorism and offered New Delhi its full cooperation with the ongoing investigation, but mutual
acrimony clouds such an effort, and the attacks have brought into question the viability of a
nearly five-year-old bilateral peace process between India and Pakistan.
Three wars—in 1947-48, 1965, and 1971—and a constant state of military preparedness on both
sides of the border have marked six decades of bitter rivalry between India and Pakistan. Such
bilateral discord between two nuclear-armed countries thus has major implications for regional
security and for U.S. interests. The Administration of President-elect Barack Obama may seek to
increase U.S. diplomatic efforts aimed at resolving conflict between these two countries. The
Mumbai attacks have brought even more intense international attention to the increasingly deadly
and destabilizing incidence of Islamist extremism in South Asia, and they may affect the course
of U.S. policy toward Pakistan, especially. The episode also has major domestic implications for
India, in both the political and security realms. Indian counterterrorism capabilities have come
under intense scrutiny, and the United States may further expand bilateral cooperation with and
assistance to India in this realm. For broader discussion, see CRS Report RL33529, India-U.S.
Relations, and CRS Report RL33498, Pakistan-U.S. Relations. This report will not be updated.






Introduc tion ..................................................................................................................................... 1
Attack Overview..............................................................................................................................1
U.S. Response...........................................................................................................................2
Suspected/Accused Culprits......................................................................................................3
Lashka r-e -Taiba .................................................................................................................. 3
Suspected Links With Pakistan’s State Apparatus..............................................................4
Indigenous Indian Suspects.................................................................................................5
Possible Motives.......................................................................................................................6
Backgr ound ..................................................................................................................................... 6
Domestic Indian Terrorism........................................................................................................6
India-Pakistan Tensions.............................................................................................................7
The Kashmir Issue.....................................................................................................................8
Implications for India-Pakistan Relations.......................................................................................8
New Delhi’s Response..............................................................................................................8
Islamabad’s Response.............................................................................................................10
Outlook for Bilateral Relations................................................................................................11
Implications for India....................................................................................................................13
Political Recriminations..........................................................................................................13
Anti-Terrorism Law and Capacity Reform.............................................................................14
Implications for Pakistan...............................................................................................................15
U.S. Policy.....................................................................................................................................16
U.S.-India Relations................................................................................................................17
U.S.-Pakistan Relations...........................................................................................................18
Author Contact Information..........................................................................................................19






An audacious, days-long November terrorist attack on India’s most populous city, Mumbai, has
deeply affected the Indian people and their government. Because the attackers appear to have
come from, and received training and equipment in, neighboring Pakistan, the episode has led to
renewed tensions between two nuclear-armed South Asian states with a history of war and mutual
animosity. Seemingly incompatible national identities contributed both to several wars and to the
nuclearization of the Asian Subcontinent, with the nuclear weapons capabilities of both countries
becoming overt in 1998. In 2004, New Delhi and Islamabad launched their most recent
comprehensive effort to reduce tensions and resolve outstanding disputes, an effort that has to
date resulted in modest, but still meaningful successes. New Delhi acknowledges that a stable
Pakistan is in India’s interests. At the same time, however, Indian leaders are convinced that
Pakistan has long been and remains the main source India’s significant domestic terrorism
problems. They continue to blame Islamabad for maintaining an “infrastructure of terror” that
launches attacks inside India.
A central aspect of U.S. policy in South Asia is prevention of interstate conflict that could
destabilize the region and lead to nuclear war. Since 2001, the United States has also been directly
engaged in efforts foster stability in Afghanistan. Many analysts view this goal as being
intimately linked with the India-Pakistan peace process. The Administration of President George
W. Bush made Pakistan a key ally in the global “war on terrorism” while simultaneously
deepening a “strategic partnership” with India. The Administration of President-elect Barack
Obama may seek to increase U.S. diplomatic efforts aimed at resolving conflict between these
two countries.
Potential issues for the 111th Congress with regard to India include legislation that would foster
greater U.S.-India counterterrorism relations. With regard to Pakistan, congressional attention has
focused and is likely to remain focused on the programming and potential further conditioning of
U.S. foreign assistance, including that related to security and counterterrorism. Also, major U.S.
arms sales to both countries are likely to be proposed, and these would require the (implicit)
endorsement of Congress. This report reviews the most recent major incidence of terrorism in
India and its possible connection to elements inside Pakistan. It then considers some implications
for both countries, as well as for U.S. interests.

At approximately 9:30 p.m. local time on the evening of November 26, 2008, a number of well-
trained militants came ashore from the Arabian Sea on small boats and attacked numerous high-
profile targets in Mumbai, India, with automatic weapons and explosives. By the time the episode
ended some 62 hours later, about 174 people, including nine terrorists, had been killed and
hundreds more injured. Among the multiple sites attacked in the peninsular city known as India’s
business and entertainment capital were two luxury hotels—the Taj Mahal Palace and the Oberoi-
Trident—along with the main railway terminal, a Jewish cultural center, a café frequented by 1
foreigners, a cinema house, and two hospitals. Six American citizens were among the 26
1
Two detailed descriptions of the incident areIn Just Minutes, Mumbai Was Under Siege, Washington Post, and
India Security Faulted as Survivors Tell of Terror,” Wall Street Journal, both December 1, 2008.





foreigners reported dead. Indian officials have concluded that the attackers numbered only ten, 2
one of whom was captured. Some reports indicate that several other gunmen escaped.
According to reports, the militants arrived in Mumbai from sea on dinghies launched from a 3
larger ship offshore, then fanned out in southern Mumbai in groups of two or three. Each was
carrying an assault rifle with 10-12 extra magazines of ammunition, a pistol, several hand
grenades, and about 18 pounds of military-grade explosives. They also employed sophisticated
technology including global positioning system handsets, satellite phones, Voice over Internet
Protocol (VoIP) phone service, and high-resolution satellite photos of the targets. The attackers
were said to have demonstrated a keen familiarity with the Taj hotel’s layout in particular,
suggesting that careful advanced planning had been undertaken.
Home Minister Shivraj Patil (who resigned in the wake of the attacks) reportedly ordered India’s
elite National Security Guard commandos deployed 90 minutes after the attacks began, but the
mobilized units did not arrive on the scene until the next morning, some ten hours after the initial 4
shooting. The delay likely handed a tactical advantage to the militants. According to a high-
ranking Mumbai police official, the militants made no demands and had killed most of their 5
hostages before being engaged by commandos on the morning of November 27. Two full days
passed between the time of that engagement and the episode’s conclusion when the two hotels
were declared cleared of the several remaining gunmen.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh apologized to the Indian people on behalf of his
government for being unable to prevent the attacks. He said his government will pursue a three-
level response to include (1) seeking to galvanize the international community to deal sternly with
what Singh labeled the “epicenter of terrorism, which is located in Pakistan;” (2) taking a strong
posture toward the Islamabad government in pressing it to end the use of Pakistani territory for
staging terrorist attacks, and (3) recognizing that self-help measures to improve India’s own 6
domestic security are required. On December 11, the country’s new home minister, P.
Chidambaram, announced major reform efforts for the country’s security infrastructure to include
the establishment of a new national investigative agency, a new Coastal Command, 20 new 7
counterterrorism schools, and new regional commando bases. The Indian Parliament passed a
serious of stringent new anti-terrorism laws on December 17 (see below).
Senior U.S. officials, including President Bush and President-elect Obama, joined the State
Department in issuing immediate statements of support for and condolences to the Indian
2
“Mumbai Attacks - City Fears Five Terrorists are ‘Missing,London Times, December 2, 2008.
3 The Indian fishing vessel Kuber reportedly was hijacked by Pakistan-based terrorists in the Arabian Sea some two
weeks before the attacks and its five-man crew executed (“Authorities Trace Final Voyage of the Kuber,Wall Street
Journal, December 2, 2008).
4India to Restructure Security Services After Mumbai Failings,” Jane’s Defense Weekly, December 1, 2008.
5Our Mission Was Not About 10 Terrorists, It Was All About Saving Lives (interview with Mumbais Joint Police
Commissioner), Rediff.com, December 12, 2008;Militants Lead Commandos in Deadly Dance in Mumbai,” Reuters,
November 28, 2008;Terrorists Did Not Make Any Demands: NSG Chief, Times of India (Delhi), December 1, 2008.
6 See http://www.indianembassy.org/newsite/press_release/2008/Dec/6.asp.
7 “Indian Official Unveils Plan to Strengthen Security, Washington Post, December 11, 2008.





