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November 18, 2001
SUNDAY REPORT
Long Before Sept. 11, Bin Laden Aircraft Flew Under the Radar

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-
111801osamair.story

By STEPHEN BRAUN and JUDY PASTERNAK, Times Staff Writers

Osama bin Laden built a shadow air force to support his terrorist
activities, using Afghanistan's national airline, a surplus U.S. Air
Force
jet and clandestine charters.

Long before suicide teams crashed hijacked airliners into the World
Trade
Center and the Pentagon on Sept. 11, sympathetic foreign officials
and
wealthy supporters gave Bin Laden access to planes to help him
forge, arm
and transport his terrorist network.

Interviews with more than 50 U.S. diplomatic and security aides, law
enforcement agents, former Afghan civil air officials, pilots and
aviation
executives provide a wealth of new details about how Bin Laden
cobbled
together an unconventional air capability.

Through an operative, he bought and refurbished the Air Force
passenger jet
in 1992 and had it transported to Sudan, where he was then based.
He shipped
men and materiel on Afghanistan's Ariana Airways after the Taliban
took
control of the country in 1996. And when international sanctions
hobbled the
airline last year, he turned to covert charters to keep his terrorist
network airborne.

In recent weeks, U.S. bombers pounded a western Afghanistan
airfield where
four Ariana airliners were believed to be stored. The attack was an
attempt
to deny Bin Laden mobility and prevent his escape from
Afghanistan.

U.S. officials expressed concern that he might have other aircraft
assets
concealed in the country. Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld
said Bin
Laden might try to flee aboard a "well-hidden helicopter." A former
Afghan
civil air official said Taliban leaders had given Bin Laden regular
access
to a Russian-made MI-17 helicopter in recent years.

With the Taliban's blessing, Bin Laden effectively had hijacked
Ariana, the
national civilian airline of Afghanistan. For four years, according to
former U.S. aides and exiled Afghan officials, Ariana's passenger
and
charter flights ferried Islamic militants, arms, cash and opium
through the
United Arab Emirates and Pakistan. Members of Bin Laden's Al
Qaeda terrorist
network were provided false Ariana identification that gave them
free run of
airports in the Middle East.

"One airline was servicing Afghanistan at the time, and that was
Ariana,"
said Steve Simon, a former senior director for transnational threats
at the
National Security Council. "Al Qaeda moved drugs out, money in
and people
around on Ariana."

Taliban authorities also opened the country's airstrips to high-
ranking
Persian Gulf state officials who routinely flew in for lavish hunting
parties. Sometimes joined by Bin Laden and Taliban leaders, the
dignitaries,
who included several high-ranking officials from Saudi Arabia and
the
Emirates--left behind money, vehicles and equipment with their
hosts,
according to U.S. and Afghan accounts.

In buying and renovating the Air Force jet, Bin Laden and Al Qaeda
easily
evaded rules governing the sale of U.S. planes.

The jet, overhauled at Van Nuys Airport in 1992, later was used to
ferry Al
Qaeda commanders to East Africa, where they trained Somali
tribesmen for
attacks on U.S. peacekeeping forces. It later crashed on a runway in
Sudan.

Bin Laden's secret purchase capitalized on lax government
oversight and the
unwitting aid of Americans who helped disguise the plane as a
civilian jet.

The FBI is reexamining the episode. Concerned that other terrorists
may have
attempted to buy planes, investigators have been looking at several
unusual
attempts earlier this year to obtain commercial aircraft, though they
have
yet to find any credible links to terrorists.

"Our sensitivities are so much more finely tuned now," explained
Clive G.
Medland, a vice president of a New York aviation firm whose
executives were
questioned by the FBI about an attempt by three Pakistanis to lease
a
transport jet earlier this year. "Everyone's on guard."

An Eager Student Flies the T-39

In mid-December 1992, John Lowrey, a veteran pilot operating out
of a small
airfield in Lancaster, took a client up in a surplus Air Force T-39A
jet.

Lowrey's new student was Essam al Ridi, an Egyptian emigre who
showed up in
a crisp Northwest Airlink pilot's uniform. Ridi told Lowrey he was
eager to
learn to fly the T-39A because he had just bought a similar jet and
planned
to fly it for a family in Cairo.

