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+ "The Next Big Get" 20 September, Karachi - Islamabad from Martin Smith
The trail that led to the arrest of Ramzi bin al-Shibh began with the
arrest of another man in another neighborhood two days earlier.
For months, the ISI, Pakistan's proud and darkly secretive
intelligence agency, has been investigating a ring of human smugglers
based in Karachi which is led by an infamous Pakistani millionaire they
call "Mr. M." He owns a large "import-export business," but
investigators believe he is also trafficking in illegal human cargo.
Some of his payloads, they suspect, consist of 11- and 12-year-old boys
destined to become camel jockeys at the race tracks in Dubai, or consist
of poor undocumented workers seeking jobs in Saudi Arabia.
But the payloads they are most interested in are Al Qaeda militants
on the run. They believe "M" may be able to tell them about where some
of those militants may have gone or just who's still in the pipeline.
Unfortunately, "M" remains at large.
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In Karachi, Pakistani police arrest Ramzi bin al-Shibh, a central planner of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. |
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However, on a balmy Monday night, the 9th of September, ISI agents
and Sindh Rangers -- a paramilitary force under the control of the
Interior Ministry -- raided a house in the Badurabad section of Karachi.
According to a high-level Pakistani government official who spoke to me
on the condition that I would not reveal his identity, the ISI arrested
"a foreigner" who had been seen in the presence of a "Pakistani
accomplice" on several occasions over the last few weeks. This
"accomplice," I learn separately, is "M".
According to the official, the "foreigner" sang. He confirmed to
investigators that he was in the business of providing false identity
papers and arranging the smuggling of Al Qaeda militants across the Gulf
of Oman to Middle Eastern countries such as the U.A.E., Yemen and Oman.
He also told police where some of his Al Qaeda clients were hiding.
Based on this information, a small contingent of around 15 to 20 ISI
agents and Sindh Rangers took up positions around a four-story apartment
block in the Defense neighborhood of Karachi at around 3:00 a.m. on the
morning of Sept. 11. They did not know who exactly was in the building,
but they knew "there were some Arabs." At around 9:00 a.m., two men came
out of the buildings' front door, just beneath a sign that reads "Nice
Enterprises," and began making their way across the street where they
appeared headed for breakfast. The ISI agents moved out and arrested
them.
The two men put up little resistance, but realizing the danger they
were in they began shouting warnings back up to their friends on the
fourth floor. One grenade was thrown and some shots were fired. A battle
followed that lasted three to four hours, although most of this time was
spent waiting for someone to make a move.
The gun battle can be roughly reconstructed from the visual record of
the event. The first video crew on the scene was from GEO TV, a new
Urdu-language TV news network service now beginning to broadcast by
satellite around Pakistan. From their cameraman's footage it is obvious
that most of the top floor was already heavily riddled with bullet holes
at the time he began taping, around 9:45 a.m. And from 9:45 to 1:00 or
2:00 p.m., when the 10 men and one woman and two children were taken
into custody, very little gunfire was recorded by him or the other
local cameramen who covered the event. Most of that time, the "battle"
was a standoff during which hundreds of reinforcements, mostly Karachi
policemen, arrived.
Some neighbors told me the men in the apartment didn't fire any shots
at all. I think they are wrong, but not very. I saw two bullet holes in
the glass window of the shop directly across the street and a few more,
no more than 5 or 6, in the front faÁade of that same building. This was
all. There were no bullet holes visible on the roof, either. The police
on the other hand, clearly fired hundreds of rounds, if not thousands,
mostly from the roof of the opposite building. And after the raid only
one Kalashnikov rifle was found in the apartment, along with a laptop
and a message smeared in blood on the wall. "God is great. There is only
one God and Mohammed is His messenger."
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Bullet holes riddle the wall of the apartment building in Karachi where Ramzi bin al-Shibh was arrested. (Photo by Marcela Gaviria) |
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According to the government official, these men were lying low.
"There was no evidence they were planning anything. They may have just
been in transit. They had only been in the apartment for less than a
month."
President Musharraf announced there were eight Yemenis, one Pakistani
and one Egyptian arrested. The world now knows that the big get was a
30-year-old Yemeni named Ramzi bin al-Shibh: one of the key planners of
the Sept. 11, 2001, attack on the U.S., a former roommate of Mohamed
Atta in Hamburg, Germany.
"It was not the interception of a satellite phone call by the
Americans, as has been reported in your papers, that led to this arrest.
It was the work of our investigators," the government official
emphasized to me. I have learned more than once that there is an ongoing
battle between the Pakistanis and the Americans over who is responsible
for the big gets.
Another man arrested on Sept. 11 is Fazal Karim. Karim was already
known to the police as one of three Yemenis responsible for the killing
of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl last spring. Karim has not
been handed over to the Americans because unlike bin al-Shibh's alleged
crimes, Karim's was committed on Pakistani soil. Authorities want to try
him here. The ringleader of the Pearl kidnapping, British born Sheik
Omar Saeed Sheik, has already been tried, convicted and sentenced to
death. Meanwhile, he awaits a ruling on his appeal in a Pakistani
prison.
There are some other reports that it was a tip-off from an Al Jazeera
reporter that led to the arrests. Three months ago, Yosri Fouda came to
Karachi to interview Ramzi bin al-Shibh and Khalid Shaikh Mohammed. News
of the interview leaked out to reporters and editors a few weeks ago.
