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A RUSSIAN AGENT AT THE RIGHT HAND OF BIN LADEN?
The Jamestown Foundation ^ | Jamuary 15, 2004 | Evgenii Novikov

Posted on 02/10/2005 4:54:46 PM PST by TapTheSource

TERRORISM MONITOR

Volume 2 Issue 1 (January 15, 2004)

A RUSSIAN AGENT AT THE RIGHT HAND OF BIN LADEN?

By Evgenii Novikov

The Arabic television channel Al Jazeera broadcast an audiotape on December 19, 2003, that was said to be from Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri, the right hand man of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. In it, Zawahiri claimed that his group was chasing Americans everywhere, including in the United States. This claim helped raise the terror threat level.

But where is Zawahiri, whose head now carries a price of US$25 million? Recent media reports have said that he is hiding in Iran, though Iranian authorities deny this. Yet it could be that Russian intelligence knows exactly where he is and may even have regular contact with the elusive Egyptian.

Zawahiri as Prisoner

There are many accounts of Ayman al-Zawahiri published in the press. These stories cover Zawahiri's childhood and his relatives, his study of medicine, his connections to the Muslim Brotherhood, his involvement in the assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, his close relations with Osama bin Laden, and his role in major terrorist attacks against the United States. But there are few authors who mention that Zawahiri spent half a year in close contact with representatives of Russian intelligence while in their custody.

Significantly, these contacts led to a change in Zawahiri's political orientation. Long talks with Russian intelligence officers "forced a critical change in his lethal planning. ...America, not Egypt, became the target... Freed from Russian jail in May 1997, Dr. Zawahri found refuge in Afghanistan, yoking his fortunes to Mr. bin Laden. [Zawahiri's group] Egyptian Jihad, previously devoted to the narrow purpose of toppling secular rule in Egypt, became instead the biggest component of al Qaeda and a major agent of a global war against America. Dr. Zawahri became Mr. bin Laden's closest confidant and talent scout." [1]

The story of Zawahiri's Russian experience begins on December 1, 1996, when he was traveling under the alias "Mr. Amin" along with two of his officers--Ahmad Salama Mabruk, who ran Egyptian Jihad's cell in Azerbaijan under the cover of a trading firm called Bavari-C, and Mahmud Hisham al-Hennawi, a militant widely traveled in Asia. The group was accompanied by a Chechen guide. They were trying to enter Russia between the Caspian Sea and the Caucasus Mountains in an effort to discover whether Chechnya could become a base for training militants. It was here that the group was arrested by Russian police for a lack of visas. They were soon handed over to the Federal Security Service, the successor to the KGB.

When Zawahiri's computer was later discovered in Afghanistan by two journalists, it provided insight into Zawahiri's side of the story. In short, it goes as follows:

The Russians failed to: 1) find out Zawahiri's real identity and the goals of his visit to Chechnya; 2) read the Arabic texts in his laptop, which would have revealed the nature of his activities; and 3) read the coded messages that he sent from custody to his friends.

Zawahiri's Version Debunked

Yet based on my own twenty years' experience with Russian intelligence people involved in Arab affairs, these claims simply do not ring true. The Soviet KGB had good--albeit indirect--connections with Islamic fundamentalists, including the Muslim Brotherhood and the Egyptian Jihad. The curriculum of Arab terrorists who studied at Moscow International's Lenin School placed special emphasis on cooperation between Marxists and Islamists. Soviet instructors would encourage Arab terrorists to consider the Muslim Brothers and other Islamic extremists as "allies in class struggle."

Good contacts between the KGB and Islamic fundamentalists existed at the time of the Egyptian Jihad's 1981 assassination of Anwar Sadat, after which Zawahiri was jailed by Egyptian authorities. Since the KGB followed these events very closely and may have even been indirectly involved in the plot, the KGB would have put Zawahiri's name into its records at that time. Therefore, when Zawahiri crossed the KGB's path again, that organization likely would have soon discovered his real identity.

Additionally, local Islamic organizations flocked to Zawahiri's aid during his detention and trial in such large numbers that the Russians and even Zawahiri's own lawyer were puzzled by the outpouring. [2] This would have been another tip-off to the authorities that they had more than just a mere merchant (Zawahiri's reported claim) in custody. Also, the fact that he was arrested along with a Chechen should have raised additional suspicions.

