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| January 28,
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Question: Who was Garbo?
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Schreiber Spied For German Secret Service 
- Karlheinz Schreiber, the controversial
businessman who is at the centre of Canada's Airbus affair and is linked to
Germany's political donations scandal, was recruited by the German secret
service in the early 1980s.
Mr. Schreiber yesterday said he became an agent
for the Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND). It is not clear whether he still
remains on the BND's books.
According to a report in The Times newspaper in
London, Mr. Schreiber was recommended to the secret service by his friend
Franz Josef Strauss, who was then premier of Bavaria.
At the time, the German secret service had a
policy of recruiting well-connected entrepreneurs and lobbyists to penetrate
the higher levels of the political and business world.
Mr. Schreiber said yesterday some of his
activities for BND overlapped with his business activities in Latin America.
In Costa Rica, for example, Mr. Schreiber became very friendly with the
former president, Oscar Arias Sanchez, and received a Costa Rica diplomatic
passport.
Mr. Schreiber is accused by German investigators
of evading tax on 46.1 million Deutsche marks ($37.3-million) of income. He
is also accused by German prosecutors of bribing Holger Pfahls, a deputy
minister of defense, in 1991 in connection with a $400-million sale of
armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia by Thyssen AG., the company Mr. Schreiber
represented. Mr. Pfahls was a former head of the German counter-espionage
service, which has very close ties to the BND.
Mr. Schreiber has repeatedly denied the
allegations of bribery and tax evasion. He is currently in Toronto fighting
a German extradition request.
His lawyer, Edward Greenspan, said this week the
request should be dropped after Mr. Schreiber's principal accuser, Giorgio
Pelossi was arrested in Chicago last week on Italian allegations that he
laundered the proceeds of a drug-trafficking organization.
Secret Funds Seen As Cure
For Security Ills
-
Brass to put in a request for
B420m
(Bangkok) The military will ask for more secret funds to
overcome shortcomings in the intelligence service, which has been accused of
letting down national security in recent months.
A Defense Ministry source yesterday said a
shortage of funds had led to the failure to prevent last October's seizure
of the Burmese embassy, the illegal entry of Cambodian opposition activist
Sok Yoeun and God's Army's seizure of Ratchaburi regional
hospital.
The source said the military planned to seek 420
million baht in secret funds in the 2001 budget, of which 10 million baht
would go to the Defense Ministry, 50 million baht each to the Supreme
Command and the navy, 290 million baht to the army and 20 million baht to
the air force.
The military would ask for more from the Budget
Bureau, but did not have high hopes as Prime Minister Chuan Leekpai had
already stated that the government would have to bring in a deficit budget
for 2001.
In 1987, the military received as much as one
billion baht in secret funds. Since then the allocation had been slashed
every year, to the present level of 400 million baht.
The source said the budget cuts left intelligence
units with little money to procure modern equipment.
He ruled out concern about corruption, saying
military leaders would not tolerate the abuse of the secret fund.
Defense agencies would seek a combined budget of
102 billion baht for 2001. Two billion baht would be for the Defense
Ministry, 11 billion baht for the Supreme Command, 49 billion baht for the
army, 21 billion baht for the navy and 19 billion baht for the air force,
according to the source.
Sqn Ldr Prasong Soonsiri, the prime minister's
security adviser, said the intelligence service should not have to take all
the blame. It was only part of the entire network responsible for
safeguarding national security.
The former National Security Council chief said
security services could never function efficiently if the various agencies
failed to eradicate "diseases" within them.
Sqn Ldr Prasong likened the country to a human
body and intelligence work to a vaccine that gave immunity.
"But if the body is still dirty, it can be
attacked by the virus and the vaccine will not be able to protect it," he
said.
Even if intelligence units knew ahead of time
about the planned seizure of the Ratchaburi hospital, prevention might not
have been possible if other agencies did not deign to help, he
said.
