The Mind of a Terrorist
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The Mind of a Terrorist

David Headley, the Mumbai Massacre, and His European Revenge

Kaare Sørensen, Cory Klingsporn

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eBook - ePub

The Mind of a Terrorist

David Headley, the Mumbai Massacre, and His European Revenge

Kaare Sørensen, Cory Klingsporn

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About This Book

With the Pacing of a Thriller, a Veteran Journalist's Account of the Terrorist behind the Mumbai Attacks and a Planned Attack in Europe David Headley, the American-Pakistani also known as Daood Gilani, lived a double life. One day he would stroll through Central Park in his tailored Armani suit as a true New Yorker, and the next he would browse in the bazaar in Lahore wearing traditional Pakistani clothes. One day he would drink champagne at the most extravagant clubs; on another he would prostrate himself in prayer in remote Pakistan and pledge fidelity to Allah.Born in 1960, the son of an American mother and Pakistani father, with one blue eye and one brown, Headley grew up between East and West. He was attracted to both worlds, even working as an informant for the US government, until one day he found he had to choose between the place of his birth and a radical form of Islam preaching global jihad. This is the disturbing story of the mastermind behind the 2008 attacks in Mumbai that killed 166 people—who two months later flew to Copenhagen to plan another act of terror with the help of al-Qaeda sleeper cells in Europe.Veteran journalist Kaare Sørensen has reconstructed his movements and planning in a tense feat of reportage. His account, based on extensive reporting, eyewitness interviews, and documentation including wiretaps, court transcripts, and emails by Headley accessed from a chat room cache of nine thousand messages, offers unprecedented insight into the mind of the terrorist. The author has provided updates and a new preface for the English-language edition.

