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AR15.COM
11/5/2004 11:23:42 AM EDT
intresting reading

Al Qaeda Among Us

                 

Our greatest fears were realized when                         the 9/11 Commission report confirmed the presence of al                         qaeda in Arizona. But how did they get here? By Len Sherman                         Illustrations by Jason Moore
                 



                    There are 59 references to Arizona in the 9/11 Commission                     Report. But it tells only a fragment of the story when it                     comes to terrorists in the Grand Canyon State. A joint FBI-CIA                     analysis titled Arizona: Long Range Nexus for Islamic Extremists                     remains classified. Its existence was revealed for the first                     time when the 9/11 Commission released its final report this                     summer. But the long-standing link between Islamic terrorists                     and the Arizona desert has been in the public record for                     years–and it’s centered dead on Tucson, and in                     particular, the Islamic Center of Tucson (ICT).

                 

For nearly                       two decades, the most important nexus for international                     jihad outside of Pakistan and the Middle East has been Arizona.

                 

It’s not clear quite how or why the state has attracted                     what seems to be more than its fair share of individuals                     linked to terrorist organizations over the years. Experts                     have posited that the familiar desert climate; the anonymity                     provided by life in cities outside New York, California,                     and D.C.; and the easy access to a wealth of flight-training                     schools all played a role. But the most ominous explanation                     came from FBI agent Kenneth Williams, the author of the now                     infamous “Phoenix Memo.” In his testimony to                     a congressional committee in 2003, he said, “These                     people don’t continue to come back to Arizona because                     they like the sunshine or they like the state. I believe                     that something was established there, and I think it’s                     been there for a long time.”

                 

To be sure, the vast majority of the Muslims and Middle                     Easterners who have chosen to live or study in Arizona are                     decent, law-abiding people. The University of Arizona in                     Tucson, for one, has a long tradition of attracting people                     from the region thanks to its renowned science programs and                     the city’s quality of life. Since September 11th, however,                     U of A has seen a 54 percent drop in enrollment from the                     Middle East.

                 

The Center’s current leadership says the                     terrorists who have indisputably found their way to its gold-domed                     mosque across the street from a U of A dormitory and next                     to a Carl’s Jr. have nothing to do with the 8,000 or                     so Muslims living in Tucson. But that assessment is not universally                     shared. State law-enforcement agencies and the FBI have conducted                     numerous investigations in Arizona since the terrorist attacks                     of September 11th, and many of those centered on Tucson and                     the ICT’s well-documented, sordid history of attracting                     extremists.

                 

On November 19, 1999, two friends–both doctoral students,                     one from Arizona State University, the other from the University                     of Arizona–were driven to Sky Harbor Airport by a third                     friend in order to catch a flight for Washington, D.C.
  The pair boarded the aircraft and took their seats. They weren’t sitting   together at first, but an empty seat allowed them to do so. The flight proceeded   in the usual manner, and the friends did the usual things. They chatted, went   to the bathroom, and asked the flight attendants a few questions. One expressed   his surprise that the plane was not going directly to Washington–it made   a stop in Columbus, Ohio, and the two students fretted that they might not   arrive in D.C. in time to attend a conference hosted by a foreign university.

                 

The plane landed on schedule in Columbus, where local police                     officers entered the aircraft, handcuffed the students, and                     took them into custody. The authorities had been summoned                     by members of the flight crew, who found the students’ behavior                     strange at best, suspicious at worst. The FBI got involved                     as well as the local police, but the whole matter, as unpleasant                     and as ugly as it was, ended with the release of the students,                     who were not formally arrested or charged with a crime. They                     proceeded on to Washington, once again on an America West                     plane, and attended their conference.

                 

For their troubles, they sued the airline.

                 

That’s one way the story is told. Here’s another                     way.

                 

On November 19, 1999, Zakaria Mustapha Soubra drove Mohammad                     al Qudhaieen and Hamdan al Shalawi to Sky Harbor International                     Airport in Phoenix. The two men boarded an America West plane                     headed to Washington, D.C. with a stop in Columbus. On route                     to Ohio, al Qudhaieen got up and appeared to be headed towards                     the first-class bathroom. Though informed by a flight attendant                     that, as a coach passenger, he was supposed to use the bathrooms                     in the back of the aircraft, he proceeded to move to the                     front, where he was observed attempting to open the cockpit                     door on two occasions. He claimed to be looking for the bathroom.                     The crew was sufficiently alarmed that they asked the captain                     to contact the Columbus police, who were waiting when the                     jet landed.

