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Al-Qaida driving U.S. out of Saudi Arabia
WND ^ | May 15, 2004 | WND

Posted on 05/15/2004 4:49:11 AM PDT by joesnuffy

GEOSTRATEGY-DIRECT INTELLIGENCE BRIEF Al-Qaida driving U.S. out of Saudi Arabia Amid terror threat, ambassador telling Americans to get out

Posted: May 15, 2004 1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2004 WorldNetDaily.com

The U.S. presence in Saudi Arabia has been threatened by an al-Qaida operative who has escaped the clutches of the American military for more than two years, reports Geostrategy-Direct, the global intelligence news service.

Despite Saudi government efforts, al-Qaida operatives like Mustafa Abdul Kader Abed Al Ansari are driving the 35,000 Americans and many of the companies they work for out of Saudi Arabia. About 3,000 Americans work in the oil industry and another 3,000 work in the Saudi defense sector.

Al-Qaida has managed to raise the fear factor so high that even U.S. Ambassador James Oberwetter has told Americans to simply get out.

Mustafa Abdul Kader Abed Al Ansari was nearly captured in the U.S. military's offensive against al-Qaida in the mountains of Tora Bora in 2002.

But Al Ansari fled Afghanistan and began his long trek of revenge.

On May 1, Al Ansari sent a squad to kill American nationals working at the huge Saudi petrochemical and refinery complex at Yanbu. Five Western engineers were brutally slain in an attack masterminded by Al Ansari.

Saudi security forces killed Al Ansari. But his death raised the question of how many other al-Qaida combatants are willing to carry out suicide attacks against the U.S. presence in Saudi Arabia.

Al Ansari's success centered on finding and then attacking weak points in the Saudi-U.S. relationship. He used his three brothers, who worked in the Saudi refinery and petrochemical facility at Yanbu, to provide intelligence on important American targets. The brothers then sneaked Al Ansari into the facility where he captured and executed Western engineers of the Texas-based ABB Lummus.

Al Ansari's brutality astounded the Saudis and alarmed the Western community in Yanbu. Al Ansari had ordered one of the Western engineers to strip naked, shot him and then dragged his body throughout Yanbu, forcing passersby to watch. Saudi security agents killed him and his brothers.

Not surprisingly, after Oberwetter's appeal to the Americans, ABB Lummus decided to cut its losses, and fast.

"All remaining 90 ABB expatriate employees in Yanbu, along with about 30 family members, will leave the country in the next few days," a company statement said. "Other ABB operations in Saudi Arabia are continuing their work, amid heightened security."

Al Ansari's odyssey reflected the path of many al-Qaida operatives following the U.S. war in Afghanistan in late 2001. He participated in the Tora Bora battle and when his colleagues took flight, Al Ansari crossed the Afghan border into Pakistan.

Several weeks later, Al Ansari was in Yemen, which al-Qaida tried to make the new base in the Arabian Peninsula. Under heavy U.S. pressure, Yemen launched an offensive against al-Qaida operatives near the Saudi border. Al Ansari was arrested in 2003 but escaped.

Al Ansari recruited his family for international jihad operations. His younger brother, Abdul Muhsen, was killed in Chechnya in 1994.

Meanwhile, Al Ansari was fighting the Serbs in Bosnia. Afterwards, he used a forged passport to enter Britain, where he lived until 1997.

"This young man was involved in many Jihad activities in the whole of Africa, Bosnia and Afghanistan," said Mohammed Al Masari, head of a leading Saudi opposition group.

"He stayed with us. A few months later he disappeared. We thought he might have left the country and gone to Afghanistan.

Life was not quiet for Al Ansari in Britain. Islamic sources said Al Ansari studied English in London and married a British woman in Cambridge.

"He was studying English in London," Al Masari said. "Then he went to Cambridge and got married to an older lady. He was studying and she was helping him with his English. It did not work out because of the age difference."

The FBI also had its sights on Al Ansari. In 2002, the FBI appealed for information on Al Ansari, whom the agency had discovered through interviews of al-Qaida insurgents captured in Afghanistan and interrogated at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

At the time, the FBI had almost no information on Al Ansari.

"Mustafa Abdulkhader Aabed Al-Ansari/Saudi Arabia," the notice said.

Saudi security sources aren't certain whether Al Ansari operated on his own or on orders from al-Qaida. Regardless, Saudi authorities have reinforced security around Saudi Aramco and other facilities to protect against other attacks.

