India blames "elements" from Pakistan for attack
By C.J. Kuncheria and Robert Birsel
NEW DELHI/ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - India blamed "elements" from Pakistan on Friday for the assault on its financial capital, Mumbai, raising the prospect of a breakdown in peace efforts between the nuclear-armed rivals.
But Pakistan said it was not to blame, and in an unprecedented step, agreed to send the head of its military's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) agency to India to share information.
The attacks on two luxury hotels and other sites around Mumbai were mounted after Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, widower of assassinated former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, had made bold moves to improve ties with India.
On Thursday, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh pinned the blame for the Mumbai attacks on militant groups based in India's neighbors, usually an allusion to old rival Pakistan.
Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee was more explicit.
"Preliminary evidence, prima facie evidence, indicates elements with links to Pakistan are involved," Mukherjee told a news conference in New Delhi on Friday.
He urged Pakistan to dismantle the infrastructure that supports militants.
The two countries have fought three wars since their independence in 1947 and went to the brink of war again after a December 2001 a militant attack on India's parliament that India linked to Pakistan.
Pakistani leaders were quick to condemn the Mumbai attacks and on Friday they denied involvement.
Zardari, in a meeting with Germany's ambassador, said the roots of terrorism lay in Afganistan's war against Soviet occupation in the 1980s.
"The germs of terrorist elements were not produced in security agencies' labs in Pakistan," the Foreign Ministry cited Zardari as saying.
"Pakistan could neither gain anything nor does the democratic government believe in such tactics," he said.
"INTERNATIONAL NETWORK"
Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, in India on a visit that was scheduled before the attacks, said anti-terrorism cooperation must be strengthened. He called on India not to play politics.
"This is an international network. It has to be dealt with at an international level," he told reporters. Continued...