This was apparent in the spread of drugs, as
traffickers were rarely intercepted even though intelligence operatives
could track their movements, he said.
"If other units were co-operating, we would not
hit by the virus. "Sqn Ld Prasong said intelligence agencies would need to
co-operate more closely, adding that making the NSC the co-ordinating centre
was the right decision.
He also suggested that officials check the
backgrounds of their sources before fully trusting them.
Some sources sold information and some had
"shady" records, he said.
The NSC would from now on be an intelligence hub
where the various agencies would share information and combine resources to
improve their operations.
-
Murdered Exile's
Grave Located At Paris Mosque
-
�60m religious site linked to
international plot to kill opponent of Moroccan king 35 years
ago
Thirty-five years after the Moroccan opposition leader Mehdi
Ben Barka disappeared after being kidnapped in Paris, his secret burial site
has been located south of the capital.
His body was buried under Europe's biggest
mosque, built by his bitter foe, the late King Hassan II of Morocco.
The operation to silence Ben Barka, the king's
former mathematics teacher who died aged 45, involved the Moroccan defense
chief, General Mohammed Oufkir, the French secret service and leading
gangland figures linked to the Gaullist party.
The discovery of his grave follows a decision by
King Mohammed VI, enthroned last year after Hassan's death, to allow Ben
Barka's widow and four children to return to Morocco.
The French prime minister, Lionel Jospin, has
also lifted a secrecy ban on most of the archives documenting the
affair.
It appears that Hassan had known of the
circumstances of Ben Barka's murder when he financed the building of the
�60m mosque over the secret grave. The building of the mosque, at
Courcouronnes near Orly airport, started in October 1984, 19 years after Ben
Barka was bundled into a car as he went to the Lipp brasserie in
Saint-Germain-des-Pr�s for lunch.
He had flown to Paris from Geneva, where he was
living in exile, supposedly to discuss a film on oppression in Morocco,
where he faced arrest for leading a democracy movement.
The invitation was a set-up, according to
evidence given in several criminal trials that arose from the
kidnapping.
After being stopped by two plainclothes French
policemen on the Boulevard Saint-Germain, Ben Barka was handed over to
Frenchmen with long criminal records at a house at Fontenay-le-Vicomte,
south of Paris, to await a meeting with Oufkir.
After being seriously injured in a fight with his
captors, the opposition leader was bound and gagged, then transferred to a
house at nearby Ormoy, where he died in a cellar on October 30 1965.
What happened to his body has now been revealed
to Paris Match by a former secret serviceman, Antoine Lopez, known as "Don
Pedro".
Mr Lopez, now 75, said he had seen Ben Barka
being tortured in the cellar and then helped put his body, wrapped in an
army blanket, in the boot of a Mercedes. The car was driven six miles to a
field, where his kidnappers dug a grave in a small copse known as the Bois
de la Mare � la Besace.
Oufkir was convicted of Ben Barka's abduction and
murder and sentenced to life imprisonment in his absence by a French court.
He died in 1972 after leading an abortive coup against King Hassan.
A French policeman and an intelligence agent were
jailed for the abduction.
Several senior French intelligence personnel were
sacked but many details of the case remain unclear because their involvement
resulted in many documents being classified.
It is believed that archives may reveal that
France's president at the time of Ben Barka's murder, Charles de Gaulle,
knew of the burial site and had informed Hassan before the area was
submerged by a building program for the new town. Three years after Ben
Barka's burial, French authorities compulsorily acquired the land and in
1977 ceded it to a Moroccan cultural association.
Guided by Mr Lopez, investigators have located
the site under the car park in front of the mosque, but have ruled out
exhumation because it is under several feet of concrete.
According to Paris Match, Mr Lopez, the last
surviving member of the kidnap team living in France, traded his information
against an eventual meeting with Hassan.
The king was invited to the Bastille Day
celebrations last year, but died 10 days later, before a meeting could be
arranged.
