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Home Front: WoT
International bomb plotter jailed for 40 years in US
2015-11-25
A Pakistani man extradited from the UK to the US has been sentenced to 40 years in jail for plotting attacks in several countries. Abid Naseer, 29, was sentenced by a federal judge in New York.

US authorities said he had been part of a plot to attack Manchester, New York City and Copenhagen.

In March, a jury found him guilty of providing material support to al-Qaeda and conspiracy to use a destructive device.

FBI assistant director-in-charge Diego Rodriguez said that Naseer, who moved to the UK to study, failed to use the British education visa system to make the best of his life. Instead, he exploited it "to take away the lives of many others in large numbers", said Mr Rodriguez.

Naseer was first arrested in the UK in 2009, along with 11 other men, suspected of planning a bomb attack on the Arndale shopping centre in Manchester over the Easter weekend. No explosives were found but the men were ordered to leave the country. Mr Naseer avoided deportation after a judge ruled it was likely he would not be safe if he returned to Pakistan.

Abid Naseer says he's not guilty. He defended himself throughout the trial, but his legal advisers say they'll appeal - and not just against the sentence which they believe is overly harsh. They say this was not a fair trial and Naseer should have appeared in court in the UK, not in front of a jury in a post 9/11 New York.

But US prosecutors say the 29-year-old was capable of mass murder. They say he remains a threat and they're delighted by the sentence. They hope it sends a message to terrorists that they will be caught and they will be put behind bars for life.

Naseer appealed to the judge that he was not - nor had he ever been - a "career criminal". But Judge Raymond Dearie had a response.

"I know you're not," he replied. "You're a terrorist."

UK officials arrested him again in 2010 at the request of US prosecutors. In 2013 he was extradited to the US, where prosecutors argued Naseer was part of a broader al-Qaeda conspiracy to attack various Western locations, including the New York subway system and a newspaper office in Copenhagen, Denmark.

The US Department of Justice said the plots were "directed by and co-ordinated with senior al-Qaeda leaders in Pakistan".

Evidence at Naseer's trial included a document found in the raid of the Bin Laden compound and MI5 officers testifying in wigs. His defence was largely based on his own testimony and cross-examining prosecution witnesses.

Prosecutors brought in MI5 agents who had previously tracked Naseer in 2009 at a shopping centre in the UK. They also relied on the testimony of two co-conspirators who pleaded guilty to the subway plot - Najibullah Zazi and Zarein Ahmedzay. Prosecutors say coded emails show all three men were under the direction of the same al-Qaeda handler.
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Terror Networks
NY Times Reveals How CIA Money Ended Up in Hands of Al Qaeda
2015-03-15
[Mediaite] A new report from The New York Times' Matthew Rosenberg published Saturday reveals details about a 2010 deal between Afghan officials and Al Qaeda that resulted in $1 million of CIA money funding the terrorist group.

According to the report, Al Qaeda demanded $5 million for the release of an Afghan diplomat held hostage in 2010 and the Afghan government ended up using $1 million from a secret fund that the CIA provided them in monthly cash installments delivered directly to the Kabul palace of former President Hamid Karzai.

Rosenberg quotes letters sent between Osama bin Laden and one of his deputies after the Afghans raised the rest of the money from other countries and completed the deal:
Ynet adds:
The newspaper said letters about the ransom payment were found in the 2011 raid by US Navy SEALS who killed bin Laden at his compound in Abbottabad
... A pleasant city located only 30 convenient miles from Islamabad. The city is noted for its nice weather and good schools. It is the site of Pakistain's military academy, which was within comfortable walking distance of the residence of the late Osama bin Laden....
, Pakistain. The communications were submitted as evidence in the trial of Abid Naseer, who was convicted this month in New York of supporting terrorism and plotting to bomb a shopping center in Manchester, England.
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Home Front: WoT
Pakistani man found guilty in al-Qaeda plot to attack NYC subway
2015-03-05
[Ynet] A US jury has found a Pak man guilty in a failed al-Qaeda conspiracy to attack the New York City subway and targets in Europe.

