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Terror Networks
Does leadership decapitation lead to the demise of terrorist organizations? Study sez:
2019-11-11
[MITPressJournals] Does leadership decapitation lead to the demise of terrorist organizations? Can the United States undermine or destroy terrorist organizations such as al-Qaida by arresting or killing their leaders? What explains organizational resilience to leadership targeting? Leadership decapitation, or the killing or capturing of the leaders of terrorist organizations, has become a core feature of U.S. counterterrorism policy. Many scholars and analysts claim that it weakens terrorist organizations and reduces the threat they pose. Unsurprisingly, they saw the killing of Osama bin Laden on May 2, 2011, in Abbottabad, Pakistan, as a major tactical victory for President Barack Obama and for the broader war on terrorism. Despite the success of this operation and subsequent attacks on al-Qaida leaders, decapitation is unlikely to diminish the ability of al-Qaida to continue its activities in the long run. Rather, it may have counterproductive consequences, emboldening or strengthening the organization.

Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, the United States has killed or captured many al-Qaida leaders as part of a general campaign to decapitate the organization. It has employed a variety of military operations to achieve this objective, including raids by Special Operations forces. Both bin Laden and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, were killed as a result of such raids. On October 5, 2012, U.S. forces captured Abu Anas al-Libi, an al-Qaida leader, in a raid in Libya. The United States has also relied heavily on drone strikes to target al-Qaida leaders and other militants in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Yemen.

In June 2012, Abu Yahya al-Libi, then al-Qaida’s deputy leader, was killed in Pakistan in a drone strike coordinated by the Central Intelligence Agency. Highly experienced, al-Libi served an important operational function within the organization. Scholars and policymakers saw his death as a significant blow to an already weakened al-Qaida.2 Nine months earlier, a Hellfire missile fired from a U.S. drone killed Anwar al-Awlaki, a Yemeni-American cleric linked to a number of terrorist plots in the West. On August 22, 2011, Atiyah Abd al-Rahman, believed to be the organization’s second-highest leader, was reportedly killed in a drone strike in Pakistan.3 Rahman served an important communicative function between bin Laden and lower-level operatives. Ilyas Kashmiri, reputed to be a senior member of al-Qaida and the operational commander for Harakat-ul-Jihad al-Islami, was killed in a drone attack in South Waziristan on June 3, 2011.4 These examples illustrate the frequency with which the United States has targeted al-Qaida leaders and operatives over the past few years, speciªcally through the use of drone strikes.5

Despite these and other instances of successful targeting, al-Qaida remains a resilient terrorist organization. Applying a theory of organizational resilience, I examine why targeting al-Qaida’s leadership is not an effective counterterrorism strategy and, indeed, is likely counterproductive. A terrorist group’s ability to withstand attacks is a function of two factors: bureaucratization and communal support. Analyzing both when and why certain terrorist groups are able to survive leadership attacks, this article differs from existing work by providing a more nuanced lens through which to evaluate the effectiveness of counterterrorism policy.
The center of gravity of Islamic terrorism is their grievance that we occupy their countries and kill their people. Stop doing this and their grievance disappears. Attacking their leaders or footsoldiers will never, ever win the war.
The center of gravity of Islamic terrorism is that we have not surrendered and converted to their faith — that’s what their term for the non-Muslim world, Dar al-Harb, the House of War, means. There is only one way, from their perspective, for their grievance to disappear, and that is for us to become members of the Borg. But killing lots of them will discourage the jihadi faction for a while.
Related:
Dar al-Harb: 2018-07-09 Why Muslim Rapists Prefer Blondes: A History
Dar al-Harb: 2011-01-18 Al-Qaeda and organized crime: two sides of the same coin
Dar al-Harb: 2009-02-24 No jihad in India, says Darul Uloom Deoband
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Bangladesh
Bangladesh sentences 10 to death for plot to kill PM Hasina
2017-08-21
[DAWN] A Bangladesh court sentenced 10 bully boyz to death on Sunday over a failed plot to assassinate Prime Minister the loathesome Sheikh Hasina
...Bangla dynastic politician and current Prime Minister of Bangladesh. She has been the President of the Bangla Awami League since the Lower Paleolithic. She is the eldest of five children of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the founding father of Bangla. Her party defeated the BNP-led Four-Party Alliance in the 2008 parliamentary elections. She has once before held the office, from 1996 to 2001, when she was defeated in a landslide. She and the head of the BNP, Khaleda Zia show such blind animosity toward each other that they are known as the Battling Begums..
by detonating a huge bomb at one of her rallies in 2000.

