http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/al-qaida-operative-captured-iraq-2004-wa

 

Al-Qaida Operative Captured in Iraq in 2004 Was Key Source for ID’ing Bin
Laden Courier 

Friday, May 06, 2011 
By  <http://www.cnsnews.com/source/72750> Fred Lucas 

 <http://www.cnsnews.com/image/osama-bin-laden-1> osama bin laden

Al-Qaeda terrorist leader Osama bin Laden, responsible for the 9/11
terrorism attacks in the United States, was killed by U.S. Navy Seals in
Abbottabad, Pakistan on May 2, 2011. (AP Photo)

(CNSNews.com) – Information from an al-Qaida operative named Hassan Ghul,
captured in Iraq in 2004, provided the “key moment” in identifying the
notorious courier that ultimately led to the killing of Osama bin Laden, a
U.S. government official confirmed to CNSNews.com.

Further, the official said, high ranking al-Qaida operatives Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed (KSM) – the mastermind of 9/11 -- and Abu Faraj al-Libi, each tried
to mislead interrogators about the courier, whose nickname was Abu Ahmed
al-Kuwaiti. KSM identified al-Kuwaiti as not important, while al-Libi
declined even knowing him. This greatly conflicted with what other detainees
had said.

The Obama administration -- immediately after announcing Osama bin Laden had
been killed by a team of Navy SEALs at a well-fortified compound in Pakistan
-- identified the courier as a protégé of KSM.

Jose Rodriguez, former head of the CIA’s Counterterrorism Center from 2002
to 2005, told Time magazine in an article published earlier this week that,
“Information provided by KSM and Abu Faraj al-Libi about bin Laden’s courier
was the lead information that eventually led to the location of [bin
Laden’s] compound and the operation that led to his death.”

KSM, one of three terror suspects who were waterboarded, provided
information about the courier months after the waterboarding had ended, the
official said.

“At no point did KSM say this guy is a courier for bin Laden. It didn’t
happen,” the government official said. KSM disclosed the courier’s nickname
but apparently did not disclose his function in relation to Osama bin Laden.

“It depends on how you define lead information,” the official told
CNSNews.com. “One of the values of the program is the ability to compare and
contrast comments from different detainees. So, in this case it’s almost
what they didn’t say and what they’re trying to hide that we were also able
to key on to.”

 <http://www.cnsnews.com/image/khalid-sheikh-mohammed> Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed

At left a March 1, 2003 photo obtained by the Associated Press shows Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged Sept. 11 mastermind, shortly after his capture
during a raid in Pakistan. At right, a photo downloaded from the Arabic
language Internet site <a href=

The Boston Globe reported on a 2005 memo from the U.S. Department of
Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel that states the CIA used enhanced
interrogation techniques, which included facial slaps, sleep deprivation,
and pushing into a wall on a terror suspect named “Gul,” who is Hassan Ghul.


“The interrogation team ‘carefully analyzed Gul’s responsiveness to
different areas of inquiry during this time and noted that his resistance
increased as questioning moved to his knowledge of operational terrorist
activities,’” said the memo, which was first reported by
<http://s3.amazonaws.com/propublica/assets/missing_memos/28OLCmemofinalredac
t30May05.pdf> ProPublica in 2009.

ProPublica, an investigative news organization, said “the heavily redacted
OLC memo dated May 30, 2005, government censors appeared to have missed a
single reference to his name and confinement during a lengthy description of
the interrogation techniques used against him. The reference can be found at
the bottom of page 7 where Ghuls surname is spelled ‘Gul.’”

Various detainees in the CIA secret prison identified the courier
“al-Kuwaiti” as an important al-Qaida operative, the Associated Press
reported this week. When the CIA captured KSM, the number three man in the
al-Qaida network, KSM admitted to knowing al-Kuwaiti but “minimized the
courier’s importance” and said he was retired from the organization, the
government official said.

Then in January 2004 in Iraq, U.S. and Iraqi officials captured Ghul who,
according to NBC News, was one of the top 20 al-Qaida leaders called “The
Gatekeeper,” responsible for providing money, transportation, and safe haven
to al-Qaida terrorists, and providing assistance to Abu Musab Zarqawi, an
al-Qaida leader in Iraq at the time.

Ghul was traveling from Pakistan into Iraq, the official told CNSNews.com,
and “became relatively cooperative rather quickly.”

Ghul admitted to knowing al-Kuwaiti as someone who had worked with al-Libi
and was a close and trusted associate of Osama bin Laden who ran errands for
bin Laden before and after 9/11, the official said.

More than a year later, May 2005, Pakistani intelligence forces captured
al-Libi, the new number three man in al-Qaida. Al-Libi was reportedly also
subjected to enhanced interrogation techniques. However, he insisted he did
not know who the courier al-Kuwaiti was and gave interrogators a name that
CIA officials believe was fictional, the official told CNSNews.com.

The official said the discrepancies between the bulk of detainees and
particularly the information from Ghul – who identified the courier as a
close associate of bin Laden – functioned as a tip off, because neither
al-Libi nor KSM were forthcoming about the courier when the CIA had
information suggesting that they should know more about the courier given
their number three status in al-Qaida.

After Ghul was arrested in early 2004, President George W. Bush said, “Just
last week we made further progress in making America more secure when a
fellow named Hassan Ghul was captured in Iraq. Hassan Ghul reported directly
to Khalid Sheik Mohammad, who was the mastermind of the September 11
attacks. He was captured in Iraq, where he was helping al-Qaida to put
pressure on our troops.”

The 9/11 Commission Report  <http://911.gnu-designs.com/Notes_7.html>
referred to Ghul as an “al Qaeda facilitator.”

 

 <http://www.cnsnews.com/image/bin-laden-compound-3> Bin Laden Compound

<i>People gather on Tuesday, May 3, outside the wall of the compound where
Osama bin Laden lived for as long as six years in Abbottabad, Pakistan. (The
Associated Press)</i>

The Washington Times reported on Jan. 23, 2004 that Ghul “also was involved
in the August 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.” 

CIA Director George Tenet
<https://www.cia.gov/news-information/speeches-testimony/2004/dci_speech_021
42004.html>  testified to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence on
Feb. 24, 2004 that Ghul was “a senior facilitator who was sent to case Iraq
for an expanded al-QA`ida presence there.”

In 2005, Human Rights Watch (HRW) included Hassan Ghul on a list of 26
“ghost prisoners” the organization believed were in U.S. custody. The group
identified those on the list as “detainees who are not given any legal
rights or access to counsel, and who are likely not reported to or seen by
the International Committee of the Red Cross.”

Further, the HRW
<http://www.hrw.org/legacy/english/docs/2005/11/30/usdom12109_txt.htm>
report complains, “Under international law, enforced disappearances occur
when persons are deprived of their liberty, and the detaining authority
refuses to disclose their fate or whereabouts, or refuses to acknowledge
their detention, which places the detainees outside the protection of the
law. International treaties ratified by the United States prohibit
incommunicado detention of persons in secret locations,” and that “none on
this list has been arraigned or criminally charged, and government
officials, speaking anonymously to journalists, have suggested that some
detainees have been tortured or seriously mistreated in custody.”

 



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