Revelations concerning the burial site have not
quashed rumors that Ben Barka's head was sent to Hassan in a diplomatic bag
and buried in a desert tomb.
Nor has there been any progress in finding four
gangsters linked to the abduction who were given refuge by Hassan after
fleeing France.
-
Wen Ho Lee Defense Challenges Law In Espionage
Case 
-
Attorneys for a former
Los Alamos scientist accused of mishandling nuclear weapons secrets want to
overturn a law that requires them to reveal details of their case to
prosecutors before trial.
Attorneys for Wen Ho Lee
filed a motion Wednesday to have parts of the Classified Information
Procedures Act voided as unconstitutional.
The law's interest in
protecting national security "cannot justify the burden" on Lee's rights,
his attorneys argued. The defense team said the prosecution is under no
obligation to disclose similar details of its case.
Criminal defendants
generally do not have to reveal details of their defense to prosecutors
before trial. But the 1980 law demands such details. It was passed to
prevent someone accused of spying from disclosing so many secrets that
prosecutors would find the case too damaging to the nation's security
interests.
The law requires Lee's
defense attorneys to list and justify any secrets they expect to use, with
the filings made in sealed documents and closed hearings. They must tell
prosecutors what questions they might ask government witnesses and what Lee
might say if he testifies. If challenged, they must explain why the
information is important to their case.
The law has withstood
several such challenges. A spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's office did
not return a call seeking comment.
Lee, 60, could face life
in prison if he is convicted of breaching security by moving classified
material to unsecure computers and computer tapes. The prosecution has
called the data he downloaded the "crown jewels" of American
science.
Lee, who has not been
charged with espionage, is being held without bail.
-
U.S. Senator Says
Embassies In Africa Are Vulnerable
-
Members of the Senate Intelligence Committee who
toured eight African countries, including the sites of the 1998 U.S. embassy
bombings, found facilities were still ``vulnerable'' to attack in that
region.
The security of U.S. embassies will be an issue
this year for the committee which oversees U.S. intelligence agencies in the
context of the threat from ``terrorism.''
``I think our focus and the major concern that I
have is the threat of terrorism. I think that's very real,'' said Sen.
Richard Bryan, a Nevada Democrat, who is the new vice chairman of the
panel.
The trip to Africa demonstrated ``how vulnerable
other embassies are in terms of their location,'' he told Reuters in a
telephone interview this week.
While some measures to tighten security have been
taken, the locations of the embassies on busy streets in major cities pose a
potential security problem, Bryan said.
``There's nothing that you can do in that
location to prevent (an attack) other than closing the street itself, which
becomes very difficult if you're right in the downtown area,'' he
said.
Bryan went with panel Chairman Richard Shelby, an
Alabama Republican, to Kenya and Tanzania where the 1998 embassy bombings
occurred. They also visited Egypt, Mozambique, Madagascar, Botswana, South
Africa and Namibia.
Nicholas Rostow, committee staff director who
also went on that trip, echoed that assessment. ``In many of those places,
most of them, our facilities are very vulnerable and our people are very
vulnerable,'' he said. ``They're not set back. They're not secure, and the
committee is very concerned about it.''
-
US - China Resume Military Relations
-
The United States and China have agreed to resume
normal military ties, Defense Secretary William Cohen said Thursday after
two days of meetings at the Pentagon between U.S. and Chinese
officials.
China broke off military relations with the
United States last May after the mistaken U.S. bombing of its embassy in
Yugoslavia. Relations also are strained over disagreements on Taiwan and
U.S. missile defense projects.
''I think we are on track to getting
military-to-military relations back at a normal state of affairs,'' Cohen
told reporters during a photo-taking session in his office with British
Defense Minister Geoffrey Hoon.