government and people.8 H.Res. 1532, agreed to by unanimous consent on December 10, 2008,
condemned the attacks, offered condolences and support to the people and government of India,
and expressed U.S. congressional desire to improve coordination between the United States and
India to combat terrorism and advance international security. The resolution also called upon the
Pakistani government to cooperate fully with India in bringing the culprits to justice and to 9
prevent Pakistan’s territory from “serving as a safe-haven and training ground for terrorists.”
The Bush Administration claims to be carefully monitoring related developments and has sent
FBI agents to Mumbai to assist in the investigation. On November 30, the Administration
announced that it would dispatch Secretary of State Rice to India as “a further demonstration of
the U.S. commitment to stand in solidarity with the people of India as we all work together to 10
hold these extremists accountable.” Rice met with Indian External Affairs Minister Pranab
Mukherjee on December 3 and was told that Indian officials have “no doubt that the terrorist
attack in Mumbai was perpetrated by individuals who came from Pakistan and whose controllers
are in Pakistan.” Rice assured her interlocutors that the United States “stands in solidarity with
the people of India,” and she pledged full cooperation in bringing the perpetrators to justice and 11
ensuring that future attacks are prevented. She then traveled to Islamabad to convey to Pakistani
leaders a U.S. expectation that Pakistan act quickly and resolutely to bring justice to any 12
perpetrators on Pakistani territory. Rice was followed in both capitals by other senior U.S.
officials, including her deputy, John Negroponte, Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen, and
Foreign Relations Committee Chairman-designate Senator John Kerry.
On December 9, Indian officials released the names or aliases of the nine suspected gunmen 13
killed during the Mumbai siege, saying all were Pakistani nationals. U.S. and Indian officials
reportedly have used forensic evidence, including phone records, to establish solid links between
the gunmen and elements inside Pakistan. Early indications pointed to the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT
or “Army of the Pure”), which was outlawed by the Islamabad government in 2002, as being 14
complicit. The LeT denies involvement in the attack. Designated as a Foreign Terrorist
Organization (FTO) under U.S. law in late 2001, the LeT is based in Muzaffarabad (in Pakistani
Kashmir) and Muridke (near Lahore). The group seeks not only Islamic rule in all of Kashmir, but
is also a proponent of broader anti-India and anti-Western struggles, and is the armed wing of a
Pakistan-based, anti-U.S. Sunni religious organization formed in 1989. Its key leader is Hafiz
Mohammad Saeed. The LeT is believed to have close links with both Al Qaeda and the Taliban, 15
and over the years it appears to have taken a more expansive, global jihadi perspective. The
8
See http://www.indianembassy.org/newsite/press_release/2008/Nov/11.asp.
9 H.Res. 1532.
10 See http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2008/11/20081130-1.html.
11 See http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2008/12/112622.htm.
12 See http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2008/12/112752.htm.
13 “India Police ‘Name Mumbai Gunmen,’” BBC News, December 9, 2008.
14 See a profile of the LeT at http://www.cfr.org/publication/17882.
15 Of three major Al Qaeda figures captured in Pakistan, one (Abu Zubaydah) was found at an LeT safehouse in
Faisalabad, suggesting that some LeT members have facilitated the movement of Al Qaeda members in Pakistan (see
(continued...)





group even has some successes in efforts to recruit Westerners, especially Britons and 16
Americans. Under aliases and through front organizations, the LeT has operated more or less
openly in Pakistan despite the 2002 ban, fueling pervasive doubts that Pakistan’s security 17
agencies will honor the promises of cooperation being made by Islamabad’s civilian leaders.
The LeT has been implicated in past, multiple-target attacks involving coordinated movements by
well-armed gunmen who took hostages. The level of sophistication and training required to
undertake the recent Mumbai attacks spurred many Indian and American analysts to name the 18
LeT as a likely suspect. Such suspicions appeared validated when Indian government officials
announced that the sole attacker captured alive had confessed to being a Pakistani national trained
in LeT camps. The 21-year-old militant, named as Azam Amir Kasab and said to be a native of
Faisalabad in Pakistan’s Punjab province, reportedly admitted that the Mumbai operation was 19
launched from Pakistan’s Karachi port.
Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), nominally a charitable organization established in 2005 (it provides
education, health care, and emergency relief services in Punjab and Pakistani Kashmir) is
identified as a continuation of the LeT with a new name. The Indian government claims the JuD 20
operates 2,500 offices and 11 religious seminaries in Pakistan. The JuD is viewed favorably by
many Pakistanis for its charitable efforts. On December 10, at the request of the Indian
government and with Washington’s blessing, the U.N. Security Council took several actions
related to LeT, including listing four of its members for targeted sanctions, adding JuD as an LeT
alias, and adding aliases for the two Islamic trusts that have raised funds for LeT. Hafiz Saeed and
Zaki-ur-Lakhvi were among those named, along with two men said to be key LeT financiers, one
of them a Saudi national. The U.S. Treasury Department had in May 2008 designated these same 21
four LeT “leaders.” One of the key “masterminds” of the Mumbai attacks is said to have been
Yusuf Muzammil, a top LeT commander. Lakhvi, his lieutenant, reportedly took telephone calls
from the Mumbai terrorists as the attack was underway. Both men, named by the captured 22
gunman under interrogation, reportedly stage-managed the attacks in real time.
Over the past two decades or more, the Pakistani government—its military and intelligence
services, in particular—is widely believed to have used radical Islamist groups to forward its own
regional policy goals. Reports link the LeT to Pakistan’s main Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI)
agency, which is likely to have facilitated its creation and early activities. Indian analysts

(...continued)
http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2007/103714.htm).
16Pakistan Militant Group Builds Web of Western Recruits,” Los Angeles Times, December 8, 2008.
17Mumbai Attack is Test of Pakistan’s Ability to Curb Militants,” New York Times, December 4, 2008;Pakistan
Army Link to Mumbai Suspects May Hurt Pledge, Bloomberg News, December 3, 2008.
18U.S. Intelligence Focuses on Pakistani Group,” New York Times, November 29, 2008; “US Official: India Attack
May Have Pakistani Roots,” Associated Press, December 2, 2008.
19India Says All Attackers Came By Ship,” New York Times, December 3, 2008.
20 “India Raises Terror Issue at U.N., New York Times, December 10, 2008. According to India’s top diplomat, the
JuD and the LeT are indistinguishable:The headquarters are the same, the ideologies are the same, and the activities
are the same (see http://www.indianembassy.org/newsite/press_release/2008/Dec/10.asp).
21 See http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2008/dec/113087.htm and http://www.ustreas.gov/press/releases/hp996.htm.
22 “Terror Attacks Traced to Two from Pakistan, New York Times, December 4, 2008.





