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Recent Appearances... Rantburg
Sheikh Ahmed Salim Sheikh Ahmed Salim al-Qaeda Terror Networks 20020904  
Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan al-Qaeda   20020904  

Terror Networks
Ten reasons Al Qaeda fears drones.
2009-07-24
Usama bin Laden's son isn't the only Al Qaeda operative believed to have been killed in an attack by an unmanned U.S. drone in the past year.

U.S. officials tell FOX News that Saad bin Laden, who is not considered a significant player in Al Qaeda leadership, was "collateral" damage in an airstrike in Pakistan and was not considered important enough to target on his own.

Click here for photos of the terrorists.

But other high-value operatives, some of them with key roles in Al Qaeda, also have been taken out by U.S. attacks. The following are 10 top operatives killed in the past year:

Khalid Habib -- veteran combat leader and operations chief involved with plots to attack the West; deputy to Shaikh Said al-Masri, Al Qaeda's No. 3.

Rashid Rauf -- mastermind of the 2006 transatlantic airliner plot.

Abu Khabab al-Masri -- Al Qaeda's most seasoned explosives expert and trainer, and the man responsible for its chemical and biological weapons efforts.

Abdallah Azzam -- senior aide to Sheikh Sa'id al-Masri.

Abu al-Hassan al-Rimi -- led cross-border operations against Coalition forces in Afghanistan.

Abu Sulaiman al-Jaziri -- senior external operations planner and facilitator.

Abu Jihad al-Masri -- senior operational planner and propagandist.

Usama al-Kini -- Marriott attack planner and listed on the FBI's terrorist most wanted list.

Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan -- involved in the attacks on the US Embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

Abu Sulaiman al-Jaziri -- senior trainer and external operations plotter.
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Home Front: WoT
Predator Drones Could Face Legal Challenges - Usual Suspects
2009-05-30
Human rights activists at odds with President Obama over his recent national security decisions are indicating that they might legally challenge the U.S. military's use of Predator drones, a weapon that intelligence officials say is their single most effective tool in combating Al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Predator spy planes are unmanned aerial vehicles that are virtually invisible when flying overhead. The Air Force uses them frequently in Afghanistan and Pakistan, where they are able to track and hit targets from the air when mountainous terrain makes it notoriously hard to send troops.

"That's the spooky thing about the Predator," national security and terrorism expert Neil Livingstone said. "Even if the Predator is directly overhead and you know it's overheard, you still can't see it or hear it. This is kind of like death out of the blue."

Human rights activists are turning their attention to the drone program in part because they say there's no warning to innocent civilians who are in a targeted area.

Gabor Rona, international legal director of Human Rights First, a U.S.-based group that advocates universal rights and freedom, said large number of civilians are being unintentionally hit, harmed and killed.

"This is not only a violation of the international laws of war," he said. "It's bad policy."
Who says that 'large numbers of civilians' are being hit? Who's making that call? HRW? Our military has traditionally gone out of its way to avoid civilian casualties.
Opponents of the drones say that the policy could be illegal. The laws of war allow individuals who are engaged in hostilities to be targeted in an armed conflict but strictly prohibit actions against those not engaged. "Even when you're attacking a legitimate military objective, you cannot cause civilian casualties that exceed the value of a legitimate military attack," Rona says.

It's undeniable that more civilians have been killed than actual Al Qaeda terrorists in the 16 Predator strikes this year. But there's little chance that could change.

"So many of these guys surround themselves with collateral casualties," Livingstone said, and large numbers of women and children are strategically placed around hotbeds of activity.
So, Mr. HRW guy, who's responsible for that? If an al-Qaeda perp hides behind a bunch of skirts, isn't he the one responsible for any civilian deaths? And if not, haven't you just granted him a free pass and the power he craves?
Livingstone makes the point that even if high-value targets are killed in one of these drone attacks, Al Qaeda still can claim a "propaganda victory" because of the number of civilian casualties.
Which is why they hide like that. Our response has to be to whack them anyway and make clear to the civilian population that they need to stay clear of the perps.
Two high-value Al Qaeda operatives were killed on New Year's Day this year in northern Pakistan. Usama al Kini and Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan were wanted for their involvement in the 1998 embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. More than 200 people were killed in the embassy bombings, including 12 Americans. The men sought refuge in the tribal areas of Pakistan.