The United States expects another al-Qaida-inspired attack against Americans in Saudi Arabia within the next few weeks.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 0911; abb; alqaeda; alqaedasaudiarabia; alqaida; cair; islam; middleeast; murder; muslim; oil; oilprices; osamabinladen; religionofpeace; saudiarabia; saudiroyals; southwestasia; terrorists; wahabbi; waronterror; yanbu
Al Ansari's brutality astounded the Saudis and alarmed the Western community in Yanbu. Al Ansari had ordered one of the Western engineers to strip naked, shot him and then dragged his body throughout Yanbu, forcing passersby to watch.
1 posted on 05/15/2004 4:49:12 AM PDT by joesnuffy
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To: joesnuffy

What will the ME do if the world grows a pair and gets oil elsewhere? A small shift would cause the ruling government to change their tune. No more money availible to steal, err.... I mean make.....(sarcasm = off)


2 posted on 05/15/2004 4:58:20 AM PDT by Dutch Boy
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To: joesnuffy

By all means, let all the Americans and other Westerners leave Saudi Arabia. The whole place will shut down within six weeks, and they'll be begging us back. Why, you ask? Because work is beneath the lofty Saudis, and everything the least bit technical is done by outsiders. Wait and see....


3 posted on 05/15/2004 4:59:09 AM PDT by TexasBarak (aka Captain Cantankerous!!- www.postalbanks.com)
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To: TexasBarak

One of the most bizarre things I've ever seen was the shadow workers managing the hotel I stayed in Damman in the "kingdom". A Pakistani hotel manager does all the mundane things like checking people in, while the haughty Saudi natives sit in the office and drink tea and eat dates. Then there's all the slave labor out in the 125 degree weather building roads. I don't ever want to go back there.


4 posted on 05/15/2004 5:51:24 AM PDT by tom paine 2
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To: Dutch Boy

Dutch Boy wrote:


What will the ME do if the world grows a pair and gets oil elsewhere?





They'd eat sand, that's what.

We REALLY need to start drilling and refining our own. And possibly make a deal with the Russians.


5 posted on 05/15/2004 6:05:21 AM PDT by tiamat ("Just a Bronze-Age Gal, Trapped in a Techno World!")
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To: joesnuffy

WEst should have seized all the Mideast ands NAfrica Oil Field back when these thieves started the Nationalizing BS


6 posted on 05/15/2004 6:43:49 AM PDT by uncbob
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To: joesnuffy

If an al-Qaeda objective is to drive us out of Saudi Arabia, then they have largely succeeded. Our troops are out, our expats are leaving or gone and energy contracts are going increasingly to non-coalition entities.


7 posted on 05/15/2004 7:07:19 AM PDT by Ranger
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To: TexasBarak
By all means, let all the Americans and other Westerners leave Saudi Arabia. The whole place will shut down within six weeks, and they'll be begging us back.

Not an option, because if we leave the Saudis will just replace us with Asians. The newbies may not have the benefit of prior experience in the Texas oil patch, but five of them can be had for the cost of one of us - and they will no doubt learn as fast as they have in every other field of technology.

Wealth is created by trade, not by isolation. We have no choice but to stand and fight. Let Saudi Arabia be the next battleground.

8 posted on 05/15/2004 7:17:49 AM PDT by BlazingArizona
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To: TexasBarak
The British are pretty solid in there doing technical work as are the Germans to a certain degree, if by technical work you mean in the oil Industry. They could certainly get help for the EU and money from the Chinese.

Pressure must be put on them from the military side. They certainly do not have to sell oil to the USA, or even Europe.

9 posted on 05/15/2004 8:08:38 AM PDT by CasearianDaoist
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To: CasearianDaoist

Why did the Government of Saudi Arabia frame seven westerners for a series of car bombings they didn't commit?

Those car bombings, which began in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, in November 2000, killed three members of the expatriate community and severely injured several others. To western observers, they were clearly the work of Islamic fundamentalists.

But the Saudis were not about to admit that. So five Britons, a Canadian and a Belgian found themselves arrested, systematically tortured into false confessions and eventually convicted of those bombings.

Since the release of the men from a Saudi Arabian jail last summer, it's emerged that the Saudis were secretly using them as pawns in a bigger game. - snip -

In London, the Foreign Office will only say that Scotland Yard was sent to Saudi Arabia to investigate those diplomats and found them to be completely innocent.

Falsely accusing a group of expatriates is bad enough. But why would the Saudis try to implicate the British Government?

Dr Sayed al-Faghi, head of a Saudi dissident organization in London, says that according to his sources in the security apparatus in Riyadh, the Saudis had set up the British to try to get back at him and his group.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/05/06/60minutes/main615986.shtml


10 posted on 05/15/2004 8:38:56 AM PDT by NewRomeTacitus
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To: joesnuffy
Al Ansari's name is now added to the Terrorist Scumbag Scorecard. Additions or corrections are always welcome.
11 posted on 05/15/2004 9:32:31 AM PDT by Straight Vermonter (06/07/04 - 1000 days since 09/11/01)
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