British, American and Indian spy agencies had enough combined intellligence to have prevented the 2008 attacks on Mumbai, according to an investigation by several US media outlets.
168 people were killed in the combined attack on luxury hotels, the city's main train station and a Jewish center.
The New York times conducted a joint investigation with ProPublica and the TV news show PBS Frontline, examining leaked documents and interviewing unnamed intelligence officials.
The attack was carried out by the Pakistani group Lashkar-e-Taiba and the report says the US warned Indian security officials several months before the attack.
US State Department Spokesperson Marie Harf acknowledges that more could have been done...
IN: We've always had...
OUT: ...doing better here.
DUR: 26
http://fsnradionews.com/feeds/1222mumbai-harf.mp3
168 people were killed in the combined attack on luxury hotels, the city's main train station and a Jewish center.
The New York times conducted a joint investigation with ProPublica and the TV news show PBS Frontline, examining leaked documents and interviewing unnamed intelligence officials.
The attack was carried out by the Pakistani group Lashkar-e-Taiba and the report says the US warned Indian security officials several months before the attack.
US State Department Spokesperson Marie Harf acknowledges that more could have been done...
IN: We've always had...
OUT: ...doing better here.
DUR: 26
http://fsnradionews.com/feeds/1222mumbai-harf.mp3