Perhaps most difficult to believe from Zawahiri's version is that his captors would not have read the Arabic information contained within his laptop computer. Russian intelligence has probably the best Arabists in the world. One of them--Dr. Evgeny Primakov--headed the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service from December 1991 until January 1996 and made a considerable efforts to bring many talented Arabists into this service. These individuals would have been able not only to read Zawahiri's Arabic text, but also to decode his encrypted messages without any problem.

Thus, with Zawahiri's true identity and purpose uncovered by the Russians, these authorities would have been faced with several options. One would have been deportation to either Egypt or the United States, with gratitude from those governments for Russian President Yeltsin, burnishing his image as a fighter against terrorism. But apparently the Russians decided not to do this, believing perhaps that their national interest was better served by another alternative.

One should bear in mind that at the time of Zawahiri's capture, Chechnya was enjoying a period of actual independence from Moscow. The Kremlin was having great difficulty finding "agents of influence" among the Chechen people. At the same time, Moscow knew that representatives of al Qaeda and other foreign Islamic fundamentalists were present in Chechnya and exercised strong influence on the Chechen leaders, especially on the military commanders. It would have been logical, therefore, for the Russians to try to persuade Zawahiri to cooperate with them in directing the activities of Arabs in Chechnya, in getting information about the plans and activities of Chechen leaders, and in influencing the Chechen leadership.

It may not have been too difficult for Russian officers to persuade Zawahiri to go along with such a plan. The prisoner would have been very frightened by the prospect of being deported to Egypt or remaining jailed in Russia. Furthermore, methods of torture during interrogation used by KGB officers would have truly almost scared Zawahiri to death. Execution very likely was just one threat.

Once made aware that the KGB knew of his true identity, Zawahiri would have realized that it would be useless to lie further. At a minimum, Zawahiri would have had to agree to cooperation with Russian intelligence to save his life and to buy his freedom. It is possible that the Russians also offered some form of assistance to Zawahiri and al Qaeda. This could have been in the form of explosive technology or other weaponry.

It is notable that Taliban and al Qaeda militants in Afghanistan received regular re-supplies of Russian arms. The man responsible for these deliveries was Victor Anatolievich Bout, the son of a top KGB officer. His father's connections helped establish Bout in the arms trade, which is linked to the Russian government and particularly to its intelligence services. Bout and his family currently reside in the United Arab Emirates. [3]

It is also not difficult to imagine that the Russians managed to get some information from Zawahiri about his colleagues that could have been used to blackmail him if he tried to avoid cooperation after his release. With an agreement reached between Zawahiri and the Russians, the authorities would have taken steps to make the Egyptian look "clean" to his Arab comrades and the Chechens. It would not have been difficult for them to stage Zawahiri's trial, at which the judge gave him only a six months' sentence, much of which he had already served.

A final note: Arabs are still very active among the Chechen militants today, and yet the Russians appear to turn a blind eye toward their infiltration and do not hunt them particularly. Even the most influential among the Arabs, Khattab, may well have been killed by his own people. Arabs have also never been listed as POWs. Perhaps the Russian forces have an order to kill Arabs on the spot: Nobody wants them to reveal unwanted information during interrogations. Thus left alone, the Arabs exercise significant influence over the activities of Chechen commanders according to orders from Zawahiri. Presumably they do so without understanding that they could well be the Trojan horses who actually execute the Kremlin's orders. For example, the Arabs apparently do not encourage Chechen militants to direct any attacks against Russian leaders in Moscow. This could be accomplished simply by refusing to pay for such operations.

In contrast, the Arabs do seem to encourage the taking of hostages from among the common people, as in the Moscow youth club Nord-Ost incident, thus making it easier for the Kremlin to stoke public anger against "Chechen terrorists." This in turn helps Vladimir Putin garner popular support for his own authoritarian actions as well as those of his former KGB colleagues who now occupy 65 percent of top governmental positions. Dr. Zawahiri may thus be the queen in the Kremlin's chess game not only in Chechnya, but also in Russia's power struggle at the highest levels. If so, it is not likely that the Russians would surrender him merely to help win the global war on terror.

Dr. Novikov is a senior fellow at the Jamestown Foundation.

