Yaako Warrior wrote:
> Iranian tip-off led Americans to al-Qaeda leader
>
> http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,,2067962,00.html
>
> A major in Saddam's army, believed to have masterminded the London
> bombings, could have been betrayed in Tehran, re****ts Jason Burke
>
> Sunday April 29, 2007
> The Observer
>
> British diplomats are checking secret re****ts that elements within Iran,
> normally hostile to the West, helped the American secret services to
> capture Abdul Hadi al-Iraqi, the Kurdish-born senior al-Qaeda militant
> who was revealed last week to have been arrested on the border between
> Iran and Iraq late last year.
>
> Abdul Hadi, 45, a former Iraqi army officer who speaks five languages
> and is a key link between the al-Qaeda leader****p in western Pakistan
> and militants in Iraq, had 'met with al-Qaeda leaders in Iran' and had
> urged them to sup****t efforts in Iraq and to cause 'problems within
> Iran', US military sources told The Observer
>
> Elements within the complex matrix of interest groups that make up the
> Iranian regime, who have co-operated with Western intelligence services
> before when it has served their purposes, provided crucial elements of
> information, possibly through intermediaries, allowing Abdul Hadi to be
> captured. 'They may have felt he posed an equal threat to them,' said
> one Paris-based Middle Eastern diplomat yesterday. 'One of Tehran's
> biggest fears is of an alliance between Kurdish ethnic separatists in
> the northwest and al-Qaeda.'
>
> Any such help would have been highly secret, given the tense relations
> between the Iranian regime and Western nations which came to a head with
> last month's detention of British naval personnel, allegations that
> Tehran is sup****ting ****a militants in Iraq and fierce recriminations
> over Iran's continued pursuit of nuclear technology.
>
> However, senior US intelligence officials told The Observer that the
> Iranian government has 'in some cases' been helpful in tracking and
> 'disabling' key militants crossing their national territory between Iraq
> and Afghanistan. The key Egyptian militant Saif al-Adel, once in charge
> of training al-Qaeda's new recruits, and one of Osama bin Laden's sons
> are both believed to be under some kind of detention in Iran.
>
> However, though such co-operation was relatively common in the years
> immediately following the 11 September attacks, the sources said, it had
> ceased more recently.
>
> Though they refused to confirm that Abdul Hadi was picked up on the
> frontier with Iran, Pentagon officials said that he had been attempting
> to return to Iraq 'to manage al-Qaeda affairs and possibly focus on
> operations outside Iraq against Western targets'.
>
> Regional governments have made no comment on the arrest, but Pakistan
> Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao described the arrest as a 'welcome
> development'. Senior British officials appeared unaware that Abdul Hadi
> had been detained by the CIA nearly six months ago, despite the
> militant's re****ted links to the London bomb plots and suspected
> interest in organising attacks on British soil. Intelligence services in
> the northern Iraqi cities of Arbil and Sulaimaniyah said Abdul Hadi,
> whose real name is Nashwan abd al-Razzaq abd al-Baqi, was well known to
> them.
>
> Born in 1961 in the northern city of Mosul, Abdul Hadi - who is being
> held at Guantanamo Bay - is thought to have served in the Iraqi national
> army in the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s before becoming involved in the
> Islamist groups active in northern Iraq's urban areas at the time. He is
> believed to have travelled to Afghanistan at the end of the 1980s to
> fight Soviet occupiers, fighting alongside the militia group of hardline
> local warlord Abd al-Rab al-Rasul Sayyaf. As Afghanistan sunk into civil
> war in the early 1990s, Abdul Hadi is thought to have stayed in the
> region, based in the western Pakistan city of Peshawar, where he
> instructed recruits in Sayyaf's complex of training camps. One Pakistani
> source told The Observer he had taken at least one local wife from among
> the city's large population of Afghan refugees and had at least one son.
> Towards the end of the decade, Abdul Hadi gravitated towards bin Laden's
> al-Qaeda, becoming close to the Saudi-born terrorist leader and taking
> up a position on his ruling consultative council. In the late 1990s
> Abdul Hadi commanded a unit of international volunteers fighting
> alongside the Taliban against the Northern Alliance of Ahmad Shah
> Massoud in the northeastern Afghan province of Takhar.
>
> He became known to Western intelligence services during the battle of
> Shah-e-Kot in eastern Afghanistan in March 2002, when he is thought to
> have commanded the militants who inflicted heavy casualties on American
> troops and their Afghan auxiliaries in fierce fighting. A year later he
> is believed to have been appointed al-Qaeda's 'director of external
> operations', replacing Khaled Sheikh Mohammed, mastermind of the 11
> September attacks, who was arrested in Pakistan. 'It is the most exposed
> position in the al-Qaeda structure because it is the link with the
> outside world,' one British counter-terrorism official said. 'It's the
> job with the worst long-term prospects in the world.'
>
> A do***ent prepared by the UK's Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre quoted
> Abdul Hadi as calling for an attack against the UK this summer, 'ideally
> before Tony Blair leaves office'. According to the do***ent, he
> 'stressed the need to take care to ensure that the attack was successful
> and on a large scale'.
>
> A senior Pakistani intelligence official confirmed that Abdul Hadi had
> been one of the key targets of a series of bloody offensives by
> Islamabad's troops in the 'tribal territories' and was believed to be a
> direct link between al-Qaeda leaders and the Taliban and deeply
> implicated in organising attacks on Nato forces in Afghanistan. He had
> disappeared some time during mid-2005, around when the Pentagon says
> Abdul Hadi had been posted as a key link between bin Laden and local
> Iraqi militants, but surfaced in a violent recruiting video apparently
> filmed in Afghanistan.
>
> His capture came just weeks after the US State Department issued his
> photograph and offered £500,000 for information on his whereabouts.
>
> ****skin mohammadans to be wiped out soon
>
HOW TO BECOME A ****SKIN MOSLEM - this is how: **** goats, **** your
mother (nikomak), molest children, wear a beekeepers outfit all the
time, never shower or bath, beat your wives, learn terrorist activities
at a maddrassa, wipe your ass with stones, sell the donkey you ****ed to
a nearby village, marry a nine year-old , send your child off to an
indoctrination camp, practice thighing with little kids, ............
Practice all those and you too could become a prophet !!
Elif air ab tizak mohammad !!!!
info@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
or apache@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
or
politicsIranian@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
moslem cartoon character mohammad and his bumchum allaah were child
molesting goat ****ers and nikomaks
_
/'_/)
,/_ /
/ /
/'_'/' '/'__'7,
/'/ / / /" /_\
('( ' /' ')
\ /
'\' _.7'
\ (
\ \
Up your ass mohammad - Elif air ab tizak!!!
info@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
or apache@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
or
politicsIranian@[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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