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Italy seeks arrest of 13 CIA agents for abduction of Egyptian
cleric
By Barry Grey
27 June 2005
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The US practice of abducting terrorism suspects on foreign
soil and secreting them to third countries, where they are held
without charges and routinely tortured, has been propelled to
the forefront of international diplomatic relations with the issuing
of criminal arrest warrants for 13 CIA agents accused of seizing
an Egyptian cleric on the streets of Milan and shipping him to
an Egyptian jail.
The warrants were requested by prosecutors and police in Milan
and signed by a judge on June 22. They concern the case of Hassan
Mustafa Osama Nasr, 42, also known as Abu Omar, who had been granted
political refugee status by Italy and headed a mosque in Milan
at the time of his kidnapping and disappearance on February 17,
2003.
Italian authorities say they do not know the whereabouts of
those named on the warrants, but if found, tried and convicted,
they could be sentenced to more than 10 years in jail. Neither
the CIA nor the US Embassy in Rome has issued any comment. A US
State Department spokesman would only say he had no information
on the case.
Nasr, a militant Islamist who regularly denounced the US, was
under investigation at the time by Italian authorities, who suspected
him of seeking to build a recruiting cell for Al Qaeda-type terrorists
in Europe and the Middle East. Italian investigators were sharing
the results of their investigation of Nasr with CIA officials
in Italy, and were angered by the kidnapping, which, they maintain,
was carried out without their knowledge and aborted the criminal
case they were seeking to assemble against the cleric.
According to prosecution documents cited in press reports Saturday
and Sunday, some of the 13 CIA operatives seized Nasr as he was
walking from his home to his mosque at noontime, sprayed his eyes
with a chemical substance, and bundled him into a van. They drove
him to Aviano Air Force Base, a joint US-Italian facility several
hours away, making cell phone calls along the way to a US commander
at the base to inform him of their progress. From Aviano he was
flown to the US base at Ramstein, Germany, and from there to Egypt.
Nasr was released from prison for a brief time in 2004, when
he telephoned family and friends and told them he had been subjected
to electric shocks to his genitals and had lost hearing in one
ear. He has since disappeared again, and may have been reincarcerated
in Egypt.
The prosecution of the CIA agents is the first such criminal
action by authorities abroad against US officials in connection
with the so-called war on terrorism. It is all the
more significant coming from Italy, whose right-wing government,
headed by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, has staunchly supported
the Bush administration and the war in Iraq.
There are already public demands for an investigation into
whether Rome played any role in the kidnapping of Nasr, and some
supporters of Berlusconi are suggesting that the criminal case
launched by prosecutors in Milan was politically motivated. However,
Armando Spataro, Milans deputy chief prosecutor, who led
the investigation into Nasr and, following the abduction, into
the suspects disappearance, is generally regarded as a figure
on the right of Italian politics. Spataro led the prosecution
of the Red Brigade terrorist organization in the 1970s and 1980s.
In a recent interview, Spataro expressed his opposition to
the US practice of extrajudicial abduction and transfer of alleged
terrorists to third countries, known as rendition.
He said the struggle against terrorism should be conducted
in accordance with international laws and the rights of
the defendant.
While Italian authorities are the only ones to date to issue
criminal charges against US citizens in connection with renditions,
judicial or parliamentary investigations are ongoing in Sweden,
Germany and Canada concerning the rendition of citizens or residents
of these countries. The US government is refusing to cooperate
with these probes.
It is generally agreed that since 9/11, the US has kidnapped
and rendered at least 100 people. Only three months
ago, at a March 16 press conference, President Bush was asked
about the practice and defended it.
Prosecutors in Italy and other European countries are growing
increasingly angry not only over the US practice of rendition,
but also the refusal of the US to allow them access to witnesses
and intelligence information which they consider essential to
their own investigation and prosecution of terrorist suspects
within their borders. The New York Times on Sunday quoted
a senior Italian counterterrorism official as saying:
The American system is of little use to us. Its a
one-way street. We give them what we have, but we are given no
useful information that can help us prosecute people.
In Germany, according to the Times, counterterrorism
officials were furious when a criminal trial against Mounir el-Montassadeq,
a suspected associate of several Sept. 11 hijackers, crumbled
and he was released. They openly blamed American officials for
failing to provide crucial evidence.
