Today's WashPost contains the first detailed public report on Musaad Aruchi.
Aruchi was arrested  in Karachi on June 12.  He is the fifth
terrorist-nephew of KSM to appear in the public record.  As a Pakistani
intelligence official remarked,  "'It seems that this family has something
in their genes against the icons of financial power in the U.S."

But does that constitute a rational explanation?  For an alternative view
see: http://www.benadorassociates.com/article/5451

The Washington Post
Al Qaeda Arrest In June Opened Valuable Leads
By Kamran Khan
Special to The Washington Post
Tuesday, August 3, 2004; Page A01

KARACHI, Pakistan, Aug. 2 -- The arrest of a senior al Qaeda operative in
June and his subsequent interrogation enabled U.S. and Pakistani
intelligence agents to gather documents, e-mail addresses and cell phone
text messages that suggested al Qaeda planned to strike targets in New York
and Washington, according to Pakistani intelligence officials.

The al Qaeda operative, Musaad Aruchi, was arrested here on June 12 by
Pakistani paramilitary forces in an operation supervised by the CIA,
officials said. According to a senior Pakistani intelligence official
involved in the early interrogation of the suspect, Aruchi "was sure that al
Qaeda would hit New York or Washington pretty soon."

"He had with him street maps of New York City without the front cover, and
addresses of some other important buildings," the official said. "There were
some data CDs also recovered from him."

Pakistani officials said Aruchi's capture had led to other important
arrests, including the raid last week in the city of Gujrat that netted
Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, a Tanzanian wanted in connection with the 1998
bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

"The Americans always thought that Aruchi was a big catch because of his
connection with other active al Qaeda operatives, particularly those
planning to target the U.S.," another Pakistani intelligence official said.

Officials described Aruchi as a nephew of Khalid Sheik Mohammad, the chief
planner of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon, who was arrested in the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi in March
2003. Like Mohammad, Aruchi was born in Pakistan's Baluchistan province, but
his parents later moved to Kuwait and subsequently to other Persian Gulf
states.

Officials said Aruchi is also a cousin of Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, who planned
and carried out an attack on the World Trade Center in 1993 and is serving a
life sentence in the United States.

"It seems that this family has something in their genes against the icons of
financial power in the U.S.," one Pakistani intelligence official said.

U.S. intelligence telephone and Internet intercepts enabled investigators to
trace Aruchi to an apartment building in a congested Karachi neighborhood,
other officials said.

Pakistani authorities held him for three days before he was flown in an
unmarked CIA plane from a Pakistani air force base to a location that U.S.
officials did not disclose to the Pakistanis, intelligence officials said.
One official said the casual nature of Aruchi's remarks during his brief
time in Pakistani custody provided hints that the al Qaeda operative was in
touch with people planning another terrorist strike in the United States.

Intelligence gathered from Aruchi also led to two important arrests last
month, another Pakistani official said.

Muhammad Naeem Noor Khan, a Pakistani, was arrested in the city of Lahore on
July 13. A Pakistani official familiar with Khan's interrogation said, "Khan
did some messaging for some of his Arab associates he knew from his days in
Afghanistan. We can't categorize him as a key player, but he was definitely
a foot soldier.

"Nothing very incriminating was found to connect him with any terrorist act
or to the planning of an act, hence we are still not sure if he'll be
prosecuted or not," the official said.

Information obtained from Khan, when compared with extensive debriefing of
Aruchi, led U.S. and Pakistani officials to Ghailani, the Tanzanian whose
arrest in Gujrat last week has been described by Pakistani and U.S.
officials as a major breakthrough.

"The timing of [Ghailani's] arrest is superb. He was definitely working on
something big," said a Pakistani official familiar with his initial
interrogation in Pakistan.

As Pakistani officials prepared Sunday night for Ghailani's apparently
imminent handover to U.S. authorities, they said they were sure that
computer disks found in his possession -- one in his laptop and another
loose -- might reveal at least some of al Qaeda's plans and clues about
important operatives.

The officials said that two other suspects arrested with Ghailani, earlier
thought to be insignificant, had provided information showing that Ghailani
was expecting important news from the United States.

Pakistani and U.S. officials are still trying to establish the nationalities
of the two suspects.

An al Qaeda operative captured several weeks ago by Pakistani security
forces, Abu Talaha, was described as one of the key sources of the
documentary information on surveillance in the United States, according to a
senior American intelligence official. Talaha remains in Pakistani custody,
the official said.

Under procedures agreed to by the U.S. and Pakistani governments, agents
from the CIA, FBI and National Security Agency have been allowed to
eavesdrop and conduct wiretaps on terrorism suspects in Pakistan, a cabinet
minister said on condition of anonymity.

For its part, the Inter-Services Intelligence agency, or ISI, Pakistan's
military intelligence service, has designated special units to collect
counterterrorism intelligence through hundreds of newly recruited agents and
state-of-the art surveillance equipment provided by the U.S. government.

"There is almost daily exchange of information between the CIA and ISI. The
cooperation is even better than the Afghan war days," said the minister.

Pakistani police and intelligence officials said that once a target is
tracked down, any raid is always conducted by local law enforcement agencies
under the direct supervision of senior ISI officials, many of whom have
taken training courses with the FBI and the CIA.

All key al Qaeda suspects arrested in Pakistan have been handed over to U.S.
authorities for broader investigation. In each case, Pakistani intelligence
officials were called in by their U.S. counterparts for coordinated
follow-up.

"There is not a single significant al Qaeda arrest that didn't yield us
more," a senior Pakistani intelligence official said of Aruchi.


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