mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
573 lines
38 KiB
Plaintext
573 lines
38 KiB
Plaintext
<conspiracyFile>Wrong Number Filename: WTCBOMB1.ZIP
|
||
[From _The Village Voice_, March 30, 1993]
|
||
THE CIA AND THE SHEIK
|
||
The Agency Coddled Omar Abdel Rahman, Allowing
|
||
Him to Operate in the U.S.
|
||
Now This Unholy Alliance Has Blown Up in Our Faces.
|
||
By Robert I. Friedman
|
||
"They were talking all the time about targeting American symbols," says the
|
||
FBI undercover informant, "the Empire State Building, the Statue of
|
||
Liberty. A few of the guys came to the mosque to pray and go home. But
|
||
others gathered to conspire in small groups, talking in deep, low voices.
|
||
They see the U.S. as an imperialist power, the Big Satan, the root of all
|
||
the evil in the world."
|
||
The FBI operative, Mamdouh Zaki Zakhary, monitored the radical activities
|
||
at the El Salaam Mosque in Jersey City, which was the headquarters of the
|
||
terrorist cell that allegedly planned and carried our the of the World
|
||
Trade Center on February 26. Zakhary, a heavily bearded Coptic Christian
|
||
from Egypt who owned an import-export firm in Jersey City, spent a year and
|
||
a half spying on the local Arab American community and the mosque,
|
||
beginning January 10, 1990. During this time, he watched the first two men
|
||
arrested in connection with the bombing. Mohammed Salameh and Ibraham
|
||
Elgabrowny, as well as the spiritual leader who may have inspired them, the
|
||
fiery blind fundamentalist cleric Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, who is infamous
|
||
throughout the Arab world for his alleged role in the assassination of
|
||
Egyptian president Anwar el-Sadat.
|
||
"The only thing they want is to establish an Islamic world," Zakhary told
|
||
The Village Voice during an interview from his home in Alexandria, Egypt.
|
||
"They will do anything to achieve it. You have to understand their desire
|
||
to strike out, to avenge anything that hurts Islam. I asked Elgabrowny,
|
||
'Why do you stay here [in Brooklyn]?' And he told me, I want to earn their
|
||
dollars so that I can stab them in the back."
|
||
Zakhary reported the group's subversive activities in regular meetings with
|
||
his FBI handler, Special Agent Kenneth Strange. But Zakhary, who was not
|
||
able to penetrate the cell's inner circle, had no advance warning that
|
||
there was a plan to commit one of the most sensational acts of foreign
|
||
terrorism on American soil before the bombing of the World Trade Center:
|
||
the assassination of the controversial right-wing Zionist leader Rabbi Meir
|
||
Kahane.
|
||
On November 5, 1990, El Sayyid Nosair, a pudgy, bearded 34-year-old
|
||
Egyptian American and a core member of the El Salaam Mosque, calmly walked
|
||
up to the podium of a conference room in the Halloran House, a midtown
|
||
Manhattan hotel, after Kahane had finished, a one-hour speech. Moments
|
||
later, Kahane was shot once in the throat at point-blank range with a .357
|
||
magnum, and Nosair bolted outside. During a running gun battle down
|
||
Lexington Avenue, Nosair was wounded by an off-duty postal inspector and
|
||
finally captured by New York City police.
|
||
"At first, no one knew who Nosair was," recalls Zakhary, "so when I heard
|
||
about it I called the FBI and identified him,' I told them he was a member
|
||
of the mosque and that he was very close with the sheikh [Abdel Rahman]. I
|
||
told them that, four days before, I saw with my own eyes the sheikh meeting
|
||
with Nosair at a Lebanese restaurant on Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. It was
|
||
7 p.m. There was Nosair, the sheikh, a person escorting the sheikh, and
|
||
another person I don't know. They were deep in conversation."
|
||
Shortly after police arrested Nosair they found startling evidence that the
|
||
Kahane killing was just the first in a planned spree. Scrawled on a bank
|
||
calendar in Nosair's home was a "hit list" that included the names of a
|
||
U.S. representative, two federal judges, and a former assistant U.S.
|
||
Attorney. Local police searching Nosair's Cliffside Park, New Jersey, home
|
||
discovered a trove of terrorist paraphernalia: bombmaking manuals, AK-47
|
||
cartridges, a stolen New York State license plate, and a bullet-riddled
|
||
target board. There were also a number of passports and driver's licenses
|
||
under various names, as well as articles about the assassination of Anwar
|
||
Sadat.
|
||
But despite Zakhary's reports, Nosair's hit list, and the suspicious cache
|
||
at his home, the authorities seemed to be downplaying all signs of a
|
||
terrorist conspiracy. Within 12 hours of the shooting, New York City chief
|
||
of detectives Joseph Borrelli declared the Kahane assassination was the
|
||
work of a "lone gunman." Borrelli added, '"There was nothing found [at
|
||
Nosair's house] that would stir your imagination."
|
||
One New York City detective close to the investigation told me that the
|
||
case was handled like a routine homicide. "They [the NYPD] wanted to make
|
||
it as simple as possible," said the detective. "It was treated as a
|
||
homicide at the precinct level. The higher-ups didn't want to take it
|
||
further. The police department stated that they got the gunman and that
|
||
was it. We're not equipped to investigate international terrorism."
