In fact, areas where international tourists concentrate have frequently been on the radar of the Al Qaeda. A laptop recovered by British troops deployed in Iraq in 2006 revealed that two Al Qaeda operatives had done an elaborate reconnaissance of several areas in Goa frequented by American and Israeli tourists. In fact, interrogations of terrorists picked up by the Karnataka policehad also revealed that they were planning to hit the international community in India.And when the hit came, the terrorists went into Nariman House, the home to a Jewish family as well as the headquarters of an Israeli religious group - the ChadLubavitch. It was clearly not just a coincidence that the Trident was targeted where anIsraeli conference on diamond exports and imports was taking place. Orthat top managers who run corporations, also happened to be having their board meetings at the Taj andTrident.
LeT's linkages with the Al Qaeda have been well recorded in the past, and the scale and scope of this attack indicates that the latter group has finally left its footprint in India. So far, intelligence officials say, there were intermittent reports, based on electronic intelligence andintercepts, of the Al Qaeda building up a base in the higher reaches of the Pir Panjal ranges. But when a ship is employed to launch an armed militia off the coast of Mumbai, it is adequate evidence to suspect an international hand in the current terrorist attack.
The Indian response, as usual, has left much to be desired. While the Mumbai police was completelycaught unawares, (initial reports attributed the attacks to gang wars) the central intelligence agencieswere also found wanting. But are they to blame for this continuing state of affairs? Most certainly not. The blame lies with a political leadership which continues to brush off civilian deaths with announcements of inadequate compensation and the promise to "revamp the state and central intelligence mechanism." Intelligence per se, will never be enough to check such attacks.