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カナダ人アブドゥルマン・カディール、カミングアウト。
「私はCIA、FBI、米軍のために働いていました」カナダCBCが先週木曜日に放映する。
経緯は次の通り。
・アフガニスタンでCIAにリクルートされ9ヶ月アフガニスタンで工作
・好きだった女性エージェントの依頼で3ヶ月グアンタナモ通常施設でスパイ活動
・自殺寸前に救出5ヶ月グアンタナモ・ゴージャス施設でリハビリ
・昨年9月にCIAから工作活動の訓練を受けボスニアに。そこでイラク行きのオファーを受けるが、それを断わりカナダの祖母に連絡、メディアへの暴露が始まる。そして彼はカナダ大使館に置き去りにされ、カナダに帰国することに。
父親は殺されたが、彼は「消されていない」ということも忘れてはならない。まだ彼は若い。指導力、人徳を駆使した「活動」はできないことはCIAとてわかっていただろう。
アルカイダでは別のエージェントの例もあった。ともあれ、以下のリンクを、ざっと目を通してから、本件記事をご覧頂きたい、
Bin Laden's family link to Bush
http://www.federalobserver.com/archive.php?aid=517
Bin Laden Family Could Profit From a Jump In Defense Spending Due to Ties to U.S. Bank
Source: Wall Street Journal Online
http://www.geocities.com/vonchloride/wsjarticle.html
2 Days after 9/11: FBI allowed Saudi-Laden flights
http://new.globalfreepress.com/911/03/09/03/194214.shtml
US, Pak made 'deal' over capture of Bin Laden: report
Sunday, 24 August , 2003, 18:37
http://sify.com/news/international/fullstory.php?id=13232647
Taliban defector was a CIA informant for years
http://propagandamatrix.com/taliban_defector_was_cia_informant_for_years.html
The Informant Who Lived With the Hijackers
http://www.truthout.org/docs_02/09.13A.newk.infrmt.htm
Al Qaeda terrorist worked with FBI
Ex-Silicon Valley resident plotted embassy attacks
http://propagandamatrix.com/terrorist_worked_with_fbi.html
The CIA met bin Laden in Dubai in July
http://www.cooperativeresearch.org/timeline/2001/lefigaro103101.html
SUDAN NEWS & VIEWS
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/Newsletters/snv20.html
July 1996
The Egyptian state-owned magazine Rose al-Yousef said it had tracked Bin Laden down, and interviewed him, in a house in Wembley in London. He was traveling with a Sudanese diplomatic passport under a false name. According to the magazine, Bin Laden said he was on a mission with the US embassy in London. 'Sudan needs me more than I need Sudan and I say that my leaving Sudan will lead to the collapse of what's left of the economy in Sudan,' he added. He described the political situation in Sudan as 'a mixture of religion and organised crime'.
Khadr says he worked for CIA, FBI
http://www.canada.com/national/story.html?id=cc32a3b0-5471-4074-b79f-92bd10f66c50
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1078441810747&call_pageid=968332188492&col=968793972154
TORONTO (CP) - A Canadian who admitted his family has had links to al-Qaida says he was recruited to work for the CIA, the FBI and the U.S. military in Afghanistan and later at the U.S. prison facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
In an interview that was airing on CBC-TV's The National on Thursday, Abdurahman Khadr said he was so frightened after his capture by U.S. forces, he agreed to live for nine months in a CIA safe house near the American embassy in Kabul. Key elements of Khadr's story were subjected to polygraph tests and he passed, the network said.
Khadr told the CBC he conducted what became known as "the Abdurahman Tour" in Kabul.
"I took the people from the CIA, the FBI, the military," he told CBC in transcripts provided to The Canadian Press.
"We'd go around in a car in Kabul and show them the houses of al-Qaida people, the guest houses, the safe houses. . . . I just told them what I knew."
