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http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,3604,669778,00.html

Uncle Sam's lucky finds 
Anne Karpf
Tuesday March 19, 2002
The Guardian

On Sunday night the United States prepared for fresh
strikes against new pockets of al-Qaida and Taliban
fighters in Afghanistan. At almost exactly the same
time, American intelligence revealed that they had
uncovered an increase in money being transferred
between groups of al-Qaida fighters. According to my
reckoning, this is the 14th handy thing that American
intelligence has discovered since September 11. Think
back over the past six months and it becomes
ineluctable: never in the history of modern warfare
has so much been found so opportunely. 

It started the day after the attacks on the twin
towers, with the discovery of a flight manual in
Arabic and a copy of the Koran in a car hired by
Mohammed Atta and abandoned at Boston airport. In the
immediate shocked aftermath of the attacks, these
findings were somehow reassuring: American
intelligence was on the case, the perpetrators were no
longer faceless. 

In less than a week came another find, two blocks away
from the twin towers, in the shape of Atta's passport.
We had all seen the blizzard of paper rain down from
the towers, but the idea that Atta's passport had
escaped from that inferno unsinged would have tested
the credulity of the staunchest supporter of the FBI's
crackdown on terrorism. 

Yet we were still in the infancy of coincidence. On
September 24 the belongings of alleged terrorist
Zacarias Moussaoui threw up a cropdusting manual,
while four days later came Atta's suicide note, the
one with the counsel to shine your shoes before you
meet your maker - a piece of advice which seemed
suspiciously Norman Rockwellesque. It was here, too,
that the stuff about 72 virgins awaiting him in heaven
first started to circulate. 

In December the laughing, boasting video of Osama bin
Laden was unearthed in a house in Jalalabad. The new
year saw no let-up in this serendipitous trove -
January turned up an email sent by "shoe bomber"
Richard Reid from a Paris cybercafe (and found on its
hard disk) shortly before boarding the Paris-Miami
flight in which he claimed responsibility in advance
for downing the plane. (Luckily or carelessly,
depending on your perspective, Reid had pocketed a
business card from the cybercafe.) 

And then, last Friday, Major General Frank Hagenbeck
revealed that Americans had found a whole shelf of
field manuals on undertaking terrorist activity, to
put beside the instruction manual on how to use light
automatic weapons left in a training camp in January. 

Apart from the fact that the al-Qaida network seem to
have a catastrophic way with lost property, isn't it
strange that these most demonised and potent of
terrorists seem unable to operate any weapons without
a manual? Dad's Army is nothing - this bunch sounds as
if they wouldn't be able to programme the video. And
if the quality of their manuals is anything like those
most of us have come across, they will still be
wrestling with them long after the guarantee has run
out. 

Of course you could interpret these discoveries
differently. You could detect in them the clear hand
of American propaganda. This isn't, of course, to
claim a dirty tricks department somewhere in the heart
of Washington. That would have you immediately accused
of peddling conspiracy theories, though I'm coming to
think that conspiracy theories have had a bad press.
What are they, after all, but "joined-up government"
by another name? 

All these discoveries can't obscure four things that
American intelligence agencies have notably failed to
find. First, even with a bloated expenditure exceeding
Russia's total defence budget, they never managed to
find out about September 11 before the event. Rhodri
Jeffreys-Jones's new book, Cloak and Dagger: A History
of American Secret Intelligence (Yale), shows how,
almost since their 19th-century inception, American
intelligence bureaux have invented or exaggerated a
succession of menaces to defend their spiralling
budgets and demonstrate their own usefulness while
failing to tackle effectively other, more substantial
threats. 

Second, despite a reward of $2.5m offered at the end
of January, the FBI still hasn't discovered those
responsible for last year's anthrax attacks. 

Third, American intelligence, tragically, didn't find
Daniel Pearl, the US journalist kidnapped and murdered
in Pakistan. 

Fourth - and most spectacular - despite having highly
sophisticated satellite tracking equipment, and
offering a reward of $25m for information leading
directly to his apprehension or conviction, they still
haven't found Bin Laden. 

Is this one reason why the US is talking about an
attack on Iraq - a flexing of the military biceps to
distract from flabby intelligence? Whatever the case,
to find one training manual might be regarded as a
stroke of luck. To find a shelf-full looks like
desperation. 



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