http://www.newspress.com/Top/Article/article.jsp?Section=WORLD&ID=564942290235555859

  Evidence shows Milan CIA chief opposed cleric's kidnapping

John Crewdson

January 7, 2007 5:30 PM

(HAS TRIM)

Chicago Tribune

(MCT)

MILAN, Italy - The CIA chief in this northern Italian city opposed the 
intelligence agency's planned abduction of a radical Muslim cleric as 
ill-conceived and counter-productive, according to evidence gathered by 
prosecutors here.

Had the abduction of Abu Omar been stopped, the CIA would have been 
spared what has become one of the most embarrassing episodes in its 
post-Sept. 11 war on terror.

And Robert Seldon Lady, the now-retired Milan CIA chief, would likely 
still be living with his wife in the Italian villa they bought with 
their life savings, high on a hillside overlooking a lush green valley 
with long, straight rows of vines that provide the grapes for Asti's 
famous sparkling wines.

Instead, Lady is a fugitive from Italian justice, one of 25 past and 
present CIA operatives charged with the kidnapping of Abu Omar, whose 
given name is Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr.

click here

A preliminary hearing in the case begins here Tuesday. Lady and the 
other Americans are not expected to attend. All would be subject to 
arrest the moment they set foot in Italy, or any of the other 26 member 
countries of the European Union.

But Lady, who is believed to be living somewhere in the United States, 
is the only defendant who had to leave a picturebook retirement villa 
behind. Says a former CIA colleague: ''Everybody feels bad that Bob has 
been left holding the bag.''

After simmering for nearly three years, the unparalleled investigation 
is about to come to a rolling boil here in the massive Tribunale di 
Milano, the first case in anyone's memory in which CIA operatives have 
been charged with non-espionage-related crimes.

The evidence that will be laid out in the preliminary hearing is more 
than the story of the CIA's lax ''tradecraft'' in abducting Abu Omar in 
February 2003, a remarkable degree of sloppiness that allowed the Milan 
police to unravel an operation costing hundreds of thousands of U.S. 
taxpayer dollars.

For the future of American intelligence and the war on terrorism, the 
most consequential revelations may concern schisms within the CIA over 
the value and risks of ''rendition,'' the agency's euphemism for its 
once-secret practice of snatching suspected terrorists abroad and 
transporting them to countries where they are likely to be interrogated 
under torture.

An Italian intelligence official's recollection that the CIA's Lady 
opposed the abduction from the start is perhaps the most startling 
disclosure buried in the mountains of evidence gathered by Deputy Chief 
Public Prosecutor Armando Spataro and his investigators.

Spataro's evidence indicates that Lady was overruled by his immediate 
boss, the chief of the CIA's station in Rome. The evidence also suggests 
that the Rome chief, then considered a rising star within the agency, 
overstated the threat posed by Abu Omar in obtaining approval for the 
abduction from CIA higher-ups in Washington.

A veteran senior CIA official who has been interviewed about the Abu 
Omar rendition by the CIA's independent Office of Inspector General said 
an internal review of what went wrong in Milan had generated tension 
within the agency.

''All of a sudden people are having trouble remembering meetings they 
were in,'' he said.

Since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the U.S., the White House and 
the highest levels of the CIA have signaled strong support for a new 
genre of ''paramilitary'' intelligence-gathering operations, of which 
rendition is only one.

But not everyone at CIA headquarters shares that enthusiasm, and there 
are signs that the pendulum is swinging back.

Last week, Gen. Michael Hayden, the CIA director, told CIA employees 
they had been given a ''mandate'' on the collection of human 
intelligence through the cultivation of informers and sources - a 
practice at which the agency traditionally has excelled.

The veteran senior CIA officer quoted earlier in this report, who like 
others of his generation spent much of his career recruiting human spies 
abroad, expressed skepticism about ''all this paramilitary stuff,'' 
declaring that ''We never got any good (intelligence) product from a 
rendition.''

Lady, the former Milan CIA chief who fled Italy after discovering that 
he was a target of the kidnapping investigation, has been offered an 
opportunity to testify for the prosecution in return for a promise that, 
under a new Italian law, he will not have to serve time in prison even 
if he is convicted.

Lady's Italian lawyer, Daria Pesce, declined to make her client 
available for an interview with the Chicago Tribune but said she had 
advised him to accept the prosecution's offer. He has until the 
conclusion of the preliminary hearing at the end of February to make his 
intentions known to the prosecutors.