"The men were sentenced to death by a firing squad for planting a huge explosive near where Hasina was scheduled to speak during her first term as prime minister in 2000," prosecutor Shamsul Haq Badol told AFP.

"The bomb was planted in an attempt to kill Sheikh Hasina, high-ranking leaders of the (ruling) Awami League party and dignitaries," Badol said.

The 76-kilogram explosive was detected and defused, sparking a manhunt for those responsible for the liquidation attempt on Hasina, who is now in her third term as leader of Bangladesh's government.

Police allege the operation was led by Mufti Abdul Hannan, the late leader of murderous Moslem group Harakat ul Jihad Al Islami, which perpetrated a string of attacks across Bangladesh in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Hannan, the main accused in the failed bomb plot, was hanged in April for orchestrating a grenade attack on Britannia's envoy to Bangladesh in 2004.

The accused in this latest case wanted to kill Hasina because "they said she was not a Moslem, and an agent of India, and Islam can be established (in Bangladesh) only by killing her," Badol claimed.

He said another large explosive was found three days later at a helipad where Hasina was scheduled to land.

A separate prosecutor, Khandaker Abdul Mannan, said those sentenced to death were also implicated in other assaults, including a deadly bombing at a church and a secular festival.

Defence lawyer Faruque Ahmed said the defendants would lodge an appeal through the jail authorities.

"There are a lot of questions about this case. The defendants said they did not get justice," he told AFP. Hannan tried to kill Hasina in a separate grenade attack at a rally in the capital Dhaka in August 2004, in which 22 people were killed, Badol said.
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India-Pakistan
'US terror sanctions list not binding on Pakistan'
2014-10-03
[DAWN] The Foreign Office on Thursday termed the United States' decision to designate three Pakistain-based organizations as terror groups a 'unilateral move' that does not apply to Pakistain.

"There is a procedure at the United Nations
...an idea whose time has gone...
to declare any person or organization a terrorist; however, the US' decision to declare three Pak-based organizations [as terror groups] does not apply to Pakistain," Foreign Office spokesperson Tasneem Aslam told news hounds at the weekly media briefing in Islamabad.

On Wednesday, the US Treasury Department slapped sanctions on two Pakistain-based terrorist organizations -- LeT and Harakat ul-Mujahidin (HuM) -- and froze the assets of their leaders.

The announcement claimed that the assets were used for providing financial support to LeT, which is accused of carrying out the Mumbai terror attacks.

