-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Gosling [mailto:t...@cultureshop.org.uk] 
Sent: Friday, December 04, 2009 12:33 AM
To: UK 9/11 & 7/7 Truth
Subject: [UK-911-Truth] March 11, 2004 in Madrid: Was it really an Islamist
attack?

2004, 11th March - Madrid False Flag train bombing

March 11, 2004 in Madrid: Was it really an Islamist attack?
by Mathieu Miquel

A series of bombings plunged Madrid into mourning five years ago. The
Spanish legal system concluded that this operation, attributed first
to ETA and then to Al Qaeda, was Islamist inspired, though not linked
with international networks. The Spanish press, led by the newspaper
El Mundo, today is calling into question that conclusion, which was of
obvious political character. As in the cases of the September 11th
attacks in the U.S., or those in Bali, Casablanca and London, we will
take a look at an analysis of the issue.

http://www.voltairenet.org/article163076.html
http://www.911forum.org.uk/board/viewtopic.php?t=18435

28 November 2009

192 dead and 1,800 injured. The Madrid attack represents an authentic
trauma for Spanish society, above all because the controversy over the
real perpetrators of the attack has not yet ended. On March 11, 2004,
around 7:40 in the morning, ten bombs exploded on four trains in the
space of a few minutes. The date appears to have been carefully
selected because the events took place just three days before the
general elections in which the People’s Party (of the political right)
of outgoing President José María Aznar was presented as the favorite.

The suspicions of the press and of the majority of Spaniards turned
immediately to ETA, the Basque nationalist group, against which the
outgoing prime minister had preached a policy of force. But with the
arrest of a group of Moroccan suspects on the eve of elections, the
suspicions of the public were redirected towards al Qaeda.

The attack might have been in retaliation for Spain’s participation in
the war against Iraq, although autopsies showed that it had not been a
suicide attack. The subsequent insistence of the Aznar government in
condemning ETA was interpreted as the result of a campaign calculation
and in the elections of March 14 victory went to the Socialist Party
of Jose Luis Zapatero. Three weeks later, on April 3, seven North
African suspects ’committed suicide’ by blowing up the apartment in
which they had been surrounded by police. The investigative
proceedings then lasted more than two years until the opening of the
trial for the bombings in February 2007.

The courts upheld the theory of an Islamist attack but the alleged
organizers of the attack were acquitted. Only one defendant was found
guilty of having planted bombs on the trains and most of the 29
defendants were convicted of being members of Jihadist groups, not for
being involved in the attack. The appeals trial upheld that ruling in
July 2008.

In Spain, an intense controversy continues even now around the attack,
designated as "11-M". The foreign press has essentially abstained from
reporting the polarization of the Spanish media on the topic [1].
Spain’s two main newspapers, in fact, take starkly opposing view
points when addressing the terrorist attacks of March 11.

According to El Pais (center-left Atlanticist newspaper), there are no
legitimate doubts about the Islamist theory, while for El Mundo
(center-right nationalist newspaper) the Islamist theory is nothing
more than a police set-up. The journalist most representative of the
advocates of this nationalist view is undoubtedly Luis del Pino, who
works for Libertad Digital, the leading online newspaper in Spain, and
also the author of several books and documentaries on the subject for
TeleMadrid [2]. Other media, more willing to try to discredit than to
initiate a rational debate, consider the position of Luis del Pino a
conspiracy theory or "consparanoia".

Division exists even among skeptics who oppose the theory of an
Islamist attack. Some incriminate ETA while others suspect the secret
services of Spain as well as of foreign nations. Our article does not
take up the issue of the real perpetrators of the attack but rather is
limited to showing that the official version is false.

Given that the Spanish justice system has endorsed the theory of an
Islamist attack, it is essential to begin by laying out this theory.
As incredible as it may seem, the evidence that supposedly confirms
the theory can not stand up to rigorous analysis. And the suspicious
behavior of certain elements of the police forces clearly indicates
the existence of an intent to sabotage the investigation. All the
information contained in this article comes from the Spanish media
cited above and from official court documents, such as the indictment,
hearings from the trial, and the verdict.
The Islamist trail

The theory of an Islamist attack is the final conclusion of an
investigation that developed out of two tracks. We will present here
the progress of that investigation, emphasizing the evidence accepted
by the Spanish courts [3]. The first track of the investigation begins
with a bomb that did not explode. Three of the bombs placed in the
trains were defective and failed to explode. So very soon after the
attack, it was known that the bombs had been concealed in bags or
backpacks. On the morning of March 11th, explosives specialists
neutralized two of them by controlled explosions.

