Mossad warned CIA of attacks - report
By Douglas Davis | September, 17 2001 |
LONDON (September 17) - Mossad officials traveled to Washington last month to
warn the CIA and the FBI that a cell of up to 200 terrorists was planning a
major operation, according to a report in the Sunday Telegraph here yesterday.
The paper said the Israeli officials specifically warned their
counterparts in Washington that "large-scale terrorist attacks on highly visible
targets on the American mainland were imminent." They offered no specific
information about targets, but they did link the plot to Afghanistan-based
terrorist Osama bin Laden, and they told the Americans there were "strong
grounds" for suspecting Iraqi involvement.
A US administration official
told the paper that it was "quite credible" that the CIA did not heed the Mossad
warning: "It has a history of being over-cautious about Israeli information."
But the official noted that "if this is true, then the refusal to take it
seriously will mean heads will roll."
In another development, the Sunday
Times reported that an account at a branch of Barclays Bank in the London
district of Notting Hill was used by a suspected bin Laden lieutenant to finance
and disseminate Bin Laden's fatwas (religious rulings) and to maintain contacts
with various elements in bin Laden's global network.
The account was
held by Saudi dissident Khalid al-Fawwaz, who is currently being held in custody
awaiting the outcome of extradition proceedings to the United States on charges
of conspiring with bin Laden to murder Americans.
The Barclays account
is understood to form part of a web of bank accounts and front companies used by
bin Laden to underwrite his Al Qaida terror network.
Court documents
link Fawwaz to a Bin Laden fatwa calling for the death of American civilians
"anywhere in the world they can be found," which was faxed directly to him by
Bin Laden.
Fawwaz was personally appointed by bin Laden to set up and
run the London-based Advice and Reformation Committee. The organization was
ostensibly dedicated to war-relief work, but British and US officials now
believe it was in fact a component in Bin Laden's terror network.
Fawwaz
is also thought to have been directly involved in the terrorist cell that
perpetrated the simultaneous bombings of the US embassies in Dar es Salaam and
Nairobi in 1998. More than 200 people died in those attacks.
This article can also be read at http://www.jpost.com/Editions/2001/09/17/News/News.34954.html