-- 
-Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like a banana. Stranger things have -
-happened but none stranger than this. Does your driver's license say Organ
-Donor?Black holes are where God divided by zero. Listen to me! We are all-
-individuals! What if this weren't a hypothetical question? [EMAIL PROTECTED]


---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2001 10:58:46 -0700
From: Jon Callas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: The Eristocracy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Terrorists' trade in stolen identities

Subject: FWD:Terrorists' trade in stolen identities
Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2001 09:22:10 -0400
From: "Donald E. Eastlake 3rd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

<http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/0,,2001320012-2001330486,00.html>

SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 22 2001
The hunt:
Terrorists' trade in stolen identities
BY DANIEL MCGRORY

HAD FBI agents bothered to ask college lecturers in South Wales about
the terrorist bomber they supposedly taught over a decade ago, then
security chiefs would have realised how Osama bin Laden had carefully
created a generation of impostors.

His agents stole the identities and life histories of at least a dozen
Western-educated young men who were all murdered in 1990, according to
a former head of the CIA.

Every document and record of those men's lives were either stolen or
doctored to allow bin Laden's terrorists - or possibly Saddam
Hussein's - to move freely around the world using a false identity,
says James Woolsey, writing in New Republic magazine. Families of all
12 men were also killed and all their paperwork erased so nobody would
stumble on bin Laden's lethal impostors.

Only now are security services realising the extent of his
trickery. What nobody knows for sure is how many "jackals" bin Laden
has at his disposal.

The man serving life in Colorado, in America's most secure prison, for
bombing the World Trade Centre in 1993 is not who he says he is.

Ramzi Yousef, who aimed to demolish the centre by toppling one tower
into the other, told his interrogators how he was first recruited to
the Islamic cause while he was a student in Swansea. He described how
while taking a Higher National Diploma in computer-aided electrical
engineering at West Glamorgan Institute of Higher Education in 1987 he
gave up drinking in the student bars after being approached by local
followers of the Muslim Brotherhood.

The FBI did not think it strange that Swansea should be a major
recruiting station for Islamic militants. Nor did it think it curious
that a young man who had taken an advanced language course at Oxford
and lived in Britain for four years spoke appalling English.

Yousef went on to describe how during his summer holidays in 1988 he
went to Afghanistan for military training to play his part in the holy
war there against the Soviet invaders. After his stint on the front
line, where he learnt to handle explosives, Yousef returned to his
studies.

It was only then, he confessed, that the university authorities knew
him as Abdul Kareem, a Pakistani whose wealthy family lived in
Kuwait. What has now emerged is that this master bomber has
successfully used nine aliases, among them the innocent computer
student from Swansea and another murder victim.

Until two months ago the US security agencies had never asked anyone
at the college to verify Ramzi Yousef's confession of his days in
Wales. Why they suddenly re-opened the files on him only seven weeks
before the suicide attacks in America is not clear.

Professor Ken Reid, the deputy principal of the institute, knew the
real Abdul Kareem and from even a cursory glance at the photograph of
the convicted World Trade bomber he realised these were two different
men.

There was four inches' difference in height and more than 40lb in
weight, and the impostor looked a lot older than Kareem, who was 27
when he left university. One had a deformed eye, smaller ears and
mouth. A former CIA officer said it was also apparent that the
impostor was not as proficent on a computer as the gifted young
student whose identity he had assumed.

Their accents were different, and while the real Abdul Kareem was
known at university for being shy and respectful to women, voice-mail
messages taken from the impostor used foul language and graphic sexual
imagery.

The real Abdul Kareem was murdered in Kuwait shortly after the Iraqi
invasion in 1990. He had gone back to Kuwait City to be with his
family but in the confusion at that time nobody paid much attention to
his murder or of 11 other men of roughly the same age.

Their homes were not looted, but carefully ransacked to eliminate any
personal trace that they had been there.

Passports vanished, along with driving licences and bank books. Nobody
thought it suspicious at the time that there were no photographs left
of the victims nor books with their names inscribed on the
cover. Security chiefs now fear they were erased so somebody else
could take their place.

When Yousef came to assume the Swansea student's identity the files in
Kuwait had already been tampered with. Photocopied pages of earlier
passports the genuine Kareem had applied for were among the few
records not destroyed during Saddam Hussein's invasion. Fingerprints
on official records held in Kuwait city were also doctored to match
Ramzi Yousef's. Another man whose name he used was Abdul Basit, whose
documents were skillfully altered to allow Yousef to adopt his
identity.

Mr Woolsey says that federal prosecutors were dangerously wrong to
believe Yousef was just another Muslim who was seduced by the radical
cause while at a British university.

Mr Woolsey writes in the New Republic that one way to prove the
confusion over identities is to examine the fingerprints taken from
the genuine students, some of which are believed to be held by
Scotland Yard. But what it will not do is answer the question of who
Ramzi Yousef really is.

Mr Woolsey questions whether Saddam Hussein had a part to play in this
conspiracy over fake identities, as the murders of the innocents
happened during his occupation of Kuwait.

At the time of the 1993 attack on the World Trade Centre, he says, it
was easier to blame Osama bin Laden rather than examine who else was
involved. What documentary evidence the security agencies found
supported Yousef's story that he had lived in Wales.

Security agencies now face a monumental task in unravelling all the
identities of the hijackers and suspects to discover how many are
false jackals. The fear is that most of the 19 suicide bombers were
using fake identities.


[ To unsubscribe, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body
"unsubscribe man-bytes-dog" (the subject is ignored).]

Reply via email to