But no one noticed the third backpack and it was set aside with the
victims’ possessions. It was upon inventorying these possessions that
the backpack containing the bomb was found, in the police station of
suburban Vallecas during the night of March 11th and 12th. That bomb,
known as "the Vallecas backpack", consisted of 10 kilograms of "Goma-2
Eco" dynamite, shrapnel, a detonator and a cell phone that should have
triggered the explosion via its alarm setting.

The phone contained a SIM card which, when it was tracked through the
sales network, made it possible to determine where it had been sold.
The tracking led to a telephone store in Madrid belonging to a
Moroccan, Jamal Zougam. Based on those elements, the police arrested
Zougam, two of his employees and two Indians who had allegedly sold
the phone. Those arrests came on March 13, the eve of the elections.
The media announced the arrests and gave wide coverage to photos of
the suspects. During the following days, several passengers on the
metro said they had seen the detainees on the bombed trains. Finally,
the inconsistency of the testimonies led to the release of four of the
five suspects several weeks later. Zougam remained in prison because
the testimonies against him seemed more solid.

The other track that serves as a starting point for the investigation
are revelations by Rafa Zouhier, a petty drug dealer from Morroco and
an informant for the Guardia Civil (the second largest police force in
Spain) [4]. A few days after the attack this individual told police in
a taped telephone conversation that he harbored strong suspicions
about a man named Jamal Ahmidan, alias "El Chino". El Chino is another
Moroccan petty drug dealer and Zouhier had put him in contact with a
gang from Asturias (a region of northern Spain) suspected of
smuggling, among other things, explosives originally intended for
mining activities.

One member of that gang, Emilio Trashorras, confirmed to the police
that he had provided El Chino with Goma-2 Eco explosives, an assertion
corroborated by a young gypsy who participated in the transaction.
Moreover, communications among various members of El Chino’s gang were
being intercepted as part of an investigation into drug trafficking,
and the recordings confirm that the persons concerned had traveled to
Asturias.

The two tracks of investigation lead to completely different
individuals. On one hand, Zougam, and on the other, El Chino and his
gang. No personal links have been found between the two. The only
connection comes from seven SIM cards whose numbers appear during
tracking of phone marketing networks. And they are connected to El
Chino because the telephone carrier Amena said that the cards were
activated for the first time the day before the attack in the antenna
reception area that covers El Chino’s house.

Apparently, the explosives were found in that house and the bomb
preparation took place in that same location. No activity was ever
generated from the seven SIM cards after their activation, which seems
to indicate that they might have been used to detonate the bombs. This
is how the link was established between Zougam and El Chino’s gang.

Around noon on April 3, three weeks after the bombing, police finally
located El Chino’s gang in an apartment in Leganés outside Madrid.
Upon discovering the presence of the police, the suspects refused to
surrender and opened fire. At the end of the day, the GEO (Special
Operations Group of the Spanish police) launched an assault to try to
capture the members of the terrorist group. The intelligence services
warned the police that the besieged suspects had made several
telephone calls in which they announced their intent to commit
suicide. The police forced open the apartment door and an explosion
occurred that killed the 7 suspects and a GEO police officer.

Amid the rubble of the apartment were found Goma-2 Eco explosives,
some documents and a video claiming responsibility for the attack, but
the people featured in the video were not identifiable due to masks
they were wearing. Like El Chino, most of the seven dead were petty
drug dealers. The rest were members of radical Islamist circles. The
trial sentence concluded that these people set the bombs, with the
participation of Zougam, and planned to commit other attacks in the
region of Granada, where they had rented an apartment.

