Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Troubling Anthrax Additive Found; Atta Met Iraq
ABC News ^ | 10/28/01 | ABCNews.com

Posted on 10/28/2001 6:48:24 AM PST by Croooow

Troubling Anthrax Additive Found; Atta Met Iraqi
By ABCNEWS.com

Despite a last-minute denial from the White House, sources tell ABCNEWS the anthrax in the tainted letter sent to Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle was laced with bentonite. The potent additive is known to have been used by only one country in producing biochemical weapons — Iraq.

ABCNEWS has been told by three well-placed and separate sources that initial tests on an anthrax-laced letter sent to Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle have detected a troubling chemical additive that authorities consider their first significant clue yet.

An urgent series of tests conducted on the letter at Ft. Detrick, Md., and elsewhere discovered the anthrax spores were treated with bentonite, a substance that keeps the tiny particles floating in the air by preventing them from sticking together. The easier the particles are to inhale, the more deadly they are.

As far as is known, only one country, Iraq, has used bentonite to produce biological weapons.

Just minutes before ABCNEWS' World News Tonight aired this report, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer (news - web sites) flatly denied bentonite was found on the letters. Moments later, another senior White House official backed off Fleischer's comments, saying it does not appear to be bentonite "at this point."

The official said the Ft. Detrick findings represented an "opinionated analysis," that three other labs are conducting tests, and that one of those labs had contradicted the bentonite finding. But, the official added, "tests continue."

Fleischer added today that no test or analysis has concluded that bentonite is present in the Daschle anthrax, and "no other finding contradicts or calls into question" that conclusion.

Reading from what he said was a sentence from the report prepared by scientists at Fort Detrick, he told ABCNEWS, "It is interesting to note there is no evidence of aluminum in the sample." Aluminum, Fleischer said, would also be present if bentonite was.

Trademark Additive

While it's possible countries other than Iraq may be using the additive, it is a trademark of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's biological weapons program.

"It means to me that Iraq becomes the prime suspect as the source of the anthrax used in these letters," former U.N. weapons inspector Timothy Trevan told ABCNEWS.

In the process of destroying much of Iraq's biological arsenal, U.N. teams first discovered Iraq was using bentonite, which is found in soil around the world, including the United States and Iraq.

"That discovery was proof positive of how they were using bentonite to make small particles," former U.N. weapons inspector Richard Spertzel told ABCNEWS.

But officials cautioned today that even if Iraq or renegade Iraqi scientists prove to be the source, it's a separate issue from who actually sent the anthrax through the mail.

"What you have to keep in mind is the difference between knowledge about what type of information you have to have to produce it, and who could have sent it," Fleischer said. "They are totally separate topics that could involve totally separate people. It could be the same person or people. It could be totally different people. The information does not apply to who sent it."

Experts say the bentonite discovery doesn't rule out a very well-equipped lab using the Iraqi technique. In fact, commercial spray dryers that Iraq used to produce its biological weapons were bought on the open market from the Danish subsidiary of a U.S. company for about $100,000 a piece.

Starting Thursday, FBI agents began asking company officials in Columbia, Md., if anyone suspicious in this country had recently acquired one of them. — Brian Ross, Christopher Isham, Chris Vlasto and Gary Matsumoto

Atta Met Iraqi Spy

Raising new questions about whether Saddam Hussein was involved in the Sept. 11 attacks, officials in the Czech Republic now confirm for the first time that a key hijacker met with an Iraqi intelligence agent in Prague.

Czech Interior Minister Stanislav Gross said Mohamed Atta, believed by U.S. investigators to be a ringleader of the hijackers, met an Iraqi diplomat shortly before the consul was expelled. Czech intelligence officials were troubled by Al-Ani's photographing of the Radio Free Europe building in the city.

"At this point we can confirm," Gross said, "Mohamed Atta made contact with Iraqi intelligence officer Ahmad Khalil Ibrahim Samir Al-Ani, who was expelled from the Czech Republic for conduct incompatible with his diplomatic status on April 22, 2001."

"The details of this contact are under investigation," Gross said.

The meeting took place on Atta's second known visit to Prague. A year earlier, on June 2, 2000, he had came to Prague from Germany by bus in the morning hours. The next day, Gross said, Atta left for the United States.

Iraq's Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz had previously denied Al-Ani had any contact with Atta in Prague. In recent weeks, Minister Gross also had said there was no evidence to support Prague media reports citing Czech intelligence officials who said Atta had met Al-Ani.

The meeting, along with Iraq's stockpiles of biological weapons, have led some to question whether Atta — and Hussein — were not somehow behind the anthrax attacks in the United States.

"There are reports that one of the things that may have happened at that meeting was that [Atta] was given by the Iraqi some sample of anthrax," former U.N. weapons inspector Richard Butler told ABCNEWS. "We do not know if that is true. I believe it is something that should be investigated."

For his part, Gross would not give further details on the Atta meeting.