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PART 1
MUMBAI
1
A BEGINNING
Mumbai, India
Saturday, April 12, 2008, 3:00 a.m.
He had wasted his time.
The tourist ferries were packed with two decks of overweight Americans and Brits who had ventured out from their luxury hotels for a few hours before quickly returning to the pool to pour themselves yet another drink.
Pathetic. Just pathetic.
He had taken the ferries twice, but it didn’t help much. Harbor cruises couldn’t give him the kind of answers he was looking for.
Instead, he now stood on the deck of a little fishing boat as it traveled quickly out into the darkness, the smell of fish and warm seawater filling his senses. He exchanged a few words with the fisherman who had agreed to take him along on this special night cruise in the Arabian Sea, and he sensed that he was on the right path.
Like all the other big modern cities in the world, Mumbai lit the darkness behind him even now, at three in the morning on a random Friday night. They were still partying there. Letting loose. Breaking the rules. Even here, from nearly three miles out, the huge city resembled an impressive, unconquerable fort. Too large to really shake. A city that never went totally dark, though on the ocean darkness was everywhere.
They had no idea.
How did he get here, anyway?
Was it hate for India that had brought him on this deck in the dark of night? That time they bombed his school, more than thirty-five years ago? Was it because of his stint as a drug smuggler? Or as an agent for the Americans? Was it the women? The pictures from Abu Ghraib, the Qur’an thrown into the toilet at Guantánamo, or the cartoons of Muhammad in Denmark?
Or was it something greater?
That day, it was for Allah, the only true God that had ever existed. He had no doubts. He was here because he needed to be right here. He was a soldier in an army assembled by Allah. His life had been a bit of a mess, sure, he knew that, but his mission wouldn’t have been possible without his past.
Everything had led up to this trip.
The day before, he had gone down to the fishermen’s village and found the fisherman, who lived in a weathered hut near a small Hindu temple. He introduced himself as David Headley. That had been his name for some years now, and he was getting used to it. It sounded American. That was the whole idea.
He’d taken his video camera down to the fisherman’s hut and done his best to look like nothing other than an ordinary, adventure-seeking American tourist. He kept his Muslim background, his thoughts about Indians, and his true reasons for the trip to himself.
It was the fisherman who suggested that Headley come back the following night and sail with him, if he wanted a genuine experience of the sea around Mumbai. Headley quickly said yes.
He was searching for the perfect site to make landfall. A place from which everything could be set in motion. And a route there without reefs or other undersea dangers. If there was anybody who knew a safe way through the waters around Mumbai, it had to be this fisherman. He’d give Headley answers without even knowing it. All he had to do was sail.
According to the original plan, the Gateway of India monument, on the eastern side of the peninsula that splits Mumbai from the mainland, was to be the starting point. It sits right across from the majestic Taj Hotel. Headley had to admit that it was an iconic location for beginning a terrorist attack.
To reach the old harbor, though, you have to travel around the southern tip of Mumbai, where the coast guard could be a little too watchful. Headley saw far too many gunboats with uniformed guards on board for that plan to work. The fashionable area along the Cuffe Parade on Mumbai’s west side would be better. Much better. The men would be coming from the west, down from Pakistan.
The little fishing village by the beach seemed just right—unlike the rest of the area, it was dirty and often chaotic. There might occasionally be a fair number of people around, but the poor fishermen weren’t the kind to complain or call the police if they noticed anything unusual. On the contrary, if there was a crowd, it would be the perfect cover. At the same time, the village was centrally located, and you could quickly go straight up to the main road, hail a taxi, and be wherever in the city you wanted to be within a few minutes.
The outing with the fisherman had convinced Headley: it was possible to go from international waters to the coast and onto land without encountering any significant obstacles.
The men would turn up right in the left atrium of Mumbai’s heart, and nobody would realize until it was too late.
He saved the beach’s coordinates on his GPS.
It would begin here. Right here.
2
LIGHT THE FIRE, MY BROTHER
Mumbai, India
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
18° 55' 11.80", 72° 49' 32.30".
The handheld GPS device showed the position on its large screen inside the waterproof rubber case.
They were there.
The black-and-yellow inflatable dinghy reached the shore, and eight of the ten young men quickly jumped out onto the beach with their backpacks. They were silent. The remaining two members of the group fired up the powerful Yamaha outboard motor once more and disappeared into the darkness with the boat, to make landfall elsewhere.
The eight young men stepped over paper, discarded food scraps, and brightly colored old plastic bottles as they made their way up the beach in the poor fishing village.
They split up into four groups of two without a sound.
A few of the vendors were surprised at the sight of men with big backpacks in a place normally frequented only by the local fishermen, but they were told to “mind their own business.”
Other witnesses who noticed the young men in T-shirts and worn-out jeans got the same message.
“And what about you? Mind your own business!” said the men, who told other curious bystanders that they were students from a university in Hyderabad, another large Indian city.
In their pockets they carried student IDs with Indian names like Samir, Naresh, Arjunkumar, Dinesh, Raghubir, Arun, and Rohit in case anyone questioned their cover story.
But no one stopped them.
Nazir and Arshad were both twenty-three years old and anything but students. It was years since they’d even opened a book. Apart from the Qur’an, that is.
Walking calmly, they proceeded the short distance from the shore to the busy highway and hailed one of the many taxis available at all hours at the taxi stand.
In the backseat, one of the men fished a little brick of what looked like modeling clay out of his bag. The brick, which weighed about eleven pounds, was connected to a timing device and a stopwatch, and there were instructions in Urdu to ensure that, in the heat of battle, they wouldn’t attach the five loose wires incorrectly.
Nazir and Arshad connected the wires and hid the first bomb under a seat in the taxi.
The mission had begun.
In a hotel room less than half a mile away sat a Danish man by the name of Jesper Bornak, phone in hand.