At the moment, none of the two dozen other CIA defendants - all except 
Lady represented by court-appointed lawyers who say they have had no 
contact with their clients - is expected to return voluntarily to Milan 
to stand trial.

The Italian Justice Ministry has not yet forwarded to Washington a 
request from the court in Milan that the American defendants be formally 
extradited. But the presence of the American defendants is not crucial 
to the prosecution's case.

Investigators here have compiled thousands of pages of documents and 
testimony from past and present officials of SISMI, the CIA's Italian 
counterpart. Several of them have acknowledged collaborating with the 
Americans in planning Abu Omar's rendition.

If the court agrees, Spataro can try the CIA operatives in absentia. 
Even so, there will be live defendants in the dock: Italy's former top 
spymaster, Nicolo Pollari, removed in November from his post as chief of 
SISMI, and four of Pollari's former aides, all charged with having known 
about and supported the CIA's kidnapping plot.

Like all CIA employees, Lady signed a secrecy agreement upon joining the 
CIA, and he is said to be concerned that by testifying he might violate 
the agreement and become liable for criminal prosecution in the U.S.

However, Jeffrey Smith, a former CIA general counsel who sometimes 
advises the Tribune on legal matters, said in an interview that the 
agreement is aimed at limiting what CIA employees can publish while in 
government or after retirement, and that it provides for civil, rather 
than criminal, penalties.

The most the CIA can do under the agreement, Smith said, is sue a CIA 
author to recover the profits from a book or other publication that has 
not been vetted by the agency in advance. Veteran CIA officers said they 
could remember only one case in the agency's nearly 60-year history in 
which the agreement had been invoked in court.

Thus far the prosecutors have received no indication of what Lady has in 
mind.

Among Lady's responsibilities in Milan were maintaining contact with the 
local police and their anti-terrorist unit, known as DIGOS, which had 
Abu Omar under close surveillance because of his suspected role in 
helping young European Muslims make their way to Iraq to take up arms 
against the expected allied invasion.

According to a DIGOS commander, the Italians were sharing the ''take'' 
from that surveillance with Lady. Then, in the fall of 2002, Lady was 
told that the CIA wanted to take Abu Omar out of circulation.

Luciano Pironi, an officer in the Carabinieri, Italy's military police, 
who served as an informal liaison with the CIA in Milan, told 
prosecutors that, as explained to him by Lady, Abu Omar was to be 
temporarily ''relocated'' while efforts were made to recruit him as an 
informer.

The idea, according to Pironi, was that Abu Omar's collaborators would 
believe he had been abducted and then returned home a few days later - 
never suspecting that he had agreed to work for the CIA. Pironi is also 
charged in the abduction.

In a separate conversation with Stefano D'Ambrosio, then Lady's 
counterpart as the SISMI chief in Milan, Lady identified the CIA's Rome 
station chief as the person who devised the Abu Omar rendition scheme, 
D'Ambrosio told prosecutors.

D'Ambrosio's SISMI superiors later confirmed to prosecutors that the 
initiative to ''render'' Abu Omar had come from the Rome station chief.

In his closed-door testimony to investigators, D'Ambrosio quoted Lady as 
saying that CIA operatives already were in Milan, posing as tourists and 
staying at some of Europe's most expensive hotels while monitoring Abu 
Omar's movements in preparation for the snatch.

The actual abduction, Lady reportedly said, would be carried out by 
''the heavies,'' one of the CIA's elite Special Operations Groups 
composed mostly of former Army Green Berets, Delta Force operators and 
Navy SEALs.

According to D'Ambrosio, Lady made no secret of his opinion that the 
rendition of Abu Omar was a bad idea. Among his other concerns, 
D'Ambrosio said, Lady worried that the CIA would anger DIGOS by 
abducting the target of one of its major investigations without its 
knowledge, damaging both a productive surveillance and an excellent 
working relationship.

Removing Abu Omar from the picture, moreover, meant DIGOS would have to 
redouble its efforts to figure out who had taken his place as one of the 
main Italian contacts recruiting ''foreign fighters'' for Iraq.

D'Ambrosio told the prosecutors that when he agreed with Lady that the 
Abu Omar rendition made no sense, Lady spread his arms in despair, 
explaining that the operation had support at the highest CIA levels.

