From: "Macdonald Stainsby" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: [L-I] Egypt Leader Says He Warned America

Egypt Leader Says He Warned America
Associated Press, 7 December 2001

Centre for Research on Globalisation (CRG),  globalresearch.ca,  8
December 2001

The URL of this article is:
http://globalresearch.ca/articles/LEB112A.html
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Egypt Leader Says He Warned America BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak says he warned the United States that "something
would happen" 12 days before the Sept. 11 terror attacks on New York and
Washington.

In an interview published Friday by the left-wing Lebanese newspaper
As-Safir, Mubarak also said it would be a grave mistake if Israeli
forces were to kill Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.

Mubarak did not reveal how he learned in late August of a possible
terror attack on the United States. He said he was taken aback by the
scale of the Sept. 11 attacks, when hijackers seized four U.S. airliners
and crashed two into New York's World Trade Center and one into the
Pentagon. The fourth plane crashed into the Pennsylvania countryside
during an apparent struggle in the cockpit.

"We expected that something was going to happen and informed the
Americans. We told them," Mubarak said. He did not mention a U.S.
response.

"But nobody expected the event would be of such enormity. We did not
know that they would hit this target or that, and we were all surprised
when planes with passengers on board hit the twin towers," Mubarak said.

Washington has said that in the weeks before the Sept. 11 attacks, the
CIA issued a warning that bin Laden was pressing for terrorist action
against Americans. The warning was based on new intelligence but did not
have specific information on the type of attack, a date or a location.

Mubarak also commented on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Recent
Israeli airstrikes have hit targets within 100 yards of Arafat's
offices.

Mubarak said that if Israel were to kill Arafat, it would create a
vacuum in the Palestinian leadership that none of the "six to eight
contenders" would be able to fill.

"Leaderships would emerge that would vie for popularity and compete in
staging violent operations, internally and externally, against Israel,
plunging (the region) into chaos. They (Israel) should understand this
and know that it is dangerous," Mubarak said.

"And what would happen after Arafat? Who would Israel hold responsible
for (acts of violence) - the leaders of Hamas or the Popular Front for
the Liberation of Palestine?" Mubarak said, referring to two militant
Palestinian factions.

Hamas has claimed responsibility for two suicide bombings that killed 25
people and wounded scores in Jerusalem and Haifa last weekend. The PFLP
claimed responsibility for the assassination of the Israeli tourism
minister in October.

Copyright AP 2001

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Macdonald Stainsby
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