"Over the last six years, the intelligence community here in the United States has worked with all of our partners to make sure we're best positioned to stop attacks like Mumbai before they ever happen again," US State Department Deputy Spokesperson Marie Harf told reporters yesterday.
"The intelligence community has improved coordination and intelligence sharing between our own agencies, between the intelligence community and law enforcement in the US, but also among our partners abroad," she said responding to a latest investigative story on the 26/11 Mumbai attack in The New York Times which referred to an information that intelligence agencies of India, the US and Britain had before 26/11.
Harf said, "I would also say that I think that piece highlights the challenge of putting together all the puzzle pieces in a very complicated intelligence picture."
"I think as you could see from the piece, there are bits and pieces that different people have, different agencies have, different countries have," she said.
She said it is a challenge that is confronted every day.
"Ourintelligence community has in the wake of Mumbai taken steps with our partners and here at home to really improve their ability to prevent these kinds of attacks," Harf said.
The United States, she said, always had ways of intelligence sharing both internally inside the US Government between intelligence and law enforcement, but also with its partners overseas.
166 people, including six Americans, were killed in the 2008 Mumbai attacks.
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