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Posted on 02/05/2004 8:31:17 PM PST by Mossad1967
Edited on 02/09/2004 3:20:18 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
SANAA, Yemen, Jan. 24 (UPI) -- A purported statement by al-Qaida in Yemen warned Saturday of a "major strike" soon in the United States.
The statement, distributed by the Yemeni Tagamoo Party for Reforms, said: "A major strike, a big event will take place in America soon," reminiscent of the Sept. 11 attacks.
Computer firm in Dubai was hub for black market nuke network
SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM
Thursday, February 12, 2004
LONDON A Dubai-based company in the United Arab Emirates has been cited as the linchpin in the lucrative nuclear weapons black market that has supplied Iran, Libya and North Korea.
The United States and the International Atomic Energy Agency have determined that the UAE company served as the hub for the traffic of nuclear weapons components. Officials said the company coordinated with a range of nuclear suppliers for orders from such countries as Iran, Libya and North Korea.
The Bush administration identified the UAE firm as SMB Computers, a key element in the nuclear weapons black market operated by Pakistani scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan. The company was found to have served as a clearinghouse for nuclear components ordered by Iran, Libya and North Korea.
Another UAE company involved in the nuclear black market was Gulf Technical Industries, which worked closely with SMB's Tahir, Middle East Newsline reported. The Dubai-based Gulf Technical, founded by British engineer Peter Griffin, an associate of Khan, contracted with Malaysia's Scomi Group Berhad for the manufacture of centrifuge equipment identified as P-2.
The public confession on Feb. 4 by Khan the "father" of Pakistan's nuclear weapons program in which he admitted to facilitating the network, has shocked the world and prompted new warnings that terrorists could gain access to weapons of mass destruction.
"The supply network will grow, making it easier to acquire nuclear weapon expertise and materials," IAEA director-general Mohammed El Baradei wrote in the New York Times on Thursday. "Eventually, inevitably, terrorists will gain access to such materials and technology, if not actual weapons."
"Khan and his associates," a White House fact sheet said, "used a factory in Malaysia to manufacture key parts for centrifuges, and purchased other necessary parts through network operatives based in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Libya, Iran, and North Korea were customers of the Khan network, and several other countries expressed an interest in Khan's services."
The company was said to have processed orders for such goods as uranium hexafluoride used for the centrifuge process that can produce enriched uranium for nuclear bombs as well as components and complete centrifuges.
The shipments were said to have been disguised and often relabeled in Dubai to avoid detection.
SMB was operated by a deputy of Khan. Officials said the deputy, identified as Bukhari Sayed Abu Tahir, a Sri Lankan native, employed his Dubai company as the front for the nuclear network that sought to provide up to 1,000 centrifuges to Libya.
"Tahir acted as both the network's chief financial officer and money launderer," President George Bush said in a speech on Wednesday. "He was also its shipping agent, using his computer firm as cover for the movement of centrifuge parts to various clients. Tahir directed the Malaysia facility to produce these parts based on Pakistani designs, and then ordered the facility to ship the components to Dubai. Tahir also arranged for parts acquired by other European procurement agents to transit through Dubai for shipment to other customers."
The nuclear network, which was said to have been penetrated by the CIA, contained companies and people from both Western and Third World countries, officials said. They included Belgium, China, Germany, Japan, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Pakistan, Russia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Switzerland, the UAE and the United Arab Emirates.
Dubai served as the port of destination for these shipments. Officials said Tripoli acquired nuclear weapons components manufactured in Malaysia, shipped and processed in Dubai and then sent to Libya.
"As a result of our penetration of the network, American and the British intelligence identified a shipment of advanced centrifuge parts manufactured at the Malaysia facility," Bush said. "We followed the shipment of these parts to Dubai, and watched as they were transferred to the BBC China, a German-owned ship. After the ship passed through the Suez Canal, bound for Libya, it was stopped by German and Italian authorities. They found several containers, each forty feet in length, listed on the ship's manifest as full of 'used machine parts. In fact, these containers were filled with parts of sophisticated centrifuges."
Bush outlined a new policy to prevent nuclear proliferation by a crackdown on the black market and a ban on the sale of some legal equipment to countries that do not submit to close international supervision.
In 2002 and 2003, officials said, Gulf Technical maintained a representative from Dubai to Malaysia to oversee the production of P-2 for Middle East clients. The P-2, made of maraging steel, has double the uranium enrichment capacity of the earlier model P-1, which is composed of aluminum.