"At this point, neither I nor anyone else from the police or Czech intelligence services will provide any further information concerning this contact and [Atta's] stay and movement on the territory of the Czech Republic until the investigation is finished," he said. — Brian Hartman

FBI Under Fire

Critics of the FBI are saying agents may have missed some early clues that could have helped prevent the Sept. 11 attacks.

Weeks before the hijackings, the FBI received a CIA warning that two suspected terrorists had slipped into the United States. The FBI was unable to locate the two men, who ended up among the 19 hijackers.

They did, in August, arrest Zacarias Moussaoui, an Algerian man who aroused suspicions at a Minnesota flight school. But FBI headquarters denied the agents' request to obtain a warrant to search through the suspect's computer because before Sept. 11 the agents didn't have enough evidence he was part of a terrorist plan.

"If going into that computer would have helped to determine or detect what was about to happen, then it's absolutely essential that that goes forward, even if you end up forgoing a prosecution," former FBI Assistant Director Buck Revell said.

And what about sharing information? After the Sept. 11 attacks, police chiefs complained that they were given the FBI's terrorist watch list, but little more. The FBI was also criticized for what many viewed taking too long to conduct tests and interview witnesses in the first Anthrax cases in Florida and New York.

FBI Director Robert Mueller acknowledges, "There were some missteps early on."

Mueller, a career prosecutor who is the FBI's new director, comes from outside the bureau to lead it in the most challenging time in the agency's history.

Sen. Charles Grassly, a longtime FBI critic, says the director faces a tough task.

"Director Mueller has two wars to win, one on the outside against the terrorists, the other is with his own bureacracy," Grassley said. — John Miller

Italian Police Probe Man Found in Box

An extraordinary stowaway is under investigation in Italy.

Italian police are trying to learn why Rizk Amid Farid, a 43-year-old Egyptian arrested near Rome, would have been shipping himself across the Atlantic Ocean in a furnished box complete with a bed and toilet. Farid was discovered late last week in a shipyard in the southern port of Gioia Tauro, where his Canada-bound ship was docked for five days. Authorities on the ground say port authority personnel discovered Farid after hearing strange noises coming from his container. Crammed into the suspicious stowaway's box with him were two cellular phones, a satellite phone, a computer, cameras, many documents, and even a drill for making airholes.

Police believe he boarded the ship in Egypt and planned to travel all the way to Canada. But Farid, who was holding a Canadian passport, also had a plane ticket to fly from Rome to Toronto to Montreal. His seat on the flight, scheduled to leave last Friday, was confirmed.

Italian investigators say everything about Farid — his documents and claims about himself — appear to be either false or obscured. They have checked his stories with police in other countries — including Egypt, Canada and the United States — and believe none has panned out. Canadian investigators are further investigating the suspect's background.

Though police have not said they have any direct evidence tying Farid to terrorism, he is the first person to be arrested in Italy on the basis of a new counterterrorism law passed last week in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks. Under the new law, he can be held for at least six months as investigators try to determine whether he is a terrorist.

A prosecutor said the stowaway had studied in Egypt and in North America to qualify as a commercial jet engine mechanic. Before leaving Egypt, however, he was believed to be working at a magazine distribution company. Investigators say he claimed to be "running away" from a powerful brother-in-law in Egypt and had traveled in the container for five days.

— Ann Wise in Rome, Yael Lavie in London and Brian Hartman in Washington


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-71 next last
To: B.O. Plenty; Croooow; Fred25
I'll tell you one thing I know for sure and that is that Halliburton Energy is a HUGE supplier of industrial bentonite. Cheney used to be what, the CEO of Halliburton? This is only going to fuel the fires of conspiracy. You watch.
41 posted on 10/28/2001 12:55:23 PM PST by VA Advogado
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: philman_36
WARNING...this IP address 63.93.248.2 has a virus according to my virus software! Stay away if you have no protection.
This "script kiddy" shouldn't play games at times like this.
42 posted on 10/28/2001 12:57:19 PM PST by philman_36
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 40 | View Replies]

To: VA Advogado
This is only going to fuel the fires of conspiracy.
Seems like you started the fire though, doesn't it!
Remember...Only you can prevent "conspiracy fires"!
43 posted on 10/28/2001 12:59:59 PM PST by philman_36
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 41 | View Replies]

To: jerod
Neo-Nazi and other extreme Right Wing groups are known to be very happy about the attacks on the WTC. They are also very gleeful about the negative and parnoid effects those attacks have had on the feeble minded members of society.

Link please.

44 posted on 10/28/2001 1:00:25 PM PST by VA Advogado
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: VA Advogado

45 posted on 10/28/2001 1:02:39 PM PST by philman_36
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 41 | View Replies]

To: philman_36
Seems like you started the fire though, doesn't it!

