Headley told authorities that Rana provided him with cover for his Mumbai scouting missions - 
CHICAGO: The allegations against Chicago businessman  Tahawwur Rana are fairly straightforward: He helped a former boarding  school friend serve as a scout for terrorists who carried out a 2008  rampage that killed more than 160 people in Mumbai, India.
But  the implications of Rana’s trial, which begins with jury selection  Monday in Chicago, could be enormous: To make their case, federal  prosecutors may lay bare alleged connections between the militant group  blamed for the Mumbai attack and Pakistan’s main intelligence agency,  which has come under increasing scrutiny after Osama bin Laden was found  living in a compound not far from Pakistan’s capital.
The key  government witness could be David Coleman Headley, a Pakistani-American  with a troubled past who pleaded guilty last year to laying the  groundwork for the Mumbai attack by the Pakistani militant group  Lashkar-e-Taiba. Headley is cooperating with US officials and told  interrogators that Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency  provided training and funds for the attack against India, the country’s  longtime nemesis.
Headley told authorities that Rana provided him  with cover for his Mumbai scouting missions. Headley also told  interrogators that he was in contact with another militant with ties to  al Qaida who was helping plot a separate bomb attack against a newspaper  in Denmark whose cartoons had offended Muslims.
On the heels of  bin Laden’s May 2 killing, Headley’s testimony and other details from  Rana’s trial could further strain the already delicate ties between the  US and Pakistan, a critical relationship in the global battle against  terrorism.
The discovery of bin Laden living in a walled compound  in Abbottabad, an army garrison town near the capital Islamabad, has led  to suspicions that at least some Pakistani intelligence officials knew  of the al Qaida leader’s presence and perhaps were protecting him. That  has deepened suspicions that Pakistani agents secretly work with  terrorist organizations despite receiving billions in US aid every year.
”What  you’ll have now in Chicago is a trial which will undoubtedly  demonstrate links between Pakistan government agencies and one of the  most competent terrorist organizations operating in South Asia –  Lashkar-e-Taiba,” said Seth Jones, a senior political scientist at the  RAND Corp. The trial ”just adds more fuel to an already tense  situation.”
The US raid that killed bin Laden has met with growing  condemnation from Pakistani government leaders, military officials, the  Parliament and Islamic hard-liners. The Pakistani government has  threatened reprisals, and the Parliament on Saturday passed a nonbinding  resolution demanding a halt to US drone missile strikes against  militants in the tribal areas.
Experts say Lashkar-e-Taiba – whose  name means ”Army of the Pure” _ was created with ISI’s help in the  1980s as a proxy fighting force to battle with India over the disputed  territory of Kashmir. Counterterrorism officials say the militant group  has gained strength with the help of ISI since then, possibly with the  help of retired officers, but Pakistani officials have denied any ties  with the group.
Lashkar-e-Taiba is accused of carrying out the  three-day siege in Mumbai in which 10 gunmen attacked two luxury hotels,  a Jewish center and a busy train station in India’s financial capital,  killing 166 people, including six Americans.
Rana, a Canadian  national and father of three who has lived in Chicago for years, owns a  Chicago-based immigration and law services center, First World  Immigration Services, in the heart of the city’s South Asian enclave. He  and Headley met as teenagers at a prestigious Pakistani military  boarding school outside Islamabad.
Prosecutors say Rana, who was  arrested in 2009, provided cover for Headley by letting him open a First  World office in Mumbai and travel as a supposed representative for the  agency. He also allegedly helped Headley make travel arrangements as  part of the plot against the Danish newspaper that in 2005 printed  cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, which angered many Muslims worldwide.
Pictures of the prophet are prohibited in Islam.
Rana  is charged with providing material support for terrorism in India and  Denmark. In court documents, Rana’s attorneys have said he believed  Headley was working for Pakistani intelligence. Headley also told  authorities that he told Rana he ”had been asked to perform espionage  work for the ISI,” according to a court filing.
”Part of the  defense will be that Headley used his connections with ISI to explain  the things he was doing,” Rana’s attorney Patrick Blegen told reporters  outside the federal courthouse last week. Rana ”has maintained his  innocence since the day he was arrested.”
However, US District  Court Judge Harry Leinenweber ruled that that proposed defense was  ”objectively unreasonable” and Rana’s alleged actions still would have  been in violation of US law.
Prosecutors have repeatedly declined  to comment on the case. A senior Pakistani intelligence official said he  has not been following the trial and did not have any comment on it.
Some  experts are skeptical about how much the trial will reveal. They note  that federal prosecutors may work hard to keep any sensitive information  from surfacing in the courtroom, and that Headley is not the most  credible witness. Born Daood Gilani, Headley reached a plea deal with  prosecutors in the terrorism case in exchange for avoiding the death  penalty and previously had been an informant for the US Drug Enforcement  Administration after a conviction on heroin smuggling charges.
“We’re  not going to learn (anything) from the Rana trial that we don’t know  from Headley’s interrogation,” said Christine Fair, an assistant  professor at the Center for Peace and Strategic Studies at Georgetown  University. She said Headley’s accounts have not been verified and  amount to “the musings of a terrorist who’s trying to minimize his  sentence.”
Details of Headley’s possible testimony were revealed  last year in an Indian government report revealing what he had allegedly  told Indian investigators during questioning in Chicago, where he’s  being held.
In the report, Headley is cited describing how ISI was  deeply involved in planning the Mumbai attacks and how he reported to a  man known only as “Major Iqbal,” whom he called his Lashkar-e-Taiba  “handler.” But some experts have suggested Iqbal as a retired ISI  officer also. In the indictment his name is listed as unknown, and some  have even doubted his existence.
Rana is actually the seventh name  on the indictment, and the only defendant in custody. Among the six  others charged in absentia is “Major Iqbal” and Sajid Mir, allegedly  another Lashkar-e-Taiba supervisor who also “handled” Headley.
Also  indicted is Ilyas Kashmiri, the commander of the terror group  Harakat-ul Jihad Islami who also is believed by Western intelligence to  be al Qaida’s operational chief in Pakistan. During his travels for  spying and training, Headley allegedly met with Kashmiri in Pakistan,  and Kashmiri gave him instructions on how to carry out the Danish  newspaper bombing, which ultimately never occurred.
“It is  potentially serious if one can demonstrate ISI’s relationship with  Lashkar-e-Taiba and Lashkar-e-Taiba’s relationship with al Qaida,” Jones  said. “That is one step away from an ISI al Qaida link, and that’s a  very serious close connection.”





