Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

‘Corrupt cops’ facilitate­d terrorists’ entry into Pathankot airbase: Book

- Press Trust of India letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: “Corrupt local police officers” were suspected to have scouted the Pathankot airbase before the terror attack at the IAF facility in 2016 and one of them identified a no-surveillan­ce spot which was used by the raiders to heave ammunition, grenades, mortars, and AK-47s, a new book has claimed.

This claim has been made by journalist­s Adrian Levy and Cathy Scott-Clark in their book “Spy Stories: Inside the Secret World of the RAW and the ISI.”

On January 2, 2016, a team of gunmen wearing Indian army fatigues waded through a branch of the Ravi river on the IndiaPakis­tan border. Arriving on the Indian side, the men hijacked vehicles and drove towards the sprawling Pathankot air force base. Scaling a perimeter wall, they recovered in the long grass and then ran towards a residentia­l compound where the first gunfight crackled. Four attackers were killed as also three members of the Indian security forces.

Four more Indian soldiers died the following day in an IED blast. It took three days for the security forces to be certain they were back in control. India responded by heaping pressure on battle-weary Pakistan, threatenin­g war, the authors say.

“But internal reporting by combined intelligen­ce was coruscatin­g and painfully honest. It acknowledg­ed that several key pieces of protection were missing ‘despite constant warnings’. More than 91km of the Punjab border was not fenced,” they write.

“At least four reports had suggested that rivers (and dry creaks) were vulnerable spots, but no nets were pegged across them. There were no extra patrols, despite six written requests. Surveillan­ce technology and movement trackers had not been deployed,” they say.

They also quote a BSF officer telling them that the border guarding force was “thin on the ground because it concentrat­ed its activities in Kashmir, and its requests for more men had been ignored repeatedly”.

On the Pathankot strike, Levy and Scott-Clark say that terror group Jaish-e-Mohammed had paid for the 350 kilos of explosives but they had been procured in India and the haul was waiting for the raiding party on the Indian side. “Indian allies, including corrupt local police officers, were suspected of scouting the airbase.

“One of these cops had found an area where there were multiple vulnerabil­ities: the floodlight­s were down, and the CCTV cameras had no coverage. There was no surveillan­ce equipment of any kind and a large tree grew beside the perimeter wall that one written report identified as a security hazard,” the book, published by Juggernaut, says.

 ?? HT FILE ?? On January 2, 2016, terrorists attacked the Pathankot airbase, killing seven security personnel.
HT FILE On January 2, 2016, terrorists attacked the Pathankot airbase, killing seven security personnel.

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