emphasize evidence of a direct link between Pakistan-sponsored militancy in Kashmir and the
wider assortment of radical Islamic groups active in Pakistan after 2001, with one going so far as 23
to call the LeT a “wholly owned subsidiary” of the ISI. Even Pakistan’s current Ambassador to
the United States has in the recent past commented upon Pakistan’s “state sponsorship of jihad
against India” and described the LeT as “backed by Saudi money and protected by Pakistani 24
intelligence services.” In a 2005 book on the relationships between Pakistani Islamists and the
Pakistani military, this diplomat wrote that, earlier in the decade, the ISI provided significant
“severance pay” to jihadi leaders in return for their promise to “remain dormant for an
unspecified duration.” Among the alleged recipients of this ISI largesse were the LeT’s Saeed, 25
and Masood Azhar, chief of the Pakistan-based, FTO-designated Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM).
The JeM, another Kashmir-focused militant group, was publically implicated by New Delhi
(along with the LeT) for orchestrating a December 2001 attack on India’s Parliament complex, an 26
event that spurred a ten-month-long international crisis.
On December 5, an unnamed, but ostensibly high-ranking Indian official claimed that his
government has “clear and incontrovertible proof” the November Mumbai attack was planned by
the LeT with training and other support from the ISI. U.S. officials have to date been more
circumspect in their interpretation of evidence, but many are reported to believe that the LeT’s
recent growth in strength and reach has come only with active assistance from ISI elements, 27
either active or “retired.” In mid-2008, U.S. intelligence officials apparently concluded that ISI 28
elements were involved in a July car bombing of India’s Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan.
Indian authorities are holding at least four Indian nationals in possible connection with the
Mumbai attack. One, Mumbai native Faim Ansari, was detained in February 2008 carrying maps
with several Mumbai landmarks highlighted, including some of those attacked in November.
Ansari reportedly confessed to having received training from the LeT and he may have been part
of a foiled plot to attack Mumbai earlier in the year. A man arrested along with Ansari now stands
accused of facilitating the infiltration of militants into India via Nepal. Two other Indians were
arrested in early December: a native of Indian Kashmir who may have illicitly provided mobile
phone cards to the attackers, and a Kolkata man suspected of providing him with those cards. The
former figure appears to have been working as an undercover agent for Kashmir police seeking to 29
infiltrate militant groups.
23
Quoted inBeyond Control,” India Today (New Delhi), December 8, 2003.
24 Husain Haqqani,The Ideologies of South Asian Jihadi Groups,” Current Trends in Islamist Ideology, April 2005.
25 Husain Haqqani, Pakistan: Between Mosque and Military (Washington: Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, 2005), p. 306.
26 See http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2007/103714.htm.
27 “Indian Official Points to Pakistan, Washington Post, December 6, 2008;Pakistans Spies Aided Group Tied to
Mumbai Siege,New York Times, December 8, 2008.
28 “Pakistanis Aided Attack in Kabul, U.S. Officials Say,New York Times, August 1, 2008.
29Police Foiled Earlier Plot Against Mumbai,” New York Times, December 6, 2008;Police Say Indian Helped
Smuggle Pakistani Gunmen,” Associated Press, December 10, 2008; “Facts About Mumbai Attack Suspects in India,
Reuters, December 7, 2008.





The gunmen’s motives remain unclear, but most reports indicate that radical Islamist sentiments
played a central role. One report included anecdotal evidence that the attackers were seeking
vengeance for major attacks on Indian Muslim communities at Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, in 1992 30
and at Godhra, Gujarat, in 2002. Some observers see evidence that the attackers were inspired, 31
if not directed, by Al Qaeda’s brand of global jihadi ideology. A White House spokeswoman 32
said the attack on a Jewish center “adds another layer of complexity” to the episode. Secretary
Rice has speculated that the goal of the attackers was “probably to stir up trouble between 33
Pakistan and India.” Early reporting suggested that Westerners, especially Americans and
Britons, were being singled out by the attackers, but subsequent eyewitness accounts did not 34
appear to support the conclusion.
A former Bush State Department official and South Asia specialist views the Mumbai attacks as
an escalation of what he calls the “war for Pakistan”: an ongoing and essentially civil-level battle 35
to determine whether Pakistan will be a moderate or an extremist state. At least one former
senior U.S. counterterrorism official sees the attacks as part of a “goal-oriented” effort to advance
an overall strategy to, in proximate terms, defeat the U.S. military and restore Taliban rule in
Afghanistan. This strategy is assumed to be shared by Al Qaeda and the Taliban in both 36
Afghanistan and Pakistan, as well as by the LeT. Another expert agrees that LeT goals transcend
the Kashmiri separatism that has been its primary motivation, and they are aimed at crippling the 37
Indian state and conducting global war against a perceived “American-Zionist-Hindu” axis.
Conspiracy-minded regional analysts, including Iranians and Saudis, see the Mumbai attacks as 38
part of a plot to draw New Delhi (further) into this alleged axis.

As a vast mosaic of ethnicities, languages, cultures, and religions, India is difficult to govern. Of
particular relevance in the current context are tensions between India and Pakistan rooted in
unfinished business from the 1947 Partition of British India in which Pakistan was created as a
homeland for South Asian Muslims, competing claims to the Kashmir region, and, in more recent
years, “cross-border terrorism” in both Kashmir and major Indian cities. Terrorist attacks in India
beyond Kashmir have been rampant in recent months and years, and include bombings in Jaipur
30
“India Security Faulted as Survivors Tell of Terror,Wall Street Journal, December 1, 2008
31 Bruce Riedel, “Terrorism in India and the Global Jihad, Brookings Institution, December 1, 2008; M.J. Gohel and
Sajjan Gohel, “Were Mumbai Attacks Inspired by Al Qaeda?” (op-ed), CNN.com, November 30, 2008.
32 See http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2008/12/20081201-2.html.
33 See http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2008/12/112999.htm.
34 “Top Indian Security Official Resigns as Toll Eclipses 180,New York Times, December 1, 2008.
35 Daniel Markey, Mumbai: A Battle in the War for Pakistan, Council on Foreign Relations, Expert Brief, December
12, 2008, http://www.cfr.org/publication/17981/mumbai.html?breadcrumb=%2Fregion%2F279%2Fsouth_asia.
36 Richard Clarke,Plans of Attack” (op-ed), Washington Post, December 7, 2008.
37 Ashley Tellis, “Terrorists Attacking Mumbai Have Global Agenda,” Yale Global, December 8, 2008.
38 Atul Aneja, “How West Asia Views Mumbai Attacks (op-ed), Hindu (Chennai), December 17, 2008.





in May (63 dead); Bangalore and Ahmedabad in July (46 dead); and New Delhi in September (18
dead). In 2008 many Indian officials came to realize that the capabilities of indigenous extremist
elements had grown immensely. The newly emergent “Indian Mujahideen” (IM) group, widely
believed to be an offshoot or pseudonym of the Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), has
been found complicit in a number of recent bombings, even as government leaders continue to
name Pakistan as an abettor of such episodes. Mumbai itself has suffered several major terrorist 39
attacks. Some Indian experts assert that the IM’s top operators, drawn mostly from SIMI’s 40
ranks, receive training at LeT camps.
Decades of militarized tensions and territorial disputes between India and Pakistan arguably have
hamstrung economic and social development in both countries while also precluding
establishment of effective regional economic or security institutions. The nuclearization of the
Asian Subcontinent became overt in 1998 when India and Pakistan both tested nuclear explosive
devices. Since that time, a central aspect of U.S. policy in South Asia has been prevention of
interstate conflict that could destabilize the region and lead to nuclear war. In 2004, New Delhi
and Islamabad launched their most recent comprehensive effort to reduce tensions and resolve
outstanding disputes. This “composite dialogue” process has to date resulted in modest, but still
meaningful successes.
New Delhi acknowledges that a stable Pakistan is in India’s interests. At the same time, however,
many top Indian leaders are convinced that Pakistan has long been and remains the main source
of India’s significant domestic terrorism problems. They continue to blame Islamabad for
maintaining an “infrastructure of terror” and for actively supporting terrorist groups that are held 41
responsible for attacks inside India. The latter half of 2008 saw a deterioration of India-Pakistan
relations, especially after U.S., Indian, and Afghan authorities accused Pakistani state elements of 42
being complicit in a lethal July car bombing at the Indian Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan. Some
in New Delhi express frustration that the new civilian leaders in Islamabad appear to exert little
39
In 1993 more than 250 people died in a series of bomb attacks across Mumbai believed to be retaliation for the
demolition by Hindu radicals of a historic mosque at Ayodhya. A pair of August 2003 car bombings outside the Taj
hotel killed 52 people. More recently, the serial bombing of Mumbai commuter trains in July 2006 killed nearly 200
people and injured many hundreds more. Indian authorities linked each of these attacks to Pakistan-based groups,
although each may have been planned by indigenous elements.
40 See, for example, Praveen Swami, “Pakistan and the Lashkar’s Jihad in India” (op-ed), Hindu (Chennai), December
9, 2008.
41 According to Indias national security advisor, very few Indian Muslims have played major roles in domestic
terrorism. He has asserted that, “Mostly, the [terrorist] activity has been generated from outside” and “the
overwhelming majority” of India’s terrorism problems emanates from the Pakistan-Afghanistan border region. Internal
Indian government documents reportedly conclude that Pakistan’s main intelligence agency has not changed its central
objectives, which, according to these sources, include supporting anti-Indian militancy in Kashmir, Punjab, Assam, and
along the India-Nepal and India-Bangladesh borders (Negotiating War, Outlook (Delhi), May 28, 2008;MK
Narayanan” (interview), India Abroad, September 21, 2007; “ISI Still Helping Terror Groups Against India:
Narayanan,” Times of India (Delhi), March 26, 2008; “No Let Up in ISI Operations: Report, Times of India (Delhi),
June 9, 2008).
42 “Pakistan ‘Behind Afghan Attacks,’” BBC News, July 14, 2008;India Blames Pakistan in Embassy Bombing,
Associated Press, July 21, 2008;Pakistanis Aided Attack in Kabul, U.S. Officials Say,New York Times, August 1,
2008.