An Indian business contact had first postponed and then canceled a dinner, so Jesper now weighed his options for how to spend the remainder of the evening.
As a thirty-four-year-old independent businessman with his own freight company, a little daughter, and an almost-newborn son back home in Denmark, he always made good use of a free evening. There was always a mountain of emails that needed a reply. And always a considerable sleep deficit to work down.
When was the last time he’d simply thrown himself on the bed, relaxed, and read a book?
The big cities in his travels were just scenery for the long meetings filled with negotiating tactics, shipping containers, and stacks of paper. Singapore, Jakarta, Mumbai. It was all the same.
After a few days of negotiations with Indian customs officers about some containers in various far-flung parts of India, Jesper felt his curiosity about the big city grow.
“Jesper Bornak has returned to ‘civilization’ in Mumbai,” he had written on Facebook page not long before.
He called Gitte at home.
“Everything is great. Yes, I’m headed out to eat. I’ll call later. I love you,” he said and put on a jacket.
Jesper left his wallet and passport at his hotel, the Oberoi-Trident. He stuffed two credit cards, two hundred dollars, and about two thousand Indian rupees in his pants pocket and, taking his black Nokia N95 out of its charger, left room 2735 for the last time.
Near the popular Leopold Café in central Mumbai, Nazir and Arshad—the group’s first two-man team—got out of their taxi. They paid, apparently in American dollars, and were quickly stopped by a merchant who thought they were tourists.
“Want a T-shirt?” he asked.
“No,” they replied, and pointed at the café instead. “Is the Leopold Café famous?”
The merchant replied yes.
The two stood for some time with an arm around the other’s shoulder, smiling. They both seemed in high spirits.
Perhaps they were remembering the words instilled in them by the men in Pakistan over the past weeks and days:
“This is a struggle between Islam and the unbelievers. We’re the people God has chosen to defend our religion against the unbelievers.”
Some of the women who happened to be there noticed that the two men were in excellent shape physically and were good-looking too.
Jesper Bornak hopped into a taxi for the short drive to Leopold Café. He paid far too much for the trip, but that didn’t matter much to him. It amounted to less than a dollar, and he was in a good mood.
In a corner of the café, he got a seat at a table where four stewardesses and a steward from Lufthansa were enjoying a free evening before they would once again serve drinks and airplane food all the way back to Germany.
Thirty-eight-year-old Thomas ran in his free time, so he and Jesper quickly got on well with each other. They spoke of marathons and Jesper’s plans to run, cycle, and swim his way through a triathlon sometime next year. It happened that the group from Lufthansa was staying at the same hotel as Jesper.
“It’s a small world,” they said with a smile, as Jesper ordered chicken tikka masala, garlic naan, and a much-needed, tall, cold draft beer.
Leopold truly lived up to the description in Gregory David Roberts’ cult novel Shantaram—a gathering place for Western businesspeople, Indian drug dealers, and happy world travelers with blue Lonely Planet books in hand and credit cards in their pockets.
On the wall hung little messages of greeting from tourists from all over the world, honoring the author.
Behind Jesper sat two Indian men drinking the café’s specialty: more than seventy ounces of freshly brewed beer from a sort of glass column with its own tap. To his right sat Line Kristin Woldbeck, a Norwegian woman in an Indian dress and with a prominent nose ring; her husband, Arne Strømme; and their Indian friend, Meetu.
The big TV screen was transmitting live from the large city of Cuttack, about nine hundred miles away, where India was playing the fifth cricket match this month against England. Most of the country was following the match, truly a life-and-death matter. Leopold Café was no exception.
Jesper had finished the spicy chicken and was talking with the Lufthansa group about trips they’d made to Tehran. He was in the middle of a cup of coffee when he first heard the sound of small explosions from the street outside. It lasted just a few seconds and sounded a lot like firecrackers or some other fireworks. Completely normal in that part of Mumbai.
Jesper and Thomas continued talking.
Then, something was tossed through the door into the restaurant.
It was 9:28 p.m. when a young German man, twenty-six-year-old Benjamin Matthijs, saw a small oval-shaped object about the size of a fist roll along the floor to his table, when it unexpectedly made a small jump and rolled off to the right, under the neighboring table where a rugged-looking British man was eating his dinner.
I shouldn’t be here right now. Something is very wrong. There shouldn’t be a hand grenade in a café, Benjamin managed to think as he reached for his bag.
In the next second, the windows of the café were blown out with a deafening bang.
The explosion left a hole in the floor more than an inch deep, and shrapnel flew through the air, killing several people and boring into Benjamin’s leg, foot, and face. He was thrown through the air and landed on the floor four or five yards from his seat, nearly at the other end of the café.
Jesper responded instinctively.
That’s an explosion. And this is terrorism, was his immediate thought.
A few years earlier, he and Gitte had been on vacation in Bali. An American tourist had recommended a good restaurant that sounded like a romantic place with a view, but it just happened that they never made it there. The day after they returned home, the restaurant was bombed, and at least twenty people were killed.
That had left a strong impression on both of them.
But Jesper Bornak had military experience. He had been with the Danish forces in Croatia in 1995, where two of his comrades were killed and fourteen injured in a Serbian artillery attack. Jesper was familiar with explosives and had no doubt that the explosion in the café was a controlled one. And thus, most likely a terrorist attack.
Suicide bomb, he thought, instinctively pushing his chair back and throwing himself under the table in case there was another explosion.
Opposite Jesper sat Desiree, the stewardess he had been speaking to just seconds before. He took hold of her legs with both hands and dragged her to cover under the table.
She was screaming loudly. For Desiree had seen what Jesper could not, since he had been sitting with his back to the door: a young man with a backpack, in dark clothing, a tight scarf, and with a raised firearm was shooting indiscriminately around the room.
It was either Nazir or Arshad entering the café.
From his cover under the table, Jesper heard several screams and the noise of chairs being overturned and glass breaking...

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