"In the aftermath of the fall of Fallujah, foreign fighters in Iraq
convened a shura, or council, Karahan said. The meeting authorized 10
separate attacks on Israeli targets. Sakka, who told Turkish
interrogators he learned bomb-making in Iraq, volunteered to strike
the Israeli cruise ships that regularly call on Turkey's southern
coast, Karahan said."

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11451355/

A bomb-builder emerges from the shadows

Syrian linked to al Qaeda plots describes plan to attack cruise ship

By Karl Vick
The Washington Post
Updated: 11:05 p.m. ET Feb. 19, 2006

ANTALYA, Turkey - Right up to the hot August night his apartment
exploded, Louai Sakka's neighbors took him for a newlywed. The lanky
Syrian was not seen much in the corridors of the high-rise residential
complex where he lived in this sunny resort city, but he spent time
nuzzling an attractive young brunette and sipping beer beside the pool.

His real identity began to emerge shortly after 3 a.m. on Aug. 4, when
the windows of Apt. 1703 blew out, showering the parking lot with the
contents of the kitchen and bits and pieces of the massive bomb Sakka
had been painstakingly assembling in the living room. Sakka, who
escaped the inferno only to be arrested two days later, turned out to
be a senior operative for al Qaeda and intimately linked to major
terrorist plots in Turkey, Jordan and Iraq, where he had worked beside
Abu Musab Zarqawi, a longtime confederate.

He showed up in Antalya last summer with tens of thousands of dollars
in cash and a face altered by plastic surgery. After his arrest, he
told investigators he had planned to die steering a yacht laden with
explosives into a cruise ship he believed was filled with U.S.
soldiers and which was already approaching across the turquoise
Mediterranean.

The attack, just 48 hours away when the chemicals ignited, was
intended to crown a wide-ranging career in terrorism. Sakka played a
role in the so-called millennium plot to attack hotels in Amman,
Jordan, on Dec. 31, 1999. Turkish prosecutors also describe him as the
planner of the 2003 truck bombings that killed 57 people in Istanbul,
financed with $160,000 in al Qaeda funds.

Between attacks, according to his attorney, Sakka provided false
passports and other means to help Islamic militants through the web of
paths that U.S. military officials call rat lines. The routes
crisscross Turkey to and from Afghanistan, Chechnya and, since 2003,
Iraq, where Sakka traveled after the Istanbul bombings. Insurgents say
Louai al-Turki, as he was known there, played a prominent role in
major attacks on U.S. bases and commanded insurgent forces in Fallujah
when it served as the militants' headquarters.

"He's been involved in this for 15 years," said the attorney, Osman
Karahan.

The significance of Sakka, who was 32 at the time of his arrest, was
slow to emerge. But he spoke at length to Turkish interrogators,
admitting his role in past plots and describing Iraq as a training
ground for terrorists comparable to Chechnya and Bosnia in the past,
according to people who have read a summary of his statement. Sakka,
who remains in a jail in Istanbul, declined to sign the account,
however, on the advice of his controversial attorney.

"Actually, he does not deny his past activities," said Karahan, who
subscribes to the same militant vision of Islam as many of his
clients. "We are people who work for justice, so we want to tell the
truth. Things need to be taken out of the shadows." Investigators have
pressed Sakka to provide evidence against Karahan.

The attorney's office candidly declares his beliefs. The waiting room
features copies of Kaide magazine, the Turkish spelling of Qaeda, with
ads announcing the martyrdom of Turkish volunteers in Iraq. Copies of
a paperback titled "Virgins of Paradise: Eyes Like Fawns and Shining
Skin" are on sale for $4. Every image of a human face, including the
portrait on Karahan's diploma, is covered by a tab of paper. "Angels
don't come where faces are pictured," Karahan explained.

Logistical hub for terrorists
The lawyer said he handles almost 80 percent of the criminal cases
brought against Islamic militants in Turkey, a practice that increased
sharply after Sept. 11, 2001, when Turkey began detaining large
numbers of suspects at its borders. In 2000, he secured the release of
Sakka's wife and three children, who were taken in an operation that
narrowly missed Sakka.

"He called me on the phone from Holland," Karahan said. "He said he
was in Istanbul a few days earlier but managed to escape."

Born in Aleppo, in Syria's north, the son of successful factory owner,
Sakka forsook a "rich life" for the struggles of radical Islam, the
attorney said. He said Sakka worked in Turkey starting in 1998, easing
the passage of militants through a country that U.S. and Turkish
authorities have long acknowledged is a major logistical hub for
terrorists. Karahan said that included preparations for the Sept. 11
attacks, notably in Bursa, a city 60 miles south of Istanbul.

It is unclear when Sakka crossed paths with Zarqawi, but a Jordanian
court convicted both men in absentia for plotting to attack an Amman
hotel, border crossings and Christian tourist sites during the
celebration of the millennium.

By 2003, Turkish prosecutors say, Sakka was in the thick of the
planning for the bombings of two synagogues, the British Consulate and
a British bank in Istanbul over two days in November that year. Though
Karahan said Sakka now denies involvement, an indictment released Feb.
10 charges that he "proposed" the attacks, with specific approval from
both Zarqawi and Osama bin Laden. Testimony in the mass trial of more
than 70 Turks already charged in the case indicated that Sakka
provided all the funds for the attacks, with the largest installment
delivered in a sock stuffed with euros from Saudi sympathizers,
according to the indictment. When the bombs went off, he cheered as he
watched satellite television reports with the leading Turkish
plotters, all of whom had fled to Aleppo.