Notes:

1. "Saga of Dr. Zawahri Sheds Light On the Roots of al Qaeda Terror;" Andrew Higgins and Alan Cullison; The Wall Street Journal, July 2, 2002. 2. Ibid. 3. "International Business of Russian Mafia," Sueddeutsche Zeitung, February 1, 2001.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Russia; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 1tinfoil; alqaeda; area51; bigfoot; blackhelicopters; boredkids; cccp; chechnya; conspiracy; globaljihad; jamestownfoundation; jbs; kgb; michaelscheuer; nwo; obl; osamabinladen; putin; russia; scheuer; sovietunion; spacealiens; tinfoil; zawahiri
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To: Danae

Thanks Danae. Keep me posted if you run into similar info--TTS


21 posted on 02/10/2005 7:39:41 PM PST by TapTheSource
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To: BearWash
You have a good point and I agree. God knows I wouldn't trade places with the intel-weenies if given a chance.

However, I still find the good "doctor" full of wombat droppings. the Russians are very good at cutting people off from communication with their friends. And, if they found an Arab, with no papers, with a Chechyen trying to enter... He wasn't seeing the light of day for a good while.

I suspect that his "report" was to boost his image among his friends.

22 posted on 02/10/2005 7:50:51 PM PST by joedelta (Those who long for peace must prepare for war)
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To: joedelta
Yeah, it's another instance of terrorists defeating sophisticated strategies with simple ones. If I tried to send you a triple-DES encoded email message about a bomb threat on an airplane the NSA would have it decoded in 10 seconds and your and my faces on a monitor in 30 seconds.
23 posted on 02/10/2005 7:55:32 PM PST by steve86
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To: joedelta

==I suspect that his "report" was to boost his image among his friends.

Or to confuse the West/cover his tracks re: his new benefactor, the Russians. Of course, thats assuming he wasnt in their camp all along.


24 posted on 02/10/2005 7:56:28 PM PST by TapTheSource
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To: TapTheSource; Destro; A. Pole; MarMema; YoungCorps; OldCorps; FairOpinion; eluminate; FormerLib; ...
For some reason this post was removed from the Extended News section.

Gee, because this isn't news but fantasy BS, mayhap?

Glad the moderators are moderating.

25 posted on 02/10/2005 8:12:37 PM PST by jb6 (Truth = Christ)
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To: jb6

==Gee, because this isn't news but fantasy BS, mayhap?

You forgot to post your silly chart, jb6.


26 posted on 02/10/2005 8:19:05 PM PST by TapTheSource
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To: TapTheSource
You forgot to post your silly chart, jb6

You mean the truth vs your fantasy. A "silly" chart that you've yet to stand up to once. Hehehehe

27 posted on 02/10/2005 8:46:30 PM PST by jb6 (Truth = Christ)
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To: TapTheSource

What in the world was someone smoking when they posted this nonsense?


28 posted on 02/10/2005 8:53:53 PM PST by GarySpFc (Sneakypete, De Oppresso Liber)
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To: GarySpFc; jb6

Here comes the tireless defenders of KGB-president Vladimir Putin and is merry band of Kremlin/Commie strategists.


29 posted on 02/10/2005 8:59:43 PM PST by TapTheSource
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To: TapTheSource
>>>>>>>Significantly, these contacts led to a change in Zawahiri's political orientation. Long talks with Russian intelligence officers "forced a critical change in his lethal planning. ...America, not Egypt, became the target...<<<<<


30 posted on 02/10/2005 9:03:30 PM PST by DTA
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To: DTA

Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words!!! Tanks DTA.

--TTS


31 posted on 02/10/2005 9:06:13 PM PST by TapTheSource
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To: Migraine

More like it is a surrender dictated by the Political needs of the American administration. As it is called a "unilateral" disengagement, may I translate into 1940's speak, unconditional retreat.


32 posted on 02/10/2005 9:53:19 PM PST by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: TapTheSource

Russia steering the Jihad, hmmm, the pieces are indeed falling together.


33 posted on 02/10/2005 9:54:03 PM PST by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: TapTheSource
I don't trust them nor would I be surprised by anything they do.
34 posted on 02/10/2005 9:55:43 PM PST by rdcorso (What A Disgrace To The Churchill Name.Winston Would Bitch Slap This Low-Life)
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To: TapTheSource

This is all quite fascinating.

Time to indulge in a "vanity" anecdote - if you all do not mind...

We would be well served to bear in mind the old axiom of power - keep your friends close and your enemies closer. This has long been observed by both the old Soviet regime, and the newer Russian recycling attempt at democracy.

A close personal friend of mine, Sergei Aleksandrovich was a Commandant in the Soviet Navy over their submarine and frigate fleets in the Indian Ocean and a bit beyond. Now retired, he sat with me one evening in a small snack bar/cafe in the Russian town he now calls home, sharing humorous tales from the recent past.