For its part, the IAEA has questioned European businessmen suspected of having helped supply orders from Iran and Libya. They included executives from the German firm Leybold Heraeus, a leading maker of vacuum technology and a unit of the Swiss firm Unaxis AG. The agency cited four former Leybold employees that transferred centrifuge components to Iran and conducted business with other countries interested in nuclear technology, such as Saudi Arabia and Syria
http://www.kcbd.com/Global/story.asp?S=1644474
Soldier Accused of Trying to Aid al-Qaida
A National Guardsman tried to reach al-Qaida operatives through the Internet, offering the group information on U.S. military capabilities and weaponry, defense officials said.
Spc. Ryan G. Anderson, 26, was arrested Thursday, just days before he was to leave for duty in Iraq. He is a tank crew member from the National Guard's 81st Armor Brigade and converted to Islam during the last five years, officials said.
He was being held at Fort Lewis "pending criminal charges of aiding the enemy by wrongfully attempting to communicate and give intelligence to the al-Qaida terrorist network," said Army Lt. Col. Stephen Barger. It was not immediately clear if Anderson had a lawyer.
Anderson, from Lynnwood, was taken into custody without incident as part of a joint investigation by the Army, Department of Justice and the FBI, Barger said.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, defense officials said Anderson signed on to extremist chat rooms and tried to get in touch with al-Qaida operatives. It is unclear how the U.S. government got wind of his alleged offer, but authorities began monitoring his communications, the officials said. It does not appear he transmitted any information to al-Qaida.
Jack Roberts, a neighbor, said he talked to Anderson's wife, Erin, after federal agents left the couple's apartment on Thursday.
"She was pretty damned shocked, as I was," Roberts told the Herald of Everett.
Phone messages left by The Associated Press at the couple's apartment were not immediately returned Thursday.
The 81st Armor Brigade, a 4,200-member unit, is set to depart for Iraq. It is the biggest deployment for the Washington Army National Guard since World War II.
The brigade has been training at Fort Lewis since November. Eighty percent of the soldiers 3,200 are from Washington state, and 1,000 are from guard units in California and Minnesota.
It includes two tank battalions, a mechanized infantry battalion, engineers, support troops, artillery and an intelligence company.
Washington State University spokeswoman Charleen Taylor said Anderson was a 2002 graduate with a degree in history. Anderson graduated from high school in Everett in 1995, the Herald reported, and studied military history with an emphasis on the Middle East at Washington State.
In May 1998, when he was 20, Anderson was pounced on by Snohomish County sheriff's deputies as he carried a couple of rifles past a grade school near his home, the Herald reported. He was released quickly after authorities determined he had not broken any laws.
That incident happened when officials were particularly nervous about school safety, because it was just after 15-year-old Kip Kinkel killed two students and wounded more than 20 other people at his high school in Springfield, Ore. Kinkel also had killed his parents.
Anderson is the second Muslim soldier with Fort Lewis connections to be accused of wrongdoing related to the war on terror.
Capt. James Yee, 35, a former Fort Lewis chaplain, is accused of mishandling classified information from the U.S. prison for suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay. Yee ministered to Muslim prisoners there.
There were initial reports that Yee was being investigated as part of an espionage probe, but he was never charged with spying.
Associated Press writer John J. Lumpkin contributed to this report from Washington, D.C.
Al-Qaida probe leads to Lynnwood soldier
Man attended Everett's Cascade High, WSU
By Brian Kelly, Scott North, Victor Balta, Eric Stevick, Pam Brice and Diana Hefley
Herald Writers
A Lynnwood soldier on the eve of joining the war on terror in Iraq has been accused of being a spy for the terrorist network al-Qaida.
National Guard Spec. Ryan Gibson Anderson was taken into custody Thursday at Fort Lewis as he prepared to deploy with his unit to Iraq.
An Army spokesman said Anderson, who converted to Islam about five years ago, had been caught in a joint sting operation by the Army, the FBI and the Department of Justice.
The Army said Anderson was being held pending charges of "aiding the enemy by wrongfully attempting to communicate and give intelligence to the al-Qaida terrorist network."
"It's shocking, but it's not too shocking, knowing how Ryan is," said Nathan Knopp, a friend since they graduated from Everett's Cascade High School in 1995.
"He was always a paramilitary type of guy, really into military weaponry," Knopp said. "Ryan's kind of a weird type of guy who made up a lot of stories that seemed really far-fetched."