"Our military fighting in Afghanistan has got to be able to pursue high level (operatives) who flee across the border from Afghanistan into Pakistan," said Matt Bennett, a national security expert for a Washington-based think tank.

On the presidential campaign trail, Obama had said that if there was legitimate intelligence about high-level Al Qaeda personnel he would not hesitate to act. And although there's no formal agreement between the U.S. and Pakistan when it comes to Predator drone attacks, Pakistan more or less looks the other way.

Even so, human rights advocates continue to grow more disillusioned by the president's decisions on the Guantanamo military commissions and his refusal to release photos of alleged detainee abuse by U.S. soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as other national security issues. The Predator program, which is a holdover from the Bush administration, could be the next legal battle.
Let's disillusion HRW some more, then ...
"This is part of a broader campaign on the left to begin the drumbeat of withdrawal from Afghanistan and Pakistan generally to change the direction there and make it about only providing aid and not about military engagement," Bennett said.
Even though the progressive Left once thought of Afghanistan as the 'good' war ...
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Afghanistan
US strike kills 8 Taliban in South Waziristan - Roggio
2009-04-30
The US launched a covert airstrike against a Taliban safe house in Pakistan's Taliban-controlled tribal agency of South Waziristan.

An unmanned Predator strike aircraft fired two Hellfire missiles at a Taliban safehouse in the town of Kanigoram, which is just 15 miles south of the main town of Wana. Eight Taliban fighters were killed in the strike, Geo News reported. No senior Taliban or al Qaeda leaders have been reported killed at this time.

The town of Wana is a stronghold of South Waziristan Taliban commander Mullah Nazir, a former rival and now ally of Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud. The US targeted Nazir and Tahir Yuldashev, the leader of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, in a strike near Wana on Nov. 7. Nazir was wounded in the attack. Yuldashev's status is still unknown, but it is believed he survived the attack.

The US is on pace to exceed last year's total of 36 airstrikes in Pakistan. Today's strike is the fifth this month and the sixteenth inside Pakistan this year.
Good to see President Obama has not pulled the plug on these operations.
The last attack took place on April 19 in the town of Gangi Khel, which is also near the town of Wana. The region is a known Taliban and al Qaeda hotbed.

The Pakistani government officially protests the Predator strikes, but behind the scenes the government allows the attacks and the military passes some intelligence to US intelligence to target Taliban leaders. US Predators are based in Pakistan and are operated by the CIA.

During 2008, the US strikes inside Pakistan's tribal areas killed five senior al Qaeda leaders. All of the leaders were involved in supporting al Qaeda's external operations directed at the West.

In 2009, US strikes have killed two senior, long-time al Qaeda leaders. Osama al Kini and his senior aide, Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan, were killed in a New Year's Day strike in South Waziristan. Kini was al Qaeda operations chief in Pakistan. Both men were behind the 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya, which killed 224 civilians and wounded more than 5,000 others.
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India-Pakistan
Slain Qaeda commander remembered by teammates
2009-01-13
Former football teammates of Al Qaeda's top commander in Pakistan, killed in a suspected US missile strike, on Monday spoke of the man blamed for attacks that claimed hundreds of lives.

Pakistani officials have confirmed that Usama Al Kini ('Usama the Kenyan' in Arabic), a Kenyan national, and his deputy Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan were killed on January 1 in South Waziristan near the Afghan border.