influence over Pakistan’s powerful military and intelligence agencies, which historically have 43
acted independent of civilian oversight.
In December 2001, the United States designated the Lashkar-e-Taiba as a Foreign Terrorist
Organization shortly after it was publically implicated by New Delhi for a gun and grenade attack
on the Indian Parliament complex that killed nine people. This assault triggered a full Indian
military mobilization along the India-Pakistan frontier. An ensuing ten-month-long standoff in
2002 involved one million Indian and Pakistani soldiers and was viewed as the closest the two
countries had come to full-scale war since 1971, causing the U.S. government to become “deeply 44
concerned” that a conventional war “could escalate into a nuclear confrontation.” Further lethal
attacks on Indian civilians spurred Indian leaders to call for a “decisive war,” but intense
international diplomatic engagement, including multiple trips to the region by high-level U.S. 45
officials and other considerations, apparently persuaded India to refrain from attacking.
Although India suffers from several militant regional separatist movements, the Kashmir issue
has proven the most lethal and intractable. Conflict over Kashmiri sovereignty has brought global
attention to a potential “flashpoint” for war between nuclear-armed powers. The problem is
rooted in competing claims to the state, which has been divided since 1948 by a military Line of
Control separating India’s Muslim-majority Jammu and Kashmir state and Pakistan-controlled
Azad [Free] Kashmir. India blames Pakistan for supporting “cross-border terrorism” and for
fueling a separatist rebellion in the Muslim-majority Kashmir Valley with arms, training, and
militants. Islamabad, for its part, claims to provide only diplomatic and moral support to what it
calls “freedom fighters” who resist Indian rule. New Delhi insists that the dispute should not be
“internationalized” through involvement by third-party mediators and India is widely believed to
be content with the territorial status quo. The longstanding U.S. position on Kashmir is that the
issue must be resolved through negotiations between India and Pakistan while taking into account
the wishes of the Kashmiri people.

On November 27, while multiple battles between militants and security forces still raged in
Mumbai, Prime Minister Singh addressed the nation to denounce the “well-planned and well-
orchestrated attacks, probably with external linkages,” and noted evidence that the culprits were
members of a group “based outside the country,” an unmistakable reference to Pakistan. A day
later, India’s foreign minister said that preliminary evidence implicated “elements with links to
Pakistan.” On December 1, with bilateral tensions mounting, Pakistan’s envoy in New Delhi was
summoned and told the Indian government expected strong action to be taken against those
43
India Frustrated by a Rudderless Pakistan,” New York Times, August 12, 2008.
44 Statement of Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet Before the Senate Armed Services Committee,
Worldwide Threat: Converging Dangers in a Post-9/11 World,” March 19, 2002.
45 See Polly Nayak and Michael Krepon,US Crisis Management in South Asias Twin Peaks Crisis at
http://www.stimson.org/southasia/pdf/USCrisisManagement.pdf.





Pakistani elements found to be responsible for the Mumbai attacks. Indian officials are not known
to have presented any evidence, but suggested that such elements are still at large on Pakistani 46
territory. They submitted to Pakistan a list of 42 wanted fugitives believed to be on Pakistani 47
territory.
The Indian government is coming under ever-greater domestic pressure to ramp up bilateral and
multilateral pressure on Pakistan as the alleged epicenter of global terrorism. Some in India call 48
for military strikes against terrorist targets on Pakistani territory. In claiming New Delhi has
“strong evidence” that the attackers were trained in and came from Pakistan, India’s deputy
foreign minister said Islamabad must deliver on its 2004 commitment to end the activities of
terrorists groups on Pakistani soil. External Affairs Minister Mukherjee has voiced New Delhi’s
insistence that Pakistan’s actions against militant groups operating on Pakistani soil be taken to
their “logical conclusion.” This would include a total dismantling of the “terrorist infrastructure”
inside Pakistan and the permanent outlawing of militant groups under whatever aliases. These
steps were not, according to Mukherjee, taken following past episodes of Pakistani government
assurances, and New Delhi has not been impressed with the efficacy of existing bilateral
mechanisms designed to facilitate joint intelligence sharing and investigative cooperation in 49
which “nothing has been produced.”
While New Delhi is believed to have ruled out direct military action for the time being, Indian
officials immediately began considering a suspension of the ongoing bilateral dialogue with 50
Pakistan. On December 16, India’s top-ranking diplomat announced what was already widely
suspected: that the bilateral composite dialogue process was in “a pause” due to the Mumbai
attacks. While senior India officials continue to press Islamabad to act more robustly against the
Pakistani “elements” suspected of being behind the attacks, making this a requirement for
“normal” relations, Defense Minister A.K. Antony stated that his country was “not planning any 51
military action” at present. Yet, on December 18, in the first concrete sign of deteriorating
diplomatic relations, New Delhi canceled a planned January tour of Pakistan by India’s national
cricket team.
46
See http://www.indianembassy.org/newsite/press_release/2008/Nov/10.asp; “India Blames ‘Elements’ From Pakistan
for Attack,” Reuters, November 28, 2008; “On the Calling in of the High Commissioner of Pakistan Today Evening,
Indian External Affairs Ministry press release, December 1, 2008; In Wake of Attacks, India-Pakistan Tensions
Grow, New York Times, December 2, 2008.
47 These include LeT chief Hafiz Saeed; Indian criminal boss Dawood Ibrahim, who is accused of orchestrating serial
bombings in Mumbai in 1993 and is suspected of residing in Karachi; and Masood Azhar, founder of the Pakistan-
based Jaish-e-Mohammed terrorist group implicated in numerous anti-India attacks, among them a 2001 assault on the
Indian Parliament. By some accounts, Ibrahim continues to live openly in Karachi (Dawood Sitting Pretty in Karachi,”
Times of India (Delhi), December 4, 2008).
48Indian Hawks Calls for Strike on Pakistan,” Financial Times (London), December 19, 2008.
49 See http://www.indianembassy.org/newsite/press_release/2008/Dec/11.asp.
50Pranab Rules Out Military Action,” Hindu (Madras), December 3, 2008; “Cabinet Minister Resigns Amid Anger in
India,Washington Post, December 1, 2008.
51India-Pakistan Talks Stalled After Attacks – Delhi,” Reuters, December 16, 2008; “Pranab, Antony Want Pakistan
to Act,” Hindu (Chennai), December 17, 2008; “Indian Defense Chief: No Plans for Military Action,” Associated
Press, December 16, 2008.