The verdict was reached Wednesday in a New York trial where Abid Naseer acted as his own lawyer. Prosecutors say Naseer plotted in 2009 to bomb a shopping mall in Manchester, England. The charges were dropped after a British court found there wasn't enough evidence, but US prosecutors later charged him in a broader conspiracy that included a failed plot to bomb the New York subway. They said evidence showed Naseer was communicating with al-Qaeda using women's names as code for explosives. The 28-year-old Naseer testified the emails contained innocent banter about his pursuit of a potential bride, not evidence of terrorism.
Link


Home Front: WoT
US trial: Pakistani says he 'posed as a woman' to meet women, not plot terror
2015-02-28
[DAWN] A Pak man on trial in the US for planning to bomb a British shopping center testified on Thursday he was exaggerating his prowess with women in online chats and emails he sent mentioning potential wedding dates and a bride, denying the communiqués were coded to disguise an Al Qaeda plot.

Abid Naseer, taking the stand in his own defense, told a jury in Brooklyn federal court that he was posing as a woman to meet other women in a Yahoo chat-room in November 2008 when he connected with another man also posing as a woman.
Seriously? Wow.
Prosecutors charge Naseer was actually communicating with an Al Qaeda handler who communicated from the same email account with Najibullah Zazi, who pleaded guilty in 2010 to plotting to bomb the city's subway system.

"We discussed studies, life and women," said Naseer, who has pleaded not guilty
"Wudn't me."
"I exaggerated my success with women ... to keep my male pride."
"Really, I'm a pathetic loser. But you can't just come out and admit it, y'know."
The government alleges Naseer headed an Al Qaeda cell in the United Kingdom that was part of a larger conspiracy by the terror group to carry out attacks in Denmark and New York City.

He faces life in prison if convicted. He was extradited to New York in 2013.

Questioned by a court-appointed adviser, Naseer denied emails mentioning a nikah, or Islamic wedding, specific female names and a ceremony to take place on Easter weekend 2009 were coded to disguise a forthcoming plot.

While he did have an on-again-off-again relationship with at least one woman, they were broken up at the time and had no wedding planned when the emails were sent, Naseer testified.

"I'm bored of being a bachelor now," he wrote in a January 2009 email to the person prosecutors say was the Al Qaeda handler, known in the emails as Sohaib. "There will be a huge party for everyone. "

Naseer testified he never learned the true identity of Sohaib because the Internet is meant to be anonymous.

"In the Internet world it's very rare to know real identities," he said. "The Internet is a world where you have multiple identities."
And that "woman" he was having a relationship with? You've heard how on the internet no one can tell if you're a dog...
The complicated terror case has featured testimony from MI5 agents posing in light disguises and declassified Al Qaeda documents recovered from the Pak compound of the late Osama bin Laden
... who is now beyond all cares and woe...
following the 2011 raid by US Navy SEALs.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
New Docs Reveal Osama bin Laden's Secret Ties With Iran
2015-02-28
[Weekly Standard] This week, prosecutors in New York introduced eight documents recovered in Osama bin Laden's compound in Pakistan as evidence in the trial of a terrorism suspect. The U.S. government accuses Abid Naseer of taking part in al Qaeda's scheme to attack targets in Europe and New York City. And prosecutors say the documents are essential for understanding the scope of al Qaeda's plotting.

More than 1 million documents and files were captured by the Navy Seals who raided bin Laden's safe house in Abbottabad, Pakistan in May 2011. One year later, in May 2012, the Obama administration released just 17 of them.

While there is some overlap between the files introduced as evidence in Brooklyn and those that were previously made public in 2012, much of what is in the trial exhibits had never been made public before.

The files do not support the view, promoted by some in the Obama administration, that bin Laden was in "comfortable retirement," "sidelined," or "a lion in winter" in the months leading up to his death. On the contrary, bin Laden is asked to give his order on a host of issues, ranging from the handling of money to the movement of terrorist operatives.