For most people who met him, Anderson, 26, was either a standout or a stranger. Many of his classmates at Cascade didn't remember him. But for others, when he did leave an impression, it was big.
One such time was May 22, 1998, the day after Oregon teenager Kip Kinkle shocked the world by killing his parents and then continuing his murderous rampage by bringing a rifle to his high school and opening fire on classmates.
Anderson, then 20, was at his home in Everett on a break from college. He wanted to show a friend his newly acquired rifles, including one equipped with a 2-foot-long bayonet.
About 3 p.m. that day, Anderson slung his rifles over his shoulder and began walking through the Eastmont neighborhood where he grew up. His path took him past Jefferson Elementary School just before students were to be released for the day.
The report of a rifle-toting man in a school zone one day after the Oregon killings attracted Snohomish County sheriff's deputies like a swarm of angry bees. Anderson was ordered to the ground at gunpoint and disarmed.
No charges were ever filed over the incident, because authorities said Anderson apparently broke no laws.
Nearly four years later, the FBI is interested in what happened that day, sheriff's spokeswoman Jan Jorgensen said Thursday.
"I know that the FBI made some inquiries early this month," she said.
They also were looking for records that might be related to Anderson under the name of Amir Abdul-Rashid, Jorgensen said.
In the military, Anderson was an armor crewman in the National Guard. Soldiers with his job are trained at Fort Knox, Ky., and typically serve on the M1A1 Abrams, the Army's main battle tank.
Along with thousands of other soldiers in the Washington National Guard's 81st Armor Brigade, Anderson was preparing for a yearlong deployment to Iraq. He was taken into custody just days after a huge send-off ceremony held for the brigade in the Tacoma Dome. Soldiers from the brigade will start shipping out within weeks.
Anderson is now being held at the Fort Lewis Regional Corrections Facility, a holding place for prisoners from military commands throughout the country and the Pacific. He will remain there pending the filing of criminal charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
Anderson's wife, Erin, did not return phone messages left at the couple's home. His family in Everett also was unavailable for comment. No one came to the door Thursday of the two-story home where Anderson's father, Bruce, and his stepmother, Jaclyn, live.
A handful of residents in the quiet southeast Everett neighborhood said they didn't know Ryan Anderson and had only seen him a couple of times.
Jack Roberts, who lives next door to Erin and Ryan Anderson at a large apartment complex in Lynnwood, said he was surprised Thursday when about 12 FBI agents came to their door.
When told that Anderson had been arrested for alleged spying, Roberts said: "I thought it would be for that. Why else would there be 12 FBI agents there?"
Roberts said he talked to Erin Anderson after the agents left.
"She was pretty damned shocked, as I was," Roberts said.
Roberts said he has lived at the Cambridge Square North apartments for about three years, and the Andersons moved in about six months ago with their two cats.
The Army did not give any details of the investigation, when it would be concluded or what would happen next.
Knopp, Anderson's high school friend, has kept in touch with him since they graduated. He just got an e-mail from the soldier in which Anderson talked about his upcoming deployment to Iraq.
Knopp was in the Junior Statesmen of America club with Anderson at Cascade and said Anderson had talked about converting to the Muslim faith before graduation.
As group projects, the Junior Statesmen would develop bills that could theoretically be proposed to Congress, Knopp recalled. Anderson's bill proposals invariably included references to gun control, "paramilitary-type stuff" and the U.S. marshals' standoff at Ruby Ridge, Idaho.
For others, Anderson drifted through their lives without much notice.
Professors at Washington State University, where Anderson graduated with a history degree in 2002, struggled to match his face with his name on class lists.
Fritz Blackwell, an associate professor in the history department, didn't recall his former student. "I came back and looked at his grade book, trying to place him. I still couldn't."
Marina Tolmacheva said she had Anderson in two of her sophomore-level classes, one on Middle East history and another on Islamic civilization and culture.
Although his class attendance was good, Anderson didn't stand out. "I don't think he particularly spoke to me," she said.
Former classmates of Anderson -- some who didn't even know who he was -- said they have been barraged by media calls ranging from newspaper reporters to Larry King's CNN TV show.
Anderson's father, Bruce Anderson, had been a substitute teacher in the Everett School District and is pictured in Cascade's 1995 yearbook as an English teacher.
Gary Axtell, then principal at Cascade who has since retired, remembered the Andersons fondly.