                 

When the students eventually arrived in Washington, they                     attended a conference hosted by Imam Muhammad Islamic University,                     based in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, which sponsored their studies                     in the United States.

                 

Though the students later sued America West for “ethnic                     discrimination,” the case was dismissed by the court.

                 

At the time, the authorities could make neither heads nor                     tails of this, and the matter was dropped. But in the aftermath                     of 9/11, FBI analysts wondered whether this was a “dry                     run” for the attacks.

                 



It is now clear that Zakaria Mustapha Soubra–the                     two students’ driver                     to Sky Harbor Airport that day–was more than a student at                     Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Prescott. FBI agent                     Williams interviewed him at his Tempe apartment in April                     2000. This encounter, Soubra told the Los Angeles Times,                     was probably prompted by his visit to a shooting range with                     Abu Mujahid, an American-born jihadist who had fought in                     the Balkans and the Middle East. While in Soubra’s                     apartment, Williams noted a poster of Osama bin Laden on                     the wall and another of wounded Arab fighters in Chechnya.

                 

Soubra’s name was added to the U.S. State Department’s                     watch list one year later after intelligence indicated he                     may have received explosives and car-bomb training in Afghanistan.                     (The Soubra inquiry led to an investigation of six other                   individuals associated with him.)

                 

Soubra was also a leading                     member of a radical Islamic movement known as Al-Muhajiroun                     (the name of which translates to “The                     Emigrants,” a reference to the people who accompanied                     the Prophet Mohammed on his hijira from Mecca to Medina).                     It was this association that caused Soubra to be the “primary                     focus” of Williams’s “Phoenix Memo,” which                     tried to alert his superiors about Islamic extremists studying                   in U.S. flight schools.

                 

Al-Muhajiroun has its headquarters                     in London, and its web site asserts that its goal is to form                     a “fifth column” in                     Western countries for the purpose of penetrating “strongly                     in society and to become in position to overthrow the...                     kufr (infidel) regime.”
                    Sheikh Omar Bakri Mohammed, Al-Muhajiroun’s spiritual                     leader, also remains a fervent supporter of Osama bin Laden,                     describing him to United Press International on the second                     anniversary of September 11th as “the lion of the Muslim                     nation.”
                    Zakaria Mustapha Soubra was responsible for setting up a                     branch of this organization in the United States, according                     to Bakri. In a May 26, 2002 interview with the London Telegraph,                     Bakri, who also presents himself as the spokesman of bin                     Laden’s International Islamic Front for Jihad Against                     Jews and Crusaders, declared Soubra “has been an active                     member of our movement. ... He came to the U.K. from the                     Lebanon. He approached me after I gave a talk in Luton and                     I subsequently sponsored his studies at the London School                     of Sharia. He said he wanted to know about Islam. He stayed                     in Britain for two years before going back to Beirut. The                     next time I heard from him he was on an aircraft engineering                     course in Phoenix. He was still committed to our group and                     set up a branch for us.”

                 

Speaking with counter-terrorist investigators,                     Bakri explained Soubra’s role: “he himself just                     supports al Muhajiroun, and effectively he becomes in charge                   [in Arizona].”

                 

It is still unknown whether Soubra played                     a part in September 11th, but one thing is clear: If the                     authorities had followed up on any of the leads developed                     by agent Williams, there may have been another outcome. If                     just one Saudi flight-school student had been picked up and                     interrogated, that might have led to a second student, with                     more questions asked and answered, and then the next student,                     and then the next. Pulling on that first thread could have                     pulled the entire cloth apart–but that first thread was never                   touched, and tragically, the plot remained intact.

                 

Bin Laden’s                     1985 decision to leave his privileged life in Saudi Arabia                     at the age of 28 to take up jihad against the Soviets in                     Afghanistan has been much commented upon in the press. But                     the inspiration that sparked this radical move, the man who                     gave voice to bin Laden’s beliefs,                   has not received the same attention.