Some of the key revelations in the newly-released bin Laden files relate to al Qaeda's dealings with Iran and presence in Afghanistan.

A top al Qaeda operative asked bin Laden for permission to relocate to Iran in June 2010 as he plotted attacks around the world. That operative, Yunis al Mauritani, was a senior member of al Qaeda's so-called "external operations" team, and plotted to launch Mumbai-style attacks in Europe.
Anything surfacing yet on prominent U.S. based philanthropic foundations, foreign money transfers, or Libya ?
Link


Home Front: WoT
British Spies in Disguise Testify at U.S. Terror Trial
2015-02-25
[AnNahar] Spies working for Britain's MI5 intelligence agency donned wigs and makeup Tuesday to testify against a Pakistani al-Qaida suspect on trial in New York for allegedly plotting to blow up a British shopping center.
Why is he on trial in the U.S. if the plot was hatched and promulgated in Britain?
Four surveillance officers, identified by four-digit numbers, detailed how they followed the defendant, Abid Naseer, in March and April 2009 in the cities of Manchester and Liverpool in northern England.

District judge Raymond Dearie prohibited court artists from drawing the faces of a total of five members of MI5 who are expected to testify, allowing only blank faces and generic haircuts to be depicted.

The witnesses entered the federal court in Brooklyn from a side entrance, precluding any possibility of mingling with members of the press and public who use the main public entrance into the courtroom.

Two of the men, as well as the one woman agent, wore heavy black and dark-brown wigs and partially shielded their eyes behind spectacles. Two of the men were bearded; the other male agent appeared clean-shaven, with short graying hair.

From behind their disguises, the four agents said they watched the defendant visit a Manchester shopping center, allegedly the intended target. They also monitor him as he visited a mosque, an Internet cafe and traveled to Liverpool.

The agents all identified the defendant, who is representing himself in court, as the man they knew by the codename "small panel" as part of Operation Pathway that led up to his initial arrest in Britain in 2009.

U.S. government prosecutors say Naseer helped al-Qaida planned an assault on the shopping center as part of coordinated attacks that also targeted the New York subway and a Danish newspaper. Prosecutors called it one of the most serious terror plots since the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington.

- Denies the charges -

Naseer, who denies the charges, faces life in prison if convicted.

He is charged with providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization, conspiring to provide material support to al-Qaida and with conspiring to use a destructive device. The surveillance officers said they followed the defendant in the company of two other men, code-named Happy Skater and Glass Pendant.

Naseer, acting as his own defense attorney, cross-examined two of the spies who once tailed him.

One wore a John Lennon-style dark brown wig and thin-rimmed spectacles. The second pointedly stayed silent when Naseer opened his cross-examination with a two-times greeting of "good morning."

Crucially to the government's case, the officers said they had never seen the defendant -- who was in Britain as a student -- go to college, carry any books or in the company of a woman.

The defense argues that Naseer was embarked on a quest to get married and not carry out the attack.

He was first arrested in 2009 in Britain with 11 other men suspected of preparing an attack against the Manchester mall, and was extradited to the United States from Britain in 2013. The other men were released without charge, but Naseer was arrested for a second time in July 2010 at the request of Brooklyn prosecutors, who accused him of participating in the plot to attack the New York subway in 2009.
Link


Home Front: WoT
Reputed al-Qaeda operative to represent himself at US trial
2015-02-17
[Ynet] A reputed al-Qaeda operative has decided to act as his own attorney at a US terrorism trial. Abid Naseer is expected to give an opening statement Tuesday in federal court in New York City.