The Islamabad government offered condolences and strongly condemned the terrorist acts in
Mumbai. Pakistani leaders insist that India’s fight against terrorism is their fight, as well, and they
promised swift action against any Pakistani elements shown to be involved, expressing a
willingness to deepen bilateral engagement while warning against the “blame game and knee-jerk 52
reactions.” All of Pakistan’s major political parties were unified in their condemnation of the
attacks, but they also issued a joint resolution rejecting any “hasty allegations” against their 53
country. Pakistan at first offered to send its top intelligence official to India to assist in the
investigation, then later reversed itself, offering to send a lower-ranking official. The episode was
yet another embarrassment for civilian leaders in Islamabad who have sought to demonstrate their
authority over Pakistan’s security establishment with little success, and it may have further 54
damaged the confidence of Indian leaders. On December 2, Pakistan’s foreign minister offered
to establish a joint inquiry into the attacks and reiterated Islamabad’s intention to cooperate 55
fully. Islamabad has repeatedly and emphatically condemned the attacks, promised “utmost
cooperation and assistance” in bringing the perpetrators to justice, and offered to establish a joint 56
investigative commission co-chaired by Pakistan’s and India’s national security advisors.
Under pressure from foreign capitals and cognizant of the threat posed to domestic security, the
Islamabad government launched a crackdown on Pakistan’s indigenous religious militant groups
on December 7. Security forces raided a main LeT complex in Pakistani Kashmir, taking control
of several buildings and arresting at least six men, including Lakhvi and Zarrar Shah, both
suspected of remotely commanding the Mumbai attackers. Country-wide raids on LeT and other
militant compounds continued over ensuing days, leaving a total of 53 people in custody to date,
according to the Interior Ministry. A JuD spokesman claimed that nine of the group’s ten top
leaders were among those detained. Pakistani officials reject calls for extraditing any of the
fugitives sought by India, saying that any charges brought against such persons would be leveled 57
in Pakistani courts only. Islamabad also acted quickly in response to the U.N.-ordered sanctions
on the JuD, reportedly detaining Hafez Saeed and directing banks to freeze all accounts held by
the JuD. Eleven offices were shuttered in several cities. Pakistani authorities may find it difficult 58
to track and seize LeT assets which were hidden in the public lead-up to U.N. action.
52
See http://www.mofa.gov.pk/Press_Releases/2008/Nov/PR_363_08.htm;Pakistan Wants India Tension Defused
After Attack,” Reuters, November 28, 2008; http://www.mofa.gov.pk/Press_Releases/2008/Nov/PR_367_08.htm.
53 “Pakistan Parties Unite on Mumbai,” BBC News, December 3, 2008.
54 “Pakistan U-Turn on Sending Spy Chief to India,” Associated Press, November 29, 2008; “Delhi Stiffens at ISI U-
Turn, Telegraph (Kolkata), November 30, 2008.
55Pakistan Offers to Aid India in Terror Investigation,” Washington Post, December 2, 2008.
56 See http://www.mofa.gov.pk/Press_Releases/2008/Dec/PR_375_08.htm.
57 “History, Dissent Cloud Pakistan’s Mumbai Reaction,” Associated Press, December 19, 2008; “Zardari Rules Out
Returning Fugitives,” Hindu (Chennai), December 4, 2008. JeM chief Masood Azhar was reported confined to house
arrest at his compound in southern Punjab, but this report later was denied by a senior Pakistani official who said Azhar
remains at large, his whereabouts unknown (Masood Azhar Not Under House Arrest: Pakistan Envoy, Times of India
(Delhi), December 17, 2008).
58 “Pakistan Arrest Leaders of Charity Linked to Mumbai Attacks,Washington Post, December 11, 2008; “Money
Eludes Pakistans Crackdown on Accused Terror Group,” Wall Street Journal, December 13, 2008.





In the face of domestic pressure from their respective publics, the leadership of both India and
Pakistan have visibly sought to keep the situation from escalating. Yet political posturing could 59
yet polarize the situation and reverse years of increasingly positive bilateral interactions.
Numerous Indian, American, and other observers have been jaded bya Pakistani history of “catch 60
and release” in dealing with their indigenous extremists. New Delhi welcomed Islamabad’s
December crackdown while also pressing Pakistan to “shut down” the LeT entirely. One senior
Indian government official called the Pakistani raids of LeT headquarters “eyewash” that did not 61
address New Delhi’s core concerns. Meanwhile, skepticism about India’s intentions and
sincerity fuel nationalist cohesion in Pakistan, where such disparate groups as liberal 62
businesspeople and Taliban commanders have rallied around the flag.
Still, while visiting Islamabad in early December, just after meetings in New Delhi, Secretary
Rice said she had “heard nothing but reasonable [and] responsible discussion” from authorities in
both capitals. A week later, a spokesman for Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry responded to the New
Delhi-announced “pause” in the bilateral peace process with resignation and optimism that the 63
“hiccup” in relations will be overcome. A lengthy suspension could lead to a further
deterioration of bilateral relations and a possible return to the crisis and near-war conditions of
2002. However, some analysts are sanguine, citing the resiliency of the five-year-old peace
process, a new Pakistani leadership that has demonstrated keen interest in improved bilateral
relations, and the weakened state of both countries’ economies. Further reasons a bilateral war is
considered unlikely include lessons learned during the 2002 crisis, and the existence of civilian 64
(rather than military) leaders in Islamabad, and secular-minded leaders in New Delhi.
Officials in Islamabad requested that India provide “credible information and evidence pertaining
to the Mumbai attacks” without which they say Pakistan’s own domestic investigation cannot
move forward. Without provision of justiciable evidence, which Indian authorities have been
hesitant to provide in past cases, it is not clear how long the detained alleged plotters will be held 65
in Pakistan. To date, Pakistani leaders continue to deny having seen any meaningful evidence
that the attackers came from Pakistan. They also claim that Indian and Western intelligence
agencies have offered no firm evidence that the attacks were orchestrated on Pakistani soil. 66
Islamabad has denied requests from foreign governments to question its detainees.
59
“India, Pakistan Tread Lightly After Mumbai Attack, Associated Press, December 2, 2008;Public Anger Strains
India-Pakistan Cooperation,” Christian Science Monitor, December 5, 2008. In one example of heightened public
emotion, tens of thousands of demonstrators gathered in southern Mumbai a week after the attacks began to express
their anger, at times chantingdeath to Pakistan (As Rice Presses Pakistan, Tens of Thousands Take to Streets in
Mumbai,” New York Times, December 4, 2008).
60Pakistan Detains Extremist Leader,” Washington Post, December 9, 2008.
61 “Shut Down LeT Operations, India Tells Pakistan, Hindu (Chennai), December 9, 2008; quote in “Pakistan Raids
Aimed to Deflect Pressure – India Experts, Reuters, December 10, 2008.
62Mistrust of India Forges Sense of Unity in Pakistan,” Washington Post, December 6, 2008.
63 See http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2008/12/112752.htm;Pakistan Optimistic on India Talks Despite Pause,
Reuters, December 17, 2008.
64Pakistan Link to Mumbai Attacks Raises Tensions,” Janes Country Risk Daily Report, November 28, 2008;
India, Pakistan Keep Lid ion Tensions,” Los Angeles Times, December 6, 2008.
65 See http://www.mofa.gov.pk/Press_Releases/2008/Dec/PR_388_08.htm;After Pressing Pakistan on Mumbai
Attacks, India Now Pressured to Share Evidence With Rival,” Associated Press, December 13, 2008.
66 “Zardari Rejects Mumbai ‘Claims,’” BBC News, December 17, 2008;Pakistan Wont Let Foreigners Question
(continued...)





