Posts Tagged ‘Bombay’

Media and Mumbai

Monday, December 1st, 2008

The deputy commissioner of police argued that the terrorists, who were holed up in two major hotels and became involved in floor-by-floor firefights with police, were gaining tactical information from TV. Using powers under Section 19 of the country’s Cable Television Networks Act, he ordered a blackout of TV news channels.

“Transmission of various clippings/live relay/coverage of the actions being taken by the police against the terrorists in South Mumbai is causing impediment in the police action … thereby endangering the lives of the police personnel as also of the hostages,” the order stated.

Cable and satellite channels went off air for nearly half an hour before the order was rescinded.

Media chiefs present at a meeting between the MIB, the Indian Broadcasting Federation and News Broadcasting Assn. hit back by accusing the government information departments and ministerial interfaces of failing to keep up with developments in the media industry.

They said it was unclear which officials had authority to speak to the media, that government and media had never agreed to procedures for coverage of national emergencies, and that the Press Information Bureau is set up to handle print rather than broadcast and online media.

Through blogs, file-sharing and social networking functions on the Internet, dozens of eyewitness reports, some coming from within the two besieged hotels, delivered information faster than conventional media and challenged some of its reporting. Twitter, a user-generated service that delivers text message-sized “tweets,” for instance, reported that there was still gunfire inside the Taj Mahal long after Indian media had said it was finished. Others transcribed lists of casualties from the hospitals faster than mainstream media could access it.

Variety
By PATRICK FRATER

Mumbai Afterword Part One

Saturday, November 29th, 2008

It is still too early to be certain which of the many reports in the media over the last few days were correct and which were not. More witness statements will be printed and more quotes from security troops, commanders and politicians.

This attack suggest al Qaeda to me. Why? The tactics resemble the most recent attacks in Saudi Arabia where apartment buildings housing foreigners were assaulted by teams of gunmen.

The attackers’ knowledge of the city was impressive if they were foreigners. It is very unlikely that they would have stumbled upon the small Jewish community of Mumbai by accident. I also believe those reports that suggest that the gunmen had some familiarity with the non-public areas of the Taj and Oberoi hotels.

The main targets were the two hotels and the Jews at Nariman House. That is where the majority of the gunmen were concentrated. The Cafe Leopold attack, close to the Taj, may have been a target of opportunity attack as the terrorists moved into position to take the Taj.

The attacks on the hospital and the CST railway terminal were well north of the main attacks. They may have been a diversion. I could also believe that the team there was lost or trying to flee.

It is not clear that the gunmen who hijacked the two police vehicles were ever found.

The most logical scenario for the Mumbai attacks would appear to be as follows:

One or two cells enter the city weeks or months ahead of time for recon and intelligence gathering. Some may have registered as guests at the hotel while others may have been employed there.

Some arms and explosives are brought to the city and cached in preparation for the attacks. It is possible that just before the attacks, these caches were moved to the hotels. They could have been brought to rooms rented by the local cells for that purpose or secreted in non-public areas of the hotels. Food stores may also have been cached in the same manner.

The sea borne assault lands and is met by local cell members who have stolen vehicles and provide directions, maps, etc.

The Indian intelligence services may have had little to be alert for. The preparation for the attacks in Mumbai would have been very innocuous and would not have raised any flags. The Indians would have had to infiltrate a cell or a cell member would have had to leak information for there to have been any alarm. If this is an al Qaeda op, that is virtually impossible.

The response to the attacks by the Indians was hampered by several issues. The hospital attack, by luck or by plan, caught the leadership of the response forces off guard and they were killed. AQ and other terrorist groups are noted for follow-on attacks at hospitals where injured are taken from the main attacks. The Indians could have been more on guard but given the turmoil, it is very understandable that they were not.

Absent the leadership, the initial Indian responses were disorganized. Thereafter, interference by politicians and disputes over turf seem to have slowed the Indian response more.

It also appears at this point that the Indian forces, brave as they were, were less well trained than they might have been. The also may have lacked some of the technical tools that Western anti-terror units use.

The ability of the terrorists to hold out for the length of time that they did indicates that they had supplies and that the Indians had no clear strategy until the last day.

Do not underestimate the Indian security troops and their work in Mumbai. Few nations would have coped as well with such an assault. The United States would likely have done worse, since the law prevents the military from taking part in law enforcement.

This op involved around 30 men in country and an unknown number where the group trained. It was complex, another al Qaeda sign, and the participants had no agenda other than killing and dying.