                 

Sheikh Abdullah Azzam,                     a Palestinian cleric who preached hatred for all Christians                     and Jews, long advocated worldwide jihad and the restoration                     of an Islamic empire. He was also bin Laden’s teacher                     at King Abdul Aziz University in Jidda, Saudi Arabia. Azzam                     moved to Pakistan at the start of the Soviet invasion in                     1979 and set up the Mujahideen Services Bureau (also known                     as the al Kifah Refugee Center) to recruit and train fighters.                  

                 

The cleric eventually established dozens of al Kifah centers                     throughout the United States too, and its most important                   office after the one in Pakistan was found in Tucson.

                 

Bin                     Laden had become a central figure in Azzam’s organization                     by the end of the ‘80s, but his role was about to get                     much, much bigger. On November 24, 1989, a car bomb killed                     Azzam and two of his sons in Pakistan. Fundamentalists immediately                     blamed the Israelis, who surely had good reason to want Azzam                     dead. However, bin Laden and his right-hand man, Ayman Al-Zawahiri,                     have also been suspected of murdering Azzam, as the cleric’s                     demise allowed bin Laden to step forward and take control                     of the outfit, transforming al Kifah into an even more militant                     organization and a force with which the world would soon                   become all too familiar–al Qaeda.

                 

The terror network that                     would become al Qaeda has had scores of members living and                     working in Arizona during the past 25 years. The U.S. government                     is still sifting through information that spans decades,                     but the picture of bin Laden’s                     associates has been brought into sharper focus since September                   11th.

                 

One of the earliest known preachers of jihad in Arizona                     was Wa’el Jelaidan, a Saudi cleric who co-founded al                     Qaeda with bin Laden. According to state corporation records,                     Jelaidan was the president of ICT from 1983-1984, during                     which time, according to a 2002 Washington Post article, “the                     mosque provided money, support and, at times, fighters to                     the forces resisting the Soviet occupation in Afghanistan,                   according to longtime members.”

                 

During his ICT presidency,                     Jelaidan also was a graduate student at U of A’s School                     of Agriculture and president of the university’s Muslim                     Students Association. However, he left Tucson in 1985 and                     turned up the next year in Peshawar, where he joined the                   Afghan resistance along with bin Laden and Azzam.

                 

In a 1999                     interview with the Arabic-language news network al Jazeera,                     bin Laden discussed the founding of al Qaeda, saying, “We                     were all in one boat, as is known to you, including our brother,                   Wa’el Jelaidan.”

                 

On September 6, 2002, the U.S.                     Treasury Department named Jelaidan as a “specially                     designated global terrorist” and                     ordered his assets frozen after designating him as “a                   supporter of al Qaeda terror.”

                 

But perhaps most prominent                     among bin Laden’s early                     al Qaeda associates was Wadi el Hage, who eventually became                     his personal secretary. Born in Lebanon, el Hage was a Christian-born                     convert to Islam who studied at the University of Southwestern                     Louisiana before moving to Pakistan and becoming a mujahideen                   in the war against the Soviets.

                 

In 1987, he returned to the                     United States and moved to Tucson, where he was a regular                     attendee at the ICT. He made his living as a janitor, became                     a U.S. citizen in 1989, and stayed quite busy during his                     Arizona days. FBI agent Williams testified before a 2002                     Congressional inquiry that “el Hage established                     an Osama bin Ladin support network in Arizona while he was                   living there, and this network is still in place.”

                 

El                     Hage spent the 1990s traveling between the United States                     and Africa, but his role in al Qaeda ended in 2001 when he                     was convicted in U.S. federal court and sentenced to life                     in prison for his role in the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies                   in Kenya and Tanzania.

                 

Also noteworthy is the Arizona residency                     of Mohammed Bayazid, a Syrian-American who lived in Tucson                     in the 1980s and was suspected of being an al Qaeda arms                     procurer. Bayazid allegedly tried to purchase uranium in                     the early 1990s, and though he was subsequently arrested                     for his association with the 1993 World Trade Center bombing,                     it is unclear what became of him after that arrest in Mountain                     View, California. According to a 2002 affidavit, he was released                   under unclear circumstances and later fled the country.

