In New Justice Case, a Terror Leader Returns From the Dead
The U.S. may be intensifying its Predator missile campaign against Al Qaeda leaders in Pakistan, as Declassified reported this morning.
But a new Justice Department criminal case announced today raises a more fundamental question: are the missile strikes as effective as U.S. government officials would like to believe?
Consider the case of Ilyas Kashmiri, the alleged operational chief of a Qaeda-linked terror group in Pakistan and a central figure in the new Justice case. Just last month, on Sept. 7, Kashmiri (considered one of the most dangerous terrorists in Pakistan) was reported in the U.S. media to have been killed by an American missile, supposedly making him latest “big fish” casualty in the Predator campaign targeting Qaeda commanders in that country.
But much like Mark Twain, the reports of Kashmiri’s death now appear to have been greatly exaggerated.
Today’s Justice Department case alleges that two Chicago men—including a former Pakistani military officer—were plotting with Kashmiri as recently as a few weeks ago to mount terror attacks in Copenhagen against a Danish newspaper that published controversial cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad.
Indeed, the case alleges that one of the men, David Coleman Headley, was on his way to meet Kashmiri in Pakistan (after being assured the terror leader was very much alive) on Oct. 3 before being arrested by the FBI at Chicago’s O’Hare airport as he was about to board his flight.
And as if that weren’t enough evidence of Kashmiri’s return from the dead, one U.S. law-enforcement official pointed Declassified today to an Oct.15 interview the Pakistani gave to the Asia Daily Times in which he threatened new attacks even more deadly than last year’s bombings in Mumbai that killed 173 people. “That was nothing compared to what has already been planned for the future,” Kashmiri told the newspaper (a comment that has been interpreted by some as suggesting that Kashmiri’s 313 Brigade commando group may have played a role in the Mumbai attacks).
Even though there was apparently no plan to launch attacks inside the United States, the direct link to Kashmiri makes the charges filed against the Chicago men, Headley and Tahawwur Hussain Rana, among the more serious in a recent spate of FBI terrorism cases that have garnered international headlines, according to the U.S. law-enforcement official (who asked not to be identified talking about an ongoing case).
"This was no sting," said the official, referring to FBI operations in which agents pose as terrorist plotters in order to build cases against criminal suspects believed to be predisposed to committing terror attacks, but against whom the bureau often has no direct evidence. "These guys clearly had the means and the medium [to mount terrorist attacks] and they were in direct communications with senior players."
In fact, Kashmiri may well be the most senior suspected terrorist with whom anybody in the United States was alleged to have been in direct communication since the rash of post-9/11 cases involving such figures as Jose Padilla and Ali Al-Marri. (Both Padilla and Al-Marri were alleged to have been in communication with Qaeda leaders, including 9/11 architect Khalid Sheikh Mohammed). A former Pakistani Army commander, Kashmiri is the operational chief of Harakat-ul-Jihad-i-Islami, a Pakistani group the U.S. government believes to be closely aligned with Al Qaeda; he reportedly is the head of the 313 Brigade.
According to the criminal charges unsealed in Chicago Tuesday, Headley (who worked for a Chicago immigration company but performed "little if any actual work for the firm") was incensed by the 2005 Muhammad cartoons published by the Danish newspaper Morgenavisen Jyllands-Posten.
The complaint alleges that in late 2008, he began communicating via Internet and cell phone with two conspirators in Pakistan as well as his suspected boss in Chicago, Rana, about a plan to exact revenge against the newspaper. (The U.S. law-enforcement official confirmed what is implicit in the criminal complaint: that U.S. intelligence and law-enforcement officials were tipped off to the plot by electronic intercepts.)
