New Terror: Cells With No Links to Al Qaeda

By Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball

Newsweek

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18628582/site/newsweek/

 

May 21, 2007 issue - The men who gathered inside the small Bronx apartment
were tense, and they chatted nervously before the ceremony. The
participants, among them a New York City musician and an emergency-room
doctor from Florida, had allegedly gathered to meet a "brother" from Canada
who called himself Ali. The brother had come with a message-from "Sheik
Osama."

 

"You are in the belly of the enemy," the man from Canada warned, and
cautioned his audience to be careful whom they spoke to. "The oppressors are
everywhere." Once it was clear they all understood, the jazz musician bent
to his knees, clutched the visitor's hand and took a solemn oath. He pledged
to be "one of Islam's soldiers ... on the road to jihad." The doctor
allegedly did the same. Then they each embraced the oath giver, the final
step in Al Qaeda's sacred initiation ritual.

 

An audiotape of that extraordinary scene played in a federal courtroom last
week as one of the initiates, Dr. Rafiq Sabir, a graduate of Columbia
University Medical School, stood trial on federal charges that he provided
material support to terrorists. What Sabir and the others didn't know when
they attended the ceremony two years ago was that the man administering the
oath was not really a jihadist, but Ali Soufan, an undercover FBI agent who
had spent the better part of his career hunting Qaeda operatives.

 

Sabir's defense lawyer has cried entrapment. The accused himself later
testified he had no idea that the Sheik Osama he was heard pledging his
loyalty to was the Qaeda terror chief named bin Laden. But the musician, an
accomplished jazz bassist named Tarik Shah who once played with the Duke
Ellington Orchestra, has already pleaded guilty to a terror-related charge.
So have two other men in the case, a Washington, D.C., cabdriver and a
Brooklyn bookstore owner. The FBI counts the case as one more victory in
what it considers to be its top-priority mission: finding would-be
terrorists before they can carry out their plans.

 

Federal officials say the case-along with a half dozen other recent
investigations-is part of a worrisome trend: copycat jihadist cells that
spring up inside the United States without any concrete connection to Qaeda
central or other foreign terror organizations. Concerns were reinforced last
week when the Justice Department announced it had busted a plot by six
men-including four ethnic Albanians, three of whom had entered the country
illegally more than 20 years ago-to attack Fort Dix Army base in New Jersey.
The Feds say the men undertook firearms training in the Pocono mountains and
conducted surveillance of Fort Dix and other U.S. military facilities. But
they weren't exactly professional conspirators. The men made a video of
themselves shooting guns and shouting "God is great" in Arabic, and took it
to a local Circuit City to have DVD copies made. A store employee, alarmed
by the content, called the police. The group ended up talking to undercover
federal informants about acquiring weapons, including fully automatic
assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenade launchers. (The men were charged
but not indicted last week.)

 

Homegrown groups lack the expertise of terrorists who undertake training in
Qaeda camps, which probably makes them more prone to blunder. But terrorists
overseas do aim to encourage such freelancers, who-in theory-are harder to
identify and track because they can pop up anywhere. Al Qaeda and its
affiliates are now using sophisticated English-language videos and Web sites
to inspire followers in Europe and America to start their own jihadist
cells. "We have seen an increase in the number of self-radicalized groups
that use the Internet ... and are not organized by overseas groups," FBI
Director Robert Mueller told reporters last week.

 

Al Qaeda puts out a steady supply of videos to inspire the faithful; last
year the group produced 48. And they are no longer the clumsy and amateurish
productions of a few years ago. Many have English subtitles or are narrated
in perfect English by a man who calls himself "Azzam the American"-a
California expat, born Adam Gadahn-who converted to Islam and joined Al
Qaeda. Law-enforcement officials compare this to a Madison Avenue ad
campaign. "Al Qaeda is banking on the idea that if they pump up the volume
and increase the number of messages, they'll be able to push fence-sitters
over the edge," says a senior law-enforcement official who asked not to be
named discussing intelligence issues.

 

How effective is the propaganda? It's impossible to quantify. The New Jersey
case seems to show that at least some believers get inspiration from what
they can download from the Web. According to the FBI complaint in the case,
one of the key figures in the plot had DVD files of the last will and
testament of two of the 9/11 hijackers on his laptop. He also had images of
bin Laden and other jihadist leaders exhorting believers to join the cause.
The FBI complaint describes defendants erupting in laughter when they
watched a war video showing an American Marine's hand being blown off.