The T-39s, military versions of the twin-engine Sabreliner built by
North
American Rockwell, had been used by the Air Force since the late
1950s to
transport generals and VIPs. The jet Ridi purchased was being
overhauled at
Van Nuys airport, so Lowrey trained the Egyptian in a borrowed T-
39.

Ridi bought the plane from a Southern California broker, using funds
from Al
Qaeda to pay for the aircraft and the repairs. Ridi told Lowrey and
Americans working on the T-39 that he planned to pilot the craft for
wealthy
Egyptians.

Ridi was a fast learner. Just weeks after he finished training, he flew
the
plane from Van Nuys to Texas. He then set out in January 1993--not
for
Cairo, but to the Sudanese capital of Khartoum. There, in a
secluded guest
house, he turned over the plane's keys to its real owner, Bin Laden,
at a
dinner attended by men armed with AK47s, according to Ridi's
testimony in a
recent federal trial.

Bin Laden was familiar with airplanes. His father, Sheik Mohammad
bin Laden,
was the first Saudi permitted by King Faisal to buy his own plane--a
twin-engine Beechcraft; he died in a jet crash in September 1967.

When Bin Laden went to Afghanistan to fight the Soviet invaders in
the
1980s, he paid for charter jets to fly in arms for the moujahedeen
and for
construction and demolition equipment. After he was forced to move
his
budding Al Qaeda organization to Sudan in 1991, he again used
charter
flights to move troops and materiel.

According to Ridi, Bin Laden wanted his own T-39 to fly U.S.-built,
shoulder-fired Stinger missiles from Pakistan to Sudan. Ridi
provided his
account of the T-39 sale in February, during testimony as a federal
witness
in the trial of four Al Qaeda terrorists convicted in the 1998
bombings of
U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

Air Force officials said they were amazed when they learned that
one of
their surplus jets ended up in Bin Laden's hands. Officials at the
U.S. Air
Force Museum at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Fairborn,
Ohio--the last
government facility to own the T-39--said they will tighten monitoring
of
future sales and trades.

"I'm sure we're going to be changing our way of doing business,"
museum
spokesman Christopher McGee said.

The museum already had toughened its safeguards on aircraft
transactions in
1997, requiring traders to undergo a "security control check" and win
a
clearance certificate by the Defense Logistics Agency. The rules
also
required the new owners to notify future buyers that they would have
to
obtain an export license to fly the plane out of the country.

In fact, the museum was scrupulous in its 1989 trade of the T-39 to
a
California aircraft broker who later sold the jet to Ridi. McGee said
the
transaction was cleared with an assistant secretary of the Air Force.
In a
Jan. 12, 1990, deal, broker Ascher Ward was to receive six T-39s in
exchange
for a Rapide DH-89A aircraft. The T-39s were delivered to Ward in
March
1990.

Ward sold one of the craft to Ridi in 1992. Ridi later testified that he
paid $210,000--money relayed to him by one of Bin Laden's aides--
but Ward
said he received less than $100,000.

Government officials and aviation workers involved in Bin Laden's
secret
purchase of the T-39 say that FBI agents recently have interviewed
them and
scanned their records. So far, authorities have found no evidence
that
Ridi's purchase of the T-39 violated U.S. law.

"On an unprecedented scale, we are examining and reexamining a
multitude of
areas; looking for suspicious patterns or activities," FBI Assistant
Director John Collingwood said. "Even legitimate prior activities that
can
be predictive are being examined."

Ridi was able to evade the informal honor system that governs
aircraft sales in the U.S.

"The system just isn't built to check out every sale of an aircraft,"
said
Bill Gardner, president of the Meridian Aerospace Group, a major
commercial
jet broker in Winston-Salem, N.C. "There's really not much
preventing
somebody from buying a big old jet transport and flying it into
anything
they want to take out."

The FAA typically registers military aircraft purchased for civil use as
"experimental" until they comply with FAA requirements for
airworthiness,
agency spokesman Paul Turk said. Under that status, planes cannot
be used to
haul cargo or passengers for hire. Tom Poborezny, who heads the
Experimental
Aircraft Assn., said that under international air policy, such
experimental
aircraft also cannot be flown out of the U.S. without obtaining
diplomatic
clearances to land at foreign airports.