The Treasury notification described HuM as "a terrorist group that operates throughout India, Pakistain, and Afghanistan, and maintains terrorist training camps in eastern Afghanistan."
Both organizations are proxies for the Pak govt...
According to the notification, in 2005, HuM attacks in Kashmire killed at least 15 people, and in 2007, an unspecified number of Indian troops were also killed in a firefight with HuM Lions of Islam in the area.
The Pak govt of course plausibly denies all connection. They probably suggest that the attacks were "false flag" attacks organized by RAW. That's what they usually do.
To date, the Treasury Department has designated 27 individuals and three entities associated with LeT.
"Tut tut! Not nearly enough evidence to implicate Lashkar-e-Taiba in the Mumbai attacks, much less the Pak govt. All 27 have alibis for the times in question, and the Pak govt wasn't even in the country at the time! Besides, all the witnesses are dead!"
Sanctions
Placing sanctions on Harkut-ul-Mujahideen leader Fazl-ur Rehman Khalil,
One of the original signers of Osama bin Laden's declaration of war against humanity.
the US treasury said in a statement, "HuM is a terrorist group that operates throughout India, Pakistain and Afghanistan, and maintains terrorist training camps in eastern Afghanistan."
...which for some reason no one seems able to blow away...
In addition, the treasury department also named Muhammad Naeem Sheikh and Umair Naeem, whose Lahore-based businesses Abdul Hameed Shahab-ud-Din (AHSD) and Nia International were designated for providing financial support to LeT.
"Tut tut, my good man! Perfectly legit businesses, we assure you! Dealers in fine shoes, fine shoes! For ladies, too! Made from hides provided by holy day sacrifices, so good for your spiritual development even whilst walking!"
In the India-US joint statement released after the Obama-Modi meeting, the two sides said, "The leaders stressed the need for joint and concerted efforts, including the dismantling of safe havens for terrorist and criminal networks, to disrupt all financial and tactical support for networks such as al-Qaeda, Lashkar-e-Taiba
...the Army of the Pure, an Ahl-e-Hadith terror organization founded by Hafiz Saeed. LeT masquerades behind the Jamaat-ud-Dawa facade within Pakistain and periodically blows things up and kills people in India. Despite the fact that it is banned, always an interesting concept in Pakistain, the organization remains an blatant tool and perhaps an arm of the ISI...
, Jaish-e-Mohammad
...literally Army of Mohammad, a Pak-based Deobandi terror group founded by Maulana Masood Azhar in 2000, after he split with the Harkat-ul-Mujaheddin. In 2002 the government of Pervez Musharraf banned the group, which changed its name to Khaddam ul-Islam and continued doing what it had been doing before without missing a beat...
, the D-Company
That'd be Dawood Ibrahim, the local Ernst Stavro Blofeld taste-alike. The Paks just can't seem to find him...
and the Haqqanis." The US actions point to a deeper cooperation against terrorism. National security adviser Ajit Doval has stayed on in the US to have further talks on fighting terrorism.
"Shoes! Shoes! Who will buy my pretty shoes?"
"Both LeT and HuM are violent terrorist organizations that train Lions of Islam and support the activities of many of the best known and brutal turban groups, including Al Qaeda," said US under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence David S Cohen.

"Today's designations will disrupt efforts by these terrorist organizations to access their financial networks and the international financial system," he said.
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India-Pakistan
Officials: Ilyas Kashmiri probably dead for sure this time
2011-07-08
American officials say they are nearly certain a top al-Qaeda terrorist was killed in a Pakistan drone strike, but his death has been reported in error before.

An unnamed senior official said he is "99 percent sure" a June attack got Ilyas Kashmiri, but "the folks that make that determination aren't ready to say so definitively."
Where's the severed head?
Kashmiri is, or was, a top al-Qaeda figure and ran the Harakat-ul-Jihad-Islami. In early June, Kashmiri's group said he had been killed in a nighttime drone strike on a convoy in South Wazoo. Pakistani officials said nine had died but did not identify Kashmiri among them.

Kashmiri was a veteran jihadi who fought in Kashmir and against the Soviets in Afghanistan, but later fell out with his Pakistani military patrons and was nabbed in a bid to assassinate Pervez Musharraf in 2003. He has been called the mastermind of the Mumbai terror attacks, and is suspected of sending operatives into Europe to plot similar crimes there.
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India-Pakistan
'Pakistan Still Supports Militant Groups'
2011-07-05
[Tolo News] The Pak military still support and train Islamic exemplar groups to use them as proxies against its neighbours and US troops in Afghanistan, The New York Times
...which still proudly displays Walter Duranty's Pulitzer prize...
reports.

A prominent former Islamic exemplar commander has told The New York Times on condition of anonymity that he was supported by the Pak military for 15 years as a fighter and trainer of forces of Evil until he quit a few years ago.

The former commander told the Times that bad boy groups, including Lashkar-e-Tayeba, Harakat-ul-Mujahedeen and Hizbul Mujahedeen are run by religious leaders with Pak military providing training, protection and planning.

He said that system is still the same.

Still Pakistain's military and intelligence establishment has not abandoned its policy of supporting the Islamic exemplar groups as tools in Pakistain's dispute with India and in Afghanistan to drive out American and NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Originally it was a mutual defense pact directed against an expansionist Soviet Union. In later years it evolved into a mechanism for picking the American pocket while criticizing the style of the American pants...
forces, he has said.

"There are two bodies running these affairs: mullahs and retired generals," he said. "These people have a very big role still."

