Indian
police uncovered a plot, but Sri Lanka didn’t actnge, Trump &
Revelation
27
April, 2019
COLOMBO,
Sri Lanka — While monitoring the usual channels, Indian police
stumbled upon something extraordinary: a detailed plot for what would
become the bloodiest attack linked to the Islamic State group in
South Asia.
Police were investigating suspected sympathizers of the withered caliphate in southern India when a name they had no record of surfaced — National Towheed Jamaat, the Sri Lankan IS-backed militant organization that authorities say conducted the coordinated Easter Sunday attacks on churches and hotels in Sri Lanka that killed more than 250 people.
Indian
police managed to break into the group’s communications and began
tapping into the plot, according to Ajai Sahni, executive director of
the Institute for Conflict Management in New Delhi.
“That
is why the kind of detailing of the incident they received was very,
very specific,” Sahni said. “They knew the group, they knew the
targets, they knew the time, they knew the whereabouts of the suicide
bombers, and all of this was communicated to the Sri Lankan
government.”
Top
Sri Lankan officials have acknowledged that some of the island
nation’s intelligence units were given advance notice about the
attacks — starting weeks ago and up until the morning of the
bombings — but that little was done to prevent them.
Both
President Maithripala Sirisena, who is also Sri Lanka’s minister of
defense and in charge of national police, and Prime Minister Ranil
Wickremesinghe, who has been kept out of high-level security meetings
since Sirisena tried to oust him last fall, said they only learned
about the plot after it had been carried out.
“The
fact is, it’s very, very specific information and that has been
conveyed to everyone in writing. That is the action that was missing
in some cases. That’s what we’re investigating,” Wickremesinghe
said.
The
first intelligence brief from India arrived April 4, more than two
weeks before the bombings. It said a suicide terrorist attack was
planned against “some important churches” and listed six people
likely to be involved.
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100 ISIS Terrorist Arrests Prompt Worries About Caravan
The
deputy inspector of police shared the report with at least four
security unit directors, including those responsible for “VIPs”
and foreign embassies, along with a memo, urging the directors to pay
extra attention to the places and people in their care.
India’s
final intelligence warning came just before the Easter morning
blasts, Sahni said.
Why
the warnings went unheeded is the subject of intense public debate,
with some blaming the dismantling of a system built by former
strongman President Mahinda Rajapaksa for rapid response to rebel
activity during Sri Lanka’s long civil war.
Sri
Lankan military finds 15 bodies, including 6 kids, after shootout at
suspected militant hideout
For
26 years, the Tamil Tigers militants from Sri Lanka’s minority
Tamil ethnic community fought for independence from the Buddhist,
ethnically Sinhalese-majority state. Military forces under
Rajapaksa’s brother, then-Secretary of Defense Gotabhaya Rajapaksa,
brutally crushed them in 2009.
The
current state minister of defense, Ruwan Wijewardene, said “weakness”
within Sri Lanka’s security apparatus led to the failure to prevent
the Easter bombings.
Sirisena,
while campaigning for the 2015 election to defeat Rajapaksa, had
stressed the need for fresh investigations of military officials,
including intelligence officers accused of abducting and killing
civilians, political opponents and journalists during the civil war.
Since
then, some military officials have been arrested on charges related
to their actions during the war and remanded in detention facilities.
Court cases are ongoing.
But
on Friday, Sirisena, perhaps with an eye toward the 2020 election,
said that arresting military intelligence officials after the civil
war had weakened national security. He promised a shake-up, asking
for the resignations of both his secretary of defense and inspector
general of police.
Series
of blasts kill more than 200 at Sri Lankan churches, hotels on Easter
Sunday
Some
experts believe Sri Lankan security forces may not have given much
credence to Indian intelligence because of its controversial role in
the civil war.
India’s
Research and Analysis Wing, or RAW, the country’s external
intelligence group, initially supported Tamil separatists, training
and arming the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelman in the 1970s. But
after the group’s terrorist activities in the 1980s, RAW withdrew
its support.
New Delhi made a pact with Colombo in 1987 to send peacekeeping forces to the island on its southern tip, and they ended up fighting the rebels. They were asked to withdraw a few years later amid allegations of abuses against Tamils. In 1991, Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated by a Tamil Tiger suicide bomber.
India
questioned Sri Lanka’s heavy-handed approach to defeating the
Tigers in the final months of the war, when tens of thousands of
civilians were reportedly killed by government troops. Thousands more
are still missing. Ethnic minority Tamils in the country’s north
and east are still reeling from the effects of the war.
Indian
security and intelligence agencies lost some of their “moral
authority” with the Sri Lankans, said M.K. Narayanan, the former
head of India’s external intelligence service.
“What
really happened was India lost moral authority. India did not accept
the policies that were being followed, so they lost a lot of support
in Sri Lanka,” he said.
Genealogical
and cultural ties between Sri Lanka and India date back thousands of
years. According to folklore, the island’s majority Sinhalese are
descendants of an Indian prince banished there 2,000 years ago.
The
nation’s minority Tamils, meanwhile, are in part the descendants of
more than a million tea and rubber plantation workers brought to Sri
Lanka from southern India by British colonial rulers in the 18th and
19th centuries.
And
India shares intelligence with its neighbors in part to keep them
within its sphere of influence, Narayanan said.
Located
just 23 kilometers (14 miles) off its southeast coast, India sees Sri
Lanka as a bulwark in its military defenses to ward off potential
Chinese incursions. Soon after the Easter attacks, India deployed
naval and coast guard ships along the narrow Palk Strait.
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