NEW YORK (CNN) -- Secret charges have been laid against a former U.S. Special Forces sergeant suspected of involvement in the global terrorist campaign mounted by Saudi exile Osama bin Laden, CNN has confirmed.
The charges are part of efforts by U.S. authorities to prove bin Laden was behind the bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa in August and other attacks against U.S. soldiers in Somalia, Saudi Arabia, and Yemen, according to a CNN source who has knowledge of the investigation.
Ali Mohamed, 46, is being held at a federal jail in Manhattan after being charged last month, the New York Times reported, citing law enforcement officials who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Filed under a court seal, the federal charges also reportedly link
bin Laden and a group of Islamic militants in Brooklyn who were
involved with the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and plots to blow up
the United Nations and other city landmarks.
Meanwhile, prosecutors investigating bin Laden are trying to strike a plea deal with one of Mohamed's former associates who was arrested this year outside Washington, D.C., the Times said, citing court records.
Mohamed was honorably discharged from the Army's Special Forces base in Fort Bragg, North Carolina in 1989 after serving three years there.
A native of Egypt, where he was an officer, Mohamed moved to the United States in 1985 and became a permanent resident.
While in the Army, he traveled to New York and provided military training to local Muslims preparing to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan, a witness at the 1995 trial of the militants accused of plotting to destroy the landmarks testified.
Some of his students included El Sayyi Nosair, the Egyptian immigrant convicted of killing Jewish Defense League founder Rabbi Meir Kahane in 1990, the witness said.
| Find this article at: http://edition.cnn.com/2002/LAW/01/18/shoe.bomb.plea/index.html |
February
3, 2000
Web posted at: 5:40 p.m. EST (2240 GMT)
By Steve
Nettleton
CNN Interactive Correspondent
CUBRELJ, Kosovo (CNN) -- Gen. Klaus Reinhardt, German army commander of the NATO-led peacekeeping force in Kosovo (KFOR), pledged on Thursday to "do my utmost find the culprits" responsible for Wednesday's rocket-grenade attack on a U.N. bus that killed two and injured three of the 49 Serb civilians aboard.
"This was an inhuman, very cowardly terror attack on civilians, which shocks me and which shocks many people in the country," Reinhardt said as he inspected the hairpin curve in the hills of northern Kosovo where the attack took place.
The attack was the first by rocket on a U.N. bus and shattered a recent lull in violence in Kosovo, raising fears of an escalation of bloodshed.
The bus was ferrying Serbs from a predominantly Serb district of Kosovska Mitrovica, a city in northern Kosovo, to the Serb village of Suho Grlo, when it was hit near the town of Cubrelj.
French soldiers aboard two armored personnel carriers escorting the bus did not return fire, Reinhardt said, because they could not see who had launched the grenade.
Reinhardt, flanked by a column of NATO troops and U.N. police officers as he inspected the site, said he did not know the identity or the number of assailants. A search of the crime scene had been delayed because mines were in the area, he said.
Bus part of 'freedom of movement' service
Tapes bearing land mine warnings were posted on the side of the road, but several sets of footprints could be seen up and down the hillside beyond.
Shortly after Reinhardt's visit, the warning tape was inexplicably removed.
The bus was part of the "freedom of movement" service offered by the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees to carry Serbs and other Kosovo minorities from one enclave to another.
Frightened by a wave of revenge attacks by ethnic Albanians in recent months, most Serbs in Kosovo have relocated to ethnically pure villages protected by KFOR troops.
For many Serbs the UNHCR buses are the only link to other parts of the province.
"We try to get more freedom of movement with those buses, so people can move from one area to another area under security," Reinhardt said. "And we did not believe that a UNHCR bus, which was clearly marked as UNHCR, would be attacked by a terrorist."
Serb leader fears renewal of fighting
The incident was "a clear attack on UNHCR as well as on the bus," said Dennis McNamara, UNHCR special envoy to Kosovo. "And that's very demoralizing for us, having spent so much time with these peoples, the refugees we brought back, the work we've done in Kosovo, to have a frontal attack on UNHCR."