Under guidelines established after Sept. 11, each proposed rendition 
must be approved at several levels within the CIA, but not by the White 
House itself. The veteran senior CIA official said one of those who 
signed off on the Abu Omar abduction was Stephen Kappes, at the time the 
agency's associate deputy director for operations and currently its No. 
2 official.

Through a CIA spokesman, Kappes declined to be interviewed for this 
article. The CIA has refused to comment on any aspect of the Abu Omar 
case or to acknowledge that it played a role in the Milan rendition.

Had he known that Lady objected to the Abu Omar kidnapping, the veteran 
CIA officer said, ''I'd have stopped it.''

But he said neither he nor anyone else whom he was aware of at CIA 
headquarters had been told that Lady harbored reservations. He said that 
it would have been unlike Lady to have gone directly to headquarters 
behind the Rome chief's back.

D'Ambrosio recalled thinking that Lady had told him about the planned 
Abu Omar rendition in hopes that once SISMI became aware of what the CIA 
had in mind, it would object and stop the operation.

As he believed Italian law required him to do, D'Ambrosio informed his 
SISMI superiors that the CIA was planning a kidnapping on Italian soil.

But D'Ambrosio was unaware of what would be alleged later by the 
prosecutors: that SISMI officials - allegedly including the SISMI 
official to whom D'Ambrosio made his report and SISMI director Pollari - 
were not only aware of the impending abduction but had pledged to help 
the CIA.

Within a few weeks, D'Ambrosio was abruptly replaced as the SISMI chief 
in Milan.

The Rome station chief had compiled an excellent record as an 
agent-handler in Pakistan and India, the veteran CIA official said. But 
D'Ambrosio said Lady made clear that his opinion of his boss as a 
terrorism fighter was not high.

''What do you expect someone who is a Buddhist, burns incense in his 
office, and listens to the music of Bob Marley, to know about 
terrorism?'' D'Ambrosio quoted Lady as saying.

Other CIA sources described Lady's former boss as something of an 
eccentric who maintained a shrine to the late rock musician Jimi Hendrix 
in his office at the intelligence agency's headquarters.

By late summer of 2003, his four-year tour as Rome station chief at an 
end, Lady's boss was promoted to a senior position at CIA headquarters.

CIA personnel working under diplomatic cover who played a part in the 
Milan rendition were reassigned to other U.S. embassies and consulates 
abroad.

The deep-cover surveillance teams that had patiently shadowed Abu Omar 
through the neighborhoods of Milan also disappeared from Italy, driving 
their rented cars across the Alps and fading back into the twilight 
world of phony passports and fabricated identities whence they had emerged.

The only one left in Italy was Robert Lady, who retired from the CIA at 
the end of 2003 and took up full-time residence with his wife in their 
villa.

Eighteen months later, the Milan police, headed by Spataro's lead 
investigator, Inspector Bruno Megale, appeared at the villa to seize the 
hard drives from Lady's personal computers and boxes of documents 
stacked in his garage.

Lady's wife was there but Lady was gone, having retreated to Honduras, 
where he had grown up as the son of a mining engineer.

As soon as the police left, Martha Lady called her husband to report 
what had happened. The police were tapping their phone.

''Hear me out and don't say anything,'' she began, according to a 
transcript of the call. ''They came to the house today, the Milan 
police, and they seized stuff. They looked everywhere, outside, inside, 
and they took off with everything they found, your PC and the hard 
drives in your office.

''They took all your documents and floppy disks. They showed me the 
judge's warrant. Megale was also there and others whom I'd never seen, 
but they knew you. It's bound to become public news tomorrow in the press.''

''And they found nothing?'' Lady asked.

''What are they supposed to find if there's nothing to find?'' his wife 
shot back.

But there were things to find. One hard drive contained a surveillance 
photograph of Abu Omar walking at almost the precise spot where he would 
be abducted a few days later.

Another contained travel reservations for a visit by Lady to Cairo four 
days after Abu Omar's arrival there.

Also on one of the hard drives was an e-mail from a former CIA 
colleague. The woman had just received an e-mail warning ''Italy, don't 
go there,'' and was worried about Lady.

''I was truly concerned,'' the woman wrote, ''that you were sitting in 
some Italian holding cell.''

---

(Alessandra Maggiorani contributed to this report.)

---

(c) 2007, Chicago Tribune.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

AP-NY-01-07-07 2025EST

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