MessageI had to change the Title from "Canada freed top al-Qaeda operative" to  " 
Terrorists in the US army". After reading it, I think it is more appropriate.

Steve
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Miroslav Antic 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; 'BALKAN' ; 'NATO' ; 'Siem-News' ; 'SNN' ; 'SNN-Yahoo' 
  Cc: Hydro 
  Sent: Friday, November 23, 2001 9:59 AM
  Subject: [Hydro] Canada freed top al-Qaeda operative


  Thursday, November 22

  Canada freed top al-Qaeda operative 

  
http://www.globeandmail.ca/servlet/RTGAMArticleHTMLTemplate/C/20011122/wxletgo?hub=homeBN&tf=tgam%252Frealtime%252Ffullstory.html&cf=tgam/realtime/config-neutral&vg=BigAdVariableGenerator&slug=wxletgo&date=20011122&archive=RTGAM&site=Front&ad_page_name=breakingnews

  By ESTANISLAO OZIEWICZ AND TU THANH HA

  From Thursday's Globe and Mail



  The RCMP had their hands on one of the key insiders of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda 
terrorist network, but he was released after he had Mounties call his handler at the 
U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation.

  Ali Mohamed, a Californian of Egyptian origin who is believed to be the highest 
ranking al-Qaeda member to have landed in Canada, was working with U.S. 
counterterrorist agents, playing a double or triple game, when he was questioned in 
1993. Mr. Mohamed now is in a U.S. prison.

  "The people of the RCMP told me by midnight that I can go now," Mr. Mohamed - who 
confessed in the United States to being a close bin Laden associate - wrote at the 
time in an affidavit shown Wednesday to The Globe and Mail.

  The incident happened after customs agents at Vancouver International Airport 
detained Essam Marzouk, an Egyptian who had arrived from Damascus via Frankfurt, after 
they found him carrying two forged Saudi passports.

  Mr. Mohamed, who was waiting to pick him up at the airport, inquired of the police 
about his friend's detention. That made the RCMP curious about Mr. Mohamed, but he 
dispelled their suspicions by telling them he was a collaborator with the FBI.

  Mr. Mohamed, who had a U.S. passport, was called back to Vancouver to testify on 
behalf of Mr. Marzouk at the latter's refugee-claimant case - one terrorist vouching 
for another terrorist at a Canadian refugee hearing, although neither had admitted it.

  The story provides the clearest evidence that years ago al-Qaeda was using Canada as 
a logistical transit point for its operations, perhaps to smuggle people into the 
United States.

  Mr. Mohamed, who was a U.S. Army sergeant, eventually would confess to being a close 
associate of Mr. bin Laden - so close that he trained Mr. bin Laden's bodyguards, 
helped set up a terrorist cell in Kenya that bombed the U.S. embassy and arranged 
security for a meeting between Mr. bin Laden and the head of Lebanese Hezbollah.

  Mr. Marzouk's name was in the news this month after a business card for his Surrey, 
B.C., company was recovered in an al-Qaeda safehouse in Kabul. Mr. Marzouk, 33, is in 
an Egyptian prison after being convicted of terrorism.

  The November, 1998, indictment that accused Mr. bin Laden of the U.S. embassy 
bombings in Kenya and Tanzania notes that al-Qaeda "maintained cells and personnel in 
a number of countries to facilitate its activities, including in ...Canada" - but no 
details are provided.

  When Canadian authorities questioned Mr. Mohamed and Mr. Marouk at the Vancouver 
airport, "Ali Mohamed was in the Americans' good books," Mr. Marzouk's lawyer, Phil 
Rankin, said Wednesday. "He got away from the RCMP by telling them, phone ... this FBI 
agent in the United States and he'll vouch for me. So, Ali Mohamed wasn't so shadowy 
in those days. He was one of their guys,"

  Mr. Mohamed provided Mr. Rankin with an affidavit about the incident. He said he was 
waiting for "my friend Essam Marzouk ... but he did not show up, so I went to the 
customs office to find out."

  Plainclothes officers asked him for his papers and called the FBI. The RCMP asked 
him to come the following day to their Vancouver office for questioning and a search 
of his car. "They found nothing. I left Canada [at] 4:30 p.m. for the States," Mr. 
Mohamed wrote.

  According to a statement given by Khaled Abu el-Dahab, a defendant in a 1999 Cairo 
terrorism trial, Mr. Mohamed returned to Canada with money provided by al-Qaeda so Mr. 
Marzouk could pay his lawyer.

  Mr. Rankin denies that, saying that his client paid his fees and bail from $20,000 
he was carrying on him. "He [Mr. Mohamed] never gave me one penny, period. Marzouk 
came with money, and that's the money he used. Now whether he gave Marzouk money is a 
different issue. I don't know."

  Mr. Mohamed, 49, is a former major in the Egyptian army who settled in the United 
States, married a California woman and enlisted in the U.S. Army, training at Fort 
Braggs, the base of the U.S. Special Forces, though he never joined that group.

  He told a hearing in New York in October, 2000, that he joined the Egyptian Islamic 
Jihad, a fundamentalist group that merged with al-Qaeda at about the same time, in the 
early 1980s.

  In the early 1990s, while he commuted to Vancouver to pick up Mr. Marzouk and to 
testify at his refugee hearing, Mr. Mohamed conducted military and basic explosives 
training for al-Qaeda in Afghanistan, he confirmed after pleading guilty to five 
conspiracy charges.

  In the al-Qaeda camps, Mr. Mohamed was known as Abu Mohamed al Amriki - "Father 
Mohamed the American," a hearing in another trial was told this spring. "He is very, 
very strict and not gentle," testified one of his al-Qaeda students, L'Houssaine 
Kherchtou, a Moroccan-born defector who was supposed to become Mr. bin Laden's 
personal plane pilot.

  Mr. Mohamed taught Mr. Kherchtou and others how to case and surreptitiously 
photograph potential targets.

  "In the early 1990s, I assisted al-Qaeda in creating a presence in Nairobi," Mr. 
Mohamed said after his guilty plea, adding that he conducted surveillance of the 
embassy that would be bombed in 1998, killing 213 people.

  He said he took orders from Mr. bin Laden and from Mohammed Atef, al-Qaeda's chief 
of military operations who was killed in a U.S. air strike in Afghanistan last week.

  Mr. Mohamed admitted to training Mr. bin Laden's security detail and to providing 
security during a meeting by the Saudi-born millionaire and Imad Mughniyah, the head 
of security of the Lebanese Hezbollah, alleged to have been behind the Lebanese 
hostage crisis and the 1983 Beirut bomb attacks that killed 300 U.S. and French troops.

  Mr. Marzouk reportedly left Canada in 1998 for the Balkans to support the Muslim 
cause there. He then moved to Azerbaijan, which deported him to Egypt in late 1998. He 
was charged with being a member of a terrorist group and sentenced to 15 years in 
prison.

THE END

THE END

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