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Bin Laden's Operatives Still Use Dubai
AP ^ | September 3, 2004 | Associated Press

Posted on 09/05/2004 8:02:33 PM PDT by Former Military Chick

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates - Osama bin Laden's operatives still use this freewheeling city as a logistical hub three years after more than half the Sept. 11 hijackers flew directly from Dubai to the United States in the final preparatory stages for the attack.

The recent arrest of an alleged top al-Qaida combat coach is the latest sign that suspected members of the terrorist organization are among those who take advantage of travel rules that allow easy entry. Citizens of neighboring Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia can come to Dubai without visas, which other nationalities can get at the country's ports of entry.

Once here, it's easy to blend in to what has become a cosmopolitan crowd.

The Emirates is home to an estimated 4 million people, and nearly 75 percent of them are foreigners. In Dubai, expatriates of all nationalities are catered to, from concerts by top Western musicians to cricket and rugby matches to a German-styled Oktoberfest.

The expatriates, mostly from the Indian subcontinent and the Arab world, are employed in the real estate, insurance, tourism and banking sectors. Westerners, numbering in the tens of thousands, are employed as military advisers and oil specialists.

While the Emirates has taken concrete steps to fight terrorism since Sept. 11, 2001 - including making high-profile arrests, passing an anti-money laundering law, and imposing close monitoring procedures on charity organizations - the characteristics that make it an ideal place for legitimate business also attract militants and others with suspect motives.

In August, Pakistani Qari Saifullah Akhtar, suspected of training thousands of al-Qaida fighters for combat, was arrested in the Emirates and turned over to officials in his homeland, authorities in Pakistan announced.

Emirates authorities have refused to comment on Akhtar's arrest. They were similarly tightlipped in 2002, when the United States announced the arrest of Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, the suspected mastermind of the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole, which killed 17 U.S. sailors.

It was a month before Emirates officials confirmed al-Nashiri had been arrested here. Then they said he had been planning to attack "vital economic targets" in the Emirates that were likely to inflict "the highest possible casualties among nationals and foreigners."

The Saudi-born al-Nashiri, one of six Cole defendants in an ongoing trial in Yemen, is in U.S. custody at an undisclosed location. Besides the Cole attack, he is suspected of helping direct the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, U.S. officials say.

With open borders, multiethnic society and freewheeling business rules, the Emirates remains vital to al-Qaida operations, said Evan F. Kohlmann, a Washington-based terrorism researcher.

Dubai still "plays a key role for al-Qaida as a through-point and a money transfer location," Kohlmann said, although he also noted the country could be working to combat such activity with "an aggressive but low-profile intelligence strategy."

Al-Qaida isn't the only organization that has found Dubai useful. The father of Pakistan's nuclear program, Abdul Qadeer Khan, has acknowledged heading a clandestine group that, with the help of a Dubai company, supplied Pakistani nuclear technology to Iran, Libya and North Korea.

Emirates officials refused to discuss the country's latest steps to combat terror.

Dia'a Rashwan, an Egyptian expert on militant groups, said trumpeting developments such as the arrest of al-Qaida suspects could be misread as serving the United States when the Emirates, led by its President Sheik Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, cultivates an image as a champion of Arab causes. The Emirates nonetheless has a close relationship with Washington.

Rashwan said the reticence also could stem from fear that saying too much could cause "panic among the huge expatriate community, which is proportionally the largest in the Gulf."

Kohlmann said if more al-Qaida suspects are arrested in the Emirates, the network might retaliate with a strike here, perhaps on a U.S. mission or military target.

While the country has not been singled out as a target by al-Qaida, the United States issued a warning in June that it had "information that extremists may be planning to carry out attacks against Westerners and oil workers in the Persian Gulf region, beyond Saudi Arabia."

Security is tight in the Emirates, but not visible, and violent crimes are uncommon.

"The United Arab Emirates is considered a safe haven for everybody," said Emirates analyst Abdulkhaleq Abdulla. "It has not yet got entangled in any of the violence that other countries around it have experienced and it wants to keep that image."

Shortly after the Sept. 11, attacks, U.S. authorities said the United Arab Emirates, especially the commercial hub Dubai, was a major transit and money transfer center for al-Qaida.

A new report dated Aug. 21 by the U.S. commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks provided the most detail yet on the extent to which the hijackers used Dubai as a travel hub.

According to the U.S. government, 13 of the 19 hijackers entered the United States between April 23 and June 29, 2001. And 11 of those late-arrivers - who were Saudi citizens and primarily the "muscle" for the hijackings - went through Dubai, according to the report.

The hijackers traveled in groups of two or three, taking off from Dubai and arriving at airports in Miami, Orlando, Fla., or New York City, the report said.