Many Indian commentators urge New Delhi to take a measured and unemotional approach
toward Pakistan with the recognition that Islamabad, too, faces a serious terrorist threat, and that
public pressure for decisive action may only exacerbate the situation. From this perspective, the
Mumbai attacks could even serve as a catalyst for genuine progress in efforts to end the Pakistani 67
military’s alleged patronage of Islamist extremist groups. However, skeptical Indian analysts
insist that the Pakistani actions to date have been tactical moves aimed at creating “breathing
space” for Islamabad. They remain convinced that the Pakistani military has yet to relinquish its 68
the use of Islamist militant groups as “instruments of state policy.” Others conclude that the
interests of the Pakistani military, Pakistan’s conservative political parties, and Islamist extremists
converge in ways that marginalize Islamabad’s current civilian leaders, forcing the ruling political 69
coalition there to “take a do-little, if not do-nothing, stance.” Dubious experts have long asserted
that Pakistan’s interest is to appear cooperative while continuing to pursue what is seen as a 70
largely successful strategy of asymmetric warfare against India employing jihadi elements.
Pakistani President Asif Zardari insists that Pakistan is a victim of the same kinds of terrorists
who attacked Mumbai, arguing that their goals include weakening Islamabad’s civilian
government and derailing the India-Pakistan peace process. He has asked New Delhi to “pause
and take a breath” in recognizing that India and Pakistan must work together with others to 71
neutralize the mutual threat they face. Pakistan’s foreign minister expressed a desire that there
should be no war between his country and India, but warned that Pakistanis “are fully prepared in 72
case war is imposed on us.”
War fears are not unfounded, as escalatory dynamics in an atmosphere of mutual antagonism and
insecurity are notoriously difficult to control. A Pakistani daily reported that Islamabad ordered its
military forces to go on “high alert” on the weekend following the Mumbai attacks, when
President Zardari received a “threatening phone call” purportedly made by Indian External
Affairs Minister Mukherjee. Mukherjee issued a statement denying that he had made any such
call and expressing worry that Pakistani officials had “tried to give [the hoax] credibility” and 73
even considered acting on it. Reports based on the statements of Pentagon officials and others
suggested that, in the immediate aftermath of the Mumbai attacks, Indian air force units were 74
placed on alert for possible strikes on suspected terrorist camps inside Pakistan. In mid-
December, Islamabad issued a formal protest over two alleged violations of Pakistani airspace by
Indian warplanes. Indian officials deny that any such violations took place.

(...continued)
Suspects,” Reuters, December 15, 2008.
67 See, for example, Siddharth Varadarajan, “Indias Pakistan Problem is Pakistans Problem Too” (op-ed), Hindu
(Chennai), December 3, 2008.
68 See, for example, Wilson John, Action Against Jihadis, Too Little, Too Late, Observer Research Foundation (New
Delhi), December 10, 2008; Brahma Chellaney, “U.S. Must Stop Pampering Pakistan” (op-ed), Japan Times (Tokyo),
December 17, 2008.
69 “Denial or Worse?” (editorial), Hindu (Chennai), December 6, 2008.
70 See, for example, Sumit Ganguly, “Pakistan Wont Cooperate With India” (op-ed), Wall Street Journal, December
5, 2008.
71 Asif Ali Zardari, “The Terrorists Want to Destroy Pakistan, Too” (op-ed), New York Times, December 9, 2008.
72 Quoted inPakistan ‘Ready for War’ With India After Mumbai,” Daily Telegraph (London), December 10, 2008.
73 “A Hoax Call That Could Have Triggered War,Dawn (Karachi), December 6, 2008;
http://www.indianembassy.org/newsite/press_release/2008/Dec/4.asp.
74 “US: India’s Air Force ‘On Alert After Mumbai Attacks,” CNN.com, December 15, 2008; “Was India Mulling Air
Strikes on Pak Camps?, Times of India (Delhi), December 16, 2008.






Following the Mumbai attack, unity among Indian political leaders did not last even one day, and
public anger toward them was reflected in a slew of recriminating media reports and public 75
demonstrations. Many ordinary Indians expressed anger at political leaders from both major
national parties, whose alleged bickering and incompetence were seen as being at least partly 76
responsible for allowing the attacks. The Indian elite—mostly insulated from problems
associated with the country’s poor infrastructure and weak social services—found themselves the 77
targeted victims of violence and now demand swift government action to provide public safety.
The current, Congress Party-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) ruling coalition has marked
more than four years in power and overseen major economic growth in India. Yet Prime Minister
Singh been criticized for perceived weak and ineffective leadership. The UPA government only
barely won a vote of confidence in July 2008 and has lost numerous state-level elections, some to
the opposition-leading, Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which held national
power from 1998 to 2004. Although the UPA’s constituent parties fared relatively well in several
state-level elections in December, with national elections slated for May 2009 at the latest, the
coalition remains at risk of succumbing to India’s strong anti-incumbency tradition. The Mumbai
attacks may make even more difficult a Congress Party victory at the national level and could fuel 78
the Hindu chauvinism sometimes championed by the BJP. In addition, India’s already faltering 79
economy may be further harmed by the Mumbai carnage. At the time of this writing, three
senior Indian officials—all from the Congress Party—have resigned in the wake of the attack.
Home Minister Patil and the chief minister and deputy chief minister of the Maharashtra state, in 80
which Mumbai is located, all acknowledged security lapses in tendering their resignations.
Former Finance Minister Chidambaram is now the new Home Minster.
75
Mumbai Fallout: Will Indias Government Survive?, Time, December 1, 2008; “In Anger Over Mumbai Attacks,
Indians Vilify Their Politicians,” Washington Post, December 5, 2008; “The Other Battle,” Frontline (Chennai),
December 19, 2008.
76India Directs Anger at Politicians After Mumbai Attacks, Reuters, November 30, 2008. India has no overarching
anti-terrorism laws. The Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA) was promulgated under the BJP-led government of then-
Prime Minister Atal Vajpayee in early 2002. POTA came under fire as providing the government a powerful tool with
which to arbitrarily target minorities and political opponents. It subsequently was repealed by Singh’s Congress-led
coalition in 2004, only four months after the change of government. No new national anti-terrorism law was enacted to
replace POTA, although the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act of 1967 allows the government to proscribe extremist
groups.
77Mumbai Terror Siege Politicizes an Upper Class Long Insulated, New York Times, December 7, 2008.
78 See Brian Cloughley, “Who Benefits From Mumbai? (op-ed), Daily Times (Lahore), December 17, 2008.
79 “Attacks May Be Stern Test for Shaky Indian Markets,” Reuters, November 26, 2008; “Slowdown Deepens in India,
Attack Clouds Prospects, Reuters, December 1, 2008.
80 “More Indian Officials Quit in Aftermath of Attacks,Washington Post, December 1, 2008. The BJP wasted no time
in politicizing the tragedy even as it was still underway: controversial Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, a
hardline Hindu nationalist and rising BJP star, gave a November 28 press conference at the Oberoi hotel in which he
bashed the incumbent Congress-led government for failing to tackle the terrorism threat (“Crisis May Shift Indias
Political Landscape, New York Times, November 29, 2008).





Along with domestic political recriminations, the Mumbai attack has fueled already existing
concerns about India’s counterterrorism policies and capabilities. In the present case, the Mumbai
attackers’ extensive use of modern technology presented poorly equipped Indian investigators 81
with a difficult challenge. Reports have arisen indicating that some degree of warning was 82
available to Indian authorities, although it is not clear how actionable such intelligence was.
U.S. intelligence agencies were reportedly among those warning Indian authorities of a potential 83
attack “from the sea against hotels and business centers in Mumbai.” Past India
counterterrorism investigations have realized only minor successes, usually producing insufficient
evidence for prosecutorial action. Even if charges are levied, the judicial system is badly 84
hampered by painfully slow trials and obsolete technology.
Efforts to reform the system come under criticism for being minor and slowly implemented. Only
a few hundred Intelligence Bureau officials are said to specialize in counterterrorism—a seeming
pittance in a country of more than 1.1 billion people—and the Indian Coast Guard employs less
than 100 boats to patrol nearly 5,000 miles of shoreline. Indian police forces suffer from a dire
lack of funding and training. Poor working conditions, archaic surveillance and communications 85
equipment, and obsolete weapons further hinder their capacity. One senior Indian terrorism
analyst emphasizes the key role of local policing and he faults federal and state governments for
maintaining a distressingly low police-to-population ratio of about 125 per 100,000, little more 86
than half of the U.N.-recommended ration for peacetime policing.
At an emergency meeting of major political parties on November 30, Prime Minister Singh
vowed to establish a federal investigative agency, bolster maritime and air security, and create 87
multiple new bases for commando forces. On December 17, the Indian Parliament passed two
major pieces of legislation in response to the Mumbai attacks, the National Investigating Agency
Bill and the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Amendments Bill. The latter is meant to facilitate
investigations and trials of the accused in terrorism cases. Among other provisions, it would
double (to 180 days) the detention period allowed for suspects and seek to restrict the flow of
81
Mumbai Attacks Show Up Indias Technology Shortcomings,” Reuters, December 11, 2008; “Mumbai Attackers
More Tech Savvy Than the Police,” Associated Press, December 14, 2008. In one stunning example of lax Indian
security measures, two bombs were found in a pile of abandoned luggage at the train terminal nearly a week after they
had been left there by the terrorists and days after the site had been re-opened to the public.
82 In March 2007, Indias then-defense minister warned Parliament of intelligence reports that militants might plan to
infiltrate by sea. Subsequent parliamentary investigations found serious weaknesses in the ability of Indian security
forces to protect against such infiltration. In mid-November 2008, Indias foreign intelligence agency reportedly
intercepted a telephone conversation between parties in Karachi, Pakistan, and Mumbai who discussed possible
seaborne infiltration of Indias west coast by LeT militants, but a preventive naval sweep was called off after five days
(“Top Indian Security Official Resigns as Toll Eclipses 180,New York Times, December 1, 2008;India to
Restructure Security Services After Mumbai Failings,” Jane’s Defense Weekly, December 1, 2008).
83 “U.S. Warned India in October of Potential Terrorist Attack,” ABC News (online), December 1, 2008.
84 “India’s Success Rate Lacks in Terrorist Prosecutions, Wall Street Journal, December 8, 2008.
85 “Lack of Preparedness Comes Brutally to Light,New York Times, December 4, 2008; “’Rot at the Heart of Indian
Intelligence,” BBC News, December 2, 2008.
86 Ajai Sahni, “The Uneducable Indian” (op-ed), Outlook (Delhi), December 1, 2008.
87 “Cabinet Minister Resigns Amid Anger in India,Washington Post, December 2008.





