U.S. Armed, Promoted Accused September
11 Terrorist Mastermind
New details are coming out about
the origins of the alleged terrorist mastermind of 9-11. It shouldn’t be a
surprise to anyone where that trail leads.
Exclusive
To American Free Press
By Mike
Blair
Further details have emerged on the cozy
relationship that existed between the U.S. government and Osama bin Laden, the
shadowy leader of the al Qaeda terrorist network.
In the Jan. 20 issue, American Free Press carried
an exclusive report that federal officials were aware of the terrorist attacks
six months in advance, facts unearthed by retired high-ranking FBI official Ted
L. Gunderson.
That story detailed the part played by bin Laden
in America’s support of Afghan freedom fighters, who in the 1980s were resisting
the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
In 1986, U.S. officials claimed that aiding bin
Laden’s network would translate in a drop in terrorist activity.
In an exclusive interview, Gunderson told how a
high-level official in the administration of President Ronald Reagan approached
him in 1986 to see if he could arrange, outside of government channels, a means
to provide help to the Afghanis fighting the Soviet invaders.
Details of the arrangements established by Gunderson
were first reported in the Jan. 7 and Feb. 11, 2002 issues of American Free
Press.
Gunderson contacted scientist Michael Riconosciuto,
who at the time kept close ties to key Middle East moneymen and Red Chinese and
other weapons for the U.S. through his work with the CIA.
Subsequently, Gunderson arranged a meeting in the
spring of 1986 at the Hilton Hotel on Ventura Boulevard in Sherman Oaks,
Calif., between himself, Riconosciuto, Ralph Olberg, who covertly represented
the State Department at the meeting and served on its Middle East desk, and a
man identified as “Tim Osman.”
As Gunderson would discover only last year,
“Osman” was bin Laden, dressed in ordinary casual Western attire and traveling
on a Turkish passport.
Gunderson has also since found that there is a
real Osman, who is a Turkish official.
Gunderson was asked to set up the meeting because
of his knowledge of international terrorism, having retired from the FBI in the
late 1970s. At the time he was senior special agent in charge, a post
equivalent to assistant director, of the 700-plus-man Los Angeles bureau.
He immediately approached Riconosciuto, with whom
he had previously worked on several classified projects, including the
development of a devastating new fuel-air ex plosive device.
AIDING THE REBELLION
Gunderson says the only part he played in the deal
was to put the key players in touch with Sir Dennis Kendall, who lived in
Beverly Hills, Calif.
Kendall had been known by Gunderson for years and
maintained the “right contacts” to help set up an operation to aid the rebels
in Afghanistan.
According to Gunderson, Kendall, a former member
of the British parliament, was a double agent during World War II. He worked
for both the Germans and the British.
Among other things, Gunderson said, Kendall was
able to garner top-secret German intelligence for British MI-6 intelligence
agency through a relationship with a secretary of the German ambassador in
Madrid, Spain.
Kendall made arrangements to aid the Afghan rebels
through a Saudi Arabian front organization known as Maktab-al-Khidmat, which
provided the funding for aiding the rebels.
After leaving Gunderson in California,
Riconosciuto, bin Laden, Olberg and Kendall traveled to Boston, where they met
with Abdulah Assam, a leader of the Egyptian Islamic Brotherhood, and details
of the aid plan were further formulated.
Kendall had contacts with the international police
organization, Interpol, which he had probably gained due to its close ties with
German intelligence during World War II, Gunderson said.
Interpol provided secure communications and kept
the operation from being compromised or discovered, he said.
Gunderson said he understands that the operation
involved travel by Riconosciuto and others to England, Egypt, Turkey, Iran,
Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The operation was formalized in Boston with a
number of unnamed congressmen.
The project ultimately provided the Afghani
resistance with 600 stinger surface-to-air, shoulder-fired missiles, which had
been modified so they could not be used against American aircraft if captured.
The project also provided thousands of Red Chinese
107-millimeter rockets with aerial proximity fuses.
Gunderson said that these weapons turned the tide
of battle in Afghanistan against the Soviets, whose aircraft, and particularly
attack helicopters, fell victim to the missiles.
The rebels were also supplied armor-piercing
ammunition, demolition charges, remote detonators and intelligence information
on the Soviets, which probably, Gunderson said, was funneled from the CIA,
particularly through satellite imagery.