Pak role in 26/11: Either you're lying or you're being lied to, US told Gilani

Written By Lalit K Jha | Updated:

The Mumbai terror attacks that left 166 dead including six Americans were carried out by the banned LeT group and the role of many in the Pakistani establishment has come to light.

"Mr Prime Minister...either you're lying to me or your people are lying to you," is what the then US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told Pakistani premier Yousaf Raza Gilani as he tried to wash off his hands from the Mumbai terror attacks.

Gilani, in a long speech told her that terrorists who had launched the attack had nothing to do with Pakistan.

"Mr Prime Minister, I said, either you're lying to me or your people are lying to you. I then went on to tell him what we—the United States—knew about the origins of the attack," Rice recollects in her book 'No High Honors', that is scheduled to hit the book stores next week.

When she arrived in Islamabad, immediately after the 26/11 attacks at the instructions of then US President George W Bush, the Pakistani leadership were still denying what the world knew by then that the attackers were from Pakistan.

"The Pakistanis were at once terrified and in the same breath dismissive of the Indian claims. President Zardari emphasised his desire to avoid war but couldn't bring himself to acknowledge Pakistan's likely role in the attacks," Rice said in the book.

The Mumbai terror attacks that left 166 dead including six Americans were carried out by the banned LeT group and the role of many in the Pakistani establishment has come to light even though Islamabad denies so.

"I didn't accuse Pakistan's government of involvement; that wasn't the point. But rogues within the security services might have aided the terrorists. It was time to admit that and to investigate more seriously," she said.