http://scroll.in/article/801374/pathankot-terror-attack-eight-crucial-unanswered-questions

TERROR ATTACKS
Pathankot terror attack: Eight crucial unanswered questions

Rohan Venkataramakrishnan  · Yesterday · 09:15 pm

>From honey traps to a confusing Punjab Police story to the role of
Ajit Doval, almost everything about this incident is murky.

The authorities have said that Pathankot terror attack, which was
prematurely declared over on Saturday, and then on Sunday, has finally
ended as of Monday afternoon.

An official from the National Security Guard said that five terrorists
who entered the air force base have been killed, after three days of
operations which have left 11 security personnel dead and more
injured.

Although initial reports suggested the attackers might have been
members of the Jaish-e-Mohammad, the same terror outfit that was
responsible for the 2001 attack on the Indian Parliament, another
group called the United Jihad Council – actually a conglomerate of
several terrorist organisations – has now claimed responsibility for
it.

A National Security Guard official told the media that though the
fifth terrorist had been killed, combing operations were still on to
ensure that the base was secure. The official also said that all air
force assets, including the personnel and their families were safe.

Reportage on the issue has so far been relatively restrained,
considering the operations were still ongoing for much of the last few
days. In some cases the media has deliberately not put out
information, having learnt from its follies during the 26/11 Mumbai
attacks when some of the coverage was blamed for having spread panic
and even assisted the terrorists.

Despite this though, questions about the entire ordeal are starting to
crop up and, once the dust has settled in Pathankot, authorities will
have to take a long, hard look at the way India handles terror.

The Mumbai attacks comparison is instructive. That incident involved
armed terrorists walking around highly populated areas in a big city
and running into a police force that wasn't trained to take on
militants. The 26/11 attack would end up going on for four days.

This one took place at an air force base very close to the Pakistan
border, which was already on high alert because of immediately
actionable intelligence. The Pathankot attack has taken three whole
days.

The coverage, mostly by reporters covering national security, has
started to draw out exactly how many unanswered questions there are
about the whole episode.

Unanswered questions
1. First there is the story about the Honey trap. An air force
official had reportedly been conned into working as a "defence
analyst" with a magazine in the United Kingdom, when in fact he was
allegedly passing on information to intelligence agencies in Pakistan.
Authorities have arrested the air force official and now intend to
find out whether he also provided any information about the base in
Pathankot.

2. Then there is the thoroughly confusing story about a Punjab
Superintendent of Police, Salwinder Singh, who says he was abducted by
some of the terrorists while he was driving back from a religious
shrine on Friday early morning, along with two others – his jeweller
friend and cook. The abductors, he says, were five heavily armed
terrorists in army fatigues.
According to the cook, Madan Gopal, they were overpowered by the
terrorists and tied up in the back of the car. Gopal says they were
eventually dumped by the terrorists, who drove away with Singh's car,
which had a blue beacon on top of it.

Questions are being raised about what Singh – who had been transferred
from Gurdaspur only recently because of sexual harassment complaints
from five female constables – was doing out that late. Equally
confusing is the decision of the heavily armed terrorists to simply
dump Singh and the others, when they had reportedly earlier killed a
taxi driver to use his car.

3. What follows is even more confusing. A note supposedly found in the
car was what gave the media an initial idea that Jaish-e-Mohammad had
been behind the attack. The note, which was circulated to the media as
well, includes the words Jaish-e-Mohammad in English, and claims that
the attack was done as retaliation for India's decision to hang Afzal
Guru, a convict in the Parliament attacks case.

Geeta Mohan @Geeta_Mohan
First on @NewsX
Pics of terrorists neutralised by forces in #Pathankot.
@NikunjGargN reports. pic.twitter.com/mFm9DomBvz

Geeta Mohan @Geeta_Mohan
#Pathankot
@NewsX accesses #JeM note on terrorist that threatens attack in Delhi.
@NikunjGargN reports.
@BhimBassi pic.twitter.com/oC9UqBVPVo
7:45 PM - 2 Jan 2016

[Screenshot of TV screen]

4. Next there is the question of strange providence. Firstly, because
the SP was let off, he was able to alert authorities about the
terrorists being at large. Almost farcically, Punjab Police did not
believe his story at first, in part because of his "colourful
background". Gopal, his cook, even claims that he was tortured by
police, who kept asking him for the real story about what happened to
the car.

Secondly, one of the terrorists is said to have used the SP's phone to
make phone calls, including one to his mother where he reportedly said
that he was heading for martyrdom. This has apparently given
authorities some evidence that they can now use to pin blame on
elements in Pakistan, despite the Kashmir-based UJC taking credit for
the attack.

5. Next is the question about sending in the team of National Security Guard.
Once the Punjab Police came around to believing that the SP's story
was real, and that it was connected to terror, alarm bells were rung.
Delhi was informed about the concerns, at which point National
Security Advisor Ajit Doval reportedly swung into action.

According to Ajai Shukla, who covers national security for the
Business Standard, Doval didn't let the army run the operation and
instead moved a team of the National Security Guard to the Pathankot
base. This left security of the air base in the hands of the existing
Defence Security Corps, mostly retired military veterans, the air
force's Garud commandos who lacked a specific operational brief, and
the NSG.

Intent on directly controlling what he anticipated would be a walk in
the park, and without anticipating that there might be more than one
group of terrorists, Mr Doval led with his trump card – he ordered
150-160 National Security Guard (NSG) troopers to be flown down
immediately from New Delhi. The army was placed on the side-lines....

It is revealing that not a single Pathankot casualty is from the army.
The hapless DSC [Defence Security Corps] jawans took most of the
casualties. The NSG took unacceptable losses, including an officer
killed from a booby-trapped terrorist body. The army knows this ploy
well and approaches terrorist bodies in J&K with caution, knowing the
jihadi’s dying act could have been to activate a grenade and lie on
it."

6. Manu Pubby's story for the Economic Times suggested that a lack of
a proper command-and-control system in place made the response
haphazard. "Constant calls from the centre sent confusing messages and
led to a lack of clarity over the status of the operation," his story
says, which is why the home minister and the defence minister tweeted
about the success of the operation before it was actually over.

7. Harinder Baweja in the Hindustan Times echoes the same concern,
raising the main question: Despite advance intelligence, how did India
allow terrorists into a base located so close to the border, take
three whole days to neutralise the situation and lose 11 people in the
process?

8. And Praveen Swami in the Indian Express points out issues with
every element of the operation, which will need to be probed once the
dust has settled, including the one about the lack of adequate
security at the base.

Even though terrorists have successfully attacked several Pakistan Air
Force bases in recent years, taking advantage of poor perimeter
security, Pathankot had not installed electronic perimeter
surveillance systems, further complicating the task of watching out
for an intrusion.

Then of course there are the broader questions of how the government
responded in New Delhi, why it did not have clarity in its approach to
briefing the media and what this now means for relations with
Pakistan. Answering those questions will be hard if we're not able to
pin down just what has hit us in Pathankot in the first place.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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