finances that abet terrorist activities. London-based Amnesty International warned that the 88
provisions would violate international human rights treaties and should be rejected.
Those who focus on (re-)establishing national anti-terror laws may be neglecting to acknowledge
that such laws have at times been abused by those who implemented them, and that establishing a 89
coherent national counterterrorism strategy may be the more urgent task. Many observers cast
doubt on the Indian state’s capacity to effectively carry out its security overhaul plans, pointing to
a severe lack of resources. Some warn that plans for a new national investigative agency may be
too grandiose given New Delhi’s past record with such undertakings, and that the role such an
agency would play in the country’s already dense bureaucracy is far from clear. Others worry that
expanding anti-terrorism commando forces will not resolve more fundamental problems within 90
such forces, including what may be inadequate training and equipment.

The Mumbai attacks have brought sharp attention to the ongoing problem of Islamism terrorism
that emanates from Pakistan. Pakistani President Zardari faces the difficult task of avoiding open
conflict with India while at the same time not alienating Pakistan’s powerful military and 91
intelligence services. Some analysts believe this balancing act may be doomed. Substantively
cracking down on the LeT/JuD—especially if it is seen to come under pressure from New Delhi,
Washington, and other foreign capitals—poses the risk of a serious backlash among Pakistan’s
religious conservatives who are already vehemently opposed to Islamabad’s cooperation with
U.S.-led efforts to combat Taliban forces in Afghanistan and western Pakistan. This could result
in even more violence and political instability in Pakistan. Yet this may also be a risk the civilian
government and military must take in order to assuage now visceral anger in India and ever-92
increasing international skepticism about the true intentions of Pakistani leaders. Some
Pakistani commentators warn that Islamabad risks international isolation if it displays bravado
rather than flexibility. Many, however, acknowledge that, while Islamabad’s past use of Islamist
proxy groups “may have been expedient,” current geopolitical realities dictate that such policies 93
are no longer viable. Most independent analysts say only time will show how serious Islamabad 94
is in its broader stated intention to neutralize indigenous militant threats.
88
India Seeks to Sooth Public With New Terror Law, Reuters, December 18, 2008; Amnesty International, “India:
New Anti-Terror Laws Would Violate International Human Rights Standards,press release, December 18, 2008.
89 V. Venkatesan, “Short on Strategy” (op-ed), Frontline (Chennai), December 19, 2008.
90 Soutik Biswas, “Will India’s Security Overhaul Work?” (op-ed), BBC News, December 11, 2008; Praveen Swami,
Mumbai Siege Turns Spotlight on Crisis Within NSG (op-ed), Hindu (Chennai), December 12, 2008.
91 See, for example, “Pakistans President Zardari Attempts the Impossible,Spiegel (Hamburg), December 17, 2008.
92 Daniel Markey, Mumbai: A Battle in the War for Pakistan, Council on Foreign Relations, Expert Brief, December
12, 2008, http://www.cfr.org/publication/17981/mumbai.html?breadcrumb=%2Fregion%2F279%2Fsouth_asia.
93 See, for example, Khalid Ahmed, “Mumbai and Pakistan’s ‘Heroic Isolation” (op-ed), Friday Times (Lahore),
December 12, 2008, and Talat Masood,In Our Own Interest (op-ed), Daily Times (Lahore), December 18, 2008.
94 See, for example, “India: Pakistan Must Sustain Resolve,Christian Science Monitor, December 11, 2008.






U.S. regional policy focuses foremost on fostering stability and precluding open conflict between
two nuclear-armed powers; neutralizing the threat posed by religious extremists; democratization; 95
and economic development. As noted above, the Bush Administration responded to the Mumbai
attacks by reaffirming its commitment to close and supportive relations with India. Secretary Rice
meanwhile has noted Pakistan’s expressed willingness to assist in the investigation and she called
this “a time for complete, absolute, and total transparency and cooperation,” saying “the highest 96
levels of cooperation” between New Delhi and Islamabad were extremely important. While
encouraging patience with the unfolding investigation, President-elect Obama responded to a
question about the attacks by restating his view that sovereign states have a right to protect 97
themselves from external threats.
Fallout from the Mumbai terrorist attacks could further complicate U.S. policy in South Asia.
President-elect Obama had shown signs that reconciliation between India and Pakistan would be
a key foreign policy goal of his Administration in the interests of both regional and Afghan
stability, and to reduce the likelihood of attacks by religious extremists. The new Centcom
commander, Gen. David Petraeus, had voiced a similar interest, reasoning that a reorientation of
Pakistan’s strategic focus away from India and Kashmir, and toward militancy in Afghanistan and
western Pakistan, would weaken the Afghan insurgency. Renewed tensions between New Delhi
and Islamabad could easily derail such a tack while simultaneously intensifying pressure on the
U.S. government to facilitate regional conflict resolution. One result could be a growing and 98
increasingly sophisticated insurgency in Afghanistan and western Pakistan. Any high-visibility
U.S. government focus on the Kashmir issue specifically would likely evoke Indian resistance. It
also would risk fueling Pakistani expectations of a future settlement favoring Pakistan, thus in
turn providing a motive for Islamabad to sustain pressure by ramping up support for Kashmiri
separatists. Some analysts point to this potential risk in encouraging President-elect Obama to 99
appoint a special envoy who would deal with South Asia regional issues more broadly.
One unnamed senior Pakistani security official reportedly said Pakistan would respond to any
Indian military mobilization by withdrawing “all troops” from its border with Afghanistan and
redeploying them along the frontier with India, as was done during the 2002 crisis. Some view
such messages from Islamabad as a form of extortion and to argue that Pakistani leaders use such
leverage to elicit U.S. pressure on New Delhi and to continue what may be an ongoing low-100
intensity proxy war against India. Some analysts speculate that a bilateral India-Pakistan crisis
could benefit Pakistan’s security apparatus by shifting attention away from the U.S.-led “war on
terror” that is deeply unpopular among the Pakistani people and that has caused the Pakistani
95
For broader discussion, see CRS Report RL33529, India-U.S. Relations and CRS Report RL33498, Pakistan-U.S.
Relations.
96 See http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2008/11/112474.htm.
97 “India Has Right to Protect Itself: Obama,Times of India (Delhi), December 1, 2008.
98Indias Suspicion of Pakistan Clouds U.S. Strategy in Region,” New York Times;Pressure Increases on Obama for
Regional Solution,” Wall Street Journal, both November 28, 2008.
99 See, for example, Lisa Curtis, U.S. South Asia Regional—Not KashmirEnvoy Needed, Heritage Foundation
WebMemo No. 2158, December 5, 2008, at http://www.heritage.org/research/asiaandthepacific/wm2158.cfm.
100Pakistan to Move Troops If Indian Tensions Worsen,” Reuters, November 29, 2008;US, India Face Pak
Blackmail on Terror,” Times of India (Delhi), December 1, 2008.