|
||
But the FBI is. On the eve of Nosair's trial, a frustrated federal
|
||
investigator told me that he didn't believe Nosair had acted alone.
|
||
"There's nothing to prove that Nosair took it upon himself to [kill
|
||
Kahane]. There are many conspiracy theories. We hit a lot of dry wells."
|
||
Yet the federal agent said that the NYPD had jurisdiction in the case and
|
||
that the FBI's investigation was "superficial."
|
||
What investigators would have found if they had done their job thoroughly
|
||
is that Sheikh Abdel Rahman and El Sayyid Nosair were at the heart of a
|
||
far-flung terrorist conspiracy. A magnet for the angry and dispossessed of
|
||
the Muslim world, Abdel Rahman, through his violent preaching, has been
|
||
linked to dozens of terrorist incidents in Egypt and now to the attack on
|
||
the World Trade Center. an act he says he deplores.
|
||
In the aftermath of the bombing, many are wondering why there wasn't a
|
||
comprehensive, wide-ranging investigation of Meir Kahane's murder. One
|
||
possible explanation is offered by a counterterrorism expert for the FBI.
|
||
At a meeting in a Denny's coffee shop in Los Angeles a week after the
|
||
Kahane assassination, the 20-year veteran field agent met with one of his
|
||
top undercover operatives, a burly 33-year-old FBI contract employee who
|
||
had been a premier bomber for a domestic terrorist group before being
|
||
"turned" and becoming a government informant.
|
||
"Why aren't we going after the sheikh [Abdel Rahman]?" demanded the
|
||
undercover man.
|
||
"It's hands-off," answered the agent.
|
||
"Why?" asked the operative.
|
||
"It was no accident that the sheikh got a visa and that he's still in the
|
||
country," replied the agent, visibly upset. "He's here under the banner of
|
||
national security, the State Department, the NSA [National Security
|
||
Agency], and the CIA." The agent pointed out that the sheikh had been
|
||
granted a tourist visa, and later a green card, despite the fact that he
|
||
was on a State Department terrorist watch-list that should have barred him
|
||
from the country. He's an untouchable, concluded the agent. "I haven't
|
||
seen the lone-gunman theory advocated [so forcefully] since John F.
|
||
Kennedy."
|
||
Why might the U.S. government protect a militant sheikh linked to numerous
|
||
acts of terrorism?
|
||
Sheikh Abdel Rahman left Egypt in 1990, in the wake of a series of bloody
|
||
clashes between his militant fundamentalist group, Al Gamaat al Islamia,
|
||
and the secular Egyptian government. The sheikh traveled to Pakistan, where
|
||
he met with representatives of the Afghan mujahedeen, who were providing
|
||
training for his underground terrorist group in Egypt, the very same
|
||
mujahedeen who were receiving financial aid and training from the CIA in
|
||
the war to rid Afghanistan of the Soviet Army. Even after the Soviets
|
||
pulled out of Afghanistan in February 1989, the U.S. and the Saudis
|
||
continued to aid the mujahedeen through Pakistan until December 1990, in an
|
||
attempt to topple the Afghan government.
|
||
According to a very high-ranking Egyptian official, when the sheikh moved
|
||
to Brooklyn in May 1990, he worked closely with the CIA, helping to channel
|
||
a steady flow of money, men, and guns to mujahedeen bases in Afghanistan
|
||
and Pakistan. The camps became a mecca for disaffected youth from across
|
||
the Muslim world.
|
||
Of course, the mujahedeen's agenda was not exactly the same as the CIA's.
|
||
While Abdel Rahman was perfectly happy to accept CIA help to chase the
|
||
godless Russians out of Afghanistan, it didn't stop him from teaching his
|
||
recruits his revolutionary agenda. The camps, says the high-ranking
|
||
Egyptian official, were "schools for jihad," or holy war. The sacred
|
||
mission was to be waged on two fronts. In the Middle East, his holy
|
||
warriors were to overthrow secular, pro-Western Arab regimes and replace
|
||
them with austere Islamic theocracies. The main target was Egypt, the
|
||
largest and most powerful nation in the Arab world. The sheikh believes,
|
||
the high-ranking Egyptian official says, "that if you take Egypt, you take
|
||
all the Middle East." Mamdouh Zaki Zakhary concurs: "Abdel Rahman
|
||
repeatedly preached that Egypt is the hand of Satan, and that you have to
|
||
cut off the hand of Satan immediately."