The Pak defendant has pleaded not guilty
"Wudn't me."
to charges he was part of a conspiracy in 2009 to bomb a mall in Manchester, England, and the subways in New York City. Prosecutors say the trial will feature evidence seized during the Navy SEAL raid in 2011 that left the late Osama bin Laden
... who is now beyond all cares and woe...
dead. The jury also will hear testimony from undercover British intelligence officers who have been given permission to take the witness stand in disguises to conceal their identities.
Link


Home Front: WoT
Documents from bin Laden raid to be used against British-based 'student'
2015-01-02
Documents taken from Osama bin Laden’s Pakistani compound will be used in the trial of a British-based student accused of plotting attacks in the UK, it has been revealed. Abid Naseer, 28, who is Pakistani-born, is alleged to have plotted, along with a group of al-Qaeda operatives, to plant bombs in Manchester, New York and Norway.

The classified documents, which were recovered after Navy Seals killed the terror group leader in a 2013 raid on his Abbottabad hideout, will be used by federal prosecutors in the US in Naseer's February trial in an attempt to prove his guilt. Zainab Ahmad, for the prosecution, said he could not reveal what was detailed in the documents as they were top secret, but that they would be declassified in time for the trial.

The revelation was made at a Brooklyn court hearing where Naseer appeared in relation to charges of “providing and conspiring to provide material support to al-Qaeda” as well as for “conspiracy to use a destructive device in relation to the UK branch of the plot”.

It is the first time that material from the trove of files seized in the raid will have been used in a US courtroom.

Naseer, who originally came to the UK on a student visa, was among 11 men arrested in 2009 in Manchester and Liverpool, accused of making explosives to be used in an attack unspecified targets in Manchester.

No explosives were found in a subsequent raid of his home, but US prosecutors say that Naseer shared an email account with three men in America who have been convicted of plotting to bomb the New York subway. They say that both he and the New York plotters had used the address to communicate in coded language with an al-Qaeda handler in Pakistan named “Ahmad”, who advised on the use of flour and oil to manufacture explosives.

Naseer was extradited to the US in 2013 after losing a case against the Home Office.

Naseer, who is representing himself in court, denies the charges.
Link


India-Pakistan
Shukrijumah dead in Pak shootout
2014-12-06
Shukrijumah, al-Qaeda's chief of global operations who had a $5 million (£3.2 million) bounty on his head, died in a raid by Pakistain military on a compound in South Wazoo
[Telegraph.uk] For a decade, he had criminal masterminded terror attacks against the West; plotting mass death and destruction on such targets as a Manchester shopping centre and the London Underground from his hideaway in a remote and lawless region of Pakistain.
He's been on the Burg radar since 2002.
On Saturday, the authorities finally caught up with Adnan Shukrijumah, al-Qaeda's chief of global operations who had a $5 million (£3.2 million) bounty on his head. Shukrijumah, 39, died in a raid by Pakistain military on a compound in South Wazoo tribal area. He had been hunted down and killed.

US authorities had him on their most wanted list since 2010, while the justice department had charged him with ordering an attack on the New York subway. The same indictment links him to a plot to blow up shopping centres in Manchester, while he has also been implicated in attacks on the London Underground and to trains in Norway.

Shukrijumah's role in al-Qaeda was to choose the targets and then recruit the holy warriors to carry them out. The attacks on New York, London and Manchester were thankfully thwarted.

Confirmation of his death came from a Pakistain senior army officer. "The al-Qaeda leader, who was killed by the Pakistain army in a successful operation, is the same person who had been indicted in the United Stated," he said.

Shukrijumah was made al-Qaeda's chief of global operations five years ago, taking on a role filled by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. He was the only senior al-Qaeda leader with a green card.
Shukrijumah was made al-Qaeda's chief of global operations five years ago, taking on a role filled by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the criminal mastermind behind the 9/11 attacks on the Twin Towers and who was captured in 2003. Shukrijumah was also implicated, according to intelligence sources, in the 9/11 plot and was friends with at least some of the hijackers.

While born in Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face...
, Shukrijumah, 39, had a better insight into the West than perhaps any other al-Qaeda operative, including even its founder the late Osama bin Laden
... who used to be alive but now he's not...
. He had grown up in the US, his family moving to Brooklyn when he was a teenager in the Eighties and then to Florida in the Nineties, giving Shukrijumah a familiarity with America that allowed him to move largely unnoticed. He was the only senior al-Qaeda leader with a green card.

