More

Tahawwur Rana's Chicago Trial Raises Questions About Pakistan's Terrorism Ties‎

Tahawwur Rana

SOPHIA TAREEN   05/15/11 05:24 PM ET   AP

CHICAGO — The allegations against Chicago businessman Tahawwur Rana are fairly straightforward: He helped a former boarding school friend serve as a scout for terrorists who carried out a 2008 rampage that killed more than 160 people in Mumbai.

But the implications of Rana's trial, which begins with jury selection Monday in Chicago, could be enormous: To make their case, federal prosecutors may lay bare alleged connections between the militant group blamed for the Mumbai attack and Pakistan's main intelligence agency, which has come under increasing scrutiny after Osama bin Laden was found living in a compound not far from Pakistan's capital.

The key government witness could be David Coleman Headley, a Pakistani-American with a troubled past who pleaded guilty last year to laying the groundwork for the Mumbai attack by the Pakistani militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba. Headley is cooperating with U.S. officials and told interrogators that Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency provided training and funds for the attack against India, the country's long nemesis.

Headley told authorities that Rana provided him with cover for his Mumbai scouting missions. Headley also told interrogators that he was in contact with another militant with ties to al-Qaida who was helping plot a separate bomb attack against a newspaper in Denmark whose cartoons had offended Muslims.

On the heels of bin Laden's May 2 killing, Headley's testimony and other details from Rana's trial could further strain the already delicate ties between the U.S. and Pakistan, a critical relationship in the global battle against terrorism.

The discovery of bin Laden living in an army garrison town near Islamabad has led to suspicions that Pakistani intelligence officials knew of his presence and perhaps were protecting him. That has deepened suspicions that Pakistani agents secretly work with terrorist organizations despite receiving billions in U.S. aid every year.

"What you'll have now in Chicago is a trial which will undoubtedly demonstrate links between Pakistan government agencies and one of the most competent terrorist organizations operating in South Asia – Lashkar-e-Taiba," said Seth Jones, a senior political scientist at the RAND Corp. The trial "just adds more fuel to an already tense situation."

Experts say Lashkar-e-Taiba – whose name means "Army of the Pure" – was created with ISI's help in the 1980s as a proxy fighting force to battle with India over the disputed territory of Kashmir. Counterterrorism officials say the militant group has gained strength with the help of ISI since then, possibly with the help of retired officers, but Pakistani officials have denied any ties with the group.

Lashkar-e-Taiba is accused of carrying out the three-day siege in Mumbai in which 10 gunmen attacked two luxury hotels, a Jewish center and a busy train station in India's financial capital, killing 166 people, including six Americans.

Rana, a Canadian national and father of three who has lived in Chicago for years, owns a Chicago-based immigration and law services center, First World Immigration Services, in the heart of the city's South Asian enclave. He and Headley met as teenagers at a prestigious Pakistani military boarding school outside Islamabad.

Prosecutors say Rana, who was arrested in 2009, provided cover for Headley by letting him open a First World office in Mumbai and travel as a supposed representative for the agency. He also allegedly helped Headley make travel arrangements as part of the plot against the Danish newspaper that in 2005 printed cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, which angered many Muslims worldwide. Pictures of the prophet are prohibited in Islam.

Rana is charged with providing material support for terrorism in India and Denmark. In court documents, Rana's attorneys have said he believed Headley was working for Pakistani intelligence. Headley also told authorities that he told Rana he "had been asked to perform espionage work for the ISI," according to a court filing.

"Part of the defense will be that Headley used his connections with ISI to explain the things he was doing," Rana's attorney Patrick Blegen told reporters outside the federal courthouse last week. Rana "has maintained his innocence since the day he was arrested."

However, U.S. District Court Judge Harry Leinenweber ruled that that proposed defense was "objectively unreasonable" and Rana's alleged actions still would have been in violation of U.S. law.

Prosecutors have repeatedly declined to comment on the case. A senior Pakistani intelligence official said he has not been following the trial and did not have any comment on it.

Some experts are skeptical about how much the trial will reveal. They note that federal prosecutors may work hard to keep any sensitive information from surfacing in the courtroom, and that Headley is not the most credible witness. Born Daood Gilani, Headley reached a plea deal with prosecutors in the terrorism case in exchange for avoiding the death penalty and previously had been an informant for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration after a conviction on heroin smuggling charges.

"We're not going to learn (anything) from the Rana trial that we don't know from Headley's interrogation," said Christine Fair, an assistant professor at the Center for Peace and Strategic Studies at Georgetown University. She said Headley's accounts have not been verified and amount to "the musings of a terrorist who's trying to minimize his sentence."

Details of Headley's possible testimony were revealed last year in an Indian government report revealing what he had allegedly told Indian investigators during questioning in Chicago, where he's being held.

In the report, Headley is cited describing how ISI was deeply involved in planning the Mumbai attacks and how he reported to a man known only as "Major Iqbal," whom he called his Lashkar-e-Taiba "handler." But some experts have suggested Iqbal as a retired ISI officer also. In the indictment his name is listed as unknown, and some have even doubted his existence.

Rana is actually the seventh name on the indictment, and the only defendant in custody. Among the six others charged in absentia is "Major Iqbal" and Sajid Mir, allegedly another Lashkar-e-Taiba supervisor who also "handled" Headley.

Also indicted is Ilyas Kashmiri, the commander of the terror group Harakat-ul Jihad Islami who also is believed by Western intelligence to be al-Qaida's operational chief in Pakistan. During his travels for spying and training, Headley allegedly met with Kashmiri in Pakistan, and Kashmiri gave him instructions on how to carry out the Danish newspaper bombing, which ultimately never occurred.

