Friday, November 8, 2013

Book claims Indian secret agent helped Mumbai attackers

World News
New Delhi: another book on the Mumbai dread strike has asserted that an Indian knowledge mole bailed the Pakistani assailants complete the November 2008 ambush and Indian home service authorities said on Friday they were not slanted to accept the staggering charge without a test. In their book on the fear strike on Mumbai, 'The Siege: The Attack On The Taj', writers Adrian Levy and Cathy Scott-Clark have guaranteed that an Indian native was a mole for
the Inter Services Intelligence and passed on data to it that helped mount the daring dread ambushes on Mumbai on November 26, 2008. Pakistan has prevented the charge from securing any official complicity in the ambush. Mr Levy has been cited by rediff.com as saying the Indian government had not tried hard enough to uncover the Isi mole in the New Delhi foundation. As per the creators, David Coleman Headley, an American of Pakistani inception who was sentenced in the United States for his part, was given "a consolidated form of the Pakistani armed force's two-year instructional class on reconnaissance and counter-brainpower". Mr Levy told rediff.com he accepts that while the Isi's source in India is unrealistic to be from the guard, it could be somebody from the Indian security stronghold other than the armed force. Notwithstanding the mole, the book additionally guarantees there were individuals in Mumbai codenamed "chuhas" (mice) who supplemented data and added to the parts Headley purportedly furnished to the Lashkar-e-Taiba to arrange the dread strike. "The Let claims there were 10 coconspirators working in Mumbai," says Levy. The Ram Pradhan Commission of Inquiry, set up to test the dread strike, came up short in its obligation when it didn't inspect the 'neighborhood component', Mr Levy included. "The Pakistan side let me know there exist Honey Bee and chuhas. he Indian side should have established their identity.”

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