Terror case witness describes Pakistani intelligence-militant links
The balding, Washington D.C.-born, military school drop-out squinted pensively Monday, darting his eyes around a federal courtroom.
Then in a mumbling monotone and a hint of a patrician South Asian accent, David Coleman Headley nonchalantly revealed how both militants and members of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency separately gave him identical instructions for scouting and surveilling locations for the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks.
“They coordinated with each other,” Headley said, describing what he believed to be Lashkar-e-Taiba militants’ and the government organization’s cozy relationship.
“ISI provided assistance to Lashkar” through military and financial assistance and moral support, he continued.
He was detailing inner-workings of an overseas terror group, but Headley remained as casual as the baby blue polo and dark windbreaker he wore in U.S. District Judge Harry Leinenweber’s courtroom.
Headley’s characterization of LeT and the ISI working in concert was a stunning admission given outstanding questions of the Pakistani intelligence agency’s possible role in helping protect Osama bin Laden as he hid in Pakistan before he was killed by U.S. forces on May 2.
Headley, 50, is the star prosecution witness in the terror case against his former classmate Tahawwur Rana, a Pakistani trained doctor-turned businessman who emigrated to Chicago from Canada in 1995. Headley was the first witness called by the federal government in a trial that brought tight security and a throng of reporters from around the globe.
Rana, also 50, is accused of allowing Headley to open a fake Mumbai-based office using his immigration business’ name as a cover so Headley could inspect potential sites to attack while he was in India. They’re also accused in a separate plot targeting a Danish newspaper that published a cartoon depicting the Prophet Muhammad.
Headley, who spent his formative years in Pakistan, has already pleaded guilty for his role in the bloody rampage that killed over 160 people.
After training with the LeT between 2001 and 2004, the pale-skinned Headley, who was born Daood Gilani, said the group’s leaders encouraged him that with his American background, he could easily hide his Islamic faith and Pakistani ties and gain access to India without much suspicion.
“I wanted to be launched into Indian occupied Kashmir,” said Headley, who said he was motivated to perform jihad to help the “needy and oppressed” Muslims.
But Zaki Rehman, LeT’s operational commander assured him they would find something “better and more suitable,” Headley said.
During four hours of testimony Monday, Headley quietly told Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel Collins how he met with ISI’s Major Mazhar Iqbal and the purported Mumbai attack mastermind Sajid Mir independently several times in Pakistan before ten LeT fighters ascended on India’s shore and unleashed the chaos and carnage.
Headley often referred to both men and others connected to the attacks as “sahib,” a respected Urdu salutation that roughly translates to “mister.”
When Headley proposed that he might be able to coax his friend Rana into helping with the ruse, both Iqbal and Sajid had similar reactions.
Iqbal, who Headley said gave him $25,000 to set up his bogus Mumbai office, “thought it was an excellent idea,” Headley said.
Similarly LeT leadership thought “it was a great” strategy, he said.
Rana could never return to his native country since he went AWOL after he suffered altitude sickness so Iqbal told Headley he could further coax Rana by telling him with his assistance, he might be able to visit Pakistan again.
Headley shared videotapes of sites he shot while in India with both men, including the Taj Hotel. Conversely, both men gave Headley similar instructions on his follow-up assignments in India, trying to infiltrate the right wing Hindu nationalist Shiv Sena political party and film a train station
Headley said during an April meeting in 2008 Sajid showed him a “terrible” two-feet Styrofoam model of the Taj Hotel and was given a GPS locator.
Headley’s plea deal means he will not face the death penalty, something that defense lawyers argue was a motivating factor for Headley to ensnare Rana.
“He knows on that day he has to give them someone otherwise he’ll face the death penalty,” Rana’s lawyer, Charles Swift said of Headley’s arrest. “He knew he needed a homerun or a touch down.”
Swift painted Headley as a lifelong manipulator, a man who cooperated with U.S. authorities on heroin charges at the same time he was on militant training missions in Pakistan. He is a man who kept three wives at one time, betraying them all at once, he said.
“When they found out about each other, they got really angry,” Swift said. That prompted at least one wife to talk to authorities, he said.
Swift said Headley used Rana and made a fool of him, never disclosing what he was really doing on his trips to Mumbai.
Prosecutors had a different take, saying Rana was involved every step of the way.
They said he wrote letters purporting that Headley was a member of his First World Immigration business and wired him money.
“The defendant is not charged with killing anyone. He’s not charged with picking up a gun or throwing a grenade,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Streicker. “Not every player carries a weapon.”
After the attacks, Rana told Headley “that Indians deserved it,” Streicker said.
When Headley was arrested in 2009, prosecutors said Headley initially shielded Rana, denying his involvement.
“He told those lies because he wanted to defend his best friend in the world, the defendant.”
Terror case witness describes Pakistani intelligence-militant links - Chicago Sun-Times