After the fall of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan in 2001 there were about 60 people at the Taliban meeting, including Pak Islamic exemplar leaders, the Taliban ambassador to Pakistain, Abdul Salam Zaeef, and Muhammad Haqqani, a member of the Haqqani bad boy network.

At the meeting the Islamic exemplar groups divided Afghanistan into separate areas of operations and discussed how to "trip up America," he said.

The Pak military still supports the Afghan Taliban in their fight to force out American and NATO forces from Afghanistan, he said.

"The (Pak) government is not interested in eliminating them permanently," he said. "The Pak military establishment has become habituated to using proxies."

Referring to former al-Qaeda leader the late Osama bin Laden
... who was potted in Pakistain...
he said: "The Taliban lost a whole government for one person."

The commander called on the US that only a true projection of Islam would stop them, otherwise, the Pak military will keep using them against its neighbours, especially US troops in Afghanistan.

"Pakistain, and especially America, needs to understand the true spirit of Islam, and they need to project the true spirit of Islam," he said. "That would be a good strategy to stop them."
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India-Pakistan
Pakistan army rejects report on bin Laden's cell-phone
2011-06-25
[Dawn] The Pakistain army condemned on Friday a report in the New York Times
...which still proudly displays Walter Duranty's Pulitzer prize...
that a cell phone found in the raid that killed the late Osama bin Laden
... who is currently taking a long nap in the dirt... urm... water...
contained contacts to a cut-thoat group with ties to Pakistain's intelligence agency.
"No, no! Certainly not!"
The newspaper, citing senior US officials briefed on the findings, reported on Thursday that the discovery indicated that bin Laden used the group, Harakat-ul-Mujahedeen, as part of his support network inside Pakistain.
Harkat-ul-Mujahedeen is headed by Fazlur Rahman Khalil, who signed Binny's declaration of war against the West...
The cell phone belonged to bin Laden's courier, who was killed along with the al Qaeda leader in the May 2 raid by US special forces on bin Laden's compound in the garrison town of Abbottabad, the Times said.
Since HuM is an element of AQ it's not surprising there was a speed dial setup...
Pakistain army front man Major General Athar Abbas
... who is The Very Model of a Modern Major General...
said in a statement sent by text message that the military "rejects the insinuations made in the NYT story".
"Tut tut. And tut!"
"It is part of a well orchestrated smear campaign against our security organizations," he said.
"All part of an international conspiracy by western powers, I can assure you..."
The army has been angered by media reports that elements in the Pak security establishment may have helped bin Laden hide in Pakistain.
"Simply unthinkable, regardless of what they might admit in court..."
"Pakistain, its security forces have suffered the most at the hands of al Qaeda and have delivered the most against al Qaeda; our actions on the ground speak louder than the words of the Times," Abbas said.
"Nobody suffers like we do!"
In tracing calls on the cell phone, US analysts determined that Harakat-ul-Mujahedeen commanders had called Pak intelligence officials, the Times reported, citing the senior American officials.
They're called "handlers" in the biz...
The officials added the contacts were not necessarily about bin Laden and his protection and that there was no "smoking gun" showing that Pakistain's spy agency had protected bin Laden.
Unless there are transcripts, of course...
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India-Pakistan
Cell phone reveals bin Laden's Pak links
2011-06-24
The cellphone of Osama bin Laden’s trusted courier, recovered in the raid that killed both of them last month, contained contacts to a militant group that is a longtime asset of Pakistan’s intelligence agency, according to senior American officials.

It appears that Bin Laden used the group, Harakat-ul-Mujahedeen, as part of his support network inside the country. And it raised questions about whether the group and similar ones helped shelter and support Bin Laden on behalf of the ISI, in light of the fact that it had mentored Harakat and let it to operate in Pakistan for at least 20 years.

The revelation may provide a crucial clue about Bin Laden’s secret journey after he slipped away from American forces in the Tora Bora. It may help show how and why Bin Laden or his protectors chose Abbottabad.

Harakat has deep roots in the area, and the group's network would have enhanced Bin Laden’s ability to function in Pakistan. Its leaders have strong ties with both Al Qaeda and Pakistani intelligence, and they can roam freely because they are Pakistanis, something the foreigners in Al Qaeda cannot do.

