★阿修羅♪ > 戦争88 > 799.html ★阿修羅♪ |
Tweet |
この記事内容は、つぎのようなものでわ〜〜^^
日本とパキスタンの情報報告書は、小さいが強力なアルカイダを日本に確立したと示唆しているという。パキスタンの情報源は1999に遡って日本のアルカイダのネットワークを確立したという複数の報告を持っているとABCニュースに言ったという。
これらのネットワークは、現在、グアンタナモ刑務所で服役中のアルカイダのリーダーのハリド・シェイク・モハメッドの直接指示によって作られたと言う。
それらは1990年後半に24人ほどのパキスタン人をスパイ組織として、学生ビザを使い日本に潜入させたとABCニュースに言ったという。そのグループはインドネシアのイスラム過激派「ジェマア・イスラミア」とつながってるという。
情報源は、スパイ組織の任務はテロ計画を作ることで、それらのいくつかの計画がアルカイダのリーダーによって真剣に考えられていたという。
考えられていた計画のひとつは、2002年の(サッカー)ワールドカップ開催中のスタジアム周辺でいくつかの爆弾を爆発させることだったが、それは実行されなかったという。
First Attack by Al Qaeda in Japan?
February 12, 2007 3:01 PM
Alexis Debat and Maddy Sauer Report:
There was a scare today at a U.S. military base outside Tokyo when two small explosions occurred shortly after 11 p.m. there. While no one was injured, investigators are looking at the possibility that it was an attempted terrorist attack.
Intelligence reports in Japan and Pakistan suggest al Qaeda has established a small but powerful presence in Japan, which leads some wondering whether or not today's events are the first attempt at an attack by al Qaeda in Japan.
Pakistani intelligence sources tell ABC News they have had several reports that Pakistani militant organizations working with al Qaeda had established networks in Japan as far back as 1999.
A Pakistani intelligence source says these networks were set up following the direct orders of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the top al Qaeda leader who is now in U.S. custody at Guantanamo Bay. Mohammed reportedly had a "deep interest" in conducting operations inside Japan.
The source also tells ABC News around two dozen Pakistanis had been sent to Japan on student visas in the late 1990s to set up "sleeper cells," and those individuals had linked with operatives from the leading Indonesian terror group, Jemaah Islamiya.
The source said the mission of the sleeper cells was to draw up plans for terror attacks and that some of their plans were seriously considered by top al Qaeda leaders.
One potential plan involved planting several bombs at and around stadiums during the 2002 World Cup. The plan was never carried out, but the intelligence source says he believes these networks are still in place and are still "actively planning operations against U.S. and Western targets in Japan."
He added, "If these explosions [today] turn out to have been terrorist attacks, these networks are the first place to look."
Back in Tokyo, no arrests have been made, and the investigation is ongoing.
http://blogs.abcnews.com/theblotter/2007/02/first_attack_by.html