McNamara said the bus service was suspended pending a review of its security.
"We don't want to be unduly intimidated by the thugs, the extremists who are presumably behind this, but we have to balance that with the security of the people," McNamara said.
In Kosovska Mitrovica, the departure point of the U.N. bus route, one Kosovo Serb leader blamed KFOR for failing to protect the bus.
"We have no other opportunity but [to use] helicopters and UNHCR buses to move around," said Oliver Ivanovic, executive board president of Kosovo's Serb National Council. "These citizens are in a difficult situation. They are surrounded."
"Spring has come early," Ivanovic said.
In recent years, spring marked a surge in fighting between Serbian police and Kosovo Liberation Army guerrillas. Last year, it brought mass executions and the expulsions of hundreds of thousands of ethnic Albanians from Kosovo by Serb forces, all under a hail of NATO bombs.
In Kosovo, spring has meant war.
After President Carter agreed to admit the shah of iran into the U.S., iranian radicals seized the U.S. embassy in tehran and took 66 American diplomats hostage. Thirteen hostages were soon released, but the remaining 53 were held until their release on January 20, 1981.
The iran hostage crisis refers to events following the seizure of the American embassy in Tehran by iranian students on Nov. 4, 1979. The overthrow of Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlevi of Iran by an Islamic revolutionary government earlier in the year had led to a steady deterioration in Iran-U.S. relations. In response to the exiled shah’s admission (Sept., 1979) to the United States for medical treatment, a crowd of about 500 seized the embassy. Of the approximately 90 people inside the embassy, 52 remained in captivity until the crisis ended, over a year later.
President Carter applied economic pressure by halting oil imports from Iran and freezing Iranian assets in the United States. At the same time, he began several diplomatic initiatives to free the hostages, all of which proved fruitless. On Apr. 24, 1980, the United States attempted a rescue mission that failed. After three of eight helicopters were damaged in a sandstorm, the operation was aborted; eight persons were killed during the evacuation. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, who had opposed the action, resigned after the mission’s failure.
In 1980, the death of the Shah in Egypt and the invasion of Iran by Iraq made the Iranians more receptive to resolving the Hostage Crisis. In the United States, failure to resolve the Crisis contributed to Ronald Reagan’s defeat of Carter in the presidential election. After the election, with the assistance of Algerian intermediaries, successful negotiations began. On Jan. 20, 1981, the day of President Reagan’s inauguration, the United States released almost $8 billion in Iranian assets and the hostages were freed after 444 days in Iranian detention.
"Television newscasts were filled with on-the-scene pictures of the dramatic event, which was virtually unprecedented in American history. The media, by giving an extremely high level of coverage, including nightly TV 'specials' on the situation, added to the emotional response of the American people, and showed huge mobs of crazed Iranians in Tehran chanting 'Death to America, Death to Carter, Death to the Shah.' Representations of Uncle Sam and Carter were burned and numerous American flags were spat upon, trampled, and burned in the street. More importantly, American television audiences were shocked to see blindfolded members of the United States Marines embassy guard, with their hands tied behind their backs, as they were paraded before TV cameras. Everywhere, the American public demanded that the government take some sort of retaliatory action."
In February 1980, Khomeini announced that he would not release the hostages until the U.S. met his specified demands, which were: return of the Shah to Iran for trial (which was almost impossible for the U.S. to do because the Shah was living in Panama until his death from cancer on July 27, 1980); return of the Shah's wealth to the Iranian people; an admission of guilt by the U.S. for its past actions in Iran; and an apology and promise by the U.S. not to interfere in Iranian affairs in the future.
Not surprisingly, Carter rejected these terms and by April had ordered that all diplomatic ties with Iran be severed. He also approved a rescue mission known as operation "Eagle Claw," which failed miserably and only led to more name-calling by each side and a dip in the polls for Carter.
Most historians agree that Carter lost the election to Ronald Reagan because of the Hostage Crisis. And ironically, Reagan's win (and the start of the Iran-Iraq war in September 1980) is what prompted their release, which, by the way, occurred the day of Reagan's inauguration, after the U.S. released $8 billion in Iranian assets.