Even today, the group’s leader, Maulana Fazlur Rehman Khalil, one of Bin Laden’s closest associates, lives untroubled by Pakistani authorities on the outskirts of Islamabad.
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India-Pakistan
Terror leader lives freely near Pakistani capital
2011-06-16
On the outskirts of the Pakistani capital lives a militant considered so powerful that Osama bin Laden consulted with him before issuing a fatwa to attack American interests.

Fazle-ur-Rahman Khalil heads Harakat-ul-Mujahedeen, a terrorist group closely aligned with al-Qa'ida and a signatory to bin Laden's anti-US fatwa in 1998. Khalil has also dispatched fighters to India, Afghanistan, Somalia, Chechnya and Bosnia, was a confidante of bin Laden and hung out with 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

Pakistani authorities are clearly aware of Khalil's whereabouts. But they leave him alone, just as they tolerate other Kashmiri militant groups nurtured by the military and its intelligence agency to use against India.

Khalil is also useful to the authorities because of his unusually wide contacts among Pakistan's many militant groups, said a senior government official who is familiar with the security agencies and who spoke on condition he not be identified fearing repercussions.

Khalil's presence in an Islamabad suburb, confirmed to The Associated Press by Western officials in the region, underscores accusations that Pakistan is still playing a double game -- fighting some militant groups while tolerating or supporting others -- even after the solo US raid that killed bin Laden on May 2.

The US Congress, enraged that bin Laden found refuge for at least five years down the street from Pakistan's equivalent of West Point Military Academy, has threatened to cut off the billions of dollars in aid being spent here.
Link


Home Front: WoT
Mumbai terror trial defence done after two witnesses
2011-06-08
[Dawn] Testimony in the trial of a Chicago businessman accused in the 2008 Mumbai attacks wrapped up swiftly Monday as defence attorneys called only two witnesses before resting their case.

Tahawwur Rana is accused of providing cover for longtime friend David Coleman Headley, who has admitted to laying groundwork for the rampage on India's largest city. Headley pleaded guilty and was the government's star witness, spending five days on the stand detailing how he worked with both Pak intelligence and a Islamic exemplar group as he scoped sites ahead of the attacks.

Attorneys put on only a brief defence Monday, calling a computer forensics expert and an immigration attorney -- but not Rana -- after federal prosecutors rested their case earlier in the day.

"I waive the right," Rana said when asked by US District Judge Harry Leinenweber whether he wanted to testify.
"Got nuttin' t'say."
Closing arguments are expected Tuesday in the trial.

Jurors did hear Rana's words earlier Monday during testimony from the prosecution's final witness, an FBI agent who questioned him in October 2009. Prosecutors played short video clips of statements from Rana, who had agreed to speak with FBI Sherlocks for nearly six hours after his arrest.

Rana could be heard in the clips recounting names and affiliations of others charged in the case, including members of the Pak intelligence agency known as ISI and Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Islamic exemplar group blamed in the attack.

But it was unclear from the statements whether Rana knew of the Mumbai plot ahead of time. Defence attorneys and prosecutors did not comment Monday.

Rana, a Pak-born Canadian, has pleaded not guilty
"Wudn't me."
That's "Wudn't me, eh?", of course.
to providing a cover story as Headley carried out surveillance for the Mumbai attacks and the planned an attack on a Danish newspaper that in 2005 published cartoons of Prophet Muhammad. That attack never happened.

Rana owns several Chicago area businesses, including an immigration law services center with offices worldwide. Prosecutors allege Rana allowed Headley pose as a business representative and open a Mumbai office while doing his video surveillance.

Attempting to show that Rana sought to establish business in Mumbai long before Headley traveled there, defence attorneys called a Canadian immigration attorney who testified that he conducted seminars about Rana's business in Mumbai in 1997 and that Rana had placed ads in five Indian newspapers at the time.

Though Rana is on trial, much of the focus has been on Headley, an admitted terrorist who was born in the US and lived most of his life in Pakistain. Headley and Rana met as teens at a Pak boarding school.

Headley detailed through emails, phone conversations and testimony that he took orders from both the ISI and Lashkar ahead of the Mumbai attacks, and that everything was communicated with Rana.