The Times continued: And the Bush administration
has refused to allow the Spanish authorities to interview Ramzi
bin al-Shibh, a central Qaeda suspect, to bolster their case against
two men on trial in Madrid on charges of helping to plan the 2001
attacks.
The friction between the US and Italian counterterrorism officials,
police and prosecutors evidently accounts, at least in part, to
the readiness of Milan investigators to provide the press with
many details of their investigation into the CIA agents. In interviews
given over the weekend, Italian officials said that they believed
a total of 19 CIA operatives were involved in the abduction and
rendition of Nasr, although they have as of yet charged only 13.
While the whereabouts of most of the agents are unknown, and most
appeared to use cover names while they were working in Milan,
Italian sources identified one of those charged as the CIAs
station chief at the US consulate in Milan at the time of the
abduction.
The Los Angeles Times reported Saturday that the then-CIA
station chief in Milan, a 51-year-old Honduran-born American,
is believed to have accompanied or followed Abu Omar [Nasr]
to Egypt and to have been present for some of the interrogations,
a senior Italian judicial official said Saturday.
The Los Angeles Times continued: That raises the
possibility that the American agent was aware of the alleged torture,
the Italian official said. The mans movements were traced
by his use of a cellular telephone to make calls from Egypt in
the two weeks after the disappearance of Abu Omar, the official
said.
He was the one who knew everything about Abu Omar,
the official said, referring to the ex-station chief, and
so he would have been very useful in the interrogation.
Italian police on Thursday raided a home near Turin belonging
to the former CIA station chief, confiscating a computer, computer
disks and papers.
In court documents, the Milan prosecutors state that their
findings allow us to attribute the kidnapping with certainty
to the CIA. The Washington Post reported on Saturday
that its own investigation of those named in the Italian warrants
had turned up a link to the CIA. The article stated: Two
of the individuals had listed their addresses as boxes at the
same post office in Dunn Loring, Va. That is used by a man who
is listed as an officer of Premier Executive Transport Services,
a company that owns two planes used by the CIA for renditions.
Italian officials gave details of the paper and electronic
trail left by the CIA operatives whom they allege were involved
in the kidnapping. These include cell phone records, hotel registries,
car rental receipts, electronic highway toll passes and other
documents. They also revealed that the agents stayed in some of
the most exclusive hotels in Milan and other cities, running up
huge bills to pay for their luxurious lifestyle both before and
after the abduction of the Egyptian cleric.
The Los Angeles Times reported that, according to the
indictment, the group ran up a tab of $150,000 in hotel bills
alone.
Italian prosecutors said Saturday they want to question Col.
Joseph Romano, a commander at Aviano who has since left Italy,
and are considering ordering his arrest as well. Spataro, the
lead prosecutor, said he would like to seek the extradition of
the suspects, and that the warrants had been forwarded to European
police agencies, meaning those named could be arrested anywhere
in Europe.
On Monday, the judge who signed the warrants is expected to
appoint public defenders for each of the accused. Once that has
occurred, the judges 230-page arrest warrant, which includes
a full investigative report and the names of the accused, will
become public.
Whether or not the accused CIA operatives are brought to trial,
the indictment against them has thrown the spotlight on the outlaw
role of the US on the world arena. But other questions are raised
by the US governments practice of thwarting investigations
and prosecutions of terrorist suspects by other countries.
What are the Bush administration and the American intelligence
agencies afraid of? Are they following the old adage that dead
menand disappeared mentell no tales? Are
they deliberately aborting trials that might reveal links between
the American state and terrorist groups and individuals, including
those connected to the attacks of September 11, 2001?
See Also:
White House press conference
Bush defends rendition of detainees to torture regimes
[17 March 2005]
Pentagon plans rendition
of Guantánamo prisoners
Detainees face torture in Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Yemen
[14 March 2005]
More evidence of US governments
torture by proxy
[12 February 2005]
CIA involved in illegal
deportation of Iraqi prisoners
[3 November 2004]
The Maher Arar case:
Washingtons practice of torture by proxy
[18 November 2003]
The CIAs international
dirty war
US oversees abduction, torture, execution of alleged terrorists
[20 March 2002]
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