|
||
The Great Satan itself, of course, is America, a state that, in the eyes of
|
||
the sheikh and his supporters, has routinely committed atrocities against
|
||
the Muslim world. "Americans," said the sheikh on a recent Arabic-language
|
||
radio broadcast, "are descendants of apes and pigs who have been feeding
|
||
from the dining tables of the Zionists, Communism, and colonialism." He
|
||
advocates the destabilization of the U.S. by violent attacks on its symbols
|
||
of prestige and power, while proselytizing among African Americans and
|
||
other disenfranchised minorities. Abdel Rahman's "long-term goal is to
|
||
weaken U.S. society and to show Arab rulers that the U.S. is not an
|
||
invulnerable superpower," says Matti Steinberg, an expert on Islamic
|
||
fundamentalism at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
|
||
According to Western intelligence sources, Abdel Rahman has 10000 fanatic
|
||
disciples in Egypt and several hundred in America. But, as far as anyone
|
||
knows, he never issues them direct orders. "He talks about the importance
|
||
of jihad in the U.S. without being concrete," says Matti Steinberg. "It's a
|
||
form of spiritual brainwashing called Dawa. All it takes is a few angry
|
||
people to understand his message." A high-ranking Egyptian official agrees:
|
||
"This man is instigating violence in a very clever way. You can't really
|
||
hope to establish a direct link" between the sheikh and the World Trade
|
||
Center bombing.
|
||
Just four months before the bombing, Egyptian intelligence officials warned
|
||
the U.S. that the sheikh's principal mosques in America, the El Salaam
|
||
Mosque and the El Farouq Masjid Mosque in Brooklyn, were "hotbeds of
|
||
terrorist activity," and that the fiery blind Muslim preacher was plotting
|
||
a new round of terrorist attacks in Egypt. "There were many, many contacts
|
||
between Cairo and Washington," says the official.
|
||
The FBI received a violent reminder of the sheikh's agenda on November 12,
|
||
1992, when a terrorist hit squad linked to Abdel Rahman machine-gunned a
|
||
busload of Western tourists in Egypt, injuring five Germans. In the last
|
||
year, three Western tourists have been killed in Egypt and at least two
|
||
dozen have been wounded, crippling the country's $2500000000 tourist
|
||
industry. When asked on an Arabic-language radio show in Washington, D.C.,
|
||
about terrorist attacks on foreign tourists, the sheikh replied, "Force is
|
||
used with tourists. But tourists should use good manners. Tourism is not
|
||
nightclubs, alcohol, gambling, fornicating. They should stay away from
|
||
this behavior, the spread of AIDS and corruption with which they have
|
||
filled Egypt."
|
||
Some three months after the attack on the tourist bus, a rental van packed
|
||
with a witches' brew of sulfuric acid, nitric acid, and urea exploded in
|
||
the subbasement of the World Trade Center, killing six people and injuring
|
||
more than 1000. "If they had found the exact architectural Achilles' heel
|
||
[of the World Trade Center]," says an explosives expert who works for the
|
||
FBI, "on if the bomb had been a little bit bigger, not much more, 500
|
||
pounds more, I think it would have brought her down. It's really scary."
|
||
As Americans reeled from the worst terrorist attack in U.S. history, the
|
||
first rumors that swept the country centered on an unidentified Serbian
|
||
terrorist group. The theory was abandoned only after a sharpeyed
|
||
investigator from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and a New
|
||
York City cop who were combing through the rubble found a tiny metal
|
||
fragment with the identification number of the van rented by Mohammed
|
||
Salameh. "It was a miracle that it wasn't destroyed," says the explosives
|
||
expert. If it had been, the FBI might have been tracking Serbians for
|
||
weeks in stead of Sheikh Abdel Rahman and hi labyrintine web of local Arab
|
||
terrorists
|
||
Lost in the press avalanche about the World Trade Center bombing was the
|
||
new that on the same day terrorists linked to Abdel Rahman had detonated a
|
||
bomb packed with rusty nails in the Wadi el-Ni caf , a fashionable
|
||
restaurant in Cairo, killing two tourists and two Egyptians, and wounding
|
||
16. "They wanted to show the Egyptian authorities that they could operate
|
||
in the heart of the nation's capital; says the high-ranking Egyptian-
|
||
government official, who adds bitterly, "We begged America not to coddle
|
||
the sheikh."
|
||
Jack Blum, a widely respected former special investigator for the Senate
|
||
Foreign Relations subcommittee, puts it bluntly The CIA trained the
|
||
mujahedeen in terrorism, then dumped them in 1990 as part of an agreement
|
||
with Moscow, leaving behind a ragtag army of anti-Western Muslim extremists
|
||
burning to vent their rage on their former patrons, America. "One of the
|
||
big problems here is that many suspects in the World Trade Center bombing
|
||
were associated with the mujahedeen," says Blum. "And there are components
|
||
of our government that are absolutely disinterested in following that path
|
||
because it leads back to people we supported in the Afghan war." The first
|
||
suspect arrested in the World Trade Center bombing was Mohammed Salameh, a
|
||
25-year-old Palestinian with a thick black beard and a degree from a
|
||
Jordanian university in the shariah, Islamic religious law. On February
|
||
23, he rented the Ryder van that was packed with explosives and detonated
|
||
underneath the World Trade Center. When it was revealed that he had
|
||
returned four times to claim a $400 refund for the vehicle, which he claims
|
||
was stolen the night before the bombing, many assumed he was either a patsy
|
||
or the stupidest terrorist in history. What was forgotten, of course, was
|
||
that the odds against identifying the van were astronomical.