"(Ryan) was just an excellent kid, and he comes from an outstanding family," Axtell said, noting that he was listening to news reports on the radio when he heard about Anderson's arrest. "I thought, 'Oh my gosh.' I was just very, very surprised."
Also in the yearbook was a half-page ad featuring a family photo and another picture of him as a mop-topped boy in overalls riding a bicycle.
The caption read in part: "And the Adventure Begins."
Ryan Asplund had some of the same classes as Anderson at Cascade. They often stood in line together because their last names were close alphabetically.
"It was kind of shocking. How else could you put it?" Asplund said.
Asplund remembers Anderson as quiet and reserved.
"He was a nice guy," he said.
More than two dozen other teachers, staff and fellow 1995 graduates couldn't remember many details about Anderson.
As Anderson's arrest dominated the news, others came forward to say they had crossed paths with the outspoken but amiable soldier.
Michael Martinez met Anderson in June 1999 when he and some friends dropped by a gravel pit near Granite Falls.
"I had my camera there because I like to take photos. (Anderson) was wearing an old World War II helmet and had this French rifle and had combat boots on," said Martinez, who lived in Lynnwood at the time but now lives in Ohio.
He asked Anderson if he could snap his picture. The young man complied, holding his rifle in a variety of poses.
Martinez said he was surprised when he saw Anderson's photo on the national news. The young man had made an impression.
"He was friendly enough," Martinez said.
Reporter Brian Kelly: 425-339-3422 or kelly@heraldnet.com.
Letters to The Herald voiced strong opinions
By Scott North
Herald Writer
Ryan Gibson Anderson is a young man with strong opinions about his faith, his country and his right to collect firearms, according to letters he wrote The Herald over the years.
The soldier from Lynnwood, now accused of attempting to pass intelligence information to the al-Qaida terrorist network, grew up in Snohomish County and had at least five letters to the editor published in The Herald between 1999 and 2002.
Among other things, the letters show his support for Islam, his defense of firearms ownership and his pride in being a member of the U.S. military.
In 1999, when he was 22 and still in college, Anderson wrote that "if you aren't a patriot, what right do you have to be a citizen? I believe in this country so strongly that I joined the military to fight for it, and I swore an oath to uphold and defend its ideals and Constitution -- its unabridged Constitution."
Anderson's most recent letter appeared in November 2002, responding to what he argued was a bigoted attack on Islam, the religion he began studying while earning a history degree at Washington State University in Pullman.
"In pursuit of my history degree, I studied Islam and the various cultures that have embraced it and dealt with it, for three years," Anderson wrote. "I have taken many university courses, read dozens of books, and discussed Islam and the Muslim culture with everyone from ex-patriot Iraqis to former Israeli intelligence analysts."
He wrote that after three years of practicing Islam, he wasn't able "to make, with any veracity, any sort of sweeping statements about my adopted faith." Still, Anderson wrote that blaming Islam for the world's ills was simply wrong.
"The Muslim world is hurting today, but in the past our roles have been reversed. Islam at one time led the world in art, science, education and culture, while Christendom was nothing more than an assemblage of brutal, backward fiefdoms," Anderson wrote.
He urged anyone who thinks Islam evil to spend time with Muslims.
"In my three years as an observant Muslim, I've encountered nothing but kindness, patience, courtesy and understanding from them," he wrote. "On the other hand, I have experienced bigotry, hatred and mindless rage from so-called 'educated thinkers' here in the U.S."
Anderson's other letters, published between May 1999 and March 2002, all dealt with his ideas on the debate over gun control, particularly in the wake of school shootings.
Anderson counseled compromise and advocated some sort of a national program to train and license gun owners. But he also railed that gun owners were being treated like "impudent rednecks, or terrorists in training."
Expect violence if anyone tried to deprive him of his weapons collection, wrote Anderson, who said he owned everything from pellet guns and a flintlock musket to a Kalashnikov assault rifle.
"Should any law be passed which allows anyone to come and, without due cause, take my arms, I and every other lawfully armed American citizen has a right to resist that degradation with every means possible," Anderson wrote.
"This is America. Millions have died for our freedoms, and I'd rather die too than see it taken away. If you don't support that, get the heck out of my county and go somewhere else that suits your tastes better, or in simpler terms: America, if you don't love it, leave it."
The accord comes amid persistent fears that terror networks would use ships for attacks, and effectively hands oversight of vessels under the Liberian flag to the U.S. military, industry analysts say.
more at the link
nothing to do with terror, just a humor break
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