Syria had accumulated much of its information because of Al Qaedas ties to the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood, Islamic terrorists who have been at war with the secular Syrian government for more than two decades. Many of the September 11th hijackers had operated out of cells in Aachen and Hamburg, where Al Qaeda was working with the Brotherhood. In the late nineties, Mohammed Atta and other Al Qaeda members, including Mohammed Haydar Zammar, who is believed to have been one of the organizations top recruiters, worked on occasion at a German firm called Tatex Trading. Tatex was infiltrated by Syrian intelligence in the eighties; one of its shareholders was Mohammed Majed Said, who ran the Syrian intelligence directorate from 1987 to 1994. Zammar is now in Syrian custody.Within weeks of the September 11th attacks, the F.B.I. and the C.I.A, with Syrias permission, began intelligence-gathering operations in Aleppo, near the Turkish border. Aleppo was the subject of Mohammed Attas dissertation on urban planning, and he travelled there twice in the mid-nineties. At every stage in Attas journey is the Muslim Brotherhood, a former C.I.A. officer who served undercover in Damascus told me. He went through Spain in touch with the Brotherhood in Hamburg.
I rather enjoy the different takes on this- a company with one employee and a two investors was "infiltrated?" What's the difference between Syrian intelligence infiltrating a company and being responsible for partially owning it?
Tatex was infiltrated by Syrian intelligence in the eighties; one of its shareholders was Mohammed Majed Said, who ran the Syrian intelligence directorate from 1987 to 1994