According to the complaint, Headley flew to Denmark and allegedly began conducting surveillance for attacks against the newspaper. (The conspirators referred to their plot as "the Mickey Mouse Project." Among the plots they allegedly discussed was assassinating the paper’s cultural editor—apparently because they mistakenly believed the editor was Jewish.) In January 2009, the Justice case says, Headley then flew to Pakistan, where he met up with one of the co-conspirators identified only as "Individual A." The two then traveled to the Federally Administered Trial Area region in northwestern Pakistan and met with Kashmiri.
After the U.S. missile drone attack, Headley allegedly became concerned that Kashmiri was indeed dead and would no longer be in a position to back the plot. "Our company has gone into bankruptcy, then," he reportedly told his co-conspirator. (The news allegedly prompted Headley to turn to another Pakistani terror group, Lashkar-e-Taiba.) But then on Sept. 21, Headley spoke again with his co-conspirator and learned that Kashmiri was alive after all, prompting him to proclaim, "Now many other great things about him have come to surface, his supernatural powers and miracles."
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Michael Isikoff has been an award-winning investigative correspondent for Newsweek since 2004. He has written extensively on the U.S. government's war on terrorism, the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, presidential politics and other national issues. His book, "Hubris: The Inside Story of Spin, Scandal, and the Selling of the Iraq War," co-written with David Corn, was an instant New York Times best-seller when it was published in September, 2006. The book was hailed by the New York Times Book Review as "fascinating reading" and "the most comprehensive account of the White House's political machinations" in the run up to the war in Iraq. Since January 2009, Isikoff has been an MSNBC contributor, making regular appearances on the Rachel Maddow Show and Hardball w/ Chris Matthews.
Ever since the events of September 11, Isikoff has broken repeated stories about the U.S. government's war on terror and won numerous journalism awards. His blog "DeClassified: Investigative Reporting in Real Time," which appears regularly on Newsweek's Web site and is written with MarkHosenball, has become a must-read for senior U.S. intelligence officials. Isikoff and Hosenball won the 2005 award from the Society of Professional Journalists for best investigative reporting online.
Isikoff's June 2002 Newsweek cover story on U.S. intelligence failures that preceded the 9-11 terror attacks, along with a series of related articles, was honored with the Investigative Reporters and Editors top prize for investigative reporting in magazine journalism. He was honored, along with a team of Newsweek reporters, by the Society of Professional Journalists for coverage of the Abu Ghraib scandal. For that coverage, Isikoff obtained exclusive internal White House, Justice Department and State Department memos showing how decisions made at the highest levels of the Bush administration led to abuses in the interrogation of terror suspects. Isikoff was also part of a reporting team that earned Newsweek the National Magazine Award for General Excellence in 2002, the highest award in magazine journalism, for their coverage of the aftermath of the September 11 terror attacks.
Isikoff's exclusive reporting on the Monica Lewinsky scandal gained him national attention in 1998, including profiles in The New York Times and The Washington Post and a guest appearance on "Late Show with David Letterman." His coverage of the events that lead to President Bill Clinton's impeachment earned Newsweek the prestigious National Magazine Award in the Reporting category in 1999. Isikoff's reporting also won the National Headliner Award, the Edgar A. Poe Award presented by the White House Correspondents Association and the Gerald R. Ford Journalism Prize for Reporting on the Presidency. In 2001, Isikoff was named on a list of "most influential journalists" in the nation's capital by Washingtonian magazine.
Isikoff is the author of "Uncovering Clinton: A Reporter's Story," a book that chronicled his own reporting of the Lewinsky story and was hailed by a critic for The Washington Post-Los Angeles Times news service as "the absolutely essential narrative of the scandal with revelations that no one would have thought possible." The book, also a New York Times bestseller, was named Best Non-Fiction Book of 1999 by the Book of the Month Club.
Isikoff came to Newsweek from The Washington Post, where he had been a reporter since September 1981. There he covered the Justice Department and the Persian Gulf War, reported on international drug operations in Latin America and worked on the Post's financial news desk. Isikoff graduated from Washington University with a B.A. in 1974 and received a Masters in Journalism from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism in 1976.
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