Security officials said that Al Kini was connected to at least six major attacks in Pakistan, including last year's suicide attacks on the Danish embassy and the Marriott hotel in Islamabad, which killed 60 people. But in the Kenya's coastal city of Mombasa, former teammates remembered Al Kini as a reserved man — and a talented footballer. "We played with him in the early 90s to 1996 when he withdrew from public life," said a former teammate in Mombasa. "He was a dedicated religious man and a very good midfielder... Since then, I had not heard of him until I saw his story in the media," his former teammate said. Another former footballer in Mombasa remembered Al Kini as "a reserved boy who did not like mingling a lot with people".
He was a...quiet boy. Who liked to blow people up.
Al Kini, known in his hometown as Farid Mohammed Msalam, had promising stints as a youth player with Black Panther FC and former league champions Feisal FC.
Maybe they'll retire his number?
They can't count that high ...
Pakistani officials also linked Al Kini to a failed assassination attempt on the late prime minister Benazir Bhutto when she returned to Pakistan in October 2007. The attack killed 139 people. The FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists listing for Al Kini, or Msalam, also listed him as having been indicted over the August 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, which killed more than 200 people.
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India-Pakistan
New Year's Missile Strike Kills Top Al-Qaeda Operatives
2009-01-09
A New Year's CIA strike in northern Pakistan killed two top al-Qaeda terrorists long sought by the United States, including the man believed to be behind September's deadly suicide bombing at a Marriott hotel in the Pakistani capital, U.S. counterterrorism officials told The Washingon Post today.

Agency officials determined in recent days that among the dead in the Jan. 1 missile strike were a Kenyan national who used the name Usama al-Kini and who was described as al-Qaeda's chief of operations in Pakistan and his lieutenant, identified as Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan, the sources said. Both men were associated with a string of suicide attacks in Pakistan in recent months and were also on the FBI's most-wanted list for ties to the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in East Africa.

Kini, who had been pursued by U.S. law enforcement agencies on two continents for a decade, was the eighth senior al-Qaeda leader killed in clandestine CIA strikes since July
Kini, who had been pursued by U.S. law enforcement agencies on two continents for a decade, was the eighth senior al-Qaeda leader killed in clandestine CIA strikes since July, the officials said.

The CIA declined comment on the reported strike, citing the extreme secrecy of its operations on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border where al-Qaeda is believed to be based. However, a U.S. counterterrorism official confirmed that the two died in a CIA strike on a building that was being used for explosives training. "They died preparing new acts of terror," said the official, who insisted on anonymity because the agency's actions are secret.

Details of the attack were sketchy, but counter-terrorism officials privy to classified reports said the pair was killed by a 100-pound hellfire missiles fired by a pilotless drone aircraft operated by the CIA. The strike took place near Karikot in South Waziristan, a province in the rugged autonomous tribal region of northern Pakistan that has long been a haven for al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters.
Link


Africa: Subsaharan
US suspects al-Qaeda diamond link
2004-06-30
The US is stepping up its anti-terrorist efforts in west Africa amid continuing controversy over alleged links between al-Qaeda and the smuggling of Sierra Leonean diamonds through Liberia. Washington has begun looking more closely at terrorist financing in a region where the US military is increasingly active in efforts to disrupt terrorist networks, according to government officials and a leading Congressman. A US Congressional panel on the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks concluded this month there was "no persuasive evidence" that al-Qaeda funded itself through trafficking in diamonds from African states experiencing civil wars. But a US government official covering west Africa told the FT the US authorities had started to examine more deeply alleged financial links between the regime of Charles Taylor, exiled former president of Liberia, and groups such as Hizbollah and al-Qaeda. "We want to find out the infrastructure," the official said. "Taylor has ties to things other than what’s happening in Liberia. We want to find out who and what."

The US military has already launched a programme known as the Pan Sahel initiative to train soldiers in four Muslim-dominated west and central African countries - Mali, Chad, Mauritania and Niger - as part of efforts to prevent terrorists establishing bases there. The US has allocated an extra legal attaché to west Africa and plans to send support staff to help countries pursue terrorist finance investigations, a counter-terrorism official said. Another initiative will involve working with west African banking authorities to disrupt flows of terrorist funds, some of which could come from the sale of gold and diamonds. While east Africa is still the principal focus of US anti-terrorism efforts in the continent, west Africa is next on Washington’s concerns, the official said. "In coastal west Africa, what we see is the opportunity for terrorist groups to take advantage of exploitable resources," the official said.