A certain amount of secondary evidence supports the conclusions of
that investigation. Among the exhibits is a Renault Kangoo van which
was the first important element found during the investigation and its
discovery led to numerous controversies. This vehicle was discovered
in the parking lot of the Alcala subway station, where all the trains
that exploded had passed on March 11. An attendant in the neighborhood
said that on the morning of March 11 he had seen three suspicious
individuals loitering around the Kangoo. They were essentially masked
with scarves and hats and one of them walked to the subway station
carrying a bag.

Towards the end of the morning, the police opened the van and
inspected it. Two dogs trained to detect explosives checked the Kangoo
without finding anything suspicious. Upon discovering that it was on a
list of stolen vehicles, the van was taken to a police location.
There, after a new inspection, 7 detonators appeared in the van, along
with a fragment of Goma-2 Eco explosive wrapped up under a seat and,
most importantly, an audio cassette with a recording of the Koran,
which would have a decisive impact on Spanish public opinion. The
trial verdict concluded that the objective of the terrorist group was
to impose Islamic law in Europe by force and that the group was
inspired by Al Qaeda, while not being actually linked to that
organization [5].
The cracks in the verdict

We have just presented here all the important pieces of evidence that
served as the basis of the Islamist attack theory. All, nevertheless,
are plagued by suspect elements, as we will see as we analyze them
again one by one. The primary physical evidence relates to one of the
bombs that did not explode on March 11 — the one that appeared in the
backpack in Vallecas. Serious suspicions of fabrication exist,
however, with regards to its composition and with regard to the
circumstances in which the discovery occurred. In the first place, the
bomb did not explode because of a cable that simply was not connected.
The explosives expert in charge of deactivating it testified in court
that this "shoddy piece of work" did not match the complexity of the
rest of the device [6]. There is also an essential difference between
the composition of this bomb and those that did explode.

The Vallecas backpack contained 640 grams of screws and nails intended
to serve as shrapnel. However, autopsies revealed that none of the
victims had been struck by metal projectiles [7]. And, according to
the police who handled them, the two bombs defused on the morning of
March 11 contained no such projectiles. What motivated the terrorists
to put shrapnel in just one of the bombs? And finally, the
circumstances of the discovery of the Vallecas backpack are unclear.

During the trial, explosives experts explained that they had searched
all the objects left in the train cars four times and confirmed that
it was impossible that the found bomb had been among them [8]. Its
origin is even more doubtful because the abandoned objects, among
which the bomb was purportedly found, were moved 3 times throughout
the day of March 11, not always under the best surveillance [9], and
ended up at the Vallecas police station, contrary to what the judge
had ordered. If one adds to this the conflicting testimony about when
it was discovered [10], the fact that the bomb was not mentioned in
the inventories of abandoned objects [11], and the fact that there are
no photos of the bomb before the time that it was dismantled, the
inconsistency of such evidence becomes clear. Notwithstanding all
this, the court used it as a key element in rendering its verdict.

The investigation into the telephone marketing network concluded that
the SIM card found in the backpack in Vallecas had been on sale in
Zougam’s store. On what was the investigation based to reach that
conclusion? Before their sale to a customer in a store, SIM cards
usually pass through the hands of three or four intermediaries. But
only the initial brokers list on their invoices the identification
number of each SIM card sold. Subsequent brokers only record the total
number of SIM cards.

In this case, there is no invoice showing that the SIM card in
question was sold to Zougam [12]. The only thing that allows one to
reach that conclusion is the testimony of his supplier, who says he
remembers specifically the sale of that SIM card among hundreds of
other cards. Let us accept, nevertheless, that fact as sufficient
proof and continue examining the course of the investigation.

The fact of having sold a SIM card does not make the seller
responsible for any possible criminal use that the buyer might make of
that card. But Zougam had appeared as a witness in a previous
investigation about Islamist terrorists. It would seem that was the
only motive for his arrest on March 13, given that no witness had
described him nor had identified him before that date. A re-analysis
of Zougam’s behavior up until his arrest shows that apparently he
committed a series of truly incredible indiscretions. In the first
place, he used a SIM card on sale in his own store to make the
Vallecas bomb.