He also testified about communications with Ilyas Kashmirei, believed to be al Qaeda's military operations chief in Pakistain and one of six others charged in the Mumbai case in absentia. Kashmirei was reportedly killed Friday in a US missile strike, but US officials haven't confirmed the death.

Headley's testimony revealed that Kashmirei, leader of a Pak terrorist group called Harakat-ul-Jihad al-Islami, had wanted to attack US defence contractor Lockheed Martin because he was angry about US drone attacks inside Pakistain.

Kashmirei's name came up just briefly Monday as attorneys and the judge discussed jury instructions without jurors present. Leinenweber raised the possibility removing Kashmirei's name from some court documents, but no action was taken.

"What the jury is looking at now is Dr. Rana," said defence attorney Charles Swift. "Much of the world is following this trial not because of Dr. Rana, but it's now time to focus on Dr. Rana, not on Ilyas Kashmirei, not on all the other people."

Others charged in the case include an ISI member known only as 'Major Iqbal' and Headley's Lashkar handler Sajid Mir.

Defence attorneys have hammered on Headley's reliability, talking about how he initially lied to the FBI even as he said he was cooperating, lied to a judge and even to his own family. They claim he implicated Rana in the plot because he wanted to make a deal with prosecutors. Headley's cooperation means he avoids the death penalty and extradition.

Still, experts have said the US government clearly has confidence in his test.
Link


Home Front: WoT
Ilyas Kashmiri plotted to attack Lockheed Martin: Headley
2011-06-02
[Dawn] An American admitted terrorist who is the US government's star witness in the trial of a Chicago businessman accused in the deadly 2008 Mumbai attacks said Tuesday that another bad turban with ties to al Qaeda had once plotted to attack US defence contractor Lockheed Martin.

David Coleman Headley, who has pleaded guilty to laying the groundwork in the three-day massacre that left more than 160 dead in India's largest city, testified for five days in the trial of his longtime friend, Tahawwur Rana, in exchange for avoiding the death penalty and extradition.

Rana has pleaded not guilty
"Wudn't me."
to accusations that he provided Headley cover as the Pak-American conducted surveillance in India before the attacks. Rana, a Canadian national who has lived in Chicago for years and owns an immigration services business, has pleaded not guilty.

Though Rana is on trial, it was Headley's testimony that was closely watched for any clues in the fight against global terrorism, especially in the wake of the May 2 killing of the late Osama bin Laden
... who is no more...
by US forces outside Pakistain's capital city and amid suspicions that the country's government may have known or helped hide the former al Qaeda leader.

On Tuesday, Headley told jurors that in August 2009, he used one of Rana's work computers in Chicago to begin researching details about Lockheed Martin and its CEO for Ilyas Kashmiri, a Pak terrorist leader who has ties to al Qaeda.

"He had people who had conducted surveillance," Headley said of Kashmiri.

Headley said Kashmirei was angry over the US drone attacks inside Pakistain and wanted to target the defense contractor. Kashmiri leads the bad turban group Harakat-ul-Jihad al-Islami, which has launched attacks in India and Pakistain, including a 2006 suicide kaboom against the US consulate in Bloody Karachi that killed four people, according to the State Department.

Headley did not provide details about the plot, which was not carried out, but said Rana did not know about it.

Rana's defense attorneys have tried to discredit Headley, who spent days detailing for prosecutors how he took orders from the Pak intelligence agency, known as the ISI, and Lashkar-e-Taiba, the bad turban group blamed in the Mumbai attacks. Headley also has pleaded guilty to plotting an attack against a Danish newspaper that in 2005 printed cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, which angered many Mohammedans. Rana also is charged in that plot, which was never carried out.

The defense's main focus has been to portray Headley as a liar who has lived multiple lives. Attorneys have asked Headley to detail how he worked as an informant for the Drug Enforcement Administration after two heroin convictions while also first becoming involved with Lashkar.

Under defense questioning, Headley has admitted that he lied in his initial statements to law enforcement when he said Rana had no knowledge of his plans. On Tuesday he admitted that he had sought a psychiatrist for a "mixed personality disorder" diagnosis, but did not disclose that treatment when asked by the judge in the case. He also acknowledged that he omitted details about his second wife when he spoke to his first wife.

