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From
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/16/international/middleeast/16IRAQ.html
?ei=5006&en=74d9e39970d99a8d&ex=1009170000&partner=ALTAVISTA1&pagewant
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December 16, 2001

New Clue Fails to Explain Iraq Role in Sept. 11 Attack

By CHRIS HEDGES with DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.

hen Czech officials disclosed that Mohamed Atta, the suspected
mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks, had met last April with an Iraqi
diplomat in Prague, it stirred immediate speculation about whether
Iraq had a role in killing thousands of Americans.

But in the weeks since, the Prague meeting has emerged as an object
lesson in the limits of intelligence reports rather than the
cornerstone of the case against Iraq. Interviews with Iraqi
defectors, Czech officials, and people who knew the Iraqi diplomat
have only deepened the mystery surrounding Mr. Atta's travels through
central Europe.

Iraqi opposition groups say the episode cannot have been a coincidence. According to 
several former Iraqi intelligence officials, the diplomat was actually a well trained 
spy with ties to terrorist operations, a master of
 disguise whose movements are supervised by Iraq's most senior officials.

American officials in Washington, by contrast, said the diplomat was a minor 
functionary who happens to have the same last name as a more important Iraqi 
intelligence agent. These officials said that they had no evidence
that Iraq was involved in the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon.

There are even questions about whether the reports of the meeting took place. An 
associate said the Iraqi diplomat had a business selling cars and met frequently with 
a used car dealer from Germany who bore a striking res
emblance to Mr. Atta. Just this week, there were even reports from Prague that the 
Mohamed Atta who visited Prague last April was a different man with the same name.

In a retreat from the earlier definitive statements by his government, the president 
of the Czech Republic, Vaclav Havel, recently said there was "a 70 percent" chance the 
meeting between Mr. Atta and an Iraqi agent named
 Ahmed Khalil Ibrahim Samir al-Ani took place.

With the Taliban vanquished and Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda fighters cornered in 
Afghanistan, this sort of arcane debate among experts has taken on new significance. 
President Bush has said he intends to defeat the nations
 and groups that support terrorism, a global war whose targets will be selected by 
intelligence agencies sifting through fragmentary conflicting evidence comparable to 
the reports about the Prague meeting.

"There was definitely one meeting," between Mr. Ani and Mr. Atta, an intelligence 
official in Washington said. "We don't know if it was significant. We certainly don't 
attribute to it the significance others attribute to
it automatically. Just because there was a meeting doesn't mean it was connected to 
9/11."

This much has been asserted. Mr. Atta went to Prague last April and then flew to 
Florida as the plot to ram jetliners into buildings gained momentum. It has been 
reported by Czech authorities that he met with Mr. Ani, the
 diplomat who Iraqi opposition leaders insist is an important spymaster for Saddam 
Hussein.

American intelligence officials who believe that Mr. Ani is a low- ranking diplomat of 
little consequence emphasize that the Iraqi National Congress, the opposition group 
seeking to overthrow Saddam Hussein, has an agenda
 and a history of coloring fact to suit its needs.

As if the waters were not muddied enough, some in Prague who knew the diplomat say he 
met with a used car salesman named Saleh from Nuremberg, Germany, who looked like Mr. 
Atta. "He is a perfect double for Atta," said a S
yrian businessman who has lived in Prague for 35 years and says he knew the diplomat 
and the car salesman. "I saw him several times with Mister Consul."

On Friday, a major Czech newspaper, quoting Czech intelligence officials, offered 
still another theory: the Mohamed Atta who came to Prague last April was not the 
hijacker but a Pakistani of the same name.

"He didn't have the same identity card number," an unidentified Interior Ministry 
official told the newspaper Mlada Fronta Dnes. "There was a great difference in their 
ages, their nationalities didn't match, basically not
hing — it was someone else." The details of the meeting, as reported by the Czech 
authorities, remain vague. The Czech intelligence service has not said how it knows 
the meeting took place, or what was said.