A Federal Bureau of Investigation team this year found "pretty definite" evidence of a link between al-Qaeda operatives and the smuggling of Sierra Leonean diamonds, according to the head of the House of Representatives subcommittee that oversees the FBI. In an interview, Frank Wolf, chairman of the House commerce-justice-state and the judiciary appropriations subcommittee, expressed surprise at the September 11 committee’s scepticism about the tie and said he would check that it had access to FBI reports on the issue. Mr Wolf said he asked the FBI team to visit Liberia to investigate concerns about alleged dealings in diamonds by radical Islamic groups groups such as Hizbollah in Lebanon. The investigation established that al-Qaeda operatives visited Liberia to buy diamonds, although Mr Wolf warned that confidentiality laws prevented him from giving details. "I can tell you that, to my satisfaction, there is a connection to al-Qaeda," Mr Wolf said. "Now the question is how much, how extensively, is it still going on?"

Global Witness, a UK-based campaigning group, claimed this month that classified briefings given to congressional members by the FBI’s terrorist finance team had confirmed that al-Qaeda operatives visited Liberia and Sierra Leone in order to gain access to the diamond trade. "The FBI should release an unclassified version of their report as soon as possible," said Alex Yearsley, a Global Witness campaigner. The FBI declined to comment on the alleged al-Qaeda visits.

The smuggling of "conflict diamonds" from Sierra Leone became a big international issue after the rebel Revolutionary United Front took over the country’s main diamond mining areas during the 1991-2002 civilwar. Proceeds from diamond sales helped fund the RUF, which was notorious for chopping off civilians’ limbs and abducting children to serve as fighters. The US government has never officially confirmed claims that al-Qaeda earned about $20m (?15.5m, £11.1m) from selling west African diamonds, although officials say a connection with Hizbollah is possible. Diplomats in the region insist a link with al-Qaeda has not been proved despite official investigations of claims first reported in the Washington Post in 2001. A US intelligence official said it was easy to point to plausible potential financial links between al-Qaeda and west Africa but much harder to find evidence. The official said that Liberia’s Mr Taylor dealt with a Senegalese intermediary who had also met Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, an al-Qaeda operative on the FBI’s list of 22 most-wanted terrorists. "We never found anything specific, although when you start looking at links you can make any sort of assumption," the US intelligence official said. Mr Mohammed and two other senior al-Qaeda operatives on the most-wanted list - Mohammed Atef and Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan - are reportedly under investigation internationally over visits to Liberia between 1999 and 2002. Mr Atef is believed to have been killed in Afghanistan during the US invasion in 2001. Aafia Siddiqui, believed to be al-Qaeda’s only senior female leader, is also reported to be under investigation.

Liberia’s Mr Taylor, who is prohibited from talking to the media under the terms of his exile in Nigeria, has also denied involvement in diamond smuggling and helping terrorist groups. Some observers have suggested the US is reluctant to admit that it failed to spot links between al-Qaeda and Liberia before the September 11 attacks. Mr Taylor was indicted last year for crimes against humanity by the United Nations-backed Sierra Leone war crimes court. David Crane, the court’s chief prosecutor, has on several occasions publicly alleged links between al-Qaeda and west African conflict diamonds. In an interview, Mr Crane said he believed there was a terrorist presence in the region but declined to go into details. "There are all sorts of things going on that are outside our mandate and we do not pursue," he said.
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Africa: Subsaharan
al-Qaida Bomb Suspects Hid in Liberia
2004-06-01
Al-Qaida suspects in the deadly 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies took shelter in West Africa in the months before the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, converting terror cash into untraceable diamonds, according to findings of a U.N.-backed court obtained by The Associated Press. The allegations came as part of the Sierra Leone war crimes court's investigation of former Liberian President Charles Taylor, alleged have been a middleman between al-Qaida and West Africa's multimillion-dollar diamond trade. "We have in the process of investigating Charles Taylor ... clearly uncovered that he harbored al-Qaida operatives in Monrovia (the Liberian capital) as late as the summer of 2001," said David Crane, the court's lead prosecutor. "The central thread is blood diamonds."

Other international investigators told the AP the three suspects are Mohammed Atef of Egypt, Fazul Abdullah Mohammed of Comoros and Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan of Kenya. Fazul and Swedan are believed in East Africa; Atef was killed in fighting in Afghanistan. All were on the FBI's most-wanted terrorist list in connection with Aug. 7, 1998 car bombings that killed 231 people at American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. Al-Qaida claimed responsibility for both attacks. The three took shelter in Liberia in June and July of 2001, according to the international investigation findings obtained by the AP. Crane, a veteran U.S. Defense Department lawyer, said he had no information on whether any funds from alleged al-Qaida diamond dealings were used to carrying out the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington.
That was likely either zakat or princely largesse...
FBI teams have repeatedly traveled to West Africa to investigate allegations of al-Qaida diamond dealings here. No charges are known to have been brought in any court as a result of any of the probes into alleged West Africa-al-Qaida links. U.S. government officials say they have found little or no evidence to support those allegations. The illicit international trade in so-called blood diamonds draws on generally high-quality gems from Sierra Leone. The trade helped fund many of West Africa's wars of the 1990s, and is increasingly under international scrutiny as a suspected means of finance for terror. The United States estimates that between $70 million and $100 million still are smuggled out of Sierra Leone each year, despite the coming of peace and international accords to block illicit trafficking. U.S. and U.N. authorities and international rights groups have long believed Taylor was a top conduit for smuggled West Africa diamonds. Taylor is alleged to have used diamonds acquired in Sierra Leone to bankroll the 1989-1996 insurgency that brought him to power in neighboring Liberia.
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Terror Networks
Another al-Qaeda Big in jug? We knew that.
2002-09-04
This one's from The Guardian, by way of Jihad Unspun. Neither reads Rantburg. You can tell...
One of Washington's most wanted al-Qaida fugitives was captured in Karachi in July and secretly transferred to US custody, striking a significant blow to Osama bin Laden's network, Pakistani intelligence sources have claimed. Sheikh Ahmed Salim, detained in a joint Pakistan-US raid, was among a group of suspects flown out of the country in recent weeks.
Hurrah! Hurrah! Cha-cha-cha! Want some candy, little kid? Actually, Rantburg readers already knew that.
The 33-year-old Kenyan, who also goes by the name Swedan, had a $25m (£16m) price on his head for his role in the 1998 bombings of US embassies in east Africa. Since then he is believed to have emerged as an important al-Qaida figure, directing and funding Islamist militants in Pakistan.
Pay off that reward to somebody who was standing close by when they jugged him. Publicize it well, in all the papers and on the teevee. Show him wallowing in cash. Wait three weeks and we'll have another one...
Officially, the Pakistani and US governments denied knowledge of the arrest, but in interviews with the Guardian, senior Pakistani intelligence sources and a top investigator in Karachi insisted they had positively identified Salim among suspects arrested in a raid in Karachi in July. Pakistani intelligence agents were led to Salim's cell by satellite telephone intercepts provided by the FBI. That led to the arrest in Karachi of a more junior al-Qaida figure, a Saudi known only as Riyadh or Riaz. In early July he in turn led investigators to Salim, who was arrested in Kharadar, a slum area in the south of the city.
Just can't trust those Soddies, can you? Oooo! An even better idea! Pay the $25 million to Riaz or Riyadh, or whatever the hell his name is. Have Bush shake his hand on al-Jazeerah... Heh heh.
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Terror Networks
Al-Qaeda big arrested in Kenya
2001-12-10
  • Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan, whose name appears on a list of 22 most wanted terrorists issued Oct. 10 by President Bush, was arrested in Mandera, 500 miles northeast of Nairobi on Kenya's border with Somalia. Swedan is one of two al-Qaida operatives who bought a truck used in the Aug. 7, 1998 Nairobi embassy bombing in which 219 people were killed, including 12 Americans.
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