Several Americans who saw Bin Laden's T-39 in Van Nuys said it
was being
refitted as a civilian craft. Roy Silva, who installed new radios in the
cockpit, recalled that before the T-39 was outfitted with new leather
seats
and repainted, the word "experimental" was visible inside the jet's
door.

Several weeks later, the insignia was painted over and "Sabreliner"
was
stitched into the bulkhead. Painting out the word "experimental" for a
plane
designated as that status is an FAA violation. But "it's not exactly a
capital crime," Turk said. "There is no task force out there looking
for
people who obscure the markings, but if you were caught, you'd be
told to
fix it or else."

According to Barrie Towey, an editor at Air-Britain News, a British
plane
spotter saw the T-39 in Luton, England, on Jan. 16, 1993. Ridi flew
the T-39
from Fort Worth to Sault Ste. Marie and Frobisher Bay, Canada;
Iceland; Rome
and Cairo before landing in Khartoum.

There, he was invited to dinner with Bin Laden and his terrorist
commanders.
The next day, Bin Laden offered Ridi a job as his personal pilot. The
Egyptian turned him down after he learned his pay would be only
$1,200 a
month.

In late 1993, Ridi later testified, he flew the T-39 to Nairobi, Kenya,
dropping off five Al Qaeda commanders. They were on their way to
Somalia to
stir up tribal insurgents against U.S. peacekeeping troops there.
Another
federal witness testified that one of the passengers was Mohammed
Atef, Bin
Laden's senior commander who reportedly was killed in an airstrike
last
week.

The T-39's third flight was its last. Returning to Khartoum in 1995,
Ridi
found the jet sagging in disuse, its tires melted in the desert heat,
vents
stuffed with sand. He overhauled the engine and took it for a test
run, but
the jet skidded, crashing into a dune. Panicked, Ridi fled.

A high-ranking federal official said that six years later Bin Laden's jet
still is in Khartoum, disabled and landlocked.

Ridi, who has disappeared into the federal witness protection
program, still
is listed as the plane's owner in FAA files.

Overdue, 727 Returns With Surprise Cargo

In October 1996, a month after the Islamic militant Taliban seized
control
of Afghanistan, Ariana officials in the capital of Kabul grew alarmed
about
a missing Boeing 727 cargo plane.

The jet had been chartered for a round trip from Jalalabad to
Khartoum by
two Sudanese diplomats. It was to fly to the UAE, then on to
Khartoum
carrying a load of fruit and rugs. It was to return a few days later with
a
humanitarian cargo of food and medicine.

It took a week before the 727 returned. When the weary flight crew
showed up
in Ariana's home office in Kabul, according to former Afghan civil air
officials familiar with the incident, they offered a strange tale.

In Khartoum, the crew waited three days in a hotel until Sudanese
authorities were ready to load the plane. Back at the airport, they
were
stunned to find no cargo but 90 passengers waiting to board. The
Sudanese
had installed 100 seats in the 727, then herded the passengers
aboard--women
veiled in burkas, men in desert robes, excited children. No travel
documents
were checked.

Flying into Jalalabad just after midnight, the passengers were
greeted by a
dusty convoy of jeeps, vans and trucks. Many of the drivers carried
weapons.
Within minutes, the passengers piled into the vehicles, then
disappeared
into the desert night.

According to the crew, the Arab passengers and their Afghan
welcomers worked
for Bin Laden.

The ease with which Bin Laden's operatives boarded the 727 was
soon
replicated on a daily basis. Bin Laden and his Taliban hosts
commandeered
the 35-year-old national air company as their private charter service.

Bin Laden himself had flown out of Khartoum that May. He
disappeared into
Afghanistan, making his way first to Jalalabad, then to Kandahar,
the
mountainous southern region home to Taliban leader Mullah
Mohammed Omar and
the staging ground for jihad, or holy war, training camps.

Ariana Airlines became a "key node in Al Qaeda's infrastructure," a
former
NSC official said. "The network used Ariana to move everything that
was
useful--money, personnel and materiel."

Schedules previously tightly hewed to by Ariana pilots suddenly
collapsed.
Passenger routes to Paris and Beijing shriveled, replaced by an
explosion of
cargo runs. Many of the freight shipments flew in and out of
Pakistan and
UAE.