Sakka next surfaced in Iraq, infiltrating the border via routes he was
known for helping volunteers navigate, insurgents said. A former
member of Zarqawi's group, Abu Khalid Dulaimi, 55, said Sakka arrived
in Fallujah in March 2004 with seven Turkish men and helped defend the
city against the first, aborted Marine offensive in April. Reunited
with Zarqawi, he was well known as a key aide to the insurgent leader.
Prosecutors say he was involved in the slaying of a Turkish truck driver.

Dulaimi said Sakka provided coordinates for mortar attacks on U.S.
bases in Mosul, Samarra, Baghdad and Anbar province. He said Sakka
also played a "vivid" role in an attack on Abu Ghraib prison, where
the inmates included two organizers of the Istanbul bombings. A third
organizer, Habib Akdas, was reported killed in the second, successful
Marine offensive on Fallujah in November 2004.

Fall of Fallujah

In the aftermath of the fall of Fallujah, foreign fighters in Iraq
convened a shura, or council, Karahan said. The meeting authorized 10
separate attacks on Israeli targets. Sakka, who told Turkish
interrogators he learned bomb-making in Iraq, volunteered to strike
the Israeli cruise ships that regularly call on Turkey's southern
coast, Karahan said. The attorney said Sakka believed U.S. soldiers
used the vessels for R & R and that his own days were numbered because
his surgically altered face had appeared on an insurgent video of a
downed American drone in Iraq. Turkish doctors had detected a nose job
and scars suggesting Sakka might also have altered his chin and eyebrows.

"He decided it's about time his life ends, because he changed his face
but he was still recognized," Karahan said.

In Antalya, Sakka spent lavishly preparing for the attack. Using an
alias, he put down $60,000 on a villa in the Beldibi neighborhood,
insisting on the unit closest to the beach, with a panoramic view of
the resort city and its harbor. "His criterion was it had to be
directly on the water, no matter what the price was," said Mehmet
Yildirim, the watchman.

The two-bedroom Apt. 1703 was closer to town, in a complex overlooking
the marina where Sakka moored a 27-foot yacht, the Tufan. On board was
diving equipment and a submersible water scooter, capable of running
for 45 minutes at a depth of 75 feet.

Karahan said Sakka spent days chatting with Israeli tourists, who
flocked to the Turkish coast in summer, and learned the precise
arrival time and route of the ship he planned to attack as it
approached Antalya. In a rented Hyundai, he ferried the ingredients
for a one-ton bomb -- hydrogen peroxide, aluminum powder, acetone --
from the port city of Mersin. Then he scoured Antalya's industrial
zone for a shop that worked with chrome.

Sakka needed someone to build a distiller, a glorified pressure cooker
to concentrate the hydrogen.

"He said he wanted to increase the hydrogen peroxide to 70 or 75
percent by extracting the water," said the metalworker who did the
job, at the cost of another 2,000 euros, after checking out Sakka's
claim that he wanted to use the chemical to bleach wood. The
metalworker, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of fears for
his safety, said his only suspicion was that Sakka might be making
drugs. But he said a friend who works with chemicals told him the
wood-bleaching purpose made sense, and Sakka named a genuine firm in
Syria as his employer.

During the week it took to build the device, Sakka spent time at the
shop; one day, the conversation turned to al Qaeda. "God knows how it
came up," the metalworker said. "I said, 'Nah, there's no such thing
as al Qaeda.' Probably he was thinking, 'Yeah, you'll find out!' "

He did not look the part of an Islamic radical. The metalworker
recalled pulling up next to Sakka on a street, rapping on the window
and asking him why he wasn't in Syria, where he claimed he was headed
the day the distiller was lifted into his trunk. Sakka's reply was a
leering nod toward the striking young woman in the passenger seat,
apparently the companion neighbors saw him nuzzling by the pool at the
apartment complex.

Inside his apartment, the living room became a workshop crowded with
plastic vats, gas masks, fire extinguishers and PVC pipes to circulate
the water needed to keep stable more than 1,000 pounds of hydrogen.
The room held 200 pounds of aluminum powder and 13 pounds of C-4
plastic explosives. Sakka said he intended to finish assembling the
bomb on board the Tufan to ensure that no Turks were endangered.

Suspicious ID

How the fire began is unclear. The metalworker suspects it was sparked
by his creation, wired for industrial use at 7,500 watts, enough to
melt the wiring in a residential building. Hamid Obysi, a fellow
Syrian who was assisting Sakka, told police they were both awakened by
the explosion -- a small one, by all accounts, and less damaging than
the resulting fire -- and scrambled for their lives, leaving behind a
laptop computer, four cell phones, a digital camera and seven fake
IDs. They took a taxi to Beldibi, where, after a quick visit to the
villa, Sakka gave the guard 2,000 euros and instructions to keep
quiet, prosecutors said. The fugitives left town by bus, with Sakka
giving Obysi 1,000 euros in getaway money. Obysi was arrested trying
to enter Syria.

Sakka proceeded east to Diyarbakir and made plans to double back,
booking a domestic flight to Istanbul. He got as far as the police
check at the airport, where his attorney said he surrendered to police
officers who found his ID suspicious.

"I'm the one you're looking for," he said.


URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11451355/






--------------------------
Want to discuss this topic?  Head on over to our discussion list, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
--------------------------
Brooks Isoldi, editor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.intellnet.org

  Post message: osint@yahoogroups.com
  Subscribe:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Unsubscribe:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has 
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. OSINT, as a part of 
The Intelligence Network, is making it available without profit to OSINT 
YahooGroups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the 
included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, 
techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other 
intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes 
only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material 
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use 
this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' 
you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to