Warning that India's transportation, economic infrastructure and political establishment are on the LeT's radar, a US defence department think tank has said the terror outfit still enjoys fundingfrom ISI and is also assisted by the Karachi-based D-Companyof Dawood Ibrahim.The LeT, though having a close relationship with al-Qaeda, will continue to evolve into a distinctive, South Asia-centric terrorist actor in its own right while still receiving aid from fringe elements in Pakistan's security and intelligence apparatus and elsewhere, the Strategic Studies Institute of the US Army War College said.This will not only allow LeT to continue to plan future Mumbai-style terrorist attacks in India from safe havens in Pakistan, but will also enable it to guide and assist the predominantly indigenous Indian Mujahideen (IM), it said. 

COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

Authored by Ryan Clarke, the 117-page report 'Lashkar-I-Taiba: The Fallacy of Subservient Proxies and the Future of Islamist Terrorism in India' gives the first-of-its kind detailed analysis of the outfit.The report said the troubling fact is that the LeT has upgraded its activities and has begun to operate throughout India and will likely target transportation and economic infrastructure and the political establishment as opposed to Indian security forces exclusively."It has also adopted new methods of destabilisation such as recruiting from India's troubled northeast and smuggling militants into India by sea, a serious infringement on India's sovereignty," it said. 

"Despite being a proscribed outfit, LeT still enjoys funding from ISI and through donations from a wide range of domestic and overseas sympathisers, including Indian Muslims.Further, after capitalising on the 2005 earthquake, LeT hasbeen able to re-establish some of its fund-raising activitieswithin Pakistan," the report said, despite repeated Pakistaniclaims that its spy agency is no longer aiding LeT.

The LeT is also assisted by the Karachi-based D-Company in its fund-raising activities through the illegal hawala network."D-Company has well-established smuggling routes in the region, access to materiel, a partnership with LeT, anddepends on ISI for refuge in Pakistan," the report said.Although, LeT has a wide support base that spans several continents, underworld don Dawood Ibrahim is the most probablesource of weaponry, given D-Company's geographic proximity toLeT operations and the syndicate's proven ability toclandestinely transfer enough weaponry to fight a small war onshort notice, the report said."This is accentuated by the fact that in Pakistan there already exists a close relationship between organised criminal syndicates, narcotics, money-laundering, militant activity andsmall arms trafficking," it said.LeT now also raises funds on the internet and has becomemarket-savvy while making legitimate investments in a range ofsectors, the think tank said in its latest report, adding thegroup "is also very likely involved in trafficking Afghanheroin, an extremely high yielding venture given the lowoverhead costs and high domestic and overseas demand."All of this has resulted in a diversification of LeT's financial pipeline, thus reducing the possibility of it being held hostage to a particular party, decreasing its vulnerability to a decapitating strike and ensuring its continued existence even if it is abandoned by Islamabad entirely, the report noted.According to the think tank, LeT collects donations from the overseas Pakistani community in the Persian Gulf and the UK, Islamic non-governmental organisations (NGOs), Pakistani/Kashmiri businesspeople and through its parent organisationJamaat-ud-Dawa."The militant group also counts on donations from sympathetic Saudis, Kuwaitis, and Islamist-leaning ISI leaders."In addition, LeT maintains relations with extremist and/ or terrorist groups across the globe ranging from the Philippines to the Middle East and Chechnya by means of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa network," the report said.Although most of LeT's monetary assets were previously deposited in mainstream financial institutions, many of thesedeposits were withdrawn and invested in legitimate venturessuch as commodity trading, real estate and manufacturing inorder to avoid seizures following former President PervezMusharraf's crackdown on Pakistan-based militant groups, itsaid."This black money has likely been funneled through numerous intermediaries and a substantial portion may have even left Pakistan via the underground hawala system. Either resulting from a lack of political will or of enforcement  capacity, Pakistan's measures to cut terrorist financing remain woefully inadequate," it said.