"The planes would come back from the UAE loaded with weapons,"
said Julie
Sirrs, an Afghanistan specialist at the U.S. Defense Intelligence
Agency
during the Clinton administration. "It was mostly Soviet weapons,
small
arms--Kalashnikovs [rifles] and RPG-7s [shoulder-fired antitank
rocket
launchers]."

Ariana's schedule became "something of a hit-and-miss
proposition," said
Simon, the former NSC official who now is assistant director of the
International Institute for Strategic Studies in London. "They would
take
off 30 minutes before schedule. They canceled flights. It gave them
the
flexibility they needed" to move illicit cargo.

U.S. Knew of Al Qaeda Travels

U.S. security officials were aware that Al Qaeda terrorists flew on
Ariana
"to the UAE and other points in the [Persian] Gulf," Simon added.

According to Sirrs, one Yemeni Al Qaeda operative held prisoner in
northern
Afghanistan by the Northern Alliance described flying from Yemen to
Afghanistan on Ariana planes in 1997 and 1998.

Some went disguised as Ariana employees. According to an Afghan
civil air
expert familiar with Ariana's operations, Taliban officials set up a
false
document mill in 1997 "right at the airport" in Kabul. The station
churned
out reams of phony documents, allowing Islamic militants to travel
out of
the country posing as Ariana pilots, flight attendants, mechanics and
clerks.

"They would give the Talib's and Bin Laden's people Ariana ID
cards," the
Afghan air expert said. "So you would have planes going out with 20
mechanics on board. Do you think all those people were
mechanics? That made
them crew members. They could get into any airport they wanted
to."

A frequent stop was Sharjah, one of the Emirates. Sharjah
International
Airport, former U.S. and Afghan officials said, became a hub for
drug and
arms smuggling by Al Qaeda. The emirate, 20 miles from Dubai, is
run by a
fundamentalist Islamic regime. Sharjah's airport is studded with
numerous
"fly-by-night" cargo operations willing to take on any comers, U.S.
analysts
said. Some allegedly flew on contracts for Al Qaeda.

The terrorists often relied on an Ariana representative stationed at
the
Sharjah airport. The man was a Taliban-appointed Al Qaeda
operative,
according to the Afghan air expert. Since the U.S. began military
operations, the man has not been seen by the Afghan's Emirate
contacts.

An Emirate spokesman insisted that security at UAE airports is tight.
"All
our airports are under strict procedures," said Abdullah Alsadoosi, a
UAE
diplomat in Washington. "I don't think smuggling can go through
that."

But a U.S. official said Ariana planes were used to deliver cash from
the
Emirates to Al Qaeda operatives in Pakistan. And officials also say
Ariana
planes shipped out large quantities of drugs.

In August 1996, while Afghanistan still was divided among rival
factions,
one attempt by the Taliban to ship opium on an Ariana flight to the
UAE was
halted by Ahmed Shah Masoud, the Northern Alliance leader who
was
assassinated, presumably by Taliban or Al Qaeda operatives, just
days before
the Sept. 11 attacks in the U.S.

According to the former Afghan air expert, Masoud learned that
Taliban
officials had contracted with Ariana for a one-way charter from
Jalalabad to
Sharjah. Taliban officials told the airline the cargo was wood bound
for
construction sites in the UAE. Suspicious, Masoud led an armed
band onto the
Boeing 727 at the Jalalabad airport and examined the timber. Inside
hollow
logs, Masoud's men found bags of opium.

Those familiar with Ariana's growing abuse by Al Qaeda and the
Taliban say
there also are reports suggesting that the airline might have been
used to
train Islamic militants as pilots. According to Afghan sources,
Taliban
officials ordered Ariana executives in 1997 to train two of their men
as
Boeing 727 pilots.

The men, Afghan air force pilots experienced only in flying Russian
jets,
were sent to a Jordanian Airways flight school that Ariana used to
train its
own civilian pilots. According to the Afghan aviation expert, the two
Taliban pilots were "washouts," unable to master the 727's panel
and speak
English--the international language of pilots.

In March 1998, when an Ariana Boeing 727 crashed into a mountain
near Kabul
killing 45 people, the airliner reportedly was flown by two Taliban
pilots,
the Afghan expert said.