|
||
"He's not a clever man, but he's not a stupid man," says Zakhary, the FBI
|
||
undercover operative who met Salameh at the El Salaam Mosque. "He's an
|
||
ordinary man, a working man. I think that, for him, the bombing was coming
|
||
from his heart, not his brain."
|
||
The seeds of Salameh's discontent were sown in Bidya, a dusty, nondescript
|
||
farming village of 6000 Palestinian Arabs near the Nablus-Tel Aviv Highway,
|
||
on the Israeli-occupied West Bank. The squat, ramshackle, cinder-block
|
||
homes line unpaved streets that are strewn with garbage. Indoor plumbing is
|
||
rare, and the town doesn't have a single telephone. The gray concrete walls
|
||
of Bidya's four schools are covered with pro-PLO graffiti and fierce
|
||
tirades against Israel.
|
||
Bidya is a glaring contrast to nearby Ariel, the gleaming suburban
|
||
settlement of 15000 secular Jews that was built on land expropriated from
|
||
Bidya and other nearby Palestinian villages in the mid 1970s. Ariel has the
|
||
look and feel of an American Sunbelt suburb in the midst of a boom. At the
|
||
mall in the heart of town, shops sell everything from falafel for $ 1.50 to
|
||
expensive clothes. A large outdoor swimming pool attracts suntanned Jewish
|
||
settlers, who moved to this West Bank outpost for its front yards and
|
||
scenic vistas.
|
||
Bidya has a long history of violence and rebellion. In 1936, when
|
||
Palestinian Arabs began a three-year revolt against the British Mandatory
|
||
authorities then ruling Palestine and the Jewish minority who were
|
||
struggling for statehood, Bidya became a staging base for fedayeen, or
|
||
Palestinian guerrillas. The British Army was far more brutal putting down
|
||
the revolt than the Israeli Army has been during the intifada. British
|
||
planes strafed Arab villages, thousands of Palestinians were herded into
|
||
concentration camps, and authorities passed emergency laws that made the
|
||
possession of a gun or even a bullet a crime punishable by death. More
|
||
than 10000 Palestinians were killed in the fighting; Bidya suffered
|
||
hundreds of casualties.
|
||
After Israel's 1948 War of Independence, the Jordanian Arab Legion occupied
|
||
the West Bank, and Bidya spearheaded Palestinian opposition to Jordan's
|
||
King Hussein, a Hashemite originally from Saudi Arabia who treated West
|
||
Bank Palestinians with high-handed contempt. In 1959, 15 high-ranking
|
||
officials of the Jordanian military, including a leading notable from
|
||
Bidya, plotted King Hussein's assassination. But the Jordanian mukhabarut
|
||
(secret police) discovered the scheme, and the plotters were sentenced to
|
||
death. Mohammed Salameh was born in Bidya in September 1967, just three
|
||
months after it was occupied by Israeli troops in the June 1967 Six Day
|
||
War. "When the Israelis came to our village' says Osama Odeh, a distant
|
||
cousin of Salameh, "they made a gentlemen's agreement with my father and
|
||
uncle, who is a lawyer. 'We know your Family is very nationalistic and
|
||
won't accept occupation,' they said, 'so if the fedayeen come to Bidya, you
|
||
can feed them so long as you then tell them to go. We will give you money
|
||
for your new school and build roads and sewers."'
|
||
But from the onset of Israeli rule, Bidya's residents waged a fierce
|
||
guerrilla war against the Israeli occupation, and Mohammed Salameh's family
|
||
was in the forefront of that opposition. Salameh's maternal grandfather,
|
||
one of Bidya's largest landowners, was active in the 1936 Arab Rebellion
|
||
and later joined the PLO. He was arrested in the early 1980s for membership
|
||
in the PLO, and, in spite of his advanced age, was imprisoned by the
|
||
Israelis and allegedly tortured. He died soon after his release. Salameh's
|
||
uncle spent 18 years in prison for a PLO attack on Israeli civilians. Odeh
|
||
told me that Salameh's "hate" comes from the "injustice" of the Israeli
|
||
occupation, his uncle's and grandfather's imprisonment, and Ariel's rapid
|
||
expansion. "Ariel," says Odeh, "is growing, and sucking the red blood of
|
||
our land."
|
||
When I last journeyed to Bidya, in the fall of 1990, the main entrance was
|
||
blocked by a knot of heavily armed Israeli soldiers in riot gear. "A
|
||
shooting took place," explained a soldier, who looked no more than 18. "The
|
||
road is closed. If you go in, we will shoot you."
|
||
Earlier in the day, students had gathered in the center of Bidya, shouting
|
||
anti-Israeli slogans under a huge banner that read FATAH AND HAMAS
|
||
TOGETHER. (Hamas is the large Palestinian Islamic fundamentalist group
|
||
dedicated to Israel's destruction.) Then hundreds of Palestinian youth
|
||
marched to the Nablus-Tel Aviv Highway, where young boys and girls began to
|
||
throw stones at Israeli cars. Soldiers raced to the scene and fired into
|
||
the air, trying to disperse the demonstrators. Several armed Jewish
|
||
settlers got out of their cars and fanned out among the almond trees that
|
||
line the side of the road and started shooting. Akhlam Abed, a 13-year-old
|
||
girl, was killed. She was Bidya's first casualty of the intifada.