"We went to the public just with the thing we can really prove," said Hynek Kmonicek, 
the Czech ambassador to the United Nations who gave Mr. Ani his expulsion orders last 
April. "And we can really prove just one thing: t
hat these two people met." But his proof, he acknowledged, is the Czech Interior 
Ministry announcement.

Mr. Ani was expelled from Prague for activities that were described as "incompatible 
with his diplomatic status." Details of his infraction have never been made public but 
they had nothing to do with Mr. Atta, who was unk
nown to Czech intelligence, Mr. Kmonicek said.

A number of Arabs in Prague who knew Mr. Ani say he had every attribute of a minor 
figure in a minor post, a woman chaser and drinker with a tyrannical penchant whose 
main task seemed to be urging Iraqis to return home. Y
et former Iraqi intelligence agents in exile in Europe, made available for interviews 
by the Iraqi National Congress, say they grew up with and worked with Mr. Ani and that 
he is an established and respected spymaster.

His specialty is said to be the recruitment of foreign Muslim militants who support 
Iraq's long campaign against America and the close surveillance and intimidation of 
Iraqi dissidents.

The former Iraqi agents in Europe say that Mr. Ani, is in fact, Muhammad Kailil 
Ibrahim al-Ani.

"Baghdad would only use Ani for big jobs, serious jobs," said a former major in Iraqi 
intelligence. "He had something very important to tell Atta, or Atta had something 
very important to tell Baghdad."

Mr. Ani, for his part, adamantly denied any ties to terrorism or Sept. 11 and said he 
had never heard of Mr. Atta until after the terror attack. Jaroslev Kmenta, a Czech 
journalist who knew Mr. Ani in Prague, interviewed
him in Baghdad last month.

` "I've never in my life met him, never seen him, never spoke to him," Mr. Kmenta 
quoted him as saying. "The first time I heard of him was after Sept. 11."

Mr. Kmenta said Mr. Ani seemed to be living well in Baghdad, driving a late-model BMW 
and eating at a riverside restaurant, which would support the thesis that he is a 
figure of importance to the regime because economic s
anctions have left most Iraqi civil servants living in penury.

The defectors in Europe said that like many agents sent abroad, Mr. Ani altered his 
real name from post to post, dropping his first name, Muhammad, in Prague and going by 
Ahmed.

"I went down to renew my driver's license in 1991 in Baghdad," said the former major 
in the intelligence service, who fled to Europe after his brother was executed for 
involvement in a failed coup in 1994 against Mr. Huss
ein. "I saw Ani dressed in jeans, with an earring and with long flowing hair. He 
looked like a hippie. He was on a job. I could not speak with him. I saw him a year 
later dressed in long Arab robes."

He said Mr. Ani grew up in a middle class neighborhood in Baghdad and joined the 
intelligence service, following a year or two of university studies. He was sent to 
study at The Institute of National Security, the prepara
tory school for Iraq's intelligence service. In 1994, the defectors said, he was 
transferred to a new intelligence branch created for foreign operations called Al-Amin 
al- Khas. He soon was part of special operations, a u
nit for covert activities like recruitment and assassination.

In Prague, few who were interviewed about Mr. Ani thought of him in such vaunted 
terms. But they recognized allegations of highhandedness. Waled Majed Bahnam, 56, and 
his son Majid Waled Majed, 22, both Iraqis, own the Ba
vodo restaurant in Prague. In July 2000 for the Iraqi national day, Mr. Ani ordered 
$1,200 worth of food and catering from the restaurant.

After three days, when the bill still had not been paid, the mother
called asking for the money. The family said Mr. Ani and the
accountant came over and screamed at them. "They said `We are the
embassy, you are nothing, we are the boss, you are animals,' " Mr.
Bahnam said. Mr. Ani threatened to revoke their passports and the
accountant said he would kill the couple's eldest son. When the
family complained to the Foreign Ministry, the embassy paid the bill.


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