"It is potentially serious if one can demonstrate ISI's relationship with Lashkar-e-Taiba and Lashkar-e-Taiba's relationship with al-Qaida," Jones said. "That is one step away from an ISI-al-Qaida link, and that's a very serious close connection."

___

Associated Press senior television producer Tracy Brown in Washington and AP writer Sebastian Abbott in Islamabad contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST CHICAGO

CHICAGO — The allegations against Chicago businessman Tahawwur Rana are fairly straightforward: He helped a former boarding school friend serve as a scout for terrorists who carried out a 2008 r...
CHICAGO — The allegations against Chicago businessman Tahawwur Rana are fairly straightforward: He helped a former boarding school friend serve as a scout for terrorists who carried out a 2008 r...
Filed by Jen Sabella  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 40
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
photo
7dr361
Air Force Flyboy 59 Years ago
11:32 AM on 05/16/2011
Get out of that country and stop the billions in funds the crooked leaders
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
askyagerz
09:20 AM on 05/16/2011
The drawing looks like something out of a creepy Reading Rainbow story...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Erewhon7
Join atheists, our non-prophet organization
03:06 AM on 05/16/2011
"See no Taliban, Hear no Taliban, Speak no Taliban"--Ahmad Shuja Pasha, head of ISI.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ian Faus
07:50 AM on 05/16/2011
Rather "For the terrorists, of the terrorists and by the terrorists" - ISI motto.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
-PZ-
Amateurs talk tactics, profession­als talk logist
01:25 AM on 05/16/2011
This is BS...

Ilyas Kashmiri is the guy who led the attack on the Pakistan Army general headquarters which killed a couple of very senior military personnel...

The guy was also behind plots to kill both Musharraf and Kiyani...

He has been at war with Pakistan since 2003.

http://www.newsweek.com/2010/10/23/is-ilyas-kashmiri-the-new-bin-laden.html
12:29 AM on 05/16/2011
the Pakistan knew nothing about osama just like obama has no leftest friends! van jones common rev wright
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mensch99
12:26 AM on 05/16/2011
Let us not forget the history of the ISI.
The CIA DIRECTLY funded the ISI, (as part of the misguided effort to defeat the USSR in Afghanistan) leaving them as an independent entity without any responsibility to any part of the Pakistani government.
Like any Frankenstein, they developed a mind of their own, plotting to control Afghanistan through their creation- the Afghan Taliban (not to be confused with the Pakistani Taliban (the Frankenstein of the ISI.)
The US would have been better served in the long-run to let the USSR drag Afghanistan into the 20th century.
I said so at the time and I will say it again.
10:49 PM on 05/15/2011
Terrorism all depends on what side of the line you're standing on. When the US flies a drone into the homes of 50 civilians and kills them, that's not terrorism but if a Arab straps on a bomb and kills the same 50 people, that's terrorism, or that's how it's packaged.

We don't have communism anymore to scare people but we have terrorism and it'll be good for the next 50 years until China becomes the only Superpower and maybe communism will come back into play. Back during the Korean war the Russians were funding N. Koreans, the US never went after Russia. During Vietnam the Russians funded N. Vietnam where 58,000 Americans died, the US never went after Russia. I bet if there were Taliban in Russia this would not be a story.

I think it was stupid of Pakistan to ever allow the US to Bomb inside it's borders.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Erewhon7
Join atheists, our non-prophet organization
03:03 AM on 05/16/2011
What dangerously foolish nonsense.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
03:05 PM on 05/17/2011
It makes perfect sense to me.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thepoliticalcat
Eradicate your microbioflora
10:30 PM on 05/15/2011
So Tahawwur's defense is, basically, that Headley told him that he (Headley) was working for the ISI, so Tahawwur just did what Headley said? Even though it was illegal? Doesn't sound like much of a defense to me.
08:49 PM on 05/15/2011
The biggest fear is that one day sooner or later, Pakistan may implode. Won't be a pretty situation.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thepoliticalcat
Eradicate your microbioflora
10:30 PM on 05/15/2011
Oh, it's been imploding for thirty years now.
07:13 AM on 05/16/2011
What a sorry excuse for a country.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
P51MUSTANG
From the planet Sarcasia
08:14 PM on 05/15/2011
The judge seems to be sitting on one of the witnesses.
07:47 PM on 05/15/2011
Remember Bush saying he looked into the eyes of Putin and knew that he can trust him. He did the same with Musharraf and Pakistan. I do not.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ian Faus
07:53 AM on 05/16/2011
Bush practiced voodoo ?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
den1953
The best politicians are for free!
10:06 AM on 05/16/2011
Well at least Voodoo economics!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
dennis1943
whatever the voices in my head say.......
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thepoliticalcat
Eradicate your microbioflora
10:46 PM on 05/15/2011
Excellent article. Thanks for posting the link.
05:24 PM on 05/15/2011
......raising questions???? ......still?????
photo
L Ord Jagdish Kamble
here for my daily dose of freak.
03:13 PM on 05/15/2011
Saying there are rogue elements in ISI is like saying there are rogue elements in al qaeda or taliban.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bobbie Jean Pentecost
02:49 PM on 05/15/2011
The art up at the top there is absolutely egregious.
lqw
Justmyopinion
05:02 PM on 05/15/2011
I agree. Pretty ridiculous !
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
05:17 PM on 05/15/2011
Even with cartoons, you need to have a basic sense of anatomy. That judge has an arm coming out of his back.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bobbie Jean Pentecost
06:25 PM on 05/15/2011
XD Lol, yes, yes he does.
08:52 PM on 05/15/2011
I think there is someone behind the judge and that arm belongs to that person.