|
||
In the wake of Israel's lightning victory in the June 1967 Six Day War,
|
||
Salameh's parents left Bidya for a squalid shantytown on the outskirts of
|
||
Amman, Jordan, forfeiting their home and possessions, as did tens of
|
||
thousands of Palestinians. Like all Palestinian youth, Salameh passionately
|
||
followed the course of the intifada, the Palestinian uprising that began in
|
||
the Gaza Strip in December 1987 and quickly spread to every Arab town,
|
||
village, and refugee camp in the Occupied Territories. Every day Jordanian
|
||
television broadcast images of Palestinian boys, their faces swathed in
|
||
black-and-white-checkered kaffiyehs, their eyes unafraid, hurling
|
||
pomegranate-sized stones at Israeli troops brandishing automatic weapons.
|
||
The children of the "stone revolution," as they are called, gave
|
||
Palestinians around the world a collective sense of pride and
|
||
determination.
|
||
Salameh, one of 11 brothers and sisters, was an indifferent student with a
|
||
poor self-image. According to Odeh, he became a devout Muslim in his
|
||
teens. Salameh's parents have expressed surprise about his alleged role in
|
||
the World Trade Center bombing. "The Jews, this is from the Jews, who have
|
||
done this and blamed my son," Salameh's mother, Aysha, told The New York
|
||
Times.
|
||
Aysha might well blame Sheikh Abdel Rahman for leading her wayward son down
|
||
the combustible path of Islamic fundamentalism. Salameh, who received a
|
||
tourist visa from the American consulate in Amman in December 1987, moved
|
||
to New Jersey, where he worked at menial jobs, constantly changing
|
||
addresses. He met Abdel Rahman not long after the sheikh arrived in
|
||
Brooklyn; he was captivated by the sheikh's call for jihad and the downfall
|
||
of America, becoming his sometime gofer, according to one U.S. law-
|
||
enforcement source. Salameh quickly fell into a circle of like-minded
|
||
Muslims, including Nidal Ayyad, a chemical engineer of Palestinian descent
|
||
who allegedly concocted the World Trade Center bomb.
|
||
In Egypt, Abdel Rahman's name lives in infamy for his role in the October
|
||
6, 1981, assassination of Anwar Sadat, who was cut down in a hail of
|
||
grenade and automatic-weapons fire while he reviewed a military parade. In
|
||
1980, Abdel Rahman had issued a fatwa, or religious decree, that called
|
||
Sadat an infidel for turning his back on Islam and for making peace with
|
||
Israel. This made Sadat a prime target for assassination, an act eventually
|
||
executed by the operational arm of Abdel Rahman's organization, Al Gamaat
|
||
al Islamia, which had penetrated the Egyptian army and security services.
|
||
During a tumultuous trial in which the defendants publicly charged they had
|
||
been tortured by police interrogators, the sheikh was acquitted. The
|
||
sheikh, who continued to agitate against the Egyptian government while his
|
||
followers carried on a campaign of lethal bombings, was imprisoned for
|
||
three months in 1985, for one month in 1986, and for four months in 1989.
|
||
He finally left his homeland in 1990, saying, "It was too much for me."
|
||
After brief stays in Saudi Arabia and Iraq, the sheikh slipped into
|
||
Pakistan, where he forged operational links with mujahedeen strongman
|
||
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the head of a radical Afghan Islamic fundamentalist
|
||
army that was being covertly backed by the CIA. According to Stephen Van
|
||
Evera, an affiliate of Harvard's Center for Science and International
|
||
Affairs, Hekmatyar "strongly chastised the United States and its 'immoral'
|
||
society, even while Washington lavished him with aid." In Hekmatyar's
|
||
guerrilla training camps, American advisers taught everything from using
|
||
explosives to shooting down enemy planes with shoulder-held Stinger
|
||
missiles.
|
||
The mujahedeen base camps in Peshawar were also places where militant
|
||
Muslims were caught up in the spirit of the two supreme moments in recent
|
||
Islamic history: the revolution in Iran, which transformed the country into
|
||
a self-righteous bastion of zealous fundamentalism, and the Afghan war.
|
||
"Iran symbolizes the rise of the Islamic state," says the Egyptian
|
||
official, "and the Afghan war was a real battlefield for these people to
|
||
acquire the stamina and capabilities to wage war." And since these two
|
||
events were successful, the militants "decided to pursue this march and
|
||
spread their revolutionary message to other countries."
|
||
In America, Abdel Rahman raised funds and recruits for the mujahedeen, many
|
||
oF them first-generation Muslim immigrants. His mosques in Jersey City and
|
||
Brooklyn also attracted fundamentalists expelled from the Gulf Emirates
|
||
after the Gulf War. But many Muslims repudiate his radical preachings.
|
||
Mosques across the country closed their doors to the rabble-rousing blind
|
||
man. Local Muslims grew even more wary in March 1991 when Mustafa Shalabi,
|
||
a 39-year-old Egyptian electrical contractor living in Brooklyn, was found
|
||
lying face down on his kitchen floor in his pajamas. He had been shot once
|
||
at close range near the left ear and stabbed in the back and stomach.