Cohen said he had a very cordial meeting
Wednesday with People's Liberation Army Lt. Gen. Xiong Guangkai, and that
the Chinese officer extended an invitation for Cohen to go to Beijing. Cohen
had to cancel a visit last year after the outbreak of NATO's air war against
Yugoslavia. He last visited China in January, 1998.
''I was, in fact, invited to return to China,''
Cohen said. ''I indicated that I would do so at a mutually convenient
time.'' He was not more specific, but aides have said they believe Cohen
might go to China around April.
A Cohen trip would be preceded by a visit to
Beijing by Adm. Dennis Blair, commander in chief of the U.S. Pacific
Command. Officials said it was likely Blair would make the trip in the next
couple of months.
Xiong headed a Chinese delegation that held about
12 hours of talks, starting Tuesday morning and ending Wednesday evening,
with a U.S. delegation led by Walter Slocombe, the undersecretary of defense
for policy. On Monday, the Chinese general met with senior officials at the
State Department and paid a courtesy call on Army Gen. Henry H. Shelton,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Slocombe told reporters Thursday that neither
side changed the other's views on topics of disagreement, such as Taiwan and
the Pentagon's effort to build a nationwide defense against long-range
missile attack.
''There were clear statements of strongly
different views on a number of subjects,'' Slocombe said, adding that there
also were areas of agreement, such as the need to prevent North Korea from
building nuclear arms.
Slocombe described Xiong as ''a serious person to
talk to.'' He said Xiong raised the issue of the U.S. bombing of the Chinese
embassy in Belgrade, ''but it was not a big issue.''
A former head of military intelligence, Xiong is
deputy chief of the general staff of the People's Liberation Army. He is one
of China's most politically influential generals and is known for hard-line
views on the United States. He is a member of the ruling Communist Party's
committee that sets policy toward Taiwan.
China agreed to send Xiong to Washington after
the Clinton administration said in mid-December it would seek $28 million
from Congress for the extensive bomb damage to China's embassy in Belgrade.
China agreed to pay $2.87 million for damage done in reprisal attacks on the
U.S. Embassy and consular offices in China.
Did CSIS Agent Affect Air India Probe
- The RCMP will conduct a
criminal investigation after reports that a CSIS agent willfully destroyed
tapes that might have shaved years off the Air India bombing
investigation.
The Canadian Security Intelligence Service asked the
RCMP yesterday to look into whether the unidentified counter-intelligence
agent willfully destroyed tapes of interviews with two informants from the
Vancouver Sikh community some 14 years ago.
The person
who was involved in the investigation came forward to tell his story to set
the record straight, he told the Globe and Mail. His actions, if proven,
could land him charges of criminal obstruction of justice and up to 10 years
in prison.
"We have requested that the RCMP conduct a thorough
investigation into the allegation made by the unnamed source, who has
insisted that he's willfully destroyed tapes and that he never came forward
before," CSIS spokesman Dan Lambert said.
The 1985 bombing sent the
jumbo jet into the sea off Ireland, killing 329 people, 280 of them
Canadian. A massive investigation has yet to produce charges or
convictions.
The agent said he destroyed his tapes in the wake of a
turf war between CSIS and the RCMP, which began their investigations into
the bombing separately.
CSIS agents were asked to turn over their
sources to the RCMP, and the agent, fearing for sources who did not want to
be identified or asked to appear in court, destroyed some 150 hours of taped
interviews and cut his sources loose, he told the Globe.
A federal
source familiar with the investigation downplayed the loss of the tapes,
saying the RCMP was able to provide B.C. prosecutors with findings on which
they're trying to build a case.
RCMP spokesman Cpl. Grant Learned
said there's no way to tell whether the tapes might have sped up the 14-year
investigation, which he says is continuing and progressing well.
But
the Sikh community renewed calls yesterday for an inquiry into the
investigation of the Air India bombing.
"The Air India disaster will
never be solved and those responsible brought to justice, because the
destruction of important evidence will always taint any arrests made,"
Inderjit Singh Bal, president of the World Sikh Organization, said in a
statement.
