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US embassy bombing case: conspiracy trial perverts judicial
system
By Bill Vann
22 February 2001
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Four men are on trial in Manhattan federal court charged with
conspiracy in connection with the 1998 bombings of two US embassies
in East Africa. Held under extraordinary security in a fortified
courthouse, the trial is centered on acts of terrorism that were
carried out thousands of miles from US soil. While the media has
focused its attention on sensationalist charges made by the one
witness called thus far by federal prosecutorsa confessed
embezzler who has to date received a payoff of nearly $1 million
from US authoritiesnowhere has a question been raised as
to why this trial is even taking place in an American court.
Of the 224 men, women and children who died in the blasts,
only 12 were Americans. Why then were the alleged terrorists not
tried in the countries where the crimes took place and which suffered
far greater loss of life?
The pliant regimes in Kenya and Tanzania have bowed to Washington's
demands, allowing the US government to deal with the crimes carried
out on their soil as it sees fit. Just as in the aftermath of
the embassy blasts, rescue efforts were concentrated on saving
the much smaller number of American victims, to the detriment
of the large number of Africans, so now the US is allowed to do
as it likes with the alleged authors of the terrorist attack.
Whether those standing trial in New York were responsible for
the bombings is far from clear. Mohamed Rashed Daoud Owhali, 24,
a Saudi citizen, and Khalfin Khamis Mohamed, 27, of Tanzania,
are accused of directly participating in the bombingalbeit
in minor rolesand could face the death penalty. The other
twoMohammed Saddiq Odeh, 35, of Jordan and Wadih Hage, 40,
a naturalized US citizenare not accused of taking any direct
part in the attack. They are facing conspiracy charges and could
be sentenced to life in prison if found guilty.
In all, 22 people are named in the government's indictments.
In addition to the four in the courtroom, one is in New York and
will be tried separately, one pleaded guilty, three are jailed
in Britain and are fighting extradition to the US, and thirteen
are classified as fugitives.
The principal figure in the indictments is Osama bin Laden,
the son of Saudi Arabia's wealthiest building magnate. Bin Laden's
organization, known as Al QaedaArabic for the Basegot
its start and its name in Afghanistan in the late 1980s, when
bin Laded used his wealth to set up a support center for Saudi
and Egyptian volunteers recruited for the CIA-backed war against
the Soviet military.
With the US buildup in Saudi Arabia in preparation for the
Persian Gulf War, bin Laden turned against the Americans, denouncing
the military presence in the region as an affront to Islam. Running
afoul of the Saudi regime, he was forced to seek asylum in Sudan.
The legal pretext for holding the embassy bombing trial in
United States District Court in the Southern District of New York
stems from an earlier indictment quietly obtained by the US Attorney's
Office in Manhattan in June 1998, two months before the embassy
bombing. It charged bin Laden with conspiracy to attack US troops
in Somalia, holding him responsible for the deaths of 18 Rangers
and Delta Force commandos in Mogadishu during the US intervention
there in 1993.
There is a strong element of the absurd in this attempt to
attribute the deaths of the US soldiers in Somalia to a conspiracy
hatched by bin Laden and a handful of associates. The US troops
were killed in a mission in which American losses were dwarfed
by the carnage unleashed against the Somali people, more than
1,000 of whom were killed or wounded. In the previous months,
thousands more Somalis had been killed as the American military
unleashed massive firepower in the impoverished African city in
an attempt to suppress popular opposition to the US occupation,
expressed in both mass demonstrations and armed resistance.
Significantly, US District Court Judge Leonard Sand asked federal
prosecutors to drop the Somali events from their indictment, which
accuses the defendants of hatching plots that resulted in dozens
of acts of terrorism in a number of countries over most of the
last decade. The government refused.
Attorneys for one of the defendants charged that the sheer
scope of the indictment violated his client's rights. It
seeks to hold him responsible for a sweeping array of events involving
a political and religious movement consisting of thousands of
participants, they wrote. Whatever its attractions
as a political theory or foreign policy guide, the mammoth, all-encompassing,
decade-long, worldwide Islamic conspiracy' alleged in the
indictment cannot serve as a constitutional basis for a fair trial
for the individual defendants.
The political theory behind the US case is all too familiar.
The demonization of an individualfrom Panama's Manuel Noriega
to Libya's Muammar Gaddafi to Iraq's Saddam Husseinhas repeatedly
been used to prepare acts of US military aggression. Casting American
objectives as punishing a madman, dictator,
or terrorist serves to conceal Washington's underlying
economic and strategic interests, as well as the historical and
social roots of opposition to American policy.
Even as the current trial was unfolding, CIA Director George
Tenet presented a report to a Senate committee labeling bin Laden
as Washington's enemy number one, the most immediate and serious
threat to US national security. The US government has put a $5
million price on his head, promising the bounty to anyone who
assists in his capture.