Secondly, he left that SIM card in the phone even though it was not
necessary to use its alarm clock function. And, thirdly, he continued
his normal activity until the day of his arrest on the afternoon of
March 13, despite the fact that all of Spain had known since the
morning of March 12 that police had dismantled one of the bombs. From
that moment on, Zougam had to know that the investigators were in
possession of a SIM card that would lead to him. But he did not try to
hide or flee. The incoherence of that behavior leads to doubts about
his guilt.

The media gave wide publicity to the arrests of March 13 and to photos
of the suspects. Passengers from the attacked trains spontaneously
showed up to testify about the suspects seen on trains on March 11.
Some of these testimonies implicate Zougam and constitute the only
evidence of his involvement in the attack. There is also in this case
an incredibly inconsistent piece of evidence, in relation to the
seriousness of the facts.

The first problem is the spreading of Zougam’s picture across the
media, thereby preventing testimonies from complying with a
fundamental rule: memory must not be influenced by other images seen
after the events. Moreover, some witnesses did not agree as to the
trip that Zougam allegedly made on the trains, with contradictions
regarding his description, how he was dressed or stating that he
placed a bag in a place where no bomb exploded [13].

Finally the verdict of October 2007 only takes into account 3
testimonies incriminating Zougam [14]. In the appeals trial of July
2008, the court invalidated one of those 3 testimonies because the
witness had given his statement to the investigative judge rather than
before the court, where he had not even been convoked, a fact which
prevented Zougam’s defense from questioning him despite already
existing doubts about his statement. For example, according to that
witness, the suspect got off the train, onto the platform, and then
returned to the same train car through the door that connected to the
other car, all strangely indiscreet behavior for someone who is
planting bombs. There are, therefore, only two statements accusing
Zougam and these come from two Romanian friends who were traveling
together. The first came forward as a witness three weeks after the
bombings.

At that moment her description of the suspect is very brief: a person
1 meter 80 centimeters tall, of average build, and carrying a handbag.
Without further details. But that same description becomes more
precise days later when the police show her a series of photos among
which she recognizes Zougam: shoulder-length hair, a rather thick
nose, a goatee, lower lip thicker than upper, etc. It is reasonable to
ask then if what this witness is describing is what she saw in the
photograph rather than what she remembered. In addition, her
statements continued to change with regard to other details, such as
the position of the car in the train. After a year, the witness
recalled that the suspect had pushed her, justifying in that way why
she remembered his face, and then saying for the first time that she
was traveling with a friend, who thus became the second accusing
witness against Zougam.

Why did a whole year pass without her mentioning the friend who was
traveling with her? Why did that other witness wait a year before
coming forward? What could this new witness still remember after all
this time? Can her testimony be considered as independent of that of
her friend? And it is precisely on the basis of these two dubious
declarations that the only guilty finding for the carrying out of the
bombings on March 11 was reached. For his part, Zougam always denied
any involvement in the bombings.

All the others who allegedly planted bombs on April 3 died in the
explosion of the Leganés apartment, three weeks after the attacks. An
important consequence of the deaths of these individuals is that the
investigation did not reconstruct the exact role of each one in the
carrying out the attack, thus focusing attention on those accused. The
court acknowledged in its ruling that it ignored which of these 7
individuals were involved in placing the bombings and where they did
it [15].

This contrasts with the case of Zougam, clearly accused of having
placed the bombs on the train that exploded at the Santa Eugenia
station. Considering the difficulties involved in maintaining the
records of the accusation against Zougam, one might think that the
lack of information [about the people killed in Leganés] was
paradoxically beneficial to those attempting to prove the guilt of
those 7 suspects since it avoided any contradiction with reality. The
investigation then focused on demonstrating that the death of those in
the Leganés apartment was a suicide, a suicide that was used as proof
of the fanaticism of the suspects, while the discovery of documents
which claimed responsibility for the attack among the ruins of the
apartment was interpreted as a posthumous confession.

The circumstances under which that apartment was discovered, just at
the time when the 7 suspects were inside, remain unclear. For a long
time, the police spoke of a shootout in the street between several of
its officers and a gang of North Africans. The incident allegedly
resulted in a chase that led the gang to take refuge in the apartment
in Leganés [16]. But this episode later disappears from the official
version to make way for another explanation.

