-Caveat Lector-

<http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/26/international/middleeast/26PLOT.html>


September 26, 2001

THE CONSPIRACY

2 Leaders Tell of Plot to Kill Bush in Genoa

By DAVID E. SANGER
Agence France-Presse


WASHINGTON, Sept. 25 - The president of Egypt and the deputy prime minister
of Italy say that Osama bin Laden's network of Islamic terrorists
threatened to kill President Bush and other leaders of the industrialized
world when they met at a summit meeting in Genoa last July.

The White House, in line with longstanding policy not to discuss threats on
the president, declined to comment today.

In an interview on French television on Monday, President Hosni Mubarak of
Egypt spoke in specific terms about the threat, saying that "on June 13 of
this year, we learned of a communiquÈ from bin Laden saying he wanted to
assassinate George W. Bush and other G8 heads of state during their summit
in Italy."

"It was a well-known piece of information," Mr. Mubarak added in the
interview broadcast by the network France 3.

Separately, he told Le Figaro, a major French daily newspaper, that
Egyptian intelligence services had told the United States about the threat
and that the warning included a reference to "an airplane stuffed with
explosives."

Several days before Mr. Mubarak's interview, in an appearance on Italian
television, Gianfranco Fini, the Italian deputy prime minister, discussed
parallels between the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon,
and warnings his government had received before the Genoa meeting in July.

"Many people joked about the Italian Intelligence Force," Mr. Fini said,
"but actually they had information that in Genoa there was the hypothesis
of an attack on the American president with the use of an airplane. That is
why we closed the airspace above Genoa and installed antiaircraft missiles.
Those who joked should now reflect."

The senior American security official said the source of warnings from
foreign intelligence agencies was often unclear, and the volume was so
great that serious threats were frequently difficult to separate from false
alarms.

A senior administration official, who could not confirm the accounts, said
that foreign intelligence agencies frequently received tips about threats
to the president that they passed on to Washington.

While there was a general concern about Mr. bin Laden before the July
conference in Italy, there had also been concerns about Islamic extremists
at other summit meetings, including the Asian Pacific Economic Cooperation
meeting in Brunei last year, attended by President Clinton.

There was no attack in Genoa. It was marked chiefly by violent protests in
the streets by anarchists and anticapitalist demonstrators that resulted in
many injuries and the death of one protester at the hands of the Italian
police.

But participants and reporters who flew into the Christopher Columbus
airport, which was closed to commercial traffic, were greeted by the
unusual sight of antiaircraft batteries along the runways.

One senior American official who has been involved in a number of such
summit conferences said today, "It's something I have never seen before,
especially in such an obvious spot."

Since the Sept. 11 attacks in New York and Washington, European and
American officials have been reviewing threats from Mr. bin Laden's
organization in June and July. Those threats resulted in a number of public
warnings around the July 4 holiday, and extra security precautions for Mr.
Bush.

But after nothing materialized, the concern waned.

The most specific warning that Mr. bin Laden planned an attack apparently
came from Egyptian intelligence sources.

In his interview with Le Figaro, published late last week, Mr. Mubarak
said: "We had communicated to the Americans certain information from the
video made by bin Laden on the 13th of June. It spoke of assassinating
President Bush and other heads of state in Rome. It was a question of an
airplane stuffed with explosives. These precautions then had been taken."

However, people who have viewed the tape say there is no reference on it to
any airplane stuffed with explosives, no specific threat to kill the
President, and no mention of an attack by aircraft.

President Mubarak added that "no one had imagined that Boeings filled with
passengers would be crashed against the buildings."

Italian officials say that the antiaircraft batteries they set up in Genoa
were primarily intended to deter an attack from a small plane.

================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

   FROM THE DESK OF:

           *Michael Spitzer* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
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