|
||
Police sources say Shalabi had been running guns to the Afghan rebels, as
|
||
well as raising money for the legal defense of El Sayyid Nosair before his
|
||
trial on charges of assassinating Rabbi Meir Kahane. Earlier, Shalabi had
|
||
helped Abdel Rahman find an apartment in Brooklyn. Police speculate that
|
||
Abdel Rahman had Shalabi murdered for pocketing some of the money. Shalabi
|
||
"had a lot of enemies," says a police source. "There was also a lot of
|
||
intrigue and infighting at his mosque in Brooklyn."
|
||
Shalabi worshipped at the El Farouq Masjid Mosque, located in a bleak
|
||
storefront building at 554 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. The Friday sermons
|
||
were delivered by Abdel Rahman, until the directors of the mosque expelled
|
||
him soon after Kahane's assassination.
|
||
The sheikh then moved entirely to the El Salaam Mosque in Jersey City. The
|
||
founder of the mosque is Sultan Ibraham El Gawli, a wealthy 55-year-old
|
||
Egyptian businessman who was convicted by a federal jury in July 1986 for
|
||
conspiring to export 150 pounds of C-4 plastic explosives to Israel for use
|
||
by the PLO in a Christmas bombing. El Gawli, who sports a full, white Santa
|
||
Claus beard, served 18 months in prison before returning to Jersey City.
|
||
He often marched in front of the courthouse during Nosair's trial, carrying
|
||
banners with fierce anti-Israel slogans. "It's no crime praying together,
|
||
is it?" El Gawli asked me when I questioned him about his friendship with
|
||
Nosair.
|
||
It was the infiltrator Mamdouh Zaki Zakhary who helped U.S. Customs set up
|
||
the sting operation that netted El Gawli. Zakhary , a frail man afflicted
|
||
with blindness in one eye and a large goiter on his neck, wore a wire into
|
||
El Galwi's office at a travel agency he owned, Sultan Travel, recording
|
||
five incriminating conversations. "There were some references on the tapes
|
||
about doing it [transporting the explosives] for God," recalls Kevin
|
||
McCarthy, the assistant U.S. attorney who prosecuted El Gawli.
|
||
"Sultan El Gawli was the brains behind the terror cell at the mosque," says
|
||
Zakhary . "There were lots of meetings in his office. He also got foreign
|
||
money from the PLO and Iran. Many times he entertained and was visited by
|
||
officials from Saudi Arabia, the PLO, and Iran."
|
||
"I always thought the El Gawli case was just scratching the surface of what
|
||
was really going on [in the El Salaam Mosque]," admits a federal official
|
||
who worked on the case. "First, El Gawli himself was this businessman who
|
||
seemed to be trying to do things for the money, not for any grander scheme.
|
||
And secondly, since Mamdouh was a [Coptic Christian], I thought he wouldn't
|
||
have access to the real inner world of whatever was going on in the mosque.
|
||
At the same time, I didn't have any indications that there was more stuff
|
||
going on in the mosque."
|
||
After testifying as the key witness in a Camden, New Jersey, courthouse,
|
||
Zakhary entered a federal witness-protection program. At first, he and his
|
||
new bride lived in New Orleans, before he became convinced the PLO was
|
||
stalking him. He moved throughout the Southwest, driving the federal
|
||
marshals responsible for him crazy with complaints about the program.
|
||
Homesick and desperate for cash, Zakhary offered to return to Jersey City
|
||
to spy on the Arab American community and the El Salaam Mosque, this time
|
||
for the FBI, under the code name Mubarak. He stayed away from the mosque
|
||
itself except for three visits gathering what information he could --
|
||
through friends and acquaintances.'
|
||
"I didn't know Salameh very well," says Zakhary, who was better acquainted
|
||
with Ibraham Elgabrowny, a cousin of both El Gawli and El Sayyid Nosair.
|
||
"Elgabrowny was a very extreme fundamentalist. He belonged to the Muslim
|
||
Brotherhood in Egypt. In 1985, when the TWA plane was hijacked to Beirut,
|
||
Elgabrowny said he was very happy. He said, 'lf I was the kidnapper, I
|
||
would start executing passengers right now."'
|
||
In 1991, a year and a half after he began to work for the FBI, Zakhary
|
||
reported to his handler that he had overheard a plot to assassinate the two
|
||
U.S. senators from New York, Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Alfonse D'Amato.
|
||
When incredulous FBI agents hooked him up to a lie detector, Zakhary failed
|
||
the test. He blames the result on prescription medication he was taking at
|
||
the time because of an automobile accident. The FBI did not believe him and
|
||
terminated his employment.
