[India hopes to present evidence of official involvement in the attacks, in part to generate pressure on the Pakistani government to take action against the conspirators. Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, a commander with the militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba who is believed to have overseen the Mumbai attacks, has been free on bail in Pakistan since 2014.]
The
explosions during the 2008 terrorist attacks. Credit Arko Datta/Reuters
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India has long sought to depose the man, David
C. Headley, in hopes of establishing a direct link between the
Pakistani government and the assaults in Mumbai, which left more than 163
people dead.
Mr. Headley gave the deposition via teleconference from an
undisclosed location in the United States , where he is serving a 35-year
sentence for his role in the attacks. The questioning, by Ujjwal Nikam, the
Indian public prosecutor, will continue in the coming days.
India hopes to present evidence of official
involvement in the attacks, in part to generate pressure on the Pakistani
government to take action against the conspirators. Zaki-ur-Rehman
Lakhvi, a commander with the militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba who is believed to have overseen the
Mumbai attacks, has been free on bail in Pakistan since 2014.
The group’s founder, Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, lives openly in Lahore , in northern Pakistan , and moves freely throughout
the country, impervious to the $10 million reward offered by the United States for information leading to his
arrest.
Mr. Headley, who identified his contacts at the Inter-Services
Intelligence directorate of Pakistan , or ISI, as “Major Ali” and
“Major Iqbal,” has linked the terrorist plots to that agency before. He
previously told American prosecutors that Lashkar “operated under the umbrella
of the ISI” and that an agency official had offered in 2006 to pay him to carry
out reconnaissance trips to India before the attacks. He has
made similar statements to Indian investigators who have interviewed him in the
United States .
A few revelations emerged from Mr. Headley’s questioning on
Monday, part of a case against a Lashkar operative, Zabiuddin Ansari. One is
that the 10 gunmen who paralyzed Mumbai starting on Nov. 26, 2008, had botched
two previous attempts on the city, one in September and one in October, in one
case swimming back to shore after their boat hit a rock and their arms and ammunition
sank.
Mr. Headley also said that on
the advice of his contact in Lashkar, he had changed his birth name, Daood
Gilani, to a more American-sounding one so that he could more easily enter India . He visited India seven times before the
attacks, recording hours of video of the city for his handlers in Pakistan .
Mr. Headley, 55, the son of a
Pakistani poet and diplomat, Syed Saleem Gilani, and a Philadelphia socialite, A. Serrill Headley,
carved out a byzantine double game for himself during the years after the Sept. 11 , 2001 , attacks in the United States . Convicted of distributing
heroin in the United States, he made a deal with officials from the Drug
Enforcement Administration to travel to Pakistan in 2002 to gather information
on heroin trafficking.
He was swiftly picked up by the Pakistani authorities and
decided to work with him.
In 2002, while he was still working as a D.E.A. informant, he
began training with Lashkar. Three women — a girlfriend and two former wives of
his — approached American officials over the course of several years, saying
they suspected him of sympathizing with terrorist groups, but no action was
taken.
Mr. Headley was arrested in 2009, when he was caught carrying
plans for a terrorist attack on a Danish newspaper. On the basis of his
cooperation with investigators, United States officials shielded him from the
death penalty at his trial in 2011 and reduced his life sentence to 35 years.
Counterterrorism officials have described him as “dangerously engaging,” and
they warned about the need to guard against “being sucked into his mind games.”
The United States ’ failure to act on warnings
about Mr. Headley has been, at times, a source of tension between Washington and New Delhi . Mr. Headley’s appearance as a
witness “gives the United States an opportunity to play the
observer role in what is a South Asian conversation about terrorism and
security,” said Shamila N. Chaudhary, a South Asia fellow at the New America
Foundation.