The London Sunday Times ran a transcript of the interview about a week
before the raid. Al Jazeera originally planned to broadcast the tape on
Sept. 12. If the ISI was picking up information from Al Jazeera, they
would have moved in on bin al-Shibh sooner. Reports of Al Jazeera
leading investigators to the Al Qaeda raid are, I think, false. And only
bin al-Shibh was caught. Khalid Shaikh Mohammed escaped capture.
Although barely. On Sept. 19, Interior Minister Lt. General
Moinuddin Haider told a small group of Pakistani journalists that
the two children captured on Sept. 11 were Khalid's. "We are holding
them. We are not turning them over to anyone. And we will get Khalid."
Some investigators believe he is right: that with Abu Zubaydah and bin
al-Shibh in custody, and the whereabouts of bin Laden and Ayman
al-Zawahiri unknown, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed will be the next big
get.
A very big get ... Many American counterterrorism officials believe
that Khalid Shaikh Mohammed is the true mastermind behind 9/11. Such
plots may run in his family. Shaikh Mohammed is reportedly the uncle of
Ramzi Yousef, the convicted mastermind of the 1993 attack on the World
Trade Center.
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Al Qaeda leader Khalid Shaikh Mohammed escaped capture during the Sept. 11, 2002 Karachi raid. |
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He is a flamboyant character. While most 9/11 conspirators stayed in
modest flea-bag motels, Shaikh Mohammed prefers 5-star quality hotels.
And, once, he reportedly rented a helicopter to impress a dentist he was
dating -- flying by her window and waving while calling her on his cell
phone.
In a recent report, reporters Dan Rubin and Michael
Dorgan of Knight Ridder News Service quote a U.S. intelligence official
talking about Khalid Shaikh Mohammed:
"'He gets more interesting every day...' If he had to decide between
catching Osama bin Laden and catching Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, he might
prefer the latter. 'Bin Laden is unquestionably the leader, the symbol
and the recruiting poster. But it's looking more and more like Khalid
actually makes things happen.' Their report also quotes a French
terrorism expert and U.N. Security Council consultant, Roland Jacquard,
as saying, '[Shaikh Mohammed] is probably the only man who knows all the
pieces of the puzzle.'"
POSTSCRIPT, 24 SEPTEMBER
Yesterday, Sept. 23, Pakistani police launched a major new manhunt to
find "Mr. M." His name is Saud Memon, and the Sindh provincial
government declared him among their 10 most-wanted terrorists back on
June 29 because they believe he is a major financier of the
Harkat-ul-Mujahedeen al-Almi, one of Pakistan's outlawed jihadi groups. It was on land
owned by Saud Memon that the body of Daniel Pearl was found.
< previous dispatch + next dispatch >
|
London (Aug. 13-14) |
+ Zubaydah Is Dead 13 August, London |
+ Armchair Jihadists 14 August, London |
Gulf of Oman (Aug. 15-21) |
+ Faces at a Dubai Mall 15 August, Dubai, U.A.E. |
+ HMCS Algonquin 16 August, somewhere in the Gulf of Oman |
+ On Board the Algonquin 17-18 August, somewhere in the Gulf of Oman |
+ Like an Elephant Chasing a Mouse 17-18 August, Gulf of Oman |
+ Dubai to Karachi 20 August |
+ A Firehose of Information 20-21 August, Dubai - Muscat - Chennai |
Pakistan (Aug. 22-29) |
+ Old Hash 22 August, Islamabad |
+ Nuclear Neighbors 22-23 August, Islamabad |
+ We Believe in God 24 August, Islamabad |
+ Paranoid in Peshawar 27 August, Peshawar |
+ Bombs or Dust Devils 27-28 August, Peshawar |
+ Rumors and Half Truths 28 August, Peshawar |
Pakistan Border Lands (Aug. 30-Sept. 4) |
+ On the Road to Chitral 30 August, Dir Khas |
+ Prisoners' Dilemma 31 August, Dir |
+ In the Northwest Frontier 30-31 August, Dir |
+ Border Town 2 September, Chitral to Arandu |
+ Don't Go to Timargarha 1-2 September, Drosh to Timargarha |
+ An American Informer 3-4 September, Peshawar |
Pakistan (Sept. 5-23) |
+ Road to Nowhere 7 September, Islamabad to Faisalabad |
+ Faisal Town 7 September, Faisalabad |
+ Frustrations 9 September, Faisalabad |
+ The Plight of Women 10 September, Faisalabad |
+ A Little Noticed Gun Battle 10-13 September, Lahore-Karachi |
+ The Madrassa 14 September, Akora Khattak |
+ The Next Big Get 20 September, Karachi - Islamabad |
+ A Circle of Trust 21 September, Islamabad |
+ Indomitable 23 September, Islamabad |
Saudi Arabia (Sept. 24-Oct. 2) |
+ Inside the Kingdom 24-25 September, Riyadh |
+ My Baffling Question 27 September, Unizah-Buraydah |
+ An Obedient Dissident 27 September, Buraydah |
+ An Audience with the Crown Prince 2 October, Riyadh |
Yemen (Sept. 25-Oct. 10) |
+ Arriving in Yemen 25-26 September, Sana'a |
+ The Wedding Party 27 September, Sana'a |
+ A Talking Drug 28 September, Sana'a |
+ The World's Most Ancient Skyscrapers 3 October, Sana'a |
+ Americans Are Vampires 7 October, Sana'a |
+ Waiting for Rahma 9 October, Sana'a |
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