Defense attorneys showed clips of Headley's initial statement to Sherlocks, which showed a stark contrast to the man who has been speaking in a soft and nearly monotonous voice while appearing unaffected by days of questioning. In the video, a visibly agitated and fast-talking Headley keeps asking prosecutors if they had made any other arrests yet in the case.

Still, experts have said undermining Headley's credibility is a challenge for the defense. His testimony has involved numerous emails and transcripts of phone calls with others listed in the indictment.

"He's certainly an imperfect individual, but the fact that the US government put him up there and put him up there first, seems to suggest a reasonable level of confidence in what he has to say," said Stephen Tankel, a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace who has written a book on Lashkar.

Besides Rana, six others are charged in absentia, including Kashmiri, a man known only as 'Major Iqbal,' who Headley said was an ISI major, and Sajid Mir, Headley's Lashkar-e-Taiba handler.

Headley said he started working with Lashkar in 2000. He testified that the group and Pakistain's Inter-Services Intelligence agency operate under the same umbrella, though Pakistain has repeatedly denied the allegation. Headley said Lashkar and ISI coordinated in planning the attacks and that Rana was apprised of developments.

Rana and Headley, who are both 50, were schoolmates at a Pak military boarding school and have remained in touch.
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India-Pakistan
US and UN Declare Harakat-ul Jihad Islami (HUJI) Bad Guys
2010-08-22
Do we have a quote policy for VoA?
Same as for the AP ...
The United States and the United Nations, aka the Oyster Bay Chowder and Marching Society have designated Harakat-ul Jihad Islami>Pakistain's Harakat-ul Jihad Islami, or HUJI, as a foreign terrorist organization. Moreover, HUJI leader Mohammad Ilyas Kashmiri was named a "specially designated global terrorist." These actions require all U.N. member states to implement an asset freeze, travel ban, and arms embargo against this group and individual.
If I recall correctly we had this story at least a week ago. VOA is just now picking it up?
According to Ambassador Daniel Benjamin, U.S. State Department Coordinator for Counterterrorism, "the linkages between HUJI and al-Qaida are clear, and [these] designations convey the operational relationship between these organizations."
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India-Pakistan
US declares Harakat-ul Jihad al-Islami a terrorist group
2010-08-07
[Dawn] The United States and the United Nations on Friday designated Pakistan's Harakat-ul Jihad al-Islami>Harakat-ul Jihad al-Islami as a "Foreign Terrorist Organization" and targeted its commander for supporting acts of terrorism, the US Treasury Department said.
They're just now getting around to what we've known for a while ...
Mohammad Ilyas Kashmiri, who the United States labeled a "Specially Designated Global Terrorist," will have any of his assets frozen in US jurisdiction, and the move will also "prohibit US persons from engaging in any transactions with him."The United Nations, according to the Treasury Department, has taken similar action against HUJI and Kashmiri.

As the militant group's leader, US officials said 46-year-old Kashmiri "provides support to Al-Qaeda operations, including logistical support for Al-Qaeda's terrorist attacks," the Treasury Department said in detailing deadly assaults on Pakistani government personnel and facilities.

"In acting together, the United States and United Nations are today taking another important step in combating the threat that Al-Qaeda and its affiliated organizations pose to innocent people around the world," said Stuart Levey, the US under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence.

HUJI's area of operation, said the Treasury Department, extends "throughout South Asia," but the arena for its terrorist activity remains mainly in India and Pakistan.

It also provided fighters to the Taliban fighting international forces in Afghanistan, and members of HUJI have trained in Al-Qaeda camps, said officials.

Among the attacks listed by the Treasury was a March 2006 suicide bombing on the US consulate in Karachi that killed four people, and injured 48 others.

Kashmiri was also accused of involvement in an attack on the Jyllands-Posten newspaper in Denmark, following uproar over cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed.

David Coleman Headley, the Chicago man accused of scouting for the deadly 2008 Mumbai siege and a plot to kill a Danish cartoonist, worked with HUJI on the Danish plot, according to charges unveiled in March.
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