Media speculations talk about the potential for multiple such assaults in a country like the United States. That is unlikely though not impossible for several reasons. The events of 9/11 revealed that the larger the op, the more likely that parts of it will fail. Out of five attacks, three succeeded. One team of airplane hijackers never got off the ground. Another was overcome by passengers and failed to reach its target.

The ability to plan, organize, supply and execute multiple such assaults is there but at each stage and for each team there are multiple points of failure where a single part of the op or the entire op can fail.

After all the reports are out, and vetted, we will have a clearer idea of just what happened in Mumbai. Until then, continue to take analysis and even “statements of fact” as not yet proven. Even this analysis may be wrong in whole or part, so be skeptical of all of the media and blog reporting.

Table of contents for Mumbai Attacks 2008

  1. Mumbai Attacks Day 2
  2. Mumbai Afterword Part One

Mumbai Attacks Day 2

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

UPDATE: On scene pics by an Indian blogger, Arun Shanbhag

Repeated reports that Taj Hotel is clear then reports of additional shooting. Nariman house – Orthodox Jews – may now be hostage free. Still reports many held hostage at Oberoi Hotel.


Not much change from the prior report.

Action now confined to the Taj Mahal and Oberoi hotels. Both on fire. Shooting still being hear.

Reports that 125 dead. Oberoi Hotel is said to have 100 plus hostages still being held by terrorists.

Speculation: Op played out like this. Local cell of 3-6 men conducted recon and gathered intel for several weeks. Arms and explosives may have entered city at this time, as well. Assault group lands from sea. Local guides provide maps, directions. It’s possible that CST station and hospital attacks were accident. Group got lost or tried to run.

Main targets were the hotels and the Jewish home. Only locals would know of Jewish neighborhood.

ISI, Pakistan intel, very pervasive in Pakistan. If this came from Pakistan, ISI had to know. Unlikely terrorists sailed directly from Pakistan. Would be very sloppy work on the part of ISI which usually covers its tracks well.

Cards or letters of condolence may be sent to:
Embassy of India
2107 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.,
Washington D.C. USA – 20008

Twitter stream 1

Twitter stream 2

Flickr pics from Mumbai attacks

Table of contents for Mumbai Attacks 2008

  1. Mumbai Attacks Day 2
  2. Mumbai Afterword Part One

Mumbai India Attacks

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

I’m writing this about 13 hours after the attacks in Mumbai, India began. Mumbai is a city of about 13 million people.

We should recall the chaos on 9/11 in the news media as we watch the coverage of this event. Much of what has been reported in the last hours is just plain incorrect, just as it was on 9/11, in Hurrican Katrina and on 7/7 in London.

About 11 sites in the seaside city of Mumbai, India were attacked. Automatic weapons were used and grenades or explosives may also have been used. Targets include a hospital, the railway station, a popular restaurant, and several hotels. It also appears that the local Orthodox Jewish community may also have been targeted.

Reports are that the gunmen arrived by sea and stole cars to move into the city. At least one police vehicle was seized as there is news footage of its occupants shooting up a crowd.

Mumbai is on a peninsula and the southern part of the city where the attacks happened is the wealthier section. The hotels targeted are “5 star” and reports are that Americans and British citizens were singled out for capture.

The scale of the attack is staggering if all the reports on sites attacked are accurate. This is not a handful of terrorists, but more likely 30 or more. I would also suggest that some of the terrorists were already in place, so that the entire force did not arrive by boat.

Blame is immediately falling on Islamic terrorists, and Pakistan is being accused of providing support.

Hostage ops are underway in several places in the city. Several high ranking police officers are said to have been killed in the initial fighting. It would appear that hostage negotiations or rescues are the only actions remaining and that most of the attack sites have been cleared. Current reports are 101 dead and hundreds injured. One hotel is burning and firefighters are struggling to put it out from the exterior – presumably the interior may still be unsafe due to the terrorists.

Mumbai is a commercial center. Many US corporations have offices or operations in the area. Many outsourced ops like call centers are in Mumbai.

India has a history of terrorist violence, and Mumbai does as well. India is far more populous than the United States and its citizens include tribes living deep in the forest to folks able to report on Twitter as the attack are underway.

This is all based on reports from Twitter and from Indian television streamed over the internet. Nothing is set in concrete and the situation is far too fluid to accept any report as solid fact at this point.

Cards or letters of condolence may be sent to:
Embassy of India
2107 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.,
Washington D.C. USA – 20008

Twitter stream 1

Twitter stream 2

Flickr pics from Mumbai attacks