Thus far, however, the government has produced no concrete
evidence linking bin Laden to specific actions outside of preaching
his brand of radical religious opposition to US presence in predominantly
Islamic countries. While bin Laden has broadcast calls for violence
against Americans and American interests from his redoubt in Afghanistan,
the ideas he espouses are hardly unique in the Middle East. US
military aggression, most notably against Iraq, and Washington's
support for both Israel and the corrupt and repressive royal dynasties
and police state regimes in the Arab countries has bred widespread
hatred toward the United States in the Arab world.
Given the capitulation and decay of the old secular bourgeois
nationalist movements, from Nasserism to the Palestine Liberation
Organization, a considerable amount of popular anger toward US
policy in the region has been channeled into movements espousing
anti-Americanism based on religious ideology.
Former senior US intelligence and State Department officials
have called into question the attempt to portray bin Laden as
some sort of mastermind directing an army of international terrorists.
Many are skeptical about the CIA's claims that he has vast wealth
at his disposal to finance armed actions.
Apparently, the US estimate of bin Laden's fortune is based
on taking the amount of money accumulated by his father and dividing
it by the number of male heirs. Those familiar with the family,
however, point out that bin Laden is considered an embarrassment
by his wealthy relatives and is unlikely to have equal access
to their purse strings.
And, while the US Attorney's indictment also blames bin Laden
for a 1996 bombing in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 American soldiers,
the Saudi regime has denied any link, insisting that bin Laden
poses no security threat to its rule.
The rules of evidence and law in the trial have been twisted
and bent to help assure a conviction that meets the demands of
the US State Department and the Central Intelligence Agency, which
have provided the main ammunition for the prosecution. Before
the trial began, the court was compelled to decide on some important
legal questions posed by the peculiar situation of trying foreign
citizens arrested for crimes committed on foreign soil. Among
the principal pieces of evidence are confessions extracted from
suspects in Africa in the weeks following the embassy attacks.
Initially, Judge Sand ordered that the confession taken from one
of the defendants, 21-year-old Mohamed Rashed Daoud al-Owhali,
be kept out of the trial.
FBI agents grilled al-Owhali in Kenya over a period of weeks.
Held incommunicado, he was told during the interrogation that
if he failed to cooperate, the American agents would turn him
over to the Kenyan police, whom he feared would torture him. Al-Owhali
said that one of the US agents threatened his family, and that
Kenyan agents led him blindfolded through the building where he
was held, causing him to fear he was about to be executed.
Lawyers for al-Owhali and two other defendants charged that
while their clients were in American custody they were denied
the constitutional rights afforded every criminal suspect in this
country, including the right to be represented by a lawyer. The
US government countered that as long as the suspect was a foreigner
and interrogated on foreign soil, the US Bill of Rights did not
apply.
Judge Sand bowed to government pressure and allowed the confessions
into the trial. In his written ruling, he rejected the government's
position, maintaining that suspects questioned by US authorities
in preparation for a trial in the US had the same rights overseas
as they did in this country. He added, however, that these rights
should be subject to a principled, but realistic application,
meaning the familiar Miranda warnings guaranteeing suspects the
right to remain silent and the right to be represented by an attorney
could be tailored to fit the situation in a given country. This
allowed for the illegally obtained confessions to be used against
the defendants, and set a precedent for constitutional rights
to be universally proclaimed for foreign suspects, while denied
in practice whenever expedient.
The government's principal witness in the conspiracy trial
is one Jamal Ahmed Al-Fadl, who described himself as a founding
member of bin Laden's al Qaeda organization. He was expelled from
the group in the mid-1990s after it was discovered that he was
embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars by demanding kickbacks
from those doing business with the organization's commercial interests.
Since agreeing to cooperate with US prosecutors in 1997, Al-Fadl
has received almost $1 million from the American government, including
nearly $800,000 in aid from the witness protection program and
more than $150,000 directly from the FBI.
Referring last fall to the selection of an anonymous jury for
the conspiracy trial, Judge Sand declared, In many ways,
we are treading on new territory. In reality, the trial
only furthers an increasingly frequent manipulation of the courts
to advance the plans of the Pentagon, the CIA and the State Department
for military aggression abroad. Its does, however, have serious
implications for the further erosion of democratic rights within
the US.
In a sense, Washington determined guilt and imposed a deadly
sentence in the immediate aftermath of the embassy bombings. The
Clinton administration convened a jury composed of
the secretaries of State and Defense, the directors of the CIA
and the National Security Council and the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. As a result of their deliberations cruise missile
attacks were ordered against Afghanistan and Sudan. The 70 missiles
that rained down on Afghanistan were aimed at killing bin Laden.
They missed their target, however, killing 24 other people. In
Sudan, 13 missiles hit a pharmaceutical plant, killing a night
watchman and destroying a facility that had no proven link to
bin Laden and had produced medical supplies for the impoverished
African country.
In all likelihood, the present trial will be used as a pretext
for even more deadly military actions.
See Also:
Bombings
in Kenya, Tanzania
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