Admiral Sunil Lanba. (Photo: Yasir Iqbal)
HIGHLIGHTS
- Lanba said Indian security establishment is continuously working to address this menace
- Reports suggest groups like LeT and JeM are training new recruits in water combat skills
- Growing threat of a terror attack through the seas by Pak-based terrorists backed by military
"We also have reports of terrorists being trained to carry out attacks with varying modus operandi including through the medium of the sea," Navy Chief Admiral Sunil Lanba said.
India has been facing the threat of terror through the seas, Navy Chief Admiral Sunil Lanba said on Tuesday.
Without naming Pakistan he made a reference to the recent attack in Pulwama where a Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM suicide bomber rammed his explosives-laden car into a bus carrying CRPF troops, killing 40 of them.
"India faces a more serious form of terrorism, state-sponsored terrorism," he said.
He said terrorists have been quickly evolving and the Indian security establishment has been continuously working to combat the new threats.
"We also have reports of terrorists being trained to carry out attacks with varying modus operandi including through the medium of the sea," Admiral Lanba said.
"You have all witnessed the horrific scale of the extremist attack in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir just three weeks ago. This violence was perpetrated by extremists aided and abetted by a state which seeks to destabilise India," he said.
India faced a terror attack through the seas in 2008 when Pakistan trained terrorists attained Mumbai. The event referred to as the 26/11 Mumbai attack remains one of the deadliest strikes by terrorists on India.
Like this time, when the Indian Air Force (IAF) carried out an airstrike at militant camps in Pakistan's Balakot, the option for a similar raid was put to the then PM Manmohan Singh-led government but it was not exercised.
Recent intelligence reports have indicated the growing threat of a terror attack through the seas by Pakistan-based terrorists backed by their military. There are inputs that several aquatic wings of the terror outfits have been set up. Groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and JeM are training their new recruits in water combat skills, reports suggest.
The navy chief said that quickly terrorist groups have evolved across the globe and this particular 'brand' of terror may well become a global problem in the near future.
"The Indian security establishment is continuously working to address this menace. It is imperative that the global community acts in concert to contain and eliminate terrorism, in all its forms," Lanba said.
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