A security specialist who spent time in Afghanistan also said there
were
reports that the Taliban tried to recruit pilots for $4,000 to $5,000 a
month, tax-free, in the northern region near Uzbekistan. The
payments, the
specialist said, reportedly were offered by Al Qaeda.

According to a former NSC official, Ariana's domination by Al Qaeda
and the
Taliban was a key basis for the United Nations' decision in 2000 to
impose
sanctions on the Taliban.

When U.S. officials approached the U.N. about imposing sanctions,
they and
Russian officials detailed Ariana's cover role "so people could
understand
why this was needed," the former NSC aide said.

After Ariana's foreign flights were shut down, Ariana charter flights
kept
moving Al Qaeda cargoes and agents, former U.S. and Afghan
officials said.
Islamic militants often turned to a Lebanese-run charter service
flying out
of Sharjah. According to the Afghan aviation expert, the cargo firm
provided
mid-size Russian Antonov cargo jets for charter runs "when they
couldn't fly
on Ariana."

For years, Persian Gulf state elites hunted rare birds of prey,
houbara
bustards, in the bleak hills surrounding Kandahar. In the late 1990s,
according to former U.S. and Afghan officials, a number of
prominent Persian
Gulf state officials and businessmen flew into Kandahar on state
and private
jets for secret hunting expeditions.

For days at a time, the hunters would roam the hills, releasing
falcons
trained to catch the bustards. Some satisfied hunters heaped
donations on
their Taliban hosts, officials said--and on Al Qaeda leaders who
occasionally joined them.

Among the reported visitors were high-ranking UAE and Saudi
government
ministers. According to U.S. and former Afghan civil air officials, the
hunters included Prince Turki al Faisal, son of the late Saudi King
Faisal.
He headed that nation's intelligence service until late August,
maintaining
close ties with Bin Laden and the Taliban. Another visitor, officials
said,
was Sheik Mohammed ibn Rashid al Maktum, the Dubai crown
prince and Emirates
defense minister.

Persian Gulf state officials cast doubt on the reports. "People go
hunting
in Pakistan. They don't go to Afghanistan," said Adel al-Jubeir,
foreign
policy advisor to Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah. Similarly, the UAE's
Alsadoosi said he did "not recall" any Afghan hunting trips made by
Sheik
Mohammed.

Plenty of Supplies Left After Visits

U.S. security sources and former Afghan officials said they did not
know
what transpired during the visits by the two ministers.

But on other occasions, Bin Laden and Omar mingled with the
hunters. Former
intelligence official Sirrs said a Taliban defector who claimed he was
a
hunting camp guard described "rich Saudis and top Taliban officials
there."
The man also said Bin Laden and Omar went off to fish together. An
Afghan
source said the two militant leaders often fished at a dam west of
Kandahar.

Departing, the wealthy visitors often left behind late-model jeeps,
trucks
and supplies. "That's one way the Taliban got their equipment," said
Mohammed Eshaq, who served as Afghanistan's deputy minister of
civil
aviation from 1992 to 1994. A security specialist with experience in
Afghanistan said that late-model pickups left by the sheiks
"revolutionized"
the Taliban's troop transport.

"The Taliban could do these hit and runs," the specialist said.
"These are
the pickup trucks you see Taliban soldiers driving around in on the
news."

The dignitaries' outbound jets, former U.S. and Afghan officials
suspect,
may also have smuggled out Al Qaeda and Taliban cargo.

"Who knows what came and went on those planes?" Sirrs said.

U.S. officials are more certain of the fate of Ariana Airways' fleet of
four
Boeing 727s.

As U.S. bombers took to the skies over Afghanistan in recent
weeks, Taliban
officials reportedly withdrew the jets to hangars at an airfield near
the
city of Herat. The move provided no shelter. U.S. bombers struck at
the
Herat field repeatedly in search of "legitimate targets," Navy Adm.
John D.
Stufflebeem said.

Former Afghan civil air officials said Ariana's fleet no longer exists.

"The [Herat] airport," exulted a former Afghan civil air official, "is now
flattened."

_ _ _

Times staff writers Mark Fineman and John Hendren in
Washington, Davan
Maharaj in Nairobi, Caitlin Liu and Greg Krikorian in Los Angeles
and
researchers John Beckham, Janet Lundblad and Robert Patrick
contributed to
this report.

For information about reprinting this article,
go to http://www.lats.com/rights/register.htm

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