-Caveat Lector-

------- Forwarded message follows -------
Saturday Oct. 27, 2001; 2:31 p.m. EDT

Clintonized FBI Fingers 'Right-Wing Hate Groups' in Anthrax Probe

In a move reminiscent of the botched FBI investigations of the
Clinton era, the
bureau is actively pursuing weak leads suggesting "right-wing hate
groups" are
involved in the recent wave of anthrax attacks on the U.S.

Meanwhile, clear circumstantial evidence pointing to Saddam
Hussein and Osama bin
Laden appears to have been placed on the back burner.

Before the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11 the U.S. hadn't suffered a
single case of
inhalation anthrax since 1976.

Still probers continue to insist they see no connection between the
events of that
day and the anthrax-laden letters sent out the next week to every
branch of the U.S.
government, the CIA, the big three network news divisions and the
headquarters
prominent newspapers from New York to Florida.

"Everything seems to lean toward a domestic source," one senior
FBI official told the
Washington Post Saturday. "Nothing seems to fit with an overseas
terrorist type
operation."

For some victims, such a claim seems more than a little absurd.

Steve Coz, for instance, whose National Enquirer headquarters in
Florida was the
first to be hit with an anthrax attack, complained two weeks ago that
al Qaeda terror
kamikaze pilot Mohamed Atta had been spotted in a local drugstore
with reddened hands
-- a condition he thought could be a symptom of cutaneous anthrax.

Another detail the FBI seems anxious to overlook: The widely
reported visits by Atta
and his coconspirators to Florida airfields where they inquired
about renting
cropdusters and the size of the chemical loads the planes could
disperse.

The bureau seems none too interested in other potential evidence
that could tie Atta
to the anthrax assault.

"In Florida, agents haven't tested cars or residences used by some
of the hijackers,
including those of Mohamed Atta," reported the Wall Street Journal
Thursday. "FBI
officials said testing isn't a priority, because they assume that by
now, the
hijackers' cars and apartments would have been cleaned, removing
any trace of
anthrax."

Ken Alibek, who headed up the Soviet Union's biological weapons
program said the
FBI's "assumption" is wrong. He told the Journal that investigators
should be
conducting extensive testing for anthrax traces in vehicles used by
suspects and in
all places that a suspect resided.

Alibek's advice notwithstanding, Special Agent Rene Salinas told
the paper, "At this
time, there are no plans to go back and check (Atta's car and
apartment) for traces
of anthrax."

The FBI's belief that so-called domestic terror groups are behind
the bioterror
scourge is also belied by Friday's reports that anthrax found in a
letter sent to
Sen. Tom Daschle contained bentonite, a substance weapons
experts say is Iraq's
signature.

While some analysts point out that bentonite was also used in U.S.
anthrax
production, the Journal reported Friday that those stocks "were
destroyed in the
1960's."

Dr. Khidhir Hamza, a former top official in Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction
program, also disagrees with the FBI's domestic terrorism hunch.

"This is Iraq," Hamza told CNBC.

"This is Iraq's work. Nobody (else) has the expertise outside the
U.S. and outside
the major powers who work on germ warfare. Nobody has the
expertise and has any
motive to attack the U.S. except Saddam to do this. This is Iraq.
This is Saddam."
(Read NewsMax.com's exclusive report on Dr. Hamza's
comments.)

Saturday's news that the Czech government now confirms several
meetings betweeen Atta
and a top Iraqi intelligence official in Prague last June -- combined
with reports
last week that bin Laden was able to purchase anthrax from a
factory in the Czech
Republic -- add further legitimacy to suspicions of a foreign
bioterror tie. (See:
Osama Bought Anthrax)

Still, as the evidence mounts of al Qaeda and Iraqi involvement,
the FBI seems
hellbent on looking the other way.

"Ultra right-wing organizations -- including a particular West Coast
Group -- have
become a key focus of the massive federal investigation into the
murderous anthrax
attacks," the New York Post reported Thursday.

"Our feeling is the anthrax does not point to an international
terrorist group," an
FBI source told the Post for its front page report.

The sentiment was echoed by a Washington Post front page report
two days later:

"The FBI and U.S. Postal Inspection Service are considering a wide
range of domestic
possibilities, including associates of right-wing hate groups and
U.S. residents
sympathetic to the causes of Islamic extremists," reported Post star
Bob Woodward.

What actual evidence does the FBI's have of a homegrown anthrax
plot? Not much, at
least if published reports are any indication.

Charges against suspected domestic bioterrorist Larry Wayne
Harris, who was thought
to be targeting Las Vegas with "weapons grade anthrax" earlier this
year, had to be
dropped after the "suspicious biological agent" he was carrying
turned out to be a
harmless anthrax vaccine.

At least 20 abortion clinics have been evacuated in the last three
years after
receiving anthrax threats -- including powdered letters. All turned
out to be hoaxes.


The only U.S. prosecution for domestic bioterrorism to date was for
a man who had
mailed out two suspicious vials along with the note, "You have just
been contaminated
by anthrax."

Though the threat alone was a crime, the vials themselves turned
out to contain
nothing more toxic than tap water.

In fact, of the more than 300 homegrown anthrax scares
investigated by the FBI in the
last three years, all proved to be bogus. Until bin Laden put the
U.S. in his
crosshairs on Sept. 11, that is.

Still, federal probers seem anxious to round up the usual suspects,
no matter how
unconvincing the evidence. One supposed hot lead currently being
pursued: the gun
show connection.

"The FBI has been making inquiries about a Nebraska man who for
several years has
been selling manuals at gun shows that provide information on
making chemical and
biological weapons," the Wall Street Journal reported Friday. If the
FBI thinks the
unidentified suspect actually possesses any anthrax, it isn't saying
so.

Then there's the ever popular militia angle, which the bureau is
reportedy following
with little apparent reason:

"In Michigan, FBI agents have met several times since Sept. 11
with Ann Arbor police
to talk about the whereabouts and capabilities of local militiamen,"
the Journal
noted. "(There's) some concern that people in that element might
see Sept. 11 as a
good way to get more notoriety and exposure," the local police
chief told the paper,
citing no other evidence.

Even the Southern Poverty Law Project, which monitors U.S. hate
groups and is seldom
reluctant to point fingers, told the Post they have seen no evidence
of a domestic
group capable of launching a sophisticated anthrax attack.

If these reports reflect the true thrust of the FBI's anthrax
investigation, it's
clear the bureau has yet to overcome eight years worth of
Clintonization, where the
only leads pursued were the ones that supported predetermined
outcomes.

In fact, the bureau's decision not to test Atta's apartment for trace
anthrax seems
like deja vu all over again.

Recall the Vincent Foster death case, where FBI agents told
Congress there was no
need to analyze blond hairs found on his body or carpet fibers on
his clothing.

Or Flight TWA 800, where investigators were uninterested in
talking to 300 witnesses
who said they saw a missile strike the plane.

With blunders like that, it's no wonder Mideast terrorists thought
they could get
away with anything.

http://www.newsmax.com/archive/print.shtml?a=2001/10/27/133313


------- End of forwarded message -------
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