According to this version, the police reviewed the list of calls from
a suspect phone belonging to the terrorist cell. By calling one of the
numbers on that list, the police made contact with a property owner
who claimed to have rented an apartment in Leganés to a group of Arabs
about a month prior. That is the version of the apartment’s discovery
mentioned in the verdict, in which the story of the chase is totally
ignored.

The police then surrounded the apartment on the afternoon of April 3.
Around 9 PM, the GEO began the assault in a hasty manner, according to
members of that group [17]. But before gaining entrance, the apartment
blew up, killing its 7 occupants and a GEO member. Due to the
condition of the bodies, it was necessary to use fingerprints or DNA
during the identification process. The investigation concluded that it
was a group suicide, but the suicidal nature of the explosion was not
as clearly established as verdict stated.

Before the assault by the GEO and the explosion, neighbors had heard
gunshots, shouting and even Arabic chants coming from the apartment.
But no one clearly saw the suspects. And there were no fingerprints or
any sign of bullet impacts that should exist there after an exchange
of gunfire [18]. The decisive argument supporting the theory of
suicide is that the suspects allegedly had communicated by telephone
with their families during the siege to say goodbye. During the trial,
the only family member called as a witness to those phone calls was
the brother of one of the 7 suspects, Abdenabi Kounjaa.

This witness testified that he could not recognize the voice of his
brother during the call, and that he did not think it was him [19],
which is why he immediately alerted the police and did not call back
to convince his brother not to commit suicide. That testimony casts
serious doubt on the authenticity of the calls, especially if one
considers that no other family was summoned to the trial as a witness.

The investigative file contains 3 successive reports on those calls,
but provides no further clarification of the matter. Each report
contradicts the previous one in various aspects: the phones used, the
identity of certain recipients of calls, and the number of calls made
to some recipients [20]. So many differences justify doubts about the
reliability of such information.

Did the suspects really commit suicide? What circumstances brought
about the presence of those individuals in that apartment? By April 3
the media had already been announcing for 4 days that they were being
sought and their pictures had already been disclosed. In that context,
for all of them to meet in an apartment outside Madrid, instead of
escaping each by his own means, was extremely imprudent. And why would
these criminals, who had just committed a massive crime, wait for the
police to evacuate the entire neighborhood before blowing up their
apartment? The inconsistencies do not end there. Anyone interested in
the movements of suspects from the time of the attack to the moment of
their suicide will learn, for example, that El Chino was partying with
his wife’s family 8 days after the attack, in the same house where he
allegedly built the bombs. The very profile of most of the members of
the cell does not correspond to a radical Islam that allegedly led
them to perpetrate the massacre and later to commit suicide. Four of
them were petty criminals linked to the world of drug trafficking, a
fact not very compatible with Islam.

El Chino lived with a native Spaniard, who wore flimsy clothes, and
their son went to Catholic school [21]. The death of the other 7
suspects allowed, in any case, the reconstruction of a scenario
without going into too much detail, and without the accused being able
to contradict it. Moreover, journalists who have had access to the
investigative file [22] have cast doubt on the above connection and
between the 7 suicides and Zougam. According to these journalists,
there is nothing in the documents provided by the phone company Amena
to indicate that the seven SIM cards in question had been put into use
at the home of El Chino. The defense brought up that problem during
the trial without the Amena employees who had been invited to testify
as experts responding to it [23].

The last major element in favor of the Islamist attack theory is the
Renault Kangoo van. The verdict stated that several members of the
terrorist cell, without specifying exactly who [24], used the van to
arrive at the subway with their bombs. Therefore, the court did not
take into account the evidence given — during the trial itself — by
the dog handler who participated in the inspection of that vehicle.