Before the bombing, CSIS was watching suspected Sikh
extremists in B.C., and had been warned by India's government that its
aircraft could be a terrorist target.
-
Canada Eyeing Bombing Suspect
Canada's intelligence agency said Thursday it had
investigated a man now reportedly in custody in Senegal for involvement in
an alleged terrorist bombing plot in the United States.
Another man implicated in the alleged plot, Ahmed
Ressam, pleaded innocent in federal court in Seattle on Thursday to charges
of involvement in the alleged plot.
Ressam, an Algerian, was arrested Dec. 14 for
allegedly trying to smuggle bomb-making components from Canada into the
United States. Three other Algerian nationals and a woman married to an
Algerian are in custody, and police in the United States and Canada are
searching for another Algerian.
The New York Times reported Thursday that
Mohambedou Ould Slahi was arrested in Senegal at the request of U.S.
authorities who suspect him of organizing the bomb plot. It said no charges
have been filed, but that the United States would seek Slahi's
extradition.
According to the Times report, Slahi's
brother-in-law is a top lieutenant of Saudi millionaire Osama bin Laden. Bin
Laden is one of 18 people indicted in the United States on charges of
conspiracy to attack Americans in the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in
Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224 people, including 12 Americans. Bin Laden
is believed to be in Afghanistan.
In Washington, a law enforcement official who
requested anonymity said investigators were not sure whether Slahi was a
major figure in the bomb plot or merely a messenger. The official also said
U.S. investigators are unsure if Slahi's brother-in-law is a key Bin Laden
aide.
Slahi was in Canada before going to Senegal, said
Dan Lambert, spokesman for the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.
Sometime after Ressam's Dec. 14 arrest, Slahi left ``due, in part, to the
investigation that was ongoing,'' Lambert said. He declined to provide any
details of the case.
No specific evidence has been released that shows
bin Laden was behind the alleged bombing plot and authorities have not said
what the targets might have been.
A senior government official in Senegal and an
officer at the central police station in Dakar told The Associated Press
Friday they knew nothing of Slahi's detention.
A U.S. official in Senegal declined to comment.
Another U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the
situation was sensitive.
Little was revealed about Slahi, a citizen of
Mauritania, but investigators told the Times he was in constant contact with
a construction company in Sudan that was owned by bin Laden and was a front
for bin Laden's international organization, al Qaeda.
Last fall, Slahi traveled to Montreal, where he
worked closely with Mokhtar Haouri, one of the Algerians charged with
helping Ressam.
American officials said there are other emerging
links between the bomb plot and bin Laden. One involves Hamid Aich, an
Algerian who lived for three years in a Vancouver suburb where he shared an
apartment with Abdelmajid Dahoumane, the Times said.
Dahoumane, accused of being Ressam's accomplice,
remains at large.
Irish police said they arrested Aich on Dec. 21
and seized personal papers and computer records. They released him the
following day, and gave the seized material to the FBI for analysis,
Superintendent John Farrelly said.
In France, judicial sources said Thursday that a
Paris court had opened an inquiry last week against a person or persons for
``criminal association in relation to a terrorist operation.'' They did not
identify the target of the investigation, but said it followed the Ressam
arrest in the United States.
A French anti-terrorism judge went to the United
States earlier this month to lead the inquiry, the sources
said.
-
Ex-Soviet Spy Testifies At House Hearing 
-
With the drama of a McCarthy hearing, a former
Soviet spy was led into a room with a black bag over his head and shielded
by a screen from the audience at a congressional hearing on Russian
espionage. Stanislav Lunev was the star witness at Monday's sparsely
attended House Committee on Government Reform hearing called by Rep. Dan
Burton, R-Ind.