He was also an intelligence operative for the government. Immediately prior to our engaging Iraq in the Gulf war, he and his top assistant secretly met the U.S. CIA station chief for the Indian Ocean/Pan Arabian region on an island off the coast of Bahrain.

When they met, they shook hands as old friends - because in essence that's what they were. Our intrepid station chief laid his leather attache case on the table top, worked the combination deftly, and retrieved from within, one bottle of Johnnie Walker Red, one bottle of Johnnie Walker Black, a pack of playing cards, and a carton of premium American cigarettes. The confidential intel dossiers stayed in the briefcase - for the moment. "For now, Sergei Aleksandrovich - we will drink, smoke, and play cards like men; for we are men and that is how we do what must be done."

Six - or maybe seven hours later, the two drunk agents and their equally drunk aides exchanged intelligence files. The even-then flagging Soviet Union had just given us their latest and most confidential information on Iraqi spy operatives and militant Islamic operatives who were a part of Saddam's repressive Ba'ath regime, as well as all they knew (and they knew a considerable amount) about the command structure of the Iraqi Army, "Elite" republican guard, Fedayeen Saddam, and the locations of their underground supply-line tunnels which were feeding the front lines of the invasion force cutting through Kuwait.

There was a quid pro quo, of course. What we gave them had equal value - to them - and was well received. That information enabled the expert positioning of our naval forces and subsequent dispatch of our deadly accurate sea to land cruise missiles, and jet bombing sorties which decimated those subterranean supply lines - preemptively eliminating a large portion of the Iraqi ground threat.

Fast forward to late September, 2001. Another pair of briefcases situated on another tabletop, this time there is no Soviet Union. This time, the former aides, the assistants are now masters of the table their eyes meet across. In the aftermath of an political and then an economic implosion, the Russians have but one major bargaining chip - a sorely needed one.

After a protracted and costly campaign in Afghanistan, they have the names of warlords and small hamlets that are out of orbiting path of currently circling satellites - small enclaves of ten or twelve mud huts tucked in tiny ravines in high mountain passes. Places not noted on any known maps. They have maps. They have charts showing extended family trees, opium transport routes, pathways and landing zones not frequented by Taliban minions.

The U.S. again has something to offer (this I still cannot disclose entirely, but there was economic stimulus by way of private industry investment in Russian oil/gas production). The Russian FSB agent went home - after some obligatory "I & I", the American proceeded on to London England, where he met with MI6 and MI5 colleagues in a small pub off one end of Trafalgar square - two stone's throws away from their modest cubicles at the British Ministry Of Defence, Main Building, Horseguards Avenue, Whitehall, London, SW1A 2HB.

Some information is confirmed (that which can be - trust, but verify) other information is assessed as to immediate importance and the next morning finds its way into the DCSA - Defence Logistics Organisation.

A plan takes shape quickly for presentation to the CINC, US Joint Chiefs of Staff, and select CIA operatives - while in London it will be met with review by the Director and Deputy Director/Operations Manager of "DCSA Messaging London", Prime Minister Blair, and ranking members of the British special services, etc...

Envoys are dispatched to Italy, Australia, and Poland; responses fly back and forth across oceans and borders, agreements are struck, timetables are set.

There is much more to the groundwork to what many will recognise as the background for the most astonishingly rapid and successful strike force deployment in modern military history - with an equally amazing result of taking out a regime and controlling a country which stubbornly resisted two previous global military powers.

The point is our success rests in part on the former ashes of their failure and the subsequent accurate diagnosis of wrong strategies and discerning of new and better applications of modern, light attack force warfare.

Yes, the Russians and the Soviet Communists before then kept the Arab/Muslim world close. They had to - ever since Ghengis Khan, Russian territory has had a significant Muslim populations within its borders - one strongly resistant and militantly against Marxism.

Today most of these practitioners inside of Russia are either in Tatarstan - the most independent republic (capital Kazan, a city 1,000 years old this year), but there are also many in the caucasus just north of Georgia - the incendiary region around Kislovodsk, P'yatigorsk, Vladikavkaz, Grozny.

With so many of the R.O.P. folk intermingled so thoroughly, Putin, et al have little choice but to tread somewhat lightly to avoid sparking a civil war among factions within Russia. Until the Russian government, society, and economy are on more stable footing, they can ill-afford not keeping themselves amongst the Islamofascists - for the Muslims have their own walking amongst the Infidel, biding their time, waiting for Jihad.

