INDIA
Officials have determined that a diplomatic security officer sent a written report about Headley's wife's allegations to the FBI, CIA and DEA, ProPublica said.
America's top intelligence official has initiated a review of the handling by US agencies of the inputs provided by wives of Mumbai terror accused David Headley that their husband had radical connections and was involved in the plotting of a terrorist attack in India.
American journalist Sebastian Rotella quoted a federal law enforcement official as saying on ProPublica website that the state department did report information about a 2007 warning from Headley's Moroccan wife after she met twice with officials of the state department's diplomatic security bureau and immigration and customs enforcement in Pakistan.
Officials have determined that the diplomatic security officer sent a written report about the wife's allegations to the FBI, CIA and DEA, ProPublica said.
What happened after that will be a focus of the inquiry to be conducted by none other than the director of national intelligence (DNI) Admiral (rtd.) James Clipper.
"Director Clapper has initiated an after-action-review to determine lessons learned," newly appointed DNI spokesperson Jamie Smith said.
"Reviews of this nature are an important part of improving existing processes. Since these events occurred, advancements in information sharing systems have been made by applying the lessons learned from these reviews," she said.
The White House and the state department have so far maintained that there was no lapse in the investigation based on the information provided by the two wives of Headley, one in 2005 and other in 2007.
The Obama administration has insisted that the tip-off was taken seriously, but these were general information and not specific to those related to Mumbai.
"Had we known about the timing and other specifics related to the Mumbai attacks, we would have immediately shared those details with the government of India," spokesperson of the National Security Council Mike Hammer had said earlier.
"Three years before Pakistani terrorists struck Mumbai in 2008, federal agents in New York City investigated a tip that an American businessman was training in Pakistan with the group that later executed the attack," said the report, which was also published in The Washington Times.
According to the report, FBI had received tip-off about the Mumbai terrorist attack and the links of Headley and Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) about three years before the massacre of innocent people by Pakistan-based terrorists in India's financial capital in November 2008.
"The US regularly provided threat information to Indian officials in 2008 before the attacks in Mumbai. It is our government's solemn responsibility to notify other nations of possible terrorist activity on their soil,” Hammer said in reference to the latest report on the Mumbai terrorist attack.
US official denied it that the United States did not share any terrorist-attack related information with Indian authorities.
ProPublica said officials declined to provide further specifics but the review is certain to examine the response of federal agencies to the warnings and the extent to which the enigmatic Headley's work as a US informant overlapped with his activity as a militant of the LeT.
"These events happened some time ago and given recent press reports he initiated an action after review to look into whether any further improvements on the information sharing system need to be made," a federal official was quoted as saying by ProPublica.
"In the contacts that we had with his spouses, there was not specific information as to who he was associated with or what they were planning to do," state department spokesperson PJ Crowley told reporters early this week.
Crowley said his response was based in the context of two meetings that the state department officials had with one of Headley's spouses in late 2007 and early 2008.
"She did provide us some information. We followed up on that information and provided it to relevant agencies across the US government," he said.
Responding to reporters' questions, Crowley insisted that the US authorities followed up with the information provided by Headley's wives.
"Did we follow up? The answer is yes. Did we share information with our security partners, including India, you know, prior to the Mumbai attacks? The answer is yes," he insisted.
"Needless to say, I will just say that going back over some of the information they provided to us, there was concern expressed by both spouses; at the same time, the information was not specific. I think everyone should understand that, if we did have specific information on this, we would have absolutely provided it to the Indian government... The fact is that while we had information and concerns, it did not detail a time or a place of the attack," Crowley had said.
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