Coming back from the jihadi brink after the ouster of former Prime Minister Imran Khan, Pakistan is trying to mend fences with both India and the United States. But its sincerity in this is still very much open to question.
“Pakistan holds ‘dead’ alleged mastermind of 2008 Mumbai attacks,” by Wajahat S. Khan, Nikkei Asia, June 24, 2022 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):
NEW YORK — Pakistan has arrested the alleged mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks after years of denying his presence and even claiming he was dead, Nikkei Asia has learned.
The man, Sajid Mir, is on the FBI’s list of most-wanted terrorists, with a $5 million reward on his head. He has been sought by both the U.S. and India for over a decade. Mir is connected to Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), a United Nations-designated terrorist organization believed to have been behind the November 2008 siege, when a team of 10 men carried out coordinated attacks on multiple targets. About 170 people were killed — mainly Indians, alongside six Americans as well as visitors from Japan and elsewhere.
The case appears to have been brought to a head by Pakistan’s desire to extricate itself from the Financial Action Task Force’s international terror-financing watchlist. Hammad Azhar, Pakistan’s former finance minister in the recently ousted government of Prime Minister Imran Khan, and the man in charge of negotiations with the multilateral watchdog for the past three years, confirmed to Nikkei that Pakistan took measures against Mir and other designated terrorists that were “satisfactory” to the FATF. The task force has been keeping Pakistan on its Grey List, used to monitor and isolate noncompliant countries.
Likewise, an FBI official, speaking to Nikkei Asia on the condition of anonymity, said that Mir is “alive, in custody and has been sentenced” in Pakistan.
Another former Pakistani official who is aware of the case said the “Pakistanis have acknowledged to both India and to America that a man called Sajid Mir, who was wanted in connection with the Mumbai attacks, and whom Pakistan had long said was either dead or not locatable … they have actually found where he is.”
Over the years, Pakistan denied his presence in the country, and according to several serving and retired officials, consistently claimed that he was either dead or could not be traced….
Infidel says
Don’t worry: Blinken’s state department will happily buy all the bridges that Islamabad has to sell for a few trillions more, and pretend that their foreign policy is a success. India might be more skeptical of such moves, depending on what their ‘National Security Advisor’ Ajit Doval (who makes John Bolton look like a patriot) is smoking that week
mortimer says
The members of Pakistan’s parliament took great courage to oust Imran Khan by supporting a vote of non-confidence. They are to be commended.
Of course, Pakistan, like any Muslim country uses a lot of taqiyya, and so, Reagan’s motto ‘Trust, but verify’ must be the guiding principle when dealing with Pakistan.
Pakistan betrayed the US very badly by hiding Bin Laden and by supporting the Taliban, giving them a safe haven and base in Pakistan.
gravenimage says
Actually, Mortimer, not a single Pakistani PM has served out their term–shocking but true. I wouldn’t assume he was ousted because he was too Islamic.
As for the current authorities there–how ever long they may last–as you note, “trust but verify”. And I might drop the “trust” part, myself…
gravenimage says
Pakistan arrests formerly dead mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai jihad massacres
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OK–I guess this is good. We still should proceed with extreme caution.