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


To: lorne who wrote (2791)9/25/2003 4:19:54 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3959
 
'Did CIA bankroll moderate Islam?'

23-09-2003

By Tabassum Zakaria

WASHINGTON (Reuters)
- The CIA paid Mullahs and created fake Islamic religious leaders to preach a moderate message and counter anti-American sentiment in the Arab world after the September 11 attacks, a new book says.

In "The CIA at War", Ronald Kessler, an investigative reporter and author of several books about the CIA and the FBI, also detailed espionage activity in Iraq that supported the March invasion that toppled President Saddam Hussein.

For the book, made available to Reuters in advance of its October publication, Kessler interviewed CIA Director George Tenet in May and other senior CIA officials. The agency supplied most of the photographs in the book.

"In Islam, as in many other religions, anyone can call himself a religious leader," he said in the book. "So, besides paying mullahs, the CIA created fake mullahs -- recruited agents who would proclaim themselves clerics and take a more moderate position about nonbelievers."

"We are taking over radio stations and supporting clerics," a CIA source was quoted as saying. "It's back to propaganda. We are creating moderate Muslims."

Kessler said the CIA also paid for mullahs to issue fatwas, or religious edicts, urging Iraqis not to resist American forces. He did not specify the countries this took place in.

He said the CIA planted tiny video cameras to track former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, his sons, and other officials, and monitor the position of Iraqi troops and suspected weapons of mass destruction facilities.

Electronic beacons were attached to the undersides of cars that Saddam might use and radar-imaging sensors were dragged across the ground to look for hidden underground bunkers and storage facilities, the book said.

He did not say exactly when such activities took place.

Shedding light on how a major pre-war threat was averted -- that Saddam would blow up his oil wells -- Kessler says the CIA and U.S. Special Forces paid Iraqi guards who protected the wells to snip wires to explosive devices after the war began.

To communicate with Iraqi agents the CIA gave them devices such as satellite phones hidden in rifles and laptop computers with programs hidden in innocuous games or graphics that could send and receive encrypted documents, he said.

The CIA also used a secret writing technique dating to biblical days, in which Iraqi agents wrote over innocuous letters to aunts or mothers through a second piece of paper treated with chemicals, and the hidden message would show up when placed under a special light, according to the book.

Tenet was quoted as saying it was up to him to accept responsibility for any mistakes related to the September 11, 2001, attacks and not blame specific employees as some in Congress had requested. Otherwise it could chill risk-taking essential to the CIA's mission.

"If you think this is about protecting your image or yourself, you're finished. Forget it," Tenet was quoted as saying.

"Nobody is perfect. But guys who have never run anything in their lives, who have never taken any risk in their lives, who have never managed a large work force, will tell you how to suck eggs and how to do your job on a daily basis. If you listen to them, you're listening to the wrong people," he said.

Kessler said the CIA used operatives from intelligence services in Arab countries including Jordan, Syria, and Egypt to infiltrate al Qaeda, develop intelligence, but also sow suspicion so members of the network would kill each other, the book said. Al Qaeda was blamed for the attacks.

muslimnews.co.uk

Now, since DCI G. Tenet himself aknowledges that his rogue outfit (the CIA) engaged in anti-Islamic cointelpro activities, I'd stretch the whole story a bit further:

'Did CIA bankroll Islamic terrorists?'

23-09-2003

By Tabassum Zakaria

WASHINGTON (Reuters)
- The CIA paid Mullahs and created fake Islamic religious leaders to preach an extremist message and exacerbate anti-American sentiment in the Arab world well before the September 11 attacks, a new book says.

In "The CIA at War", Ronald Bessler, an investigative reporter and author of several books about the CIA and the FBI, also detailed espionage activity in Iraq that supported the March invasion that toppled President Saddam Hussein.

[...]

"In Islam, as in many other religions, anyone can call himself a religious leader," he said in the book. "So, besides paying mullahs, the CIA created fake mullahs -- recruited agents who would proclaim themselves clerics and take a more aggressive position about nonbelievers."

"We are taking over radio stations and supporting clerics," a CIA source was quoted as saying. "It's back to propaganda. We are creating Muslim fanatics."

Bessler said the CIA also paid for mullahs to issue fatwas, or religious edicts, urging Muslims to attack American forces. He did not specify the countries this took place in.

[...]

Tenet was quoted as saying it was up to him to accept responsibility for any mistakes related to the September 11, 2001, attacks and not blame specific employees as some in Congress had requested. Otherwise it could chill risk-taking essential to the CIA's mission.

"If you think this is about protecting your image or yourself, you're finished. Forget it," Tenet was quoted as saying.

"Nobody is perfect. But guys who have never run anything in their lives, who have never taken any risk in their lives, who have never managed a large work force, will tell you how to suck eggs and how to do your job on a daily basis. If you listen to them, you're listening to the wrong people," he said.

Bessler said the CIA used operatives from intelligence services in Arab countries including Jordan, Syria, and Egypt to infiltrate al Qaeda, develop intelligence, but also sow suspicion so members of the network would kill each other, the book said. Al Qaeda was blamed for the attacks.
___________________________

Makes sense, doesn't it? Then again, I told you so....



To: lorne who wrote (2791)9/25/2003 4:51:43 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3959
 
Ban on scarves angers lawyer dad

From combined dispatches

PARIS
— The simmering dispute in France over the right of Muslim girls to wear the head scarf in class burst into life again yesterday when two sisters were banned from a suburban Paris school for refusing to uncover parts of their face.

Lila and Alma Levy, 18- and 16-year-old daughters of a Jewish man and a Muslim woman, were ordered to stay away from the Henri Wallon school in the northern suburb of Aubervilliers pending a decision by the school's disciplinary board in 10 days.

According to a note from the education authority, the girls were wearing clothes "of an ostentatious character" that were also unsuitable for sports lessons. And it said the sisters caused a "public nuisance" by taking part in a demonstration in front of the school Tuesday in favor of head scarves.

The girls' lawyer father, Laurent Levy, reacted angrily to their exclusion from school and threatened legal action unless they are quickly readmitted.

"Three quarters of the children at their school are from immigrant families. Perhaps a half are of Muslim origin. Saying to them that just because they practice the religion of their ancestors they are doing something ugly is a surefire way of causing an explosion," Mr. Levy said at a press conference.

He said his daughters had been told they could wear head scarves only if they showed the roots of their hair, earlobes and neck — but they regarded this as unacceptable to their faith.

The wearing of Islamic head scarves in school is fiercely opposed by upholders of France's secular tradition, who say it entrenches inequality between the sexes and the division of society into religious communities.

After similar disputes in the past, a compromise was reached under which school principals are given latitude to decide whether a girl's head scarf is sufficiently discreet.

But under pressure from left-wing teacher unions, the government announced earlier this year that it is considering a law that would make all signs of religious affiliation illegal in schools, prompting an angry response from many Muslims that it would be a form of discrimination.

In Germany, meanwhile, the country's highest court ruled yesterday that a regional state was wrong in banning a teacher from wearing a Muslim head scarf in the classroom.

The German court battle began in 1998 when Fereshta Ludin, a 31-year-old German of Afghan origin, applied for a job at a public elementary school in the southern state of Baden-Wuerttemberg, and was turned down over her insistence on wearing the Muslim head scarf on the job.

The school said that would violate the religious neutrality the German constitution requires of state institutions. Miss Ludin argued her rejection violated her right to religious freedom.

The German Constitutional Court ruled the state was wrong to deny Miss Ludin a job but only because Baden-Wuerttemberg currently has no law banning head scarves.

washtimes.com