United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, hours before arriving in New Delhi, was circumspect when asked if US intelligence had warned India that a deadly terror attack in Mumbai is likely, as reported by the media, which is quoting unnamed counter-terrorism officials.
At a press conference at the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation's headquarters in Brussels, Rice said, "As to the reports that I have seen, as you have, I don't really know the source of them, and I'm always reluctant to speak to unnamed sources who are speaking on background, because one never knows what they're talking about--that's one of the problems with the unnamed source issue."
"But we obviously try to pass information to countries all around the world if we pick up information," she acknowledged," and reiterated, "But I'll tell you, having been on the receiving end of information sometimes which one could constitute as, quote-un-quote 'warnings,' they are often difficult to act on, sometimes not very concrete. And, I would just note that the problem with terrorism is that information is useful, but it isn't always something that can prevent."
Rice argued, "The real problem we have with terrorism is that terrorists can be right once and we have to be right 100 percent of the time. and in that regard, I have some, not just sympathy, but empathy for what the Indian government has gone through."
Pressed by reporters on whether the US had passed on specific information of 'increased chatter' as there was before 9/11, Rice continued to state that "I don't know who this source is, and so I don't know what they're referring to."
She repeated that "I've been on the other side of this, and I'm not going to respond to whether there are --chatter
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