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Home > News > World News > Article > LeT replaces Al Qaeda as biggest threat to US Experts

LeT replaces Al Qaeda as biggest threat to US: Experts

Updated on: 09 March,2009 05:48 PM IST  | 
Agencies |

Indicative of the growing clout of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), US security experts believe the terror group and not al-Qaeda has emerged as the main threat for the US

LeT replaces Al Qaeda as biggest threat to US: Experts

Indicative of the growing clout of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) despite an apparent crackdown by the Pakistani authorities, US security experts believe that the terror group and not al-Qaeda has emerged as the main threat and could well stage the next major attack on the American mainland.


"We are and should be concerned about the threat LeT poses, given its global network," Juan Zarate, deputy national security adviser for counter-terrorism in the Bush administration, told the Chicago Tribune in an interview published on Sunday.


According to Zarate, the FBI and other US intelligence agencies had been focussing on the LeT as the next big threat to US security even before the November terror attacks in Mumbai.


The Tribune quoted US authorities as saying that the LeT was in many ways a bigger threat than the al-Qaeda, whose leadership was on the run from numerous Predator strikes in the Pakistan's northwestern tribal areas.

Zarate's remarks come amidst reports that the LeT had got a new set of commanders to replace Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi and Zarrar Shah who the Pakistani authorities detained after the Mumbai carnage that India has blamed on the terror group.

Pakistani investigators initially pointed to an LeT hand in last week's attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore but later ascribed it to the Al Qaeda.

"We are and should be concerned about the threat LeT poses, given its global network," Zarate told the Tribune.

"It doesn't just reside in South Asia. It is an organisation that has potential reach all over the world, including the US," he added.

Bruce Riedel, chairman of the Obama administration's Pakistan-Afghanistan strategy review team, said he believed such a "global jihadist syndicate" of disaffected young Pakistanis was the most likely mechanism for launching an attack on US soil.

The 26/11 Mumbai attacks, according to Riedel, was only the latest of several such by such militants on soft targets frequented by Americans, including hotels in Kabul and Islamabad.

The Tribune said that Washington wanted Pakistan to not only dismantle LeT but also other similar groups founded during the Afghan war or later to participate in the insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir.

Quoting US and allied intelligence sources, the report claimed that potentially tens of thousands of Pakistanis had been trained in the LeT's guerrilla camps in Pakistan, many of whom had gone on to fight for the Al Qaeda.

This includes a small number of US residents, some of who are believed to have returned home.

The US is also concerned about the thousands of disaffected Westerners and Pakistanis in Britain and other countries in Europe who travel frequently to Pakistan, the newspaper said.

Citizens of these countries do not need a visa for coming to the US.

An unknown number of those have trained in LeT camps, and after getting "indoctrinated in its hatred of the West and returning home, they were free to travel to the US with virtually no background check", the Tribune said.

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