Hardly. Even a knuckle dragger like yourself will eventually learn about the Halliburton Energy/bentonite connection. There are a number of bentonite mines in Wyoming as a matter of fact. I can only see trouble for Cheney with the left and right wing tin-foilers if this amounts to something. Whatever you do, don't tell Klayman. :)

46 posted on 10/28/2001 1:03:37 PM PST by VA Advogado
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 43 | View Replies]

To: VA Advogado
Even a knuckle dragger like yourself...
Ah haha >>>in my best Eddie Murphy laugh<<< Oh, that's a good one!
47 posted on 10/28/2001 1:05:13 PM PST by philman_36
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 46 | View Replies]

To: jerod
After all, extreme Right Wingers are too STUPID to be able and pull something like this anthrax scare.

I don't think people were defending militia groups so much as they were pointing out the obvious lack of (non-political) evidence against them.
48 posted on 10/28/2001 1:08:21 PM PST by Sreen Name
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 29 | View Replies]

To: B.O. Plenty; jerod
What you're both saying is: It's entirely possible that groups within the U.S. have their own reasons for desiring the sort of unrest that the Anthrax has indeed caused.

And such a thing is indeed a plausible way to "further the revolution" that both right- and left-wing fringe groups claim they want. And of course, Saddam would be more than happy to deal with people who are in the market for somthing that futhers his cause.

The strategy of anthrax for a domestic revolutionary group is simple: anthrax begets strict controls, which turn people against the authorities. This makes it easier to peel off some of the more volatile among the otherwise law-abiding citizens. (We have plenty here at FR, and I'd venture to guess that the Democratic Underground has its own version.)

Then it's on to something different, with an eye toward stricter government controls, and so the cycle goes.

The tactics themselves are Mao's. I can easily see how the people using anthrax could be domestic: right-wing, left-wing, even both. It wouldn't surprise me in the least.

49 posted on 10/28/2001 1:16:23 PM PST by r9etb
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: philman_36
Anything more you would like to me to know about?
50 posted on 10/28/2001 1:24:29 PM PST by VA Advogado
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 47 | View Replies]

To: randita
This makes no sense. Extreme right-wing groups detest government intervention into people's lives

I don't particularly buy that particular comment. But ultimately it's irrelevant if those folks consider themselves to be revolutionaries. If government intervention will drive "patriots" into their fold, wouldn't that be a victory for them?

My reference point for the idea of right-wing involvement is the ill-fated Republic of Texas thing a few years back. Those guys really believed their little revolt would spark The Revolution.

It didn't of course. But the train of thought beyond that is fairly obvious: the "patriots" just weren't mad enough yet. Well, what better way to make them mad at the gov't than to goad them into "repressive responses?"

I don't really have an opinion yet as to who's really behind it. Suffice it to say that I'm unwilling yet to rule out domestic sources on the left or right.

51 posted on 10/28/2001 1:25:50 PM PST by r9etb
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

To: VA Advogado
Anything more you would like to me to know about?
A fellow knuckle dragger like yourself wouldn't understand.
52 posted on 10/28/2001 1:39:47 PM PST by philman_36
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 50 | View Replies]

To: VA Advogado
Look, smart rich guys are going to have contacts in both government and industry. That is nothing new. Poor dumb guys aren’t going to have any contacts at all, and that’s nothing new.
53 posted on 10/28/2001 1:40:09 PM PST by Fred25
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 41 | View Replies]

To: Croooow
Oh come-on. Ever' one knows it was us rite wing, fringe, friggin lunatic, crackpot, nut, freak, religious zealot, murderin' conservatives!
54 posted on 10/28/2001 1:42:49 PM PST by lawdude
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: VA Advogado
See reply #39
55 posted on 10/28/2001 1:49:02 PM PST by jerod
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 44 | View Replies]

To: Croooow
There was something else that was found in there that was an additive, silicon I think if I heard the tv right.
56 posted on 10/28/2001 2:34:05 PM PST by rwfromkansas
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: VA Advogado
"Halliburton Energy is a HUGE supplier of industrial bentonite..."

Since it is clay, why would it result in conspiracy talk.

Bentonite is also used in cosmetics and as a food additive---

Will the cosmetic companies and food companies be in the conspiracy ?

57 posted on 10/28/2001 3:03:15 PM PST by gatex
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 41 | View Replies]

To: jerod; BlueCat
"The web page you are trying to access doesn't exist on Yahoo! GeoCities." It would appear that GeoCities deleted it, most likely because the page violated their terms of service.

Unfortunately, there appears to be no record of this page in Google's cache, and I have been unable to find it through looking for the page title or anything else more or less useful-looking. So I'm with BlueCat on this one.

D

58 posted on 10/28/2001 3:10:38 PM PST by daviddennis
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 39 | View Replies]

To: Fred25
"Poor dumb guys aren’t going to have any contacts at all, and that’s nothing new."

LOL. Poor dumb guys don't understand that though. That's why everything seems to be a conspiracy.

59 posted on 10/28/2001 3:23:17 PM PST by blam
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 53 | View Replies]

To: Croooow
What is completely clear now is that
not only could a lonely crackpot NOT have made or obtained this grade of anthrax,
it couldn't even have been made in a major university.

However, to all you tin foil hat right wing conspiracy theorists:

KEEP HOPING!

60 posted on 10/28/2001 3:36:38 PM PST by Nogbad
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-71 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson