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The JFK plot: another grossly inflated threat
By Bill Van Auken
5 June 2007
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The weekends news in the US was dominated by screaming
headlines and sensationalist broadcast coverage of an alleged
plot in New York to blow up John F. Kennedy International Airports
jet fuel tanks and supply lines. The attack would have been, according
to many accounts, more devastating than September 11.
Four men were charged in an indictment [http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nye/pr/2007/Defreitas.complaint.pdf]
unveiled Sunday that included features that have become almost
invariable in every such terror case brought by the
government in recent years. First, the suspects had not only carried
out no acts of terror, but they apparently lacked any means to
realize such an attack. Second, a central figure in the alleged
plot was a paid undercover informant of the FBI.
Broadcast networks spoke of the worst threat since the attacks
on New York and Washington in 2001, while reporters were sent
out to conduct random interviews with passengers passing through
JFK as well as residents living near the pipelines, asking how
they felt about their supposed near brush with death.
As usual, New York Citys tabloids excelled in this sensationalism.
Rupert Murdochs New York Post Sunday referred to
the alleged plot in its headline as an inferno plan
and carried an editorial stating that the purported plan to
do calamitous damage to JFK International Airport and surrounding
residential neighborhoods underscores yet again the overarching
threat Islamist terrorism poses to America.
The New York Daily News on Monday carried five pages
on the plot, with a ludicrous front-page headline,
Evil Ate at Table Eight, promoting an inside interview
with the Brooklyn waitress who served a meal to Russell Defreitas,
whom the paper describes as the mastermind of the
alleged plot, just before he was picked up by federal agents and
police.
Yet the profile of Defreitas, a 63-year-old US citizen who
emigrated from Guyana 25 years ago, hardly suggests a terrorist
mastermind. A former friend describes him as someone
who, before becoming a Muslim, had declared himself a Rastafarian
and grown dreadlocks. He recalled his involvement in various business
schemes to ship air conditioners or refrigerators to Guyana, none
of which ever came to anything.
He couldnt even fix brakes, the former friend
said. He never built bombs.
Other accounts described him as a retired worker living in
an impoverished Brooklyn neighborhood, who on various occasions
had been homeless. New York Newsday, for example, reported,
Since being laid off from his job as a cargo worker several
years ago, Russell Defreitas has lived a meek existenceat
times sleeping in trains and trying to eke out a living running
two-bit scams, selling incense on street corners and collecting
welfare, acquaintances said.
Also charged in the indictment are Abdul Kadir, a citizen of
Guyana and former member of the Guyanese Parliament, and Kareem
Ibrahim, a citizen of Trinidad, both of whom are under arrest
in Trinidad awaiting a hearing on a US extradition request. Lawyers
for the two said that they would fight extradition, likely raising
the US record of torturing terrorism suspects. A fourth defendant,
Abdel Nur, also a citizen of Guyana, has yet to be arrested.
A key figure in the alleged plot, however, is named in the
indictment only as the source. He is identified as
a convicted drug trafficker who, in exchange for favorable consideration
on a pending jail sentence as well as cash payments, agreed to
infiltrate the supposed terrorist cell.
Much of the evidence contained in the indictment consists of
recordings of conversations between the source and
the defendants. What emerges clearly, however, is the leading
role this informant played in the alleged plot. Defreitas
is quoted as saying that they saw him as someone sent by
Allah to lead them.
The indictment also refers to meetings and recorded conversations
between both Defreitas and the source and individuals in Guyana,
who are identified only as Individuals A through F.
These six unnamed men are quoted proposing a wide range of
terrorist activity, including smuggling mujahideen from
Asia into Guyana and then into the United States, blowing
up US helicopters at the Guyanese airport and the plan to blow
up the JFK fuel system. On this last proposal, these unnamed individuals
also suggest the use of dynamite and chemical explosives and advise
on how to obtain these materials. One of these individuals also
proposes that the plotters seek the assistance of a Trinidadian
Islamist group, Jamaat al Muslimeen. In the account of these conversations,
Defreitas is not quoted as saying anything.
The obvious question is why these six unnamed individuals
have not been charged. One likely explanation is that they too
were, in one form or another, participants in an elaborate effort
to ensnare a hapless and sometimes homeless retiree and others
in a plot that was fundamentally staged by the US government for
its own purposes.
The blood-curdling accounts in the media largely reflected
the highly charged language of US prosecutors and police officials
in presenting the indictment. Roslynn Mauskopf, the US attorney
in Brooklyn, New York, in announcing the charges, said, Had
the plot been carried out, it could have resulted in unfