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Wednesday, 3rd December 2008

The political backdrop to the Mumbai attacks

James Forsyth 10:55am

For any CoffeeHouser trying to understand the relationship between Lashkar-e-Taiba—the group that are believed to have been responsible for the Mumbia atrocities—and the Pakistani government, I’d thoroughly recommend Steve Coll’s post over at The New Yorker.

This section seems to sum it up:

“On the one hand, the group’s bank accounts remain unmolested by the Pakistani government, which gives Lashkar quite a lot of running room; on the other, the group resents the accommodations reached between Pakistan’s government and the United States. Clearly, Lashkar knows what it must do to protect the Pakistan government from being exposed in the violent operations that Lashkar runs in Kashmir and elsewhere. For example, some of its younger volunteers wanted to join the fight with the Taliban in Western Pakistan and Afghanistan, my interlocutor said, and so Jamat had evolved an internal H.R. policy by which these young men would turn in their Jamat identity cards and go West “on their own time,” much as think tanks allow policy scholars to take leaves of absence to advise political campaigns.”
Coll also quotes an interesting theory aired at a recent Washington think tank meeting that Lashkar’s aim was to use the attacks to increase tensions between India and Pakistan and have Pakistan pull military units away from the Afghan border to the Indian one. This would, obviously, give Lashkar a far freer hand in its Afghan operations.

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