                 

Today,                     Bayazid’s whereabouts are unknown, but he had                     a lot in common with Mubarak al Duri, an Iraqi native who                     also lived in Tucson in the late 1980s and who also allegedly                     tried to procure weapons of mass destruction for al Qaeda.                     The 9/11 Commission Report says al Duri traveled “as                     far afield” as China, Malaysia, and the Philippines                     but not whether he was successful in his search. The report                   does not document his activities in Tucson, either.

                 

Someone                     whose activities in Arizona have been very well documented,                     however, is Hani Hanjour, one of the hijackers who smashed                     American Airlines flight 77 into the Pentagon on September                   11th.

                 

Hanjour moved from Saudi Arabia to Tucson in 1991 and                     enrolled in the University of Arizona when he was just 19                     years old. He lived within walking distance of ICT, and authorities,                     as well as Hanjour’s family, believe he developed radically                   fundamentalist beliefs while in Tucson.

                 

In 1996, Hanjour                     began flight training in Arizona, enrolling in Scottsdale’s                     CRM Airline Training Center. He ultimately earned a commercial                     pilot certificate, issued by the Federal Aviation Administration,                     in April 1999. In the spring of 2000, however, he trained                     in Afghanistan and Pakistan. In early 2001, Hanjour and fellow                     hijacker Nawaf al Hazmi–who was in Central Asia with Hanjour                     from December 2000 to April 2001–trained at a flight school                     in Mesa, completing this phase of their education by the                   end of March 2001.

                 

The 9/11 Commission Report states that                     Hanjour also was associated with Rayed Abdullah, a radical                     Islamist from Phoenix, who received flight training too.                     Abdullah was a leader of the Islamic Cultural Center in Tempe,                   where, the FBI determined, he gave “extremist speeches.”

                 

Hanjour’s                     other radical, Arizona-based associates make up a considerable                     list, but one man in particular stands out: Ghassan al Sharbi.                     Al Sharbi attended training camps in Afghanistan, swore bayat                     (personal loyalty) to bin Laden in 2001, and was captured                   in March, 2002 in Pakistan.

                 

Al Sharbi also studied at Embry-Riddle                     Aeronautical University in Prescott and leads us full circle                     back to the alleged 9/11 “dry run” on that America                     West flight in 1999.
                    The 9/11 Commission Report has an intriguing footnote that                     begins with al Sharbi: “After he left the camps [in                     Afghanistan], Sharbi looked for his friend Hamdan al Shalawi,                     another student in Arizona, for a secret project. Al Shalawi                     reportedly trained in the camps in November 2000, learning                     how to conduct ‘Khobar Towers’-type attacks                     that he and a colleague planned to execute in Saudi Arabia.”
                    Al Shalawi returned to Arizona after that, earning a Ph.D.                     in English from ASU in August 2001, and he claims that the                   Khobar Towers re-creation plan never happened.

                 

The other                       America West passenger, Mohammad al Qudhaieen, was arrested                       by the FBI in June 2003, apparently in connection with                     the 9/11 investigation. He was released two months later                     and returned to Saudi Arabia.

                 

Soubra was denied a visa to re-enter                       the United States in 2001 following his alleged terrorist                       training in Afghanistan, but he was later allowed back                     in the country and was in Tempe when he was arrested in May                       2002. Held without bond on a visa violation, he was ruled                       a national security threat and ordered deported. But federal                       agents blocked that order by obtaining a material-witness                       warrant and to keep him in custody, and Soubra testified                       before a federal grand jury under a grant of immunity.                     One year after being picked up, although never charged with                   a crime, he was deported to Lebanon.

                 

No one knows if or when                       terrorists will strike in Arizona, or anywhere else in                     America. What we do know is that our enemies will continue                     to try to live among us, attack us without remorse or quarter,                     and that this war will go on, beyond this year or next, generation                       after generation, on both the battlefields of distant lands                       and in the cities and towns of America. In a world of terror                       and fanaticism, shadows and lies, conspiracies and deception,                     this brutal, miserable reality is the one certain truth.

                 

Pick up a copy of Arizona                       Monthly's November 2004 issue on newsstands now.

