New
<http://www.opednews.com/articles/genera_j_m__ber_070103_new_lead_could_link
_.htm>  Lead Could Link Al Qaeda To Khobar Bombing

by J.M. Berger <http://www.opednews.com/author/author3017.html>
http://www.opednews.com/articles/genera_j_m__ber_070103_new_lead_could_link_
.htm

 
<http://www.opednews.com/maxwrite/print_friendly.php?p=genera_j_m__ber_07010
3_new_lead_could_link_.htm>  

 
<http://www.populum.com/tellafriend.php?page=http://www.opednews.com/article
s/genera_j_m__ber_070103_new_lead_could_link_.htm> 

Buried within the 244 pages of Gitmo detainee abuse investigation reports
released by the FBI yesterday was a clue to one of the longstanding
mysteries in the War on Terror -- did al Qaeda have a role in the 1996
Khobar Towers bombing? (see:
http://intelfiles.egoplex.com/gitmo-fd-302-training-camps.pdf)

According to an FBI FD-302 interrogation record dated May 22, 2002, two FBI
agents questioned a Gitmo detainee who had been identified by Saudi and
Kuwaiti officials as a suspect in the Khobar bombing.

The detainee had been identified as a Khobar suspect by both Saudi and
Kuwaiti intelligence as early as 1996. He was allowed to emigrate to the
United States and was living in Buffalo, New York, at the time of the
September 11 attacks.

Despite the fact the detainee was known to two U.S. allies as a suspected
terrorist, the detainee was able to leave the United States three weeks
after 9/11 -- a period when thousands of Muslim men living here had been
rounded up and were being held without charge by U.S. officials.

The detainee was eventually apprehended in Afghanistan, the report said.

In June 1996, a truck bomb detonated at Khobar Towers, a U.S. military
dormitory in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. Nineteen Americans were killed in the
attack, which is believed to have been the work of Saudi Hezbollah.

For years, rumors have persisted that al Qaeda played a role in the attack
as well. The 9/11 Commission reported that Osama bin Laden received
congratulatory phone calls on the day of the attack and suggested a link.
During the 1990s, al Qaeda and Hezbollah collaborated in terrorist training
and other matters. The relationship between Hezbollah and al Qaeda was
brokered by Ali Mohamed, an Egyptian-American who worked as a trainer for al
Qaeda.

The detainee, apparently a Saudi national, recounted a long history of close
encounters with known al Qaeda networks, although he denied any involvement
in terrorism. In 1989, the detainee -- then 16 years old -- stayed at the
Bait Al-Ansar guesthouse in Peshawar, Pakistan. The house was owned and
operated by Osama bin Laden. Al Qaeda was founded in or around this location
at the same time.

The detainee received training at the nascent al Qaeda's Al-Sideek camp near
Khost, Afghanistan. He claimed he was physically unable to complete the
training due to obesity and asked to be sent home.

But in 1995, he traveled to Bosnia, where he served alongside al
Qaeda-linked Muslim fighters. The detainee claimed he was merely the unit's
cook, but he displayed knowledge of al Qaeda-linked charities and fighting
units in Bosnia during the interview with FBI agents. The detainee
subsequently traveled to Chechnya, another al Qaeda-linked hot-spot.

Over the years, the detainee frequently returned to Saudi Arabia, where he
worked as a liaison between the Saudi government and foreign contractors
based in the kingdom. But in 1996, he decided to travel to Tajikistan to
fight with Muslim jihadists there.

While he was awaiting a flight to Tajikistan out of Kuwait, the Khobar
bombing occurred, according to the detainee. The detainee said he was held
by Kuwaiti intelligence for 10 days and released without charge. A few weeks
later, the detainee returned to Saudi Arabia where he was again arrested on
suspicion of involvement in the Khobar attack, according to the detainee.

Saudi officials have released little information concering their
investigation of the Khobar attack. Then-FBI director Louis Freeh and others
have complained that the Saudi government obstructed their own efforts to
investigate the bombing.

The detainee said he was arrested, interrogated and released repeatedly
after his return to Saudi Arabia, and his passport was revoked for several
years. Finally, the detainee mamanged to leave the country through a special
passport program for Saudis of Bahraini descent. Despite his history with
Saudi and Kuwait authorities, he was able to obtain a visa from the U.S.
embassy and moved to the United States.

He lived in Indiana for several months, making visits to Michigan and
Buffalo, New York, during this time. Eventually, he moved to Buffalo where
he lived until three weeks after September 11, 2001. After the attacks, he
left the country -- apparently without incident -- and traveled to
Afghanistan through Iran.

Another FD-302 included in the Gitmo release details the interrogation of an
Egyptian prisoner who admitted that he was suspected in a 1995 attempt to
assassinate Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak during a trip to Ethiopia
(though he did not admit actually having a role in the attack).

Other detainees have also been alleged to be involved in this incident,
which is believed to have been an Egyptian Islamic Jihad operation sponsored
by Ayman al Zawahiri.
<http://intelfiles.egoplex.com/gitmo-fd-302-1995-mubarek.pdf> Click to view
PDF.

 <http://intelwire.egoplex.com/2007_01_02_exclusives.html> Click here for
full text of all FBI-Gitmo records.

 

http://intelwire.egoplex.com/

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