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Pakistan admits Mumbai bombing planned on its soil

Posted 02 16 2009 10:21AM

— Pakistani officials took what could be a decisive step forward in the country's fight against Islamic extremism Thursday, publicly admitting for the first time that the were planned in and launched from .

"Some part of the conspiracy has taken place in Pakistan ," Rehman Malik , the top security official in the Interior Ministry , told a news conference in . "I want to assure the international community, I want to assure all those who have been victims of terrorism, that we mean business."

Before the announcement, Pakistani officials had denied that there was any proof that its citizens were involved in the , which killed some 170 people and pushed nuclear-armed Pakistan and to the verge of war. Indian officials Thursday promptly welcomed the Pakistani admission as a "positive development."

The steps Malik outlined could be Islamabad's most serious action yet against , and they coincided with a visit this week from the Obama administration's new special envoy for , Richard Holbrooke . Washington has long pressed Pakistan for tougher measures against extremists, but some Pakistani military and intelligence officials have been reluctant to take action against when they consider India to be Pakistan's main enemy.

Malik said that Pakistan has eight suspects in the attacks, including the alleged mastermind, who are together accused of orchestrating the attacks. Six of the eight are in custody, and criminal cases were filed against them on Thursday. The interior ministry said that most, and possibly all, of the conspirators belonged to Lashkar-e- Taiba , a Pakistan -based that Indian officials have accused of carrying out the Mumbai carnage.

Malik said that the ringleader, Hamad Amin Sadiq , a 38-year-old he described as the "main operator", was among those in custody. Sadiq wasn't previously named as a suspect. A resident of , he's originally from the southern , a hotbed of Islamic militancy.

Pakistani authorities found one of the boats used by the Mumbai assailants and the crew, confirming that the terrorists set off from Karachi . They located the shop in Karachi where the attackers bought a boat engine to power the inflatable craft they used to land in India , and that led them to an arrest and to the bank account used for payment, Malik said.

Investigators also discovered that the attackers had made extensive use of Internet and telephone communications from Texas to Europe and the Middle East . A man named who lived in Barcelona , for instance, set up some of the Internet phone accounts — which were paid for in Italy . Iqbal was "lured" back to Pakistan during the investigation and detained, officials said. The attackers in Mumbai used phones to keep in touch with their handlers throughout the operation.

Malik stressed that the conspirators were "non-state actors," a response to Indian allegations that Pakistan — especially its — helped orchestrate the attack.

The leaders of Lashkar-e- Taiba , including founder Hafiz Saeed , were placed under house arrest soon after the Mumbai attack, but they aren't part of the Pakistani probe. The fate of , a powerful figure who in the past was said to have ties to ISI, remains unclear.

Ten gunmen attacked Mumbai , but the only one caught alive was Ajmal , who's made a lengthy confession to . The Pakistani investigation had been unable to trace the origins of any of the nine who were killed, saying Thursday that India hadn't provided enough information on them. Islamabad said it's submitted 30 questions to Indian authorities, whom it says have withheld notes from Kasab's interrogation and other evidence.

"We will continue our investigation, but we want tenable evidence from India . We want full cooperation from India so that this kind of ring be smashed," said Malik.

There appeared to be divisions among the Pakistani authorities on how much to co-operate with India , and a senior official was fired last month for confirming that Kasab was a Pakistani, although a McClatchy investigation had traced him to his home village in Pakistan .

"If somebody here is involved in terrorism, and there is ample evidence about it, why cover it up?" said Ikram Sehgal , a security analyst based in . "They (the Pakistani government) could have said these things earlier but it's better late than never."

Shah is a McClatchy special correspondent.

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