Tahawwur Rana Makes BIG Revelation of ISI Involvement in 26/11 Attacks, Admits to Training With LeT

Tahawwur Rana has made a major revelation confirming Pakistan’s ISI involvement in the 26/11 Mumbai attacks. He admitted ties with Lashkar-e-Taiba and LeT training, deepening the global terror plot.

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Purnima Jain
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In a startling and extremely worrying disclosure, Tahawwur Rana, the Pakistani-origin Canadian businessman who is now facing extradition to India in the United States, is reported to have said that the involvement of the Pakistani intelligence agencies, ISI, in the 26/11 terror attacks in Mumbai. He also admits that he was trained in the terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), which planned one of the most ruthless attacks ever on Indian soil.

This was a bombshell revelation that was brought out by the BJP IT cell head, Amit Malviya, on the social media platform X (formerly Twitter), where he posted the supposed confession of Rana and called upon decisive international action against the terror networks of Pakistan.

Rana’s Role in the 26/11 Plot

Tahawwur Rana, a boyhood friend of David Coleman Headley, who was the primary plotter and did reconnaissance spots in Mumbai, is already facing suspicion of having assisted in the plotting of the terror attack that happened in 2008. Intelligence agencies point out that Rana aided and abetted Headley in the travel and encounters of Headley in the guise of the medical business of his visa, and he knew thoroughly about the terror plot.

His testimony might help the Indian investigators prove their point that the Pakistan state-sponsored elements were involved in the 26/11 massacre, which had taken away 166 innocent lives and maimed over 300 others.

International Implications and India’s Stand

The confession was made when India had been increasing its diplomacy to show the world how Pakistan funds and trains terrorists through their networks. Battling to extradite Rana, India is insisting that the U.S. give quick judicial assistance in its case.

The experts think that such an outing can enhance the Indian argument over terrorists in the worldwide environment, especially during the UN and FATF (Financial Action Task Force) meetings, where Pakistan was facing repeated badgering on the issue of harbouring terrorists.

What’s Next?

Even though the judicial proceedings against Rana are still on in the U.S., his confession can prove to be a wake-up call in India in its bid to seek justice regarding the 26/11 attacks. The international community has been urged by political leaders and other public figures to, at long last, hold Pakistan accountable not only through rhetorical talks but also through sanctions and pressure.

 

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