|
||
"Mamdouh [Zakhary] is an honest man with very good intentions," Richard
|
||
Kennan, a U.S. Customs agent, told the Israeli newspaper Ma ariv. "[He]
|
||
prevented a mass terror attack on Christmas 1985. Unfortunately, he didn't
|
||
understand the American system. He was confused. I'm very sorry about
|
||
what happened to him. We tried to get him asylum in the U.S., but his
|
||
behavior didn't help." The U.S. has had a long and tortured history with
|
||
the Islamic world. While most Americans see Muslims as the aggressors,
|
||
Muslims view the West the same way. In fact, the U.S. and the Islamic world
|
||
have been trading acts of terrorism for years. In 1986, Libyan-backed
|
||
terrorists bombed the La Belle discotheque in Berlin, killing two American
|
||
servicemen. In response, the U.S. bombed Libya, killing 36 civilians and
|
||
wounding 92. On July 3, 1988, during the Iran-Iraq war, the U.S.S.
|
||
Vincennes accidentally shot down an Iranian passenger plane over the Gulf,
|
||
killing 290 people. Six months afterward, Pan Am 103 disintegrated in a
|
||
shower of fire and debris over Lockerbie, Scotland. No one claimed credit,
|
||
but it is widely believed in intelligence circles that the Pan Am bombing
|
||
was Iran's revenge.
|
||
The U.S.-funded attack that killed the greatest number of innocent
|
||
civilians took place on March 8, 1985, when the U.S. tried to liquidate
|
||
what it believed was the very symbol of international terrorism:
|
||
fundamentalist Muslim leader Sheikh Mohammed Fadlallah, the head of
|
||
Hizbollah, the Party of God. On October 23, 1983, Fadlallah had sent a
|
||
suicide bomber barreling into the Marine compound in Beirut, killing 241
|
||
Marines. CIA director William Casey contracted out the job of retaliation
|
||
to Saudi intelligence, which sent a car packed with explosives into a
|
||
Beirut slum near Fadlallah's headquarters. A city block was devastated and
|
||
more than 90 people were buried under the rubble.
|
||
Because of the persistent fear of Arab terror during the Gulf War, Arab
|
||
Americans say they have been unfairly targeted for special surveillance by
|
||
federal agencies. Actually, there has been little evidence of Arab
|
||
terrorism on American soil. The PLO raises money and spreads propaganda in
|
||
the U.S., but has refrained from attacking targets here -- although it has
|
||
staged murderous assaults against Americans abroad. Ironically, the week
|
||
the World Trade Center was bombed, a PLO official was being tried in a
|
||
Brooklyn federal court for planting powerful time bombs in rented cars
|
||
parked outside two Israeli banks in Manhattan and the El Al terminal at
|
||
Kennedy Airport in 1973.
|
||
Most Americans would be surprised to learn, however, that the terrorist
|
||
group that led the hit parade through much of the 1980s was the Jewish
|
||
Defense League, Rabbi Meir Kahane's fanatical right-wing Zionist
|
||
organization. By 1985, the JDL was ranked by the FBI as the most lethal
|
||
domestic terrorist group in America, overtaking the Aryan Nation, the
|
||
American Nazi Party, and the Puerto Rican Revolution. The JDL has been
|
||
linked to dozens of bombings and at least two assassinations, including the
|
||
widely admired regional director of the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination
|
||
Committee, Alex Odeh.
|
||
For years the Brooklyn-born Kahane had been calling for the expulsion of
|
||
all Arabs from Israel. After moving to Jerusalem, he established the Kach
|
||
Party and was elected to Israel's parliament in 1984. He drafted a slew of
|
||
bills that were never passed, including one that would have made it a crime
|
||
punishable by two years in prison for a Jew to have sex with an Arab.
|
||
Israel's High Court banned Kahane from running for reelection in 1988 on
|
||
the grounds that his party was racist and antidemocratic.
|
||
It seems certain now that Kahane's fanatical ideas made him the target of
|
||
terrorism himself. On November 5, 1990, he gave the last speech of his
|
||
life. "My whole life has been ideas which eventually were taken up by
|
||
other people and succeeded," said Kahane in his characteristic stutter, an
|
||
impediment since childhood. "Today Jewish defense is an accepted thing. A
|
||
patrol in a neighborhood is an accepted thing." But patrols were no longer
|
||
adequate to defend Jews in a country that was becoming increasingly anti-
|
||
Semitic, Kahane warned. He urged his Jewish audience to move to Israel
|
||
before a new Holocaust engulfed them in America. "They hate us with a
|
||
passion out there," thundered Kahane, "with a virulence that's frightening
|
||
to see."
|
||
Following Kahane's speech, El Sayyid Nosair approached the podium wearing a
|
||
black yarmulke, as if to ask a question. Moments later, Kahane was dead.
|
||
In the irony of ironies, the FBI put the New York branch of the Kach Party
|
||
under surveillance to prevent it from avenging their slain leader. The FBI
|
||
failed, however, to monitor activities at the radical mosques.
|
||
I interviewed Nosair for The Village Voice in a tiny detention cell on
|
||
Rikers Island on the eve of his trial. Nosair, who was wearing a white
|
||
tunic and a white skullcap with the words ALLAH WILL BE VICTORIOUS knitted
|
||
in bold blue Arabic calligraphy across the front, began our 90-minute talk
|
||
by handing me a number of pamphlets showing why Islam was the true path. "I
|
||
started to practice my religion as much as I can since I came to the United
|
||
States," said Nosair. "Of course, I read a lot. I read about different
|
||
religions -- Christianity, Judaism -- I studied all these religions that
|
||
led me to believe that Islam is the true way of life.