 
 
 

 
 
             
             

 

             

 

           
 

                 

                         

 
 
 
 
           

 
 
11/5/2004 11:24:33 AM EDT
[#1]

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11/5/2004 11:24:51 AM EDT
[#2]
Here's their political website: www.democraticunderground.com.
11/5/2004 11:27:36 AM EDT
[#3]
copy and paste the article - I have to put a bunch of personal info in there to be able to see the page, and I don't like doing that.
11/5/2004 11:34:19 AM EDT
[#4]

Quoted:
Here's their political website: www.democraticunderground.com.





OUCH!



ETA: I fixed it for ya!
11/5/2004 11:49:18 AM EDT
[#5]

Quoted:

ETA: I fixed it for ya!



Thanks!

Hard to concentrate with a 3-year-old climbing all over you!
11/5/2004 11:55:45 AM EDT
[#6]
11/5/2004 11:59:14 AM EDT
[#7]
Heard it on the news this AM while driving to work.  ABC radio, I think.
11/5/2004 12:23:04 PM EDT
[#8]
Yikes
11/5/2004 2:40:44 PM EDT
[#9]
Lock and Load!!  A very interesting article to say the least..


MPNelson
11/5/2004 7:16:38 PM EDT
[#10]
I already knew this. They stand on the street corners by ASU with thier student visas and GLARE at you like your the INTRUDER. They busted 8 of the STUDENTS recently.
11/5/2004 7:21:04 PM EDT
[#11]

Quoted:
intresting reading

Al Qaeda Among Us

                             

It’s not clear quite how or why the state has attracted what seems to be more than its fair share of individuals linked to terrorist organizations over the years. Experts ? have posited that the familiar desert climate;  




UMMM yeah!!! The desert full of sand might be a give away!!!
11/5/2004 7:28:31 PM EDT
[#12]

Quoted:


Democratic Terrorists Among Us

                 

Our greatest fears were realized when  the 9/11 Commission report confirmed the presence of Democratic Terrorists in Arizona and the rest of the country..




Fixed it for you.  
11/5/2004 7:36:33 PM EDT
[#13]
I don't believe a word of it, that's the religon of peace.
11/5/2004 7:45:21 PM EDT
[#14]
Nuke Arizona - it's the only way to make sure.
11/5/2004 7:52:50 PM EDT
[#15]

Quoted:
Nuke Arizona - it's the only way to make sure.




Yeah, Right.
It would feel like a typical summer day to us.
11/5/2004 7:54:49 PM EDT
[#16]

Quoted:
Nuke Arizona - it's the only way to make sure.




Some of us might object.


Most of you Kalibans scare me more than AQ.
11/5/2004 7:57:30 PM EDT
[#17]

The 9/11 Commission Report states that Hanjour also was associated with Rayed Abdullah, a radical Islamist from Phoenix, who received flight training too. Abdullah was a leader of the Islamic Cultural Center in Tempe, where, the FBI determined, he gave “extremist speeches.”



Interesting....


ISLAM AWARENESS WEEK at ASU!


This week is National ISLAM AWARENESS WEEK from November 1 - November 5.

The Muslim Students Association at ASU (MSA) will be hosting lectures and events Around the ASU campus everyday this week regarding a different Islamic topic.

The week, themed "Muhammad:  Man and Messenger", will explore the Prophet of Islam as the backdrop to discuss several aspects of Islam from marriage and family life to Islamic Law.  The weekly events also include a tour of the local Mosque/Islamic Center in Tempe!  MSA invites everyone who has had an interest in exploring Islam or has unanswered questions to attend.  

For more details contact MSA at [email protected].  

(The Muslim Law Students' Association (MLSA) will be hosting Thursday's lecture on Islamic law At Armstrong Hall Rm 105 at 6:15-8:00pm.  

For more information on that lecture contact MLSA at [email protected]).
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Wednesday, November 3rd:
Time:  12:00pm
Title:  Mosque Tour
Place:  Islamic Community Center, 6th St. & Forest (Tempe)

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11/5/2004 7:57:37 PM EDT
[#18]

Quoted:

Some of us might object.

Most of you Kalibans scare me more than AQ.



Good to know you scare so easy - I only look scary