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Posted By: UT
Date: 3-Mar-2003-18:07:29
Subject: New War Thread (the other one's gettin' too long)

While the headlines of the world's newspapers are full of the "success story" of how Khalid Shaikh Mohammed was captured alive in Pakistan, throwing fear into the worldwide Al Quaeda network, this story from Asia Times claims that the ugly sucker has been dead for some time now, which would make the "success story" a big, steaming pile of propaganda bullshit. So, your "seeing" task of the day is -- which story is true, and which story is bullshit? Welcome to the world of Big Brother News... :-)


A chilling inheritance of terror
By Syed Saleem Shahzad

KARACHI - Ever since the frenzied shootout last month on September 11
in Karachi there have been doubts over whether Khalid Shaikh Mohammed,
the self-proclaimed head of al-Qaeda's military committee, died in the
police raid on his apartment.

Certainly, another senior al-Qaeda figure, Ramzi Binalshibh, widely
attributed as being the coordinator of the September 11 attacks on the
United States a year earlier, was taken alive and handed over to the
US. The latest information is that he is on a US warship somewhere in
the Gulf.

Now it has emerged that Kuwaiti national Khalid Shaikh Mohammed did
indeed perish in the raid, but his wife and child were taken from the
apartment and handed over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI), in whose hands they remain.

Sources close to Pakistani intelligence agents say that the wife,
under intense interrogation, has revealed information that is likely
to lead to a new crackdown in Pakistan, as well as in Southeast Asia.

After the Taliban and al-Qaeda were routed in Afghanistan at the end
of 2001, many fled to Pakistan to regroup and set up new cells. One of
these, as described in Asia Times Online, From the al-Qaeda puzzle, a
picture emerges, was in Karachi, with Khalid Shaikh Mohammed as its
head.

Despite being tracked by informers within Pakistan's Inter-Services
Intelligence (ISI), Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, who has been described as
"probably the only man who knows all the [al-Qaeda] pieces of the
puzzle", always managed to remain one step ahead of any raiding
parties in the slum areas along the coastal belt of Karachi.

However, it was then learned that Shaikh Mohammed had established
connections with some local groups, including underworld figures, to
entrench his cell. Using highly sensitive equipment, in April a call
was tracked to someone by the name of Arif, living in the densely
populated southwestern part of the city. Arif spoke to a Tunisian,
passing on a message from Shaikh Mohammed. Subsequently, the Tunisian
is believed to be the man who rammed a truck laden with explosives
into a Jewish synagogue in Djerba in Tunisia in which many French and
German citizens died.

After this suicide attack, the FBI were onto Shaikh Mohammed in a big
way, and, no doubt not entirely without coincidence, on September 11
they decided on a showdown at the apartment of Shaikh Mohammed, his
wife and child, in the Defense Housing Authority near Korangi Road. A
number of Arabs were also living in the apartment at the time.

Initially, the joint ISI-FBI plan was to take Shaikh Mohammed alive so
that he could be grilled, especially as he was believed to have
knowledge of other al-Qaeda cells in Afghanistan, Somalia, Sudan,
Yemen and elsewhere. However, as a plainclothed officer climbed the
stairs toward the third-floor apartment, a hand grenade was thrown,
and he retreated. Reinforcements then arrived, and for the next few
hours a fierce gun battle blazed.

The FBI, still keen to take Shaikh Mohammed alive, teargassed the
area, and a number of people were captured. However, despite
instructions to the contrary, a few Pakistan Rangers entered the flat,
where they found Shaikh Mohammed and another man, allegedly with their
hands up. The Rangers nevertheless opened fire on the pair.

Later, the Pakistani press carried pictures of a message scrawled in
blood on the wall of the flat, proclaiming the Muslim refrain of
Kalma, in Arabic: "There is no God except Allah, Mohammed is his
messenger"). An official who was present in the flat at the time of
the shooting has told Asia Times Online that the message was written
by Shaikh Mohammed with his own blood as his life drained from him.

Subsequently, to their surprise, the raiders learned that Ramzi
Binalshibh had been netted in the swoop. And nothing further was said
of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed.

But now it emerges that an Arab woman and a child were taken to an ISI
safe house, where they identified the Shaikh Mohammed's body as their
husband and father. The body was kept in a private NGO mortuary for 20
days before being buried, under the surveillance of the FBI, in a
graveyard in the central district of Karachi.

The widow subsequently underwent exhaustive interrogation in the
custody of FBI officials, during which she revealed details of people
who visited her husband, and of his other contacts and plans. News of
the death of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed was intentionally suppressed so
that officials could play on the power of his name to follow up leads
and contacts.

From this it emerges that, in particular, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed was
in close contact with the Rabitatul Mujahideen, an alliance formed by
Indonesia's Jemaah Islamiyah to act as a central committee for leaders
of the various militant groups in Southeast Asia. He was also in touch
with dissident groups within the Lashkar-i-Taiba, a Pakistani-based
militant group that has been active in Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) in
Indian-administered Kashmir, and another Pakistani militia, the
Ansarul Islam.

Intelligence officials now believe that through these links a new wave
of terror will be unleashed - and officials have already taken the
precaution to warn the intelligence agencies of friendly countries to
check the lists of all people who have undergone flight training in
the past six months: They have been led to believe that another World
Trade Center/Pentagon attack is being planned, although not on a
target in the US.

©2002 Asia Times Online Co, Ltd. All rights reserved.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/DJ30Df01.html


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