 

But some of the FBI's operations have rounded up disaffected losers who
might have been looking for trouble anyway. Over the past two years, the FBI
has brought a spate of domestic terrorism cases involving people who were
allegedly plotting attacks. In August 2005, the Justice Department indicted
four men on charges of planning to attack synagogues and U.S. military
installations in southern California. The alleged ringleaders were two
former inmates of California's Folsom prison who converted to Islam and
formed a radical group dedicated to "killing infidels." (All of the
defendants pleaded not guilty; their trial is scheduled for August.) In
January the FBI arrested Derrick Shareef, of Rockford, Ill., on charges that
he was allegedly planning to plant hand grenades in garbage cans in a local
shopping mall. (He pleaded not guilty.) A law-enforcement official who asked
not to be named talking about intel matters tells NEWSWEEK that the Feds
discovered Shareef had downloaded a 48-minute video by Gadahn, with an intro
by bin Laden's deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri. In other cases, the Feds also
arrested alleged plotters in Florida and Ohio.

 

A list like that can make it seem as though terrorists are all around us.
But law-enforcement officials don't know whether any of the alleged
conspirators had the will or means to carry out actual attacks. Critics have
claimed that in some of the cases, including the one in New York, FBI
informants, posing as radicals, encouraged defendants to say questionable
things. "It's not like these were spontaneous plots," said Niwad Awad,
executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. "What you
have are informants who are going to disgruntled, totally messed-up people
and trying to provoke them."

 

But FBI officials insist that they have to rely on undercover agents and
informants to identify future terrorists before they strike. That's what
they did in the New York case. The investigation began more than four years
ago when a confidential informant reported to the FBI that Tarik Shah, the
jazz musician, was trying to establish links to Al Qaeda. Shah, who at one
time was associated with the Nation of Islam, was also a martial-arts
instructor. He purportedly wanted to help train Qaeda members in
hand-to-hand combat. Acting under instructions from the FBI, the informant
set up a meeting between Shah and FBI agent Soufan, who was posing as a
Qaeda operative.

 

Soufan was the rarest of G-men-a Muslim native of Lebanon, he spoke fluent
Arabic and was regarded as one of the bureau's leading Qaeda experts. He had
worked the FBI's biggest cases against the organization. Still, when he
donned a wire and began meeting with Shah, Soufan was nervous. Shah would
boast of his martial-arts expertise. "You really want to learn how to rip
somebody's throat out?" Shah asks Soufan at one point on the FBI tape. Shah
later introduced Soufan to his other friends, including Sabir, the Florida
ER physician, who was also a former Nation of Islam follower. During the
meeting in the Bronx apartment, he allegedly volunteered to help treat
wounded Qaeda "brothers" during an upcoming trip to Saudi Arabia.

 

Even though neither Shah nor Sabir ever had a real relationship with Al
Qaeda, Soufan says the case is a classic example of how the FBI should work.
During the course of their dealings, Shah had identified three
associates-including one who had been to a training camp in Pakistan, and
another who had offered to provide funding to mujahedin in Afghanistan and
Chechnya. "It was a good catch," he says. "We got three guys. We got them
cold and we got them by the book. I consider this a proactive
counterterrorism operation."

 

The FBI says it is doing all it can to forge links with members of the
Islamic community that will lead to tips about suspicious behavior. John
Miller, the bureau's assistant director for public affairs, told a Senate
panel last week that the FBI has been stepping up its recruitment programs
in American Muslim communities-it even sponsored a "Children's Day" fair at
Giants Stadium last year for the Muslim community in New Jersey.

 

But for all its efforts, the FBI still has only a handful of Muslim agents
and only 40 who are "proficient" in Arabic despite incentive packages that
include 25 percent pay hikes for Arabic speakers. (It has been unable to
find any agents who are proficient in Urdu and Pashto, the key languages in
Pakistan and Afghanistan, where Qaeda leaders are believed to be hiding.)
The bureau and other agencies have been hampered in part by tight security
restrictions against hiring Arabic and other foreign-language specialists
who have traveled or have relatives overseas-a rule that makes it more
difficult to recruit native speakers.

 

Hanging on to the ones they have isn't easy, either. Soufan himself has gone
the way of many hardworking agents. After struggling against some of the
government's tactics in the war on terror (he reportedly objected to the
CIA's aggressive interrogation techniques), he left the agency. Now he's
putting his expertise to work for Rudy Giuliani's private security firm. The
pay is better, and it's a lot less dangerous. But it means there's one less
gumshoe working the Qaeda beat.

 

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18628582/site/newsweek/

 



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