INDIA AS POSSIBLE WEB OF CYBER TERRORISM
:INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM MONITOR--PAPER NO. 454
By B. Raman
Many terrorism experts have been concerned since 9/11
that if there is an act of terrorism involving nuclear
material, it will most probably originate from Pakistan.
Hence, their worries about the security of Pakistan's
nuclear arsenal and about the possibility of radicalised
Pakistani scientists helping Al Qaeda or pro-Al Qaeda
organisations.
2. Is there a similar danger of an act of cyber
terrorism, seeking to damage or destroy critical
infrastructure, emanating from India because of the
availability of qualified information technology experts in
the Indian Muslim community? This question is likely to
occupy the attention of the terrorism experts following the
announcement by the Mumbai Police on October 6,2008, of the
arrest of 20 suspected members of the so-called Indian
Mujahideen (IM), who had played a role in the serial blasts
in Ahmedabad on July 26,2008, in the abortive attempt to
organise similar blasts in Surat the next day and in the
serial blasts in New Delhi on September 13,2008.
3. Among those arrested are four IT-savvy members of
the IM, who had played a role in sending the E-mail
messages in the name of the IM before and after the
Ahmedabad blasts and before the New Delhi blasts by hacking
into Wi-fi networks in Mumbai and Navin Mumbai. These are :
- Mohammed Mansoor Asgar Peerbhoy
aka Munawar aka Mannu. A 31-year-old resident of Pune,
who was reportedly working for Yahoo, India, on an
annual salary of Rs. 19 lakhs (US $ 45,000).
- Mubin Kadar Shaikh, a
24-year-old graduate of computer science from Pune.
- Asif Bashir Shaikh, a 22-year-old
mechanical engineer from Pune. In addition to helping in
sending the E-mail messages, he also reportedly played a
role in planting 18 Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs)
in Surat, all of which failed to explode.
- Mohammed Ismail Chaudhary, a
28-year-old computer mechanic, who is also suspected
to have helped in planting the IEDs in Surat.
4. Peerbhoy is reported to have joined
the IM while he was studying Arabic in Pune's Quran
Foundation, which seems to have served as a favourite
recruiting ground for jihadi terrorism. The US intelligence
agencies would be interested to know that he had allegedly
visited the US twice in recent months. Did he go on his own
or in connection with Yahoo's work? This is not clear.
5. Pune as an important recruiting centre for jihadi
terrorism has come out of the investigation made so far by
the Mumbai Police. One would recall with interest that Abu
Zubaidah, the Palestinian, who was supposedly No.3 in Al
Qaeda, was also reported to have studied computer science in
Pune before crossing over into Pakistan and joining Al
Qaeda. He was arrested in the house of a cadre of the
Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET) in Faislabad in Pakistani Punjab in
March, 2002, and taken to the Guantanamo Bay detention
centre in Cuba by the US intelligence. He was considered an
IT expert of Al Qaeda.
6. Peerbhoy has been projected as self-radicalised during
a visit to Saudi Arabia for Haj. Despite this, certain
questions need to be gone into thoroughly---- were he and
others self-radicalised or radicalised by Al Qaeda, which
would welcome more IT experts? Were they recruits or
volunteers as a result of their self-radicalisation? Were
they working only for the IM or were they also helping Al
Qaeda and other pro-Al Qaeda organisations?
7. Their capabilities as demonstrated till now are rather
primitive relating to sending E-mail messages through hacked
networks. Many young students can do this. Did they have any
other capability of an ominous nature?
8. If the reports that Peerbhoy had visited the US twice
in recent months are correct, it shows that he had a valid
visa for the US, which he had probably got on the
recommendation of Yahoo. It also shows that the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) had no adverse information on
him. Otherwise, the US would not have issued a visa to him.
If he had managed to get himself transferred to one of the
Yahoo offices in the US or in West Europe, Al Qaeda would
have had a wonderful cyber sleeping cell in the West. Why
did he weaken the possibility of his getting posted to the
West one day by helping the IM in doing a simple job of
communications, which did not require much expertise?
9. These and other questions of a similar nature require
to be gone into in great detail, if necessary, by enlisting
the help of the cyber experts of the US intelligence.
(
The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet
Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently,
Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com
)