It is reported he was a regular traveller to the Caribbean and an occasional visitor to London before he went on the run in the weeks prior to the 9/11 attack.

Federal authorities in the US believe Shukrijumah oversaw a panel with two other senior al-Qaeda leaders that hatched attacks from their base in Pakistain. One of his fellow plotters was Rashid Rauf, the Birmingham-born al-Qaeda commander, who had also criminal masterminded a plot to blow up transatlantic airliners using liquid bombs. Rauf was killed in a dronezap in 2008 in North Waziristan; Saleh al-Somali, the third member of the panel, was killed a year later in another drone strike.

Security services accuse Shukrijumah of involvement in a number of planned atrocities, including the plot to blow up a Manchester shopping centre in 2009. A dozen students were nabbed
Keep yer hands where we can see 'em, if yez please!
but none charged due to lack of evidence. Some of the suspects had been watched by MI5 agents as they filmed themselves outside the Trafford Centre on the edge of Manchester, the Arndale Centre in the city centre, and the nearby St Ann's Square. Police round up the alleged plotters after they were overheard discussing dates, understood to include the Easter bank holiday, one of the busiest shopping weekends of the year.

Had it been successful, the attack would likely have been the worst in the UK. "We had to act," an intelligence source said at the time.

A year later on July 7 2010, Shukrijumah was charged by the US justice department with "an al-Qaeda plot to attack targets in the United States and United Kingdom". Two other men indicted in New York -- Abid Naseer and Tariq ur Rehman -- had previously been arrested on suspicion of terrorism over the Manchester plot.

Shukrijumah was charged with "providing and conspiring to provide material support to al-Qaeda; conspiring to use weapons of mass destruction; assisting the receipt of military training; committing and attempting to commit an act of terrorism transcending national boundaries; and using firearms in relation to the same offences".

The foiled attack on the new York subway, using a different cell, was described by the attorney general Eric Inaction Jackson Holder
... aka Mister Fast and Furious...
at the time as "one of the most dangerous" since 9/11.

Federal prosecutors said Shukrijumah had also recruited three men to carry out attacks on the London Underground as well. Details of that remain scant.

In the US, he had not amounted to much. His father, a scholar born in Guyana in South America, had been a holy man at a mosque in Brooklyn until he moved the family to Florida. Shukrijumah went to a local college before getting a job selling used cars.

His mother Zurah Adbu Ahmed , described him as a "kind, loving, caring boy", but admitted he had been angered by the excesses of American society including "drugs, alcohol, a love for sex, and clubs". She added: "That doesn't make him a terrorist."

On Saturday in a pre-dawn raid, Pak helicopter gunships swooped on Shukrijumah's hideout. He died in a shootout, the most senior al-Qaeda leader killed by the Pakistain military. Intelligence officials confirmed that five people captured were Shukrijumah's wife and four children.
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Home Front: WoT
Extradited al Qaeda suspect pleads not guilty in US court
2013-01-08
[Dawn] A Pak man accused of taking part in an international al Qaeda plot to attack targets in the United States and Europe pleaded not guilty
"Wudn't me."
to terrorism charges during his first US court appearance Monday in New York.

Abid Naseer, 26, was extradited on Thursday from Britannia to Brooklyn, New York. He is facing up to life in prison on charges including providing material support to al Qaeda and conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction in connection with an alleged plot to bomb a city center in Manchester, England.

The charges against Naseer are also connected to an alleged al Qaeda plot in 2009 to bomb the subway system in New York City, US prosecutors said. Two men, Najibullah Zazi and Zarein Ahmedzay, have pleaded guilty to planning the attacks and a third man, Adis Medunjanin, was sentenced to life in prison after his conviction last year for taking part in the plot.

During a brief court appearance in Brooklyn federal court, Naseer, wearing a bright blue t-shirt and black sneakers, pleaded not guilty to the charges through his court-appointed lawyer. The judge ordered Naseer to be held in detention without bail. His next court appearance is scheduled for March 7.

