Black Stone
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US 'warned India' about Mumbai
The US warned India about a possible threat at least a month before last week's Mumbai attacks, US media have quoted unnamed officials as saying.
One official said India had been told of an apparent plot to launch an attack from the sea, the AP agency reports.
The reports came as India's navy chief said there had been "systemic failures" in the country's security and intelligence services.
At least 188 people are now known to have died in the coordinated attacks.
The allegations are likely to add to the growing public anger that the attacks were not prevented.
India's home minister and the chief and deputy chief ministers of Maharashtra state have all resigned amid criticism of the government's handling of the crisis.
Two warnings
An Indian official appeared to confirm the US media reports that there was a known threat to at least some of the locations targets, including the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel.
Mumbai police chief Hassan Gafoor told a news conference on Tuesday that they had "had an alert that hotels like Taj could be exposed to such danger".
CNN quoted Indian officials as saying that after receiving the US warning, they also intercepted a satellite phone message on 18 November warning of a sea-borne attack on Mumbai.
The city had been on high alert but security measures at the attacked hotels had recently been relaxed, the network reported.
The US warned India about a possible threat at least a month before last week's Mumbai attacks, US media have quoted unnamed officials as saying.
One official said India had been told of an apparent plot to launch an attack from the sea, the AP agency reports.
The reports came as India's navy chief said there had been "systemic failures" in the country's security and intelligence services.
At least 188 people are now known to have died in the coordinated attacks.
The allegations are likely to add to the growing public anger that the attacks were not prevented.
India's home minister and the chief and deputy chief ministers of Maharashtra state have all resigned amid criticism of the government's handling of the crisis.
Two warnings
An Indian official appeared to confirm the US media reports that there was a known threat to at least some of the locations targets, including the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel.
Mumbai police chief Hassan Gafoor told a news conference on Tuesday that they had "had an alert that hotels like Taj could be exposed to such danger".
CNN quoted Indian officials as saying that after receiving the US warning, they also intercepted a satellite phone message on 18 November warning of a sea-borne attack on Mumbai.
The city had been on high alert but security measures at the attacked hotels had recently been relaxed, the network reported.