Al-Qaeda helping LeT to provoke conflict between India and Pak: US

December 04, 2009 10:13 am | Updated December 04, 2021 10:47 pm IST - Washington

U.S. President Barack Obama with Defence Secretary Robert Gates during a meeting with members of his Cabinet. File Photo: AP

U.S. President Barack Obama with Defence Secretary Robert Gates during a meeting with members of his Cabinet. File Photo: AP

Al-Qaeda is providing Pakistan-based LeT with targeting information and helping them in plotting attacks in India, aimed at provoking a conflict between the two countries that would ultimately destabilise Pakistan, US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said on Friday.

“Al-Qaeda sees using the Taliban in Pakistan and groups like Lashkar-e-Toiba as ways to destabilise Pakistan and even try to provoke a conflict between India and Pakistan that would inevitably destabilise Pakistan,” Mr. Gates said.

Testifying before the House Armed Services Committee, Mr. Gates said the US has evidence which suggest that the al-Qaeda aims at destabilising Pakistan.

“We have evidence that al-Qaeda is helping them pick targets, do operational planning, helping them in their effort to try to destabilise the Pakistani government,” Mr. Gates told lawmakers in response to a question.

“The other piece of this that does not include the Taliban or that -- apart from the Taliban is, we also know that al-Qaeda is helping the Lashkar-e-Toiba, the terrorist group that carried out the bombings in Mumbai,” he said.

Earlier, appearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Mr. Gates said: “al-Qaeda is providing them (LeT) with targeting information and helping them in their plotting in India, clearly with the idea of provoking a conflict between India and Pakistan that would destabilise Pakistan.”

Agreeing with Mr. Gates, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen, said: “I certainly agree with the nexus (between al-Qaeda and the LeT), and I have watched it over the last year to two, that these groups are coming together... Secretary Gates talked about the linkage between the LeT and Al Qaeda.”

“It is actually not local anymore and that is an example of the collaboration that’s going on with all these units. I was struck, as I’m sure you were, in Mumbai that a terrorist outfit could literally generate that kind of attack and then bring two nation-states closer to conflict. That is not an achievement lost on anyone that observed that,” he said.

“Those kinds of plots continue: the ability to destabilise Pakistan, seeking those nuclear materials and weapons. It’s extraordinarily dangerous,” he noted.

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