In effect, although the dog handler recognized the possibility of a
small piece of explosive being overlooked, that same expert stated
that the handling of bags with dozens of kilograms of explosives would
have left a trace of odor inside the vehicle, traces that his dog
would have detected [25]. Question from Zougam’s defense attorney: "In
the event that the van had been transporting 50 or 30 kilos of
explosives, would the dog have detected that smell? — Yes, he would
have detected it, he would have immediately, because explosive
residues remain and the dog would have detected it." ( (En el caso de
que en esa furgoneta se hubieran transportado 50 o 30 Kilos de
explosivo ¿El perro habría detectado ese olor ?- Si lo habría
detectado, inmediatamente lo habría, porque quedan residuos del
explosivo y el perro lo habría detectado.) Then another lawyer asked
whether the dog would have detected the smell if the explosive would
have been particularly well packaged. The witness replied that the
handling of such a large amount of explosive always leaves a smell.]].
Furthermore, the attendant who brought the Kangoo van to the attention
of the police stated that he thought the individuals were Eastern
Europeans, and the metro station employee who sold a ticket to one of
the individuals claimed he spoke without an accent [26]. Regarding
this point, once again the behavior of the suspects is surprising. Why
attract attention by turning to the ticket saleswoman with their faces
almost masked instead of buying the ticket at a vending machine? Why
run the risks of using a stolen vehicle without changing the license
plates? And why did the terrorists abandon that vehicle, in particular
leaving detonators, explosives and clothing inside it? According to
the indictment, that clothing contained DNA samples of suspects, but
the verdict did not take into account that evidence.

So many unexplained aspects of the supporting evidence cause the
Islamist attack theory to lose all credibility. This is especially so
considering that this article does not mention all of them. In his
book Les Dessous du Terrorisme [27], Gerhard Wisnewski shows, for
example, the inconsistency in the various Islamist claims of
responsibility for the attack. In accepting the thesis of Islamist
responsibility, the Spanish court concluded to a surprising extent
that these contradictions were not significant.
The shadow of the police

Is there other evidence to support the theory of an Islamist attack or
to steer the investigation in another direction? The problem is that
key elements of the investigation have been neglected in a manner that
is, to say the least, disturbing. First, the train cars where the
bombs exploded were destroyed just two days after the attack [28].

Why was it necessary to eliminate the "crime scene" so quickly? In
2006, a subway train that had suffered an accident in Valencia was
kept for 2 years because of the needs of the investigation. The court
acknowledged in its ruling that answers would have been found to
address many doubts if the coaches had been preserved for a longer
time [29].

The most important of those doubts has to do with the nature of the
explosive used. The analysis of the chemicals deposited on the objects
located near the explosions would have provided key information for
the investigation. However, no one knows yet exactly what it was that
exploded on the trains, as was acknowledged in the verdict [30]. We
see here why it was not possible to determine the type of explosive
used. The first was negligence in selecting the agency that performed
the analysis of the samples. The responsibility for that analysis was
put into the hands of bomb disposal specialists, whose laboratories
have only rudimentary methods for analysis of explosive substances.
Under usual procedure, forensic police would have had to ensure the
analysis, precisely because they have far more advanced methods.

The results of the forensic analysis were also very imprecise. The
report submitted to the investigative judge indicated the presence of
"generic components of dynamite" in the samples. But it does not
specify the type of dynamite. Was it Titadyne, Goma-2 Eco? Even more
surprisingly, it does not even include the list of chemical components
found. Faced with so much uncertainty, the court ended up ordering a
new expert analysis at the time the trial began in 2007.
Unfortunately, the new expert analysis had to use the already analyzed
samples, since they could not collect new samples due to the
previously mentioned destruction of the trains. The experts complained
about the small number of samples kept by police and the contamination
of these samples due to serious negligence in the course of the
previous analysis [31]. Finally, their findings do not shed more light
on the type of explosive used given that those findings include a list
of products that do not correspond to the makeup of TNT [32]. At the
end of this whole process, there was great interest in the anticipated
testimony of the director of the laboratory of bomb deactivation
specialists to answer questions about the work she had delivered in
March 2004. But she testified that she did not have the chromatography
media in which the chemical elements appeared [33], nor did she even
have the documents in which they had made notes during the carrying
out of their analysis [34]. Nevertheless she shocked the court when
she recited for the first time the precise listing of chemical
compounds found, explaining that she had never turned over that list
because no one had explicitly asked for it [35].

The imprecision of the analysis report had led to such a huge
controversy in Spain during the 3 years between the attack and the
testimony of the director of the laboratory that her explanation was
laughable. What credence can be given to that list, first mentioned
after 3 years and which corresponds to the composition of Goma-2 Eco
dynamite?