As one walks the streets of major Russian cities - Kazan, Moskva, Sankt Peterburg, Volgograd, Ekaterinburg, Nizhnii Novgorod, Rostov na Donu, you cannot long escape the gaze of pitiful, raggedy dark-skinned beggars, some no more than 3 years old...

They wander the major thoroughfares, hands out begging for kopecks, or better, rubles. They do it because they must. Their mothers sit nearby on the sidewalks, or in the gutters - equally dirtily dressed, eyeing their young charges.

The fathers/husbands have paying jobs, but still turn them out the door every morning to beg to earn their keep. This is a practice known among the Soviet/Russian military officers and soldiers- for it is the Uzbeki or Turkmeni mafia. An actual Muslim mafia organised crime syndicate. They pick pockets (and worse) in the alleys and backstreets of a multitude of Russian cities. In any city with an underground metro system, they know the tunnels better than most of the militsia, and are feared for it.

Many closed tunnels and service passageways were secret in Soviet times - known just among KGB etc...now this mafia of interlopers has the knowledge, the skill and abilities, and the insiders to plant underground bombs stealthily - to devastating effect.

Hopefully this background might explain or expand on a few things.

A.A.C.


35 posted on 02/10/2005 10:56:52 PM PST by AmericanArchConservative (Armour on, Lances high, Swords out, Bows drawn, Shields front ... Eagles UP!)
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To: TapTheSource

Skeptical bump.


36 posted on 02/10/2005 10:58:32 PM PST by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: FreedomCalls

Skepticism is good so long as you are willing to get to the bottom of the matter.

All the best--TTS

heres some more food for tought:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1220747/posts


37 posted on 02/10/2005 11:08:39 PM PST by TapTheSource
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To: TapTheSource
No, more like the people who wave away the dark clouds of paranoia that emanate from your addled brain and let the sun shine in.
38 posted on 02/10/2005 11:40:46 PM PST by jb6 (Truth = Christ)
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To: TapTheSource
Thanks for the ping.

This is a really interesting piece of propaganda. Everything seems so damning, yeah. Except for a couple of small details. Remember (of course, you do not remember), upon insistence of the West and particularly of the U.S.A., Russia made peace with Chechen rebels in 1996. So what the Russian officials could do with the guy? He was supposed to be a new buddy. The U.S.A. told us so. At that time, the U.S.A. were very fond of islamists, in Bosnia and in Albania, for instance. 9/11 will happen in 5 years. However, the Jamestown foundation of the U.S.A., where the author of the original contribution Mr. Novikov works, continues even now to support "peace" in Chechnya. Look at their Web site. Apparently, in hope that Russia would be foolish again and then, with new terrorist camps spreading in Chechnya, Mr. Novikov and his likes will start blaming Russia for support of terrorism. No, thank you.

And while you definitely may confuse the dates, Mr. Novikov, being "an expert on Islam" would certainly not. He should know that 1996-1999 Chechnya was de facto independent and Russia could do nothing to fight the terrorists there. Who were supported by the West that turned a blind eye on all the kidnappings and bombings. And continues to support them even now. The British and the Americans gave asylum to a number of high-ranking Chechen "freedom fighters". See here, for example

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1186581/posts

So go clean your own backyard first.
39 posted on 02/11/2005 3:16:31 AM PST by RussianBoor
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To: AmericanArchConservative
A very interesting post.
I am in a learning stage and am not a know it all. I have read what tapthesource has to say and it makes sense to me. You have proved that the Russians at almost any level can be bought. This I believe. That does not take away from the complexity of your story and the history of the Soviet Union/Russia which you seem to have in-depth knowledge of.

From my standpoint I have to boil things down to a manageable to understand position.

I see Putin as the prime the pump de-facto leader of Russia. Where tie Russian mob and the islamo/facists fit in is becoming more clear but nt crystal. I see him as former KGB and IMHO if he could, he would bring back the old Soviet Union if everything went his way.

What gets confusing is almost everything that happens these days can have a double interpretation. Was Yuschensko poisoned by the Russians to get back control of the Ukraine, why did the Russians wait until the last minute to get out of Iraq? There are dozens of unanswered questions in my mind which admittedly does not have the level of expertise that many of you here have. But I am still fascinated by it all and eager to put it all together.
40 posted on 02/11/2005 4:42:46 AM PST by rodguy911 (rodguy911:First Let's get rid of the UN and the ACLU,..toss in CAIR as well.)
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