Naseer is one of a dozen men, mostly students from Pakistain, who were enjugged
Yez got nuttin' on me, coppers! Nuttin'!
in Britannia in 2009 on suspicion of plotting to bomb a city center in Manchester. British authorities conducted daylight raids on the suspects' homes after Britannia's most senior counter-terrorism official was photographed openly carrying details about the operation.

British authorities said they found large quantities of flour and oil in the suspects' homes, as well as highlighted surveillance photographs of public areas in Manchester and a map of the city center.

Naseer and the other suspects were never charged, but British and US authorities said Naseer was part of a broader al Qaeda cell bent on staging attacks in the United States and Scandinavia.

Naseer was indicted in Brooklyn federal court in 2010, along with Medunjanin and other individuals alleged to be linked through a multi-national al Qaeda conspiracy.

US prosecutors said Naseer and Zazi coordinated their plans through emails to the same Pakistain-based al Qaeda controller, "Ahmad," using similar code words to discuss explosives and the timing of their respective plots.

Naseer was re-arrested by British authorities in 2010 after a US warrant was issued. He fought extradition, saying he feared he could be sent from the US to Pakistain and subjected there to torture. Naseer's appeal was rejected last month by the European Court of Human Rights, paving the way for him to stand trial in the United States.
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Britain
Al-Qaeda suspect accused over plot to bomb the New York subway is extradited to U.S. by British
2013-01-04
Police in Britain have extradited a terror suspect to the United States to face charges that he took part in an alleged al-Qaeda plot to detonate explosives on the New York City subway system in the biggest plot since the September 11 attacks.

Authorities handed Abid Naseer, 26, over to U.S. authorities on Thursday.

Prosecutors want Naseer to stand trial in the U.S. for his alleged role in a terror campaign that would have struck targets in Britain and Norway as well as New York.

Pakistani-national Naseer was arrested in the U.K. in 2010 after being indicted in the U.S. on terrorism charges. He has been fighting his extradition since then.

U.S. prosecutors told a British court hearing his extradition case two years ago that they plan to prove that Naseer collected bomb ingredients, conducted reconnaissance and communicated with al-Qaeda operatives.

The alleged activities were part of the foiled New York plot and another plot to bomb a shopping area in the northern English city of Manchester.

Naseer had been originally arrested on suspicion of terrorism in 2009. He was one of 12 men held in Manchester, but the men were later released because of a lack of evidence and a severely compromised investigation.

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Britain
Pakistani al Qaeda suspect extradited from Britain to US
2013-01-04
[Dawn] A suspected Pak al Qaeda operative accused of planning attacks in the United States, Britannia and Norway was on Thursday extradited to the US, the interior ministry in London announced.

"We can confirm that today, January 3, Abid Naseer was extradited to America where he is accused of terrorism offences. His case is now a matter for the US authorities," a statement from the Home Office said.

The 26-year-old is wanted by the US authorities over allegations that he provided material support to al Qaeda and conspired to use explosives.

He was named as a suspect in an alleged transatlantic plot directed by Pak-based al Qaeda groups, which included an attempt to bomb the New York subway in 2009.

Naseer was originally locked away
Drop the rosco, Muggsy, or you're one with the ages!
in Britannia along with 10 other Pak men in 2009 over a suspected bomb plot. But they were released without charge after prosecutors said there was not enough evidence, and ordered to be deported.

An immigration judge subsequently ruled that despite Naseer being "an al Qaeda operative who posed and still poses a serious threat", he could not be returned to Pakistain as his safety could not be guaranteed.

Two months after his release, in July 2010, Naseer was arrested again on a US arrest warrant.

In January last year, a judge approved Naseer's extradition to the United States.

He appealed to the European Court of Human Rights but his case was thrown out in December.

Metropolitan Police officers on Thursday escorted Naseer from Belmarsh Prison to London's Luton Airport where he was taken into custody by US authorities.
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