As for the money trail, Bin Laden's alleged financial manager, Mustafa Ahmed al-Hisawi, received at a Dubai bank a transfer of $15,000 two days before the Sept. 11 attacks and then left the Emirates for Pakistan, where he was arrested last year.

Marwan Al-Shehhi, an Emirates citizen and one of the hijackers, received $100,000 via the United Arab Emirates. Another hijacker, Fayez Banihammad, also was from the Emirates.

About half of the $250,000 spent on the attacks was wired to al-Qaida terrorists in the United States from Dubai banks, authorities said. Al-Qaida money in Dubai banks also has been linked to the 1998 U.S. Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: alqaeda; binladen; globaljihad; uae; waronterror
Gotta tell you this concerns me. Very little heard about Dubai and bin Laden.
1 posted on 09/05/2004 8:02:34 PM PDT by Former Military Chick
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To: Former Military Chick
Bin Laden's Operatives Still Use Dubai

Hey, Ahmed, don't bogart that dubai!

2 posted on 09/05/2004 8:04:42 PM PDT by ScottFromSpokane (Re-elect President Bush: http://spokanegop.org/bush.html)
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To: F14 Pilot

Pong


3 posted on 09/05/2004 8:14:51 PM PDT by nuconvert (Everyone has a photographic memory. Some don't have film.)
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To: Former Military Chick
The Emirates is home to an estimated 4 million people, and nearly 75 percent of them are foreigners. In Dubai, expatriates of all nationalities are catered to, from concerts by top Western musicians to cricket and rugby matches to a German-styled Oktoberfest.

?......do church bells ring?

/sarcasm

4 posted on 09/05/2004 8:18:11 PM PDT by maestro
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To: maestro

I think there are a number of Christian churches in Dubai
They really do cater to their visitors.


5 posted on 09/05/2004 8:22:58 PM PDT by nuconvert (Everyone has a photographic memory. Some don't have film.)
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To: Former Military Chick
In Dubai there are a lot of cash transactions, Personally I do not know how anyone could trace anything thru there,BTW a Absolutely Beautiful place no money spared.
6 posted on 09/05/2004 8:23:27 PM PDT by Fast1
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To: AdmSmith; Dog; jeffers

Pong


7 posted on 09/05/2004 8:25:38 PM PDT by nuconvert (Everyone has a photographic memory. Some don't have film.)
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To: Former Military Chick

I'm very Dubai-ous....


8 posted on 09/05/2004 8:34:12 PM PDT by clee1 (Islam is a deadly plague; liberalism is the AIDS virus that prevents us from defending ourselves.)
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To: Former Military Chick
Gotta tell you this concerns me. Very little heard about Dubai and bin Laden. You can say that again. Nobody is talking about Dubai. Maybe that is where we need to take the War on Terror.
9 posted on 09/05/2004 8:35:17 PM PDT by rdl6989 (Kerry voted for the war before he voted against it?)
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To: nuconvert

hey, i even visited a church in iran.

and alao - dubai is a lovely and modern place.


10 posted on 09/05/2004 9:06:16 PM PDT by sweneop
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To: ScottFromSpokane

Wonder what the "Dubai Brothers" have to say about this.


11 posted on 09/05/2004 9:23:18 PM PDT by Mad_Tom_Rackham (You have entered a "No Girlie Men" zone. Thank you for not whining and sniveling.)
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To: Former Military Chick
Dubai is a very western city. It has malls, bars, excellent restaurants, stadiums, golf courses, very nice hotels, and all of that is on one side of the city. On the other side it has a shady section overrun with Russian mafia types.
I recommend the Alamo restaurant, which has excellent Tex Mex food, although their midget isn't as short as the one at Pancho Villa's in the middle of town.
12 posted on 09/05/2004 9:25:08 PM PDT by USNBandit (Florida military absentee voter number 537.)
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To: Former Military Chick

People don't realize that Dubai is one of the major centers for air cargo shipments between Asia and Europe, as well as a major transhipment hub for equipment coming in from the states. Emirates Airlines (the main carrier in Dubai) is absolutely militant about who they let on their planes (moreso than any of OUR carrier, I'm afraid), but it only takes one.


13 posted on 09/05/2004 11:21:00 PM PDT by Clemenza (You've gotta love living, because dying's such a pain in the a-s! --- FA Sinatra)
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To: USNBandit

I know many people at Emirates. They tell me the same thing.


14 posted on 09/05/2004 11:21:50 PM PDT by Clemenza (You've gotta love living, because dying's such a pain in the a-s! --- FA Sinatra)
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To: Mad_Tom_Rackham

"Allah is just allright with me"?


15 posted on 09/06/2004 3:32:46 AM PDT by SirLurkedalot ("I think the Americans are serious this time" Uday Hussein, 9th Circle of Hell)
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