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テレグラフ紙によれば、先に逮捕された容疑者の尋問に当ったナジャフ警察が、容疑者は元イラク秘密警察官で、彼はアルカイダから金を受け取っていたことを明らかにした。
元イラク秘密警察官の名前はモハメド・ハヌーン・ハムード・アルモザニ(Mohammed Hanoun Hamoud al-Mozani)。ミッションを成功するたびに金を払っていたとされるパトロンの名前はザルカウィの副官と名乗るアブ・ウタマン(Abu Utthman)。ボーナスの金額は2万ドルから3万ドルだった。金が欲しかった彼はそのオファーに乗ったとのことだ。
アルモザニと一緒に捕らえられたその他2名の名前は明かされなかったが、先の刑務所襲撃、脱獄幇助の関与を告白とも。
イラク秘密警察についてはこのような話があった。
アメリカ、元イラク秘密警察をリクルート
U.S. Recruiting Hussein's Spies
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A37331-2003Aug23?language=printer
US occupation force in Iraq recruiting former Iraqi secret police
26 August 2003
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/aug2003/iraq-a26.shtml
CIA、イラク新秘密警察計画 30億円予算
CIA plans new secret police to fight Iraq terrorism
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/01/04/wirq04.xml
The Bush administration is to fund the new agency in the latest initiative to root out Ba'athist regime loyalists behind the continuing insurgency in parts of Iraq.
The force will cost up to $3 billion (GBP1.8 billion) over the next three years in money allocated from the same part of the federal budget that finances the Central Intelligence Agency.
ザルカウィについてはこのような話があった。
ザルカウィ死亡・・・か
http://www.asyura2.com/0403/war49/msg/147.html
イラク行きのオファーを受けたCIAアルカイダもいた。
CIAアルカイダ、カナダ人アブドゥルマン・カディール、カミングアウト
http://www.asyura2.com/0403/war49/msg/162.html
Iraqi secret policeman 'was paid by al-Qa'eda to bomb civilians'
http://news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/03/07/wirq07.xml
By Inigo Gilmore in Najaf
(Filed: 07/03/2004)
A former Iraqi intelligence officer captured by police after last week's bombings in Baghdad and Karbala has revealed that he was paid by al-Qa'eda to carry out attacks on civilians.
Mohammed Hanoun Hamoud al-Mozani was detained with two associates on Wednesday, a day after almost 200 people were killed in simultaneous explosions at shrines packed with Shias.
After interrogating al-Mozani for 24 hours, Najaf police revealed that he had given important information on the network behind the attacks in Iraq.
"We think that this is a big breakthrough," said Major Mohammed Dayekh of the Najaf police. "Al- Mozani admitted that he was part of a terrorist cell that answered to a middle-man who works for al- Qa'eda and he gave us the names of the four other men in the cell, two from Baghdad and two from Najaf."
Al-Mozani and his associates were wearing police uniforms when they were seen in Najaf. After a car chase, the three men were caught and taken to the city's police headquarters. On Thursday they were handed over to American troops.
A spokesman for the American military in Baghdad refused to comment on the arrests. The Najaf police team, however, gave a detailed account of how al- Mozani was recruited by an al-Qa'eda envoy while working at his electrical appliance shop in Baghdad.
The middle-man, who went by the name of Abu Utthman, promised him tens of thousands of dollars for each successful mission. He allegedly told al- Mozani that he was a deputy of Abu Musab al- Zarqawi, the Jordanian terrorist whom the coalition blames for most of the attacks in Iraq.
"Al-Mozani said they were offered between $20,000 (GBP10,900) and $30,000 (GBP16,400) to organise terrorist attacks and that they would get bonus money if the attacks led to the death of a large number of people," Major Dayekh said. "He said that he was tempted to work with them because it was such an easy way to make money and that he agreed to do it because he needed the money."
Abu Utthman allegedly told al-Mozani that he operated from the Abu Filas neighbourhood in Khaldiya, 60 miles west of Baghdad. Khaldiya has been a hotbed of resistance to coalition forces and scores of American soldiers have been killed and injured there.
The two men captured with al-Mozani have not been named but police say that they are convicted murderers and robbers released from an Iraqi jail six months before Saddam's overthrow.
Coalition security chiefs and their Iraqi allies are under increased pressure to show that they can confront the threat to Iraq's security from extremist groups. The American military has put a $10 million bounty on al-Zarqawi, believed to be the mastermind behind the sychronised suicide bombings.
Shi'ite leaders have been critical of the coalition forces's failure to secure Iraq's borders, arguing that this has allowed foreign fighters to infiltrate the country.
Shi'ite leaders refused to sign an interim constitution last week after Iraq's senior Shi'ite cleric rejected portions of the charter, casting a shadow over American plans to hand over sovereignty to Iraq on June 30.
At funerals for the victims of last week's attack, thousands of mourners chanted anti-American slogans: "No, no, Americans. No, no Israel. No, no, terrorists." A small group took a sheet painted to look like an American flag and set it on fire.
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Counter News
by Fake Terror Watcher
http://counternews.blogtribe.org/