To the question of the explosives must be added the doubts that led to
the statements of the chief of the bomb-dismantling specialists who
oversaw operations on March 11. Upon seeing the damage the bombs had
caused, the chief of the specialists stated that visible tearing of
the structures of the train cars was characteristic of high power
explosives, of a military type, not of dynamite [36].

It is important to remember that certain military explosives leave no
chemical traces at the scene of an explosion, which make them very
difficult to detect. Another source of doubt is the location of the
bombs as reconstructed in the indictment [37]. According to that
document, most of the bags, which contained 10 kilograms of
explosives, were not hidden but, for example, had been left between
two front seats situated face to face next to a window, or in the
baggage area, or beside the trash receptacle, or under a folding seat
(which should have closed). Only one bomb was hidden under a non-
folding seat.

Why didn’t the terrorists try to better hide the handbags? And how is
it possible that such heavy bags, abandoned in such visible places,
did not attract the attention of the passengers? To answer these
questions, several journalists expressed the hypothesis that the bombs
were very much smaller and made not with dynamite but rather with high-
powered explosives [38]. The Goma-2 Eco dynamite found in the Kangoo
van, in the Vallecas backpack, and in the Leganes apartment does not
prove that the same explosive was used to blow up the trains. The
suspicions about these facts suggest that these were items intended to
divert attention from the crime scene, in other words, away from the
trains. A final example of negligence: the recordings of conversations
among police patrols would have helped to clarify the issue of the
chase that allegedly took place in Leganés. But when the judge asked
for these recordings, the police said they had not been preserved
[39].

More serious than these acts of negligence is the existence of strong
suspicions of falsification of various elements of the investigation.
We have already mentioned the Vallecas backpack, the Kangoo van and
the goodbye phone calls by the Leganés suicides. But there are other
elements whose fabrication is so obvious that not even the verdict
took them into account, such as, for example, the telephone
conversations of Rabei Osman, an Egyptian who lived in Italy. Italian
police recorded and translated his conversations in 2004, and in one
of them this individual allegedly takes responsibility for organizing
the attacks.

During the trial, new translations requested by the defense showed
that the sentences in which Osman takes credit for organizing the
attack were simply invented by the Italian translators [40].

The Spanish court was therefore obliged to absolve him of all ties to
the attack, after he had been presented as the brains of the Islamist
group. The verdict does not name an organizer of the attack, a fact
which provoked the indignation of victims’ associations, who filed an
appeal.

But the most notorious fabrication of the investigation is a Skoda
Fabia car that police found near the Alcala metro station, 20 meters
from where the Kangoo van was found. That discovery was made on June
13, 2004, in other words, 3 months after the attacks. This second
vehicle allowed the strengthening of the argument that the 7 or 8
terrorists arrived in Alcala by car and it also bore traces of DNA
from one of those killed in Leganés. Nevertheless, many observers
doubt that a vehicle parked so close to the Kangoo van would have been
able to go unnoticed for 3 months, even more so considering that its
registration number is not even mentioned in records collected on
March 11.

That piece of evidence thus remained in limbo until June 2005 when
police delivered the testimony of a Chilean prisoner to the
investigative judge. This man claimed to have stolen the Skoda and
subsequently to have sold it in October 2003 to one of those killed in
Leganés. But this evidence was once again discredited in March 2006,
when a journalist from El Mundo revealed the testimony of a security
guard in a suburb of Madrid where the Skoda was abandoned in November
2003. According to this new witness, the vehicle was improperly parked
for 3 weeks and received numerous parking violations, until it
disappeared.

By verifying that testimony through the records of the parking
violations, it was discovered that the Skoda had been involved in
various crimes such as street robberies. These crimes were committed
between September and October 2003, a period during which the car was
supposedly in possession of the Chilean. But until then the police, as
well as the Chilean, had totally concealed those facts from the
investigative judge. When he tried again to examine the South American
prisoner, the judge learned that he had been extradited to Chile
without anyone having notified him of the fact. To all these
contradictions must be added the inconsistency of the behavior of the
terrorists. To commit one of the worst attacks that has ever been seen
in Europe they were unable to come up with anything better than to use
a stolen car, involved in a whole series of crimes, which had been
abandoned in the street for a time, which had various parking
violations, and on which it did not even occur to them to change the
license plates.

