>Date: Fri, 26 Feb 1999 22:41:55 -0800
>From:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Alex Constantine)
>Subject:Bin Laden's US Connections 3
>
>News & Analysis: North America: US Militarism
>
>Charges brought against former Green Beret
>More connections between US agents and embassy bombings
>
>By Martin McLaughlin
>7 November 1998
>
>Several reports appearing in the American press reveal
>new connections between the August 7 bombing of US
>embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and the activities of US
>intelligence agencies and paramilitary forces. These
>reports pose the question whether the embassy bombings
>were the product of a US government operation gone awry.
>They moreover highlight the role played by US and other
>intelligence agencies in the activities of terrorist and
>alleged terrorist organizations, which raise the
>possibility that such tragedies as the embassy
>explosions may involve an element of provocation on the
>part of these agencies.
>
>The New York Times reported October 30 that a former
>Green Beret sergeant and instructor has been secretly
>charged by federal prosecutors in connection with the
>bombing of the embassies in Nairobi and Dar es-Salaam.
>The charges are sealed so that the nature of the
>indictment is not known, but the former soldier, Ali A.
>Mohamed, is in custody at the Metropolitan Correctional
>Center in New York City.
>
>Former Sgt. Mohamed's career gives an extraordinary
>glimpse of the relations between the CIA, the Pentagon
>and Islamic militants recruited by the US government for
>the war against Soviet forces who invaded Afghanistan in
>1979 and waged a decade-long war against guerrilla
>forces backed by the US, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.
>
>Mohamed, born in Egypt and educated at the Egyptian
>military academy, served in the Egyptian army and then
>as a security officer for Egyptair, the country's
>airline, before emigrating to the United States in 1985.
>According to a report that appeared in the Boston Globe
>in 1995, Mohamed was brought into the United States
>under a special CIA program that provides visas and
>citizenship for key informants.
>
>The former Egyptian officer served as a special warfare
>instructor for the Green Berets at Ft. Bragg, North
>Carolina from 1986 to 1989, helping train American
>special forces who were to operate in Afghanistan and in
>other predominately Moslem countries throughout the
>Middle East and North Africa. Mohamed appeared on army
>videotapes that were used to educate soldiers and
>and Australian officers bound for the Persian Gulf war zone in 1990.
>
> At about the same time, Mohamed had begun training
>former Afghan guerrilla fighters now living in the
>United States, including some of those who were later
>arrested in the World Trade Center bombing or convicted
>on charges of planning other bomb attacks in the New
>York City area.
>
>The Times, citing intelligence sources, suggests that
>like many of the Islamic fundamentalists who
>collaborated with the CIA in Afghanistan, Mohamed turned
>against the US government after it dispatched hundreds
>of thousands of troops to Saudi Arabia and waged war
>against Iraq.
>
>Such a political transformation, however likely, does
>not explain Mohamed's alleged involvement in training
>former Afghan guerrillas in bomb-making in 1989, while
>he was still on active service in the Green Berets, and
>                   while the Afghan mujehadeen were still allies of the
>                   Pentagon and CIA. It is also significant that well after
>                   his alleged break with the US government, in the early
>                   1990s, Mohamed worked as an informer for the FBI in
>                   efforts to detect smuggling of undocumented workers from
>                   Mexico.
>
>                   According to the Times account, the key link between
>                   Mohamed and those involved in the World Trade Center
>                   bombing was El Sayyid Nosair, the Egyptian immigrant
>                   imprisoned in the assassination of the fascistic Zionist
>                   extremist Meir Kahane.
>
>                   Nosair was put on trial for allegedly assisting the
>                   World Trade Center bombers while he was in prison. His
>                   defense, largely unreported at the time of his trial,
>                   was that the group of immigrants from the Middle East
>                   was receiving paramilitary training from Mohamed as part
>                   of a US government program to prepare them for combat in
>                   Afghanistan.
>
>                   By the time of the World Trade Center bombing, Mohamed
>                   had left the United States, working first as a security
>                   officer for Saudi construction magnate Osama bin Laden,
>                   then seen in Afghanistan in 1992 at a camp for Islamic
>                   guerrilla fighters built with US government funds and
>                   staffed with recruits from all over the Moslem world,
>                   under bin Laden's supervision.
>
>                   Most of this information must have been provided to the
>                   Times, the Washington Post and other newspapers by CIA
>                   and military intelligence sources, seeking to portray
>                   bin Laden as the mastermind of a huge terrorist
>                   apparatus which must be combated by mobilizing US
>                   military forces. But the details raise many questions
>                   about the close collaboration between bin Laden and the
>                   US government.
>
>                   A second series of press reports revealed that the CIA
>                   had received explicit warnings about the attacks on the
>                   Kenya and Tanzania embassies only a few months before
>                   the bombs which killed 270 people, the vast majority
>                   innocent civilians.
>
>                   Another Egyptian man, Mustafa Mahmoud Said Ahmed, jailed
>                   in Tanzania in the bombing investigation, walked into
>                   the Nairobi embassy in November 1997 and gave a detailed
>                   account of the bombing plans. Ahmed was questioned
>                   intensively, but his story was discounted by the CIA,
>                   according to the New York Times, after "a foreign
>                   intelligence service that cooperates with the agency
>                   believed that Mr. Ahmed was a fabricator of
>                   information." The foreign intelligence service was
>                   almost certainly the Israeli Mossad.
>
>                   It is significant that although Ahmed clearly had
>                   advance knowledge of the bombing and could be an
>                   important witness, if not a suspect, the Clinton
>                   administration has made no attempt to extradite the
>                   Egyptian citizen from Tanzania, although similar actions
>                   have been taken against several other suspects in the
>                   embassy bombings.
>




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