Much of Lunev's testimony was a repeat
of allegations made in his 1998 book in which he said Russia's post-Cold War
leaders still see the United States as the enemy. Lunev, who is in the
federal witness protection program, said he masqueraded as a reporter for
the Russian news agency ITAR-Tass for three years during which he scouted
"drop sites" for weapons caches in the U.S. But he said he has no idea if
they were ever planted.
Rep. Curt Weldon, R-Pa., suggested in
November that the spy caches might include suitcase-sized nuclear weapons
that can produce a 10-kiloton blast. Weldon, who also testified Monday,
stood at one point, holding up a large briefcase and announced: "I have a
small atomic demolition device I'd like to bring up to you."
Burton quickly reassured the audience that
it was "a mockup" created by the CIA. Russian officials have confirmed their
arsenal includes such devices, but investigators have said there is no
evidence they are part of the purported hidden stockpiles. By the time the
hearing ended, no one had been able to do more than speculate that there
were "dead drop sites" for Russian weapons in California.
Burton, who said earlier there were "many
potential targets for Russian sabotage in California," was questioned by
reporters about his motives for the hearings and whether he knows of actual
weapons sites in the state. "I don't know whether there's anything like that
here — nor does the administration," he said, but he insisted that the
Russians should be asked.
When he returned to the hearing room,
Burton said, "Some members of the media are indicating we might be trying to
create paranoia and a new Cold War. That's untrue. . . . I'm distressed that
some members of the media think we're trying to scare everyone to
death." Burton said he has repeatedly asked the White House and the
State Department to investigate the question of weapons caches, but they
have never responded.
Hidden
Weapons Stockpiles In Southern California 
A former Russian spy will testify
at a Congressional hearing in downtown Los Angeles Monday about espionage
and hidden arms stockpiles in Southern California and other parts of the
country.
Stanislav Lunev will address a hearing to be held
in the boardroom of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Lunev is
a former colonel in Russia’s GRU intelligence agency who defected in 1992.
He will testify before the House Committee on Government Reform, which
includes Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Los Angeles.
Enrolled in the Federal Witness Protection
Program, Lunev will have his head covered by a hood during his testimony and
his voice will be electronically altered, a local newspaper reported.
Government Reform Committee spokesperson Mark Corallo said Lunev is expected
to give details on Russian espionage targeting Southern California’s defense
and high-tech industries.
“There appears to be widespread espionage
activity in the Los Angeles area, and there may be quite a few of these arms
stockpiles in the region,” Corallo said. Lunev and other Russian defectors
first revealed the existence of the weapons caches in 1992. Since then,
stockpiles of weapons and explosives have been uncovered in Belgium and
Switzerland, but no U.S. stockpiles have been discovered.
Congressional sources reported in
November that the FBI had searched an alleged arms cache site in Brainerd,
Minn., but had turned up nothing. Continuing Russian espionage in the
United States was the subject of Lunev’s 1998 book, “Through the Eyes of the
Enemy.”
Other witnesses expected to testify Monday
include Rep. Curt Weldon, R-Penn., who earlier raised the possibility that
the spy caches might include suitcase-sized nuclear weapons.
Russian officials have confirmed that their
arsenal includes the weapons, which can produce a 10-kiloton blast, but no
evidence has turned up to date that Russian nuclear weapons have been hidden
away in the United States.
"If Lunev is right and there are, in fact, secret
Russian arms caches throughout this county, we must not sit idly by and let
this become a larger threat to U.S. security,” said Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind.,
the Government Reform Committee chairman.
-
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- Code name of Juan Pujol Garcia, a Spaniard
who was taken on by Germans in World War II to spy on the British. He
became one of the most effective double agents in history. Garbo worked
against the Germans because of his dislike of Spanish dictator Francisco
Franco. He believed that only an Allied victory in the war could depose
Franco. After offering his services to British intelligence and being
rejected, Garbo was accepted by the German Abwehr. He departed Madrid in
July 1941, ostensibly en route to England, carrying secret writing
materials, lists of questions, money, and accommodation
addresses.
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