Manufacturing Consent For The "War On Terror"

Terror Plot Emerges as Secret Service Game

By Julio Godoy

August 20, 2009 -- BERLIN, Aug 20 ( IPS) - It was announced as a terror plot 
busted. German police had captured three young Muslim men in the small village 
Medebach-Oberschledor, some 450 km southwest of Berlin Sep. 4 in 2007. The 
police declared they had seized 730 kilograms of hydrogen peroxide, enough to 
make 550 kg of explosives.

The three men, and a fourth, who was captured a year later in Turkey, wanted to 
bomb U.S. military and other facilities in Germany, and to kill "as many U.S. 
soldiers as possible," one of the accused later confessed.

The four men told court their plans were in retaliation against the U.S. war on 
'Islamic terrorism', especially the abuse of hundreds of Muslims detained at 
Guantanamo prison. German authorities and the media dubbed the four men 'the 
Sauerland group', in reference to the region where they were captured.

The Sauerland group were declared to be members of the Islamic Jihad Union, an 
alleged terrorist organisation based in Uzbekistan.

Almost two years later, the case is before the higher regional court in 
Duesseldorf, some 460 km southwest of Berlin, and should come to a close early 
2010.

But now, the case has ceased to be "the serious terrorist threat" it was 
called. It is now a mysterious puzzle of secret service games, prosecutors' 
alarmism spread by the media, and basic failures of justice.

The supposedly dangerous group members have emerged as no more than some 
muddle-heads. They had no links whatsoever to international Islamic terror 
groups.

"No Islamic chief villain...in Pakistan or somewhere else influenced the 
group," says Hans Leyendecker, one of Germany's top investigative journalists. 
"Its members are dumb, narrow-minded young men who hate the U.S."

Moreover, the fifth member of the group, yet to be captured, has been described 
as a Turkish national known only as Mevlut K. He now appears as an informer of 
the Turkish national intelligence organisation (MIT, after its Turkish name). 
He was the key figure in the plot, according to confessions by other members of 
the Sauerland group.

"Without Mevlut, we would not have been able to go as far with the preparations 
as we did," Attila Selek, one of the accused, told the court. 'K' had procured 
26 fuses for the bombs the group was supposed to make, Selek said. Only, the 
fuses were useless. German police investigations showed that all but two were 
too humid to work.

Fritz Gelowicz, another member of the terrorist group, said the four men were 
informed of K's links with the MIT. "We knew that Mevlut had links with several 
secret services," Gelowicz told the court. "We though that these links were 
good for us."

K apparently did not hide his links to the Turkish secret service. On at least 
one occasion K told the group they were being monitored by the German security 
agencies. "Then he told me he was stealing this information from secret 
services," Selek told the court.

Despite warnings that the German police were constantly informed of their 
actions, the four men continued their preparations until they were captured.

Numerous sources have confirmed that the German foreign intelligence service 
Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND) knew in 2004 that Mevlut K worked for the MIT. 
That year, the sources said, the MIT proposed to the BND that K be infiltrated 
into Islam movements in Germany. The BND reportedly rejected the Turkish plan.

Despite the confessions about K's involvement, German justice failed to order 
his capture for a long time. Mevlut K. is believed to be living in Turkey.

German authorities only issued an international warrant against Mevlut K. Aug. 
13, several weeks after depositions by the other four members of the group had 
been widely circulated.

The Sauerland group could have been "an orchestration to make believe that a 
huge terrorist threat" was looming over U.S. military facilities in Germany, 
says Rene Hellig, leading commentator with the Neues Deutschland daily.

Former British ambassador to Uzbekistan Craig Murray calls it a fake case 
orchestrated by Uzbek security services.

"I should make plain that regrettably it is a fact that there are those who 
commit violence, motivated by a fanatic version of their faith," Murray wrote 
in his personal blog. "Sadly the appalling aggression of the U.S. government 
and allied war policy has made such reaction much more frequent. They may or 
may not have been planning to commit explosions. But if they were, the question 
is who was really pulling their strings, and why?"

Murray says there is no evidence of the existence of Islamic Jihad Union, 
alleged to have been directing the Sauerland group, other than that given by 
Uzbek security services. "There are, for example, no communications intercepts 
between senior terrorists referring to themselves as the Islamic Jihad Union," 
he said.

Murray said the planned attacks the Uzbekistan government attributed to the 
group since the spring of 2004 "are in fact largely fake and almost certainly 
the work of the Uzbek security services, from my investigations on the spot at 
the time." (END/2009) 
 
 
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article23318.htm





Satrio Arismunandar 
Executive Producer
News Division, Trans TV, Lantai 3
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Verba volant scripta manent...
(yang terucap akan lenyap, yang tertulis akan abadi...)



      

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