army significant casualties and loss of domestic status.101 Militancy in western Pakistan is 102
identified as a major threat to U.S. interests.
Washington and New Delhi have since 2004 been pursuing a “strategic partnership” based on
shared values such as democracy, pluralism, and rule of law. One facet of the emerging
partnership is greatly increased counterterrorism cooperation. The U.S. State Department’s
Country Reports on Terrorism 2007 identified India as being “among the world’s most terror-103
afflicted countries” and counted more than 2,300 Indian deaths due to terrorism in 2007 alone.
This number is set to be equaled or exceeded in 2008. In late 2001, President Bush and then-
Indian Prime Minster Atal Vajpayee agreed that “terrorism threatens not only the security of the
United States and India, but also our efforts to build freedom, democracy and international 104
security and stability around the world.” A 2006 session of the U.S.-India Joint Working Group
on Counterterrorism ended with a statement of determination from both countries to further
advance bilateral cooperation and information sharing on such areas of common concern as
bioterrorism, aviation security, advances in biometrics, cyber-security and terrorism, WMD 105
terrorism, and terrorist financing. The Working Group has met a total of nine times since its
2000 creation, most recently in August 2008. Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mullen was in New
Delhi in early December to meet with senior Indian leaders, where he reiterated the U.S. 106
military’s commitment to work closely with Indian armed forces on counterterrorism.
The Mumbai incident elicited more vocal calls for deepening U.S.-India counterterrorism
cooperation that could benefit both countries. Such cooperation has been hampered by sometimes
divergent geopolitical perceptions and by U.S. reluctance to “embarrass” its Pakistani allies by
conveying alleged evidence of official Pakistani links to terrorists, especially those waging a
separatist war in Kashmir. Mutual distrust between Washington and New Delhi also has been
exacerbated by some recent clandestine U.S. efforts to penetrate Indian intelligence agencies.
Despite lingering problems, the scale of the threat posed by Islamist militants spurs observers to
encourage more robust bilateral intelligence sharing and other official exchanges, including on 107
maritime and cyber security, among many more potential issue-areas. U.S. law enforcement
agencies possess specialized equipment that can trace voice-over-internet calls, along with other
expertise for examining the global position and satellite phone systems used by the attackers. One
unnamed senior Indian intelligence source was quoted as saying that FBI assistance in tracing 108
VoIP calls will be a “test case for U.S. promises.”
101
War-Mongering Militants Stoke India, Pakistan Crisis,” Reuters, December 1, 2008.
102 See CRS Report RL34763, Islamist Militancy in the Pakistan-Afghanistan Border Region and U.S. Policy.
103 See http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2007/103709.htm.
104Joint Statement of U.S., India on Terrorism, Bilateral Ties,” U.S. Department of State Washington File, November
9, 2001.
105 See http://usinfo.state.gov/is/Archive/2006/Apr/24-821244.html.
106 See http://newdelhi.usembassy.gov/pr120408a.htm.
107 See Lisa Curtis, After Mumbai: Time to Strengthen U.S.-India Counterterrorism Cooperation, Heritage Foundation
Backgrounder, December 9, 2008, http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/upload/bg_2217.pdf.
108 Praveen Swami, “Key Test for Indo-U.S. Intelligence Ties (op-ed), Hindu (Chennai), December 3, 2008; quote in
“Terror Boat Was Almost Nabbed Off Mumbai, Times of India (Delhi), December 10, 2008.





U.S. officials expressed being pleased with Pakistan’s most recent efforts to crack down on
militant groups, lauding them as “important” and “great steps.” Still, some reporting suggests that
U.S. officials are thus far unsatisfied with the anti-terrorism measures taken by Islamabad 109
government. Secretary Rice also bucked widely-held perceptions when she claimed to have
“heard nothing” in Pakistan suggesting any divisions between the army and the civilian
government. While Pakistani officials are likely to have tailored their message to Rice to foster
U.S. confidence, it is not clear if those officials can deliver on their promises, and some observers 110
saw Rice’s emergency diplomacy achieving nothing concrete.
In a seeming response to President Zardari’s repeated reference to the “nonstate” status of the LeT
and other Pakistan-based militant groups, Secretary Rice told the Pakistani leader that Islamabad
has a responsibility to “deal with those who used Pakistani territory even if they are nonstate
actors.” Rice added that she continues to believe Pakistan is “very committed to this war on
terror.” Following a December visit to Islamabad, Foreign Relations Committee Chairman-
designate Senator John Kerry reported feeling confident that Pakistani authorities recognize the 111
need for a serious and harsh crackdown on religious extremist groups.
In seeking to revamp U.S. South Asia policy, President-elect Obama and his advisors may face a
key central question: Are conflictual relations between the region’s two largest states primarily an 112
India-Pakistan problem or are they mainly a Pakistan problem alone? Among the options
available to President-elect Obama when he takes office would be designating Pakistan as a state
sponsor of terrorism under U.S. law, a drastic measure with regard to a “major non-NATO ally”
that would have major implications, but one that is favored by some observers, especially in 113
India. Many independent analysts strongly urge the U.S. government to energetically support
Pakistani leaders and work diplomatically to bolster international support for them if they choose 114
the “dangerous path” of standing firmly against extremism.
Many hardline Indian analysts, long convinced that the U.S. government coddles the Pakistani
security establishment with major and largely unconditioned aid, assert that meaningful
improvement will not come so long as Washington implicitly condones Islamabad’s alleged
double-game by “propping up” the Pakistani military. Even a former Indian national security
advisor, a key architect of India’s militarized response to the 2001 Parliament attack, suggests that
109
See http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/dpb/2008/113144.htm ; “Top US Military Official Says Pakistan Doing the Right
Things After India Terror Attack, Associated Press, December 10, 2008. On potential dissatisfaction, see, for example,
“Durrani Meets Rice in Washington,Daily Times (Lahore), December 20, 2008.
110 See [http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2008/12/112877.htm];Rices South Asia Trip Ends With Little
Achieved, Associated Press, December 5, 2008.
111 See http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2008/12/112752.htm;Pakistan Sees Need for Crackdown After Mumbai,”
Reuters, December 16, 2008. In mid-December, the British Prime Minister held meetings in Islamabad (and New
Delhi), where he promised to assist the Pakistani government with counterterrorism efforts and noted that three-
quarters of the most serious terrorism plots investigated in Britain had links to Al Qaeda in Pakistan (Brown Offers
Pakistan Anti-Terror Aid,Washington Post, December 15, 2008).
112 See “US to Probe New S Asia Strategy,” BBC News, December 10, 2008.
113 “Pak on Track to Being Named Terrorist State,Times Of India (Delhi), December 7, 2008.
114 See, for example, Daniel Markey, Mumbai: A Battle in the War for Pakistan, Council on Foreign Relations, Expert
Brief, December 12, 2008,
http://www.cfr.org/publication/17981/mumbai.html?breadcrumb=%2Fregion%2F279%2Fsouth_asia.





the United States (and Britain) perpetuate the problem by continuing to underwrite the 115
“instrument” (i.e., the Pakistan army) that abets terrorists who attack India. Some in Pakistan
worry that “pro-India” elements in the U.S. Congress will respond to the Mumbai attacks by 116
seeking to curtail U.S. foreign assistance to Pakistan.
K. Alan Kronstadt
Specialist in South Asian Affairs
kkronstadt@crs.loc.gov, 7-5415

115
Brahma Chellaney, “U.S. Must Stop Pampering Pakistan” (op-ed), Japan Times (Tokyo)), December 17, 2008;
India Will Have to Fight Its Own Way (interview with Brajesh Mishra), Rediff.com, December 15, 2008.
116Move in US to Get Pakistan Aid Stopped,” Dawn (Karachi), December 17, 2008.