|
||
"You face many different doors" in America, continued Nosair, who had
|
||
immigrated to Pittsburgh from Egypt on July 14, 1981. The true path is
|
||
behind one door, he explained, while evil lurks behind the others. "Because
|
||
I believe that Islam is the true way of life, I began to preach Islam, to
|
||
prove to people from their own [religious] books that Islam is the correct
|
||
way of life." Islam, he told me, is encoded in each of us at birth. Each
|
||
person is created in submission to Allah. We pervert nature, he said, when
|
||
we embrace Judaism or Christianity. "Judaism has a lot of materialistic
|
||
rituals with a minimum of spiritual rituals, and that's why Allah sent
|
||
Islam to mankind," Nosair said. Judaism is an abomination, he explained,
|
||
not because of race or blood (the Arabs too are Semites), but because the
|
||
Jews refuse to accept Mohammed as the Prophet.
|
||
I asked Nosair if the Koran says there is such a thing as a just killing.
|
||
"Of course, there has to be," he replied. "We have to have an Islamic
|
||
state -- that's why we try to preach Islam to everybody."
|
||
Nosair admitted he is a big "celebrity" in the Muslim world, where he is
|
||
credited with killing Kahane. When Nosair's wife, Caren, a blue-eyed Irish
|
||
Catholic convert to Islam, and three children traveled to Egypt a year
|
||
after Kahane's murder, they were met at the airport by government officials
|
||
and driven through Cairo in a motorcade. Caren's chaperone was none other
|
||
than Nosair's cousin, Ibraham Elgabrowny.
|
||
Elgabrowny had helped raise more than $250000 for Nosair's legal defense.
|
||
The trial turned out to be one of the most shocking in New York history.
|
||
The Manhattan D.A.'s case against Nosair was as narrowly focused as the
|
||
investigation had been. The prosecution didn't present any of the evidence
|
||
police found in Nosair's apartment suggesting his terrorist connections'
|
||
and never offered the jury an explanation of Nosair's motive, despite the
|
||
fact that Manhattan Assistant District Attorney William Greenbaum knew that
|
||
Nosair was bragging to fellow inmates at Rikers Island that "Allah chose me
|
||
to kill the big Jew." At least one inmate reported Nosair's confession to
|
||
the D.A.'s office, according to sources close to the investigation. After
|
||
close questioning that included a lie-detector test, the inmate was deemed
|
||
highly credible by the D.A. But in a catastrophic miscalculation, Greenbaum
|
||
decided not to put the inmate on the stand.
|
||
The D.A. believed there was ample evidence to convict Nosair without
|
||
delving into his motive, which would have led the trial into the swamp of
|
||
Kahane's radical ideas, 50 years of Arab-Israeli enmity, and the internal
|
||
politics of Israel and Egypt. What looked to every observer like an open-
|
||
and-shut case ended with Nosair's stunning acquittal; he was, however,
|
||
sentenced to 22 years for related charges.
|
||
"In this case the result is so jarring that has tempted people to talk
|
||
about taking the law into their own hands," former U.S. Attorney Rudolph
|
||
Giuliani wrote to Manhattan U.S. Attorney Otto Obermaier after the verdict.
|
||
Giuliani recommended that the FBI reopen the Nosair investigation. The
|
||
Justice Department refused, and the case dimmed from public memory until
|
||
the World Trade Center was bombed.
|
||
The authorities are just now reopening the Kahane investigation. It is
|
||
possible that Nosair will be tried in federal court for violating Kahane's
|
||
civil rights, much as the police in the Rodney King case are now being
|
||
tried. A new investigation may find that the bombers of the World Trade
|
||
Center were also Kahane's killers. The connections seem strong. Both
|
||
Elgabrowny and Salameh visited Nosair in Attica. And federal agents found
|
||
forged Nicaraguan passports made out to Nosair and his family in
|
||
Elgabrowny's Brooklyn brownstone. Attica officials are currently
|
||
investigating whether an escape was being planned.
|
||
Another suspect in the case, Mahmud Abouhalima, a New York City taxi driver
|
||
and an associate of both Nosair and Salameh, fled the U.S., reportedly for
|
||
Egypt. Investigators believe he may now be in Pakistan, where he had
|
||
trained with the mujahedeen and later fought in the Afghan war.
|
||
Investigators are also looking for links between the bombing suspects and
|
||
Mir Aimal Kansi, who is being sought for the slaying of two CIA employees
|
||
in front of the agency's Virginia headquarters. According to a federal
|
||
prosecutor, Kansi had told his roommate that he was going to commit a
|
||
violent act to protest what he perceived as Western mistreatment of
|
||
Muslims.
|
||
This much is certain: Just 12 hours after Kahane's killing, the government
|
||
was espousing the lone-gunman theory and Nosair's terrorist connections
|
||
were ignored. Had the investigation into the assassination of Rabbi Meir
|
||
Kahane been vigorously pursued, the World Trade Center bombing may never
|
||
have happened.
|
||
Wrong Number Filename: WTCBOMB1.TXT
|
||
</conspiracyFile> |