The court therefore had no choice but to remove the Skoda from the
list of elements of proof in its verdict [41]. Moreover, the DNA found
on that likely fabricated evidence raises doubts as to the traces of
DNA found on clothing so "conveniently" abandoned by the suspects in
this case.

Take, finally, some examples of suspected falsification of testimony.
Emilio Trashorras confirmed that police had asked him to invent the
episode according to which it was he who provided the explosives to El
Chino [42]. This witness thought he would enjoy the status of
protected witness and that he would have no more problems with the
law.

For his part, the witness Hassan Serroukh told the investigative judge
that his statement to police had been falsified. That testimony
described Zougam as a religious fanatic, something that Serroukh
claims he never said [43].

Acts of negligence and suspected fabrications are among the many
suspicious police actions that appear in the investigation which
followed the attack. But suspicions are heightened even further upon
examining the preparations for the attack as presented in the verdict.
Two key players in the attack were informants for the security forces
[44]. The first, Zouhier, put the terrorist cell in contact with an
explosives trafficker. The investigation revealed that the Civil
Guard, which controlled this informant, called him two days before the
attack.

The second, Trashorras, is nothing less than the actual explosives
trafficker. He had several telephone conversations with his police
contact the day before, the day after and two days after having placed
the explosives in the hands of El Chino. But that police contact
maintains Trashorras told him nothing about that fact. In addition,
the mobile phones used in the manufacture of the bombs were unlocked
at a location belonging to a policeman of Syrian origin, Maussili
Kalaji [45].

What a coincidence that all these terrorist collaborators have been
linked to the police! And above all, what "luck" that none of them
were turned in by these police before they committed the crime.
Apparently, the terrorists also were lucky in terms of the
surveillance they were subjected to by the police. As recorded in
police records, since January 2003 the police had been closely
monitoring an Islamist group which included several of the terrorists
who would later die in Leganés.

In sum, this group was regularly under surveillance on 81 days spread
between January 2003 and February 2004. This monitoring appears to
have intensified during the first half of February 2004, but ceased
abruptly on February 17, that is, eleven days before the operation to
deliver the explosives, and twenty-four days before the attack itself
[46]. The same good luck will later accompany the two accomplices of
the terrorist cell whose telephone conversations were being
intercepted in the course of an investigation into drug trafficking.
The phone taps were suspended abruptly on March 12, the day after the
attack [47]. Let’s consider the first example in which the silhouette
of the police is visible behind the terrorists.

After the explosion of the apartment in Leganés, several documents
regarding ETA appear among the ruins. It was determined after the fact
that these documents came from the neighboring apartment, which was
partly destroyed. That other apartment was occupied by a policeman who
- one more coincidence - specialized in fighting terrorism [48].

All these suspicious behaviors, before and after the attack, linked to
the obvious inconsistency of the Islamist theory, suggest that the
real culprits were under the protection of the state apparatus. It
must be emphasized, however, that only a reopening of the
investigation can determine whether those suspicions are founded. By
revealing evidence that shatters the official version and absolves the
alleged organizers, the trial has done nothing more than confirm the
extreme fragility of the theory of an Islamist attack.

In any case, in the political context, the court did not attempt to
precisely establish the facts. It had to conclude that José María
Aznar’s accusations against ETA were unfounded, as had already been
decided by the broadest of juries, the voters. At the same time, the
court had to conclude that the accusations by neo-cons against al
Qaeda were also unfounded, something which the new government of Jose
Luis Zapatero had already decided.

The court determined that the initial evidences had been fabricated to
falsely accuse the Basque organization ETA, but declined to go further
in terms of the manipulations carried out by certain elements of the
police. The court chose, not surprisingly, to content itself with the
hypothesis with which it had been presented and which was the only one
that could restore social calm: the hypothesis of Islamist
responsibility without links to al Qaeda.

================================================ Translated from
Spanish to English by DAVID BROOKBANK.
================================================

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