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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: LindyBill who wrote (39139)8/21/2002 3:26:42 AM
From: Nadine Carroll  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
You missed the op-ed about Abu Nidal, Iraq and Al Qaeda:

Abu Nidal, September 11 and Saddam
The terrorist network may be closer knit than we think.

BY ASLA AYDINTASBAS
Wednesday, August 21, 2002 12:01 a.m. EDT

Numerous groups had reason to wish the death of the Palestinian terrorist Abu Nidal, reported to have committed "suicide" in his Baghdad home--albeit with multiple gunshot wounds. The likely conspirators include the Israelis, the PLO leadership, Gulf states he successfully blackmailed, or former friends--like Moammar Gadhafi and Syria--that he might have crossed in one deal or another.

But just as plausible is the scenario that Abu Nidal was finished off by his on-again-off-again host, Saddam Hussein, in an effort to thwart U.S. military action.



Once a legend, Nidal--sick and operationally crippled--had long since become a liability for Baghdad. A Reuters report yesterday cited a high-level Palestinian source claiming Nidal was killed after a visit by Iraqi government agents. Perhaps he knew too much. After all, his group had served the interests of the Iraqi regime by terrorizing Saddam's foes through much of the 1970s. Or perhaps more importantly, Nidal was a hazard because his presence suggested a link between Saddam and Sept. 11.
The story starts with Ziad Jarrah, comrade of Mohamed Atta and pilot of the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania on Sept. 11. In the heady news cycle following the attacks, details of family ties of the hijackers received little attention in the U.S. The son of a prominent Lebanese family, Jarrah--secular and fun-loving--came to Germany for college in 1996 and ended up in the terrorist cell run by Atta.

A constant figure in Jarrah's life in Germany was his great-uncle, Assem Omar Jarrah. According to the German magazine, Der Spiegel, Assem Jarrah worked for a long time as an informer for the Stasi, the East German secret service, while maintaining connections to Nidal's terror group.

According to Stasi files described by Der Spiegel last November, a note on the back of Assem Jarrah's file specified he had contacts with people in "Operation Trader"--Stasi code for the Abu Nidal group, which staged several operations in Germany and recruited agents among Arab students. The elder Jarrah, who allegedly also worked for Libya as a double agent, was among the students Nidal's men approached.

Following German reunification, Assem Jarrah established two firms, selling chemicals and medical equipment to Middle Eastern clients like Libya. Based on the accounts of former employees, Der Spiegel describes visits to suspicious facilities in the middle of a Libyan desert. After living in Germany for 18 years, Ziad's uncle disappeared two months before the attacks of Sept. 11, saying he was heading back to his native Lebanon.

In his 1999 book, "Stasi: The Untold Story of the East German Secret Police," former AP reporter and White House communications director John O. Koehler describes the inroads Nidal's organization made among students like Assem Jarrah. In one particular chapter, the author discussed a luncheon between Stasi's Col. Rainer Wiegand and two of his informers, both Lebanese science students, during which the informers reveal they are targeted for recruitment by Nidal. After confirming their story, he advises them to play along.



Brutal and vengeful, Nidal spent much of his terrorism career as a hired hand, often finding himself in the service of the Iraqi or the Syrian regime. During the same period, Iraqi security was highly active in East Germany, purchasing material for Iraq's massive weapons stockpile, hunting down dissidents, and spying on Arab diplomats. In his first debriefing after defecting to West Germany, Wiegand warned of the amazing Iraqi spying and terrorism apparatus in Germany.
"It could, of course, be pure coincidence that the uncle of one of the hijackers had worked for two intelligence agencies and had relations with another group and ran a pharmaceutical company doing business related to chemicals in the Middle East," cautions Gunther Latsch, an investigative journalist at Der Spiegel and an expert on the Stasi.

Mr. Latsch notes, however, that, despite the initial denials from the Jarrah family, Ziad was very close to his great uncle: "He was the one who picked him up at the airport when he first came to Germany. The uncle paid for his apartment. He really took care of him." Extended family connections in the Middle East, and their social import, are often overlooked by Western audiences. But the case of Ziad Jarrah and his uncle is worth careful scrutiny.



The details of the Jarrah family saga do not conclusively point to the Abu Nidal group--or for that matter to Baghdad--in regard to Sept. 11. But, if true, the story of Ziad Jarrah and his uncle contains information that adds heft to similar tales that have surfaced on the fringes of the Sept. 11 investigation. In a well-reported meeting in 1998, Saddam's envoy Faruq Hijazi visited Osama bin Laden in Kandahar. Investigators have long suspected that the visit by the top-level Iraqi diplomat was a Baghdad invitation for the al Qaeda chief.
Then there were the visits to Prague by Atta. On two separate occasions, Atta--not a man given to the earthly pleasures of sightseeing--traveled to Prague to meet Khalil Ibrahim Samir al-Ani, an Iraqi agent later expelled from the Czech Republic as a spy. Since the information surfaced last fall, there have been numerous efforts to bury the story--the most tangible evidence linking Sept. 11 to Baghdad. The Czech government, however, had little reason to question its own intelligence on the Atta trips and stood by the story. Last month, a high-ranking White House official confirmed the meeting.

Details such as these do not sufficiently describe the broader relations that lie behind Sept. 11. But they do hint that behind the façade of religious fanaticism sits the old network of "terrorism international"--that same web of underground groups and the rogue states which support them. One day, when investigators get to the bottom of Sept. 11, there might after all be more familiar names than the faceless al Qaeda operatives we have seen on grainy video clips.

Ms. Aydintasbas is a writer based in New York.
opinionjournal.com



To: LindyBill who wrote (39139)8/21/2002 1:02:36 PM
From: JohnM  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Lead story in the WP today is that senior leaders of Al Queda have taken refuge Iraq. Not a mention in the NYT of course. "Wouldn't be Prudent," I guess. :^)

Last time I checked we already knew this. Rumsfeld and buddies are just trying to keep a news roll going. No newspaper should play along with this ploy. Unless they are willing to say what they mean.

This is Ashcroft in the Pentagon. Keep 'em scared.



To: LindyBill who wrote (39139)8/21/2002 1:54:42 PM
From: jcky  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 281500
 
Sorry to burst your bubble, LB.

The headline of this article is very misleading suggesting a new lead linking Saddam to al-Qaida. But just about anyone with a single synapse in their cerebral cortex will recognize al-Qaida seeks refuge in many countries around the world including Pakistan, Iran, Saudi Arabia, most of Western Europe, and probably, here, in the US. Where this administration is having difficulty in proving is that there is complicity on the Iraqi government in supporting al-Qaida in their country.

Let's examine this story and make some inferences. Iraqi's deputy prime minister, Tariq Aziz, openly acknowledges there is an al-Qaida presence in his country but that presence is located in northern Iraq under the control of the Kurds. The US refuses to disclose, publicly, the locations of the al-Qaida threat in Iraq and whether that location in confined to northern Iraq. You connect the dots.

There's nothing new here.



To: LindyBill who wrote (39139)8/21/2002 5:48:02 PM
From: Bilow  Respond to of 281500
 
Hi LindyBill; Re Washington Post article on Al Qaeda in Iraq. I thought this paragraph was particularly significant:

Al Qaeda has often used northern Iraq to travel between Afghanistan and other countries. So, U.S. officials said, they are not surprised to find some members taking shelter in Iraq. #reply-17901458

The fact is that Northern Iraq is in the "No Fly" zone, and is under the control of Kurdish separatists that we support. Hardly anything you could pin on Saddam.

-- Carl