The Khadr family has long denied ties to al-Qaida but admitted in interviews aired Wednesday they are not only terrorists but believe it's noble for them to die for the cause.
Abdurahman Khadr admitted that his father and some of his brothers fought as al-Qaida terrorists and that they even stayed with Osama bin Laden.
And his mother and sister, interviewed in Pakistan, said they were proud of their family's connection to the terrorists behind the September 2001 attacks.
The 21-year-old man, who was returned to Canada last year, said he was visited by four RCMP police officers from Toronto and Ottawa while at the safe house in Kabul.
"They had me swear on the Koran that I would tell them the truth, the whole truth," he said. "They started asking me questions about my father, the organization he was working for, how he was connected to al-Qaida."
They also asked about other family members over two days, he said, then thanked him.
"They told me . . . 'you've been very co-operative. You've told us everything you knew. We think we can trust you and we're going to go back to Canada. And the minute we get there we're going to try our best to get you back."'
He said he didn't hear from the Canadians for another 18 months. He assumed they had abandoned him. Meanwhile, he said the CIA made him an offer.
"They brought me a paper," he said. "They said $5,000 bonus 'for you being very co-operative and from now on just by working with us, just answering our questions, you get paid $3,000 a month, until you stop working for us.'
"The paper said I would get paid until someone found out about this. Now the account was under my name. It was a CIA account somewhere. I don't know where. But the money went to my account. And whenever I want my money I can ask for it."
He said he worked for the CIA in Kabul for about nine months until his favourite agent, a woman, told him he'd be going to Cuba undercover and treated just like any other prisoner.
"For three months I was in general population," Khadr told the CBC. "Their hope was when they take me to Cuba they could put me next to anyone that was stubborn and that wouldn't talk and, you know, I would talk him into it.
"Well, it's not that easy, first thing, because lots of people won't talk to anyone because everybody in Cuba is scared of the person next to him. I couldn't do a lot for them."
He said he was almost at the point of suicide when he asked to be removed from the prison camp. He said he was transferred to more luxurious quarters and given access to doctors for five months.
He said the CIA considered several international destinations to gather information about Islamic radicals. Then the focus moved to al-Qaida activity in Iraq and Bosnia.
Last September, Khadr said, the CIA provided him with a training course in undercover work, then he was given a false passport and sent to Bosnia, where he was to blend in with the transient Muslim population in Sarajevo.
He was in Bosnia when news arrived of the military attack in Pakistan which killed his father, Ahmed Said Khadr. Abdurahman says he had long resented his father for dragging the whole family into the world of al-Qaida.
He said after his first week in Bosnia, the CIA asked him to actually volunteer to go into Iraq with al-Qaida forces so that he could funnel information to the U.S. military. They told him it would be dangerous.
Khadr said he was afraid and called his grandmother in Toronto, telling her that he desperately wanted to come back to Canada. He told her to announce in the media that the Canadian government was not helping him.
After the news broke in Canada, he said he was brought to a CIA safe house in Sarajevo, where the Americans agreed to let him go back to Canada, and he promised he would not tell anyone of his CIA dealings.
He said the CIA took away all the things they had bought him and dropped him off at the Canadian embassy.
Khadr's 57-year-old father was born in Egypt but became a Canadian citizen. He was killed fighting Pakistani forces in October. One of his sons, 14-year-old Karim was wounded in the battle and is paralysed in a Pakistani military hospital.
Another son, Omar, was captured by U.S. forces after an attack in Afghanistan and is being held at Guantanamo Bay.
Abdurahman Khadr says he wants to be a peaceful Muslim.
Said Khadr: "I want everybody to know what happened."
関連
子供と遊び、バレーボール好む、とビンラディン氏素顔 [CNN]【そばにいた米国の“スパイ”が語っているところが面白い】
http://www.asyura2.com/0403/war49/msg/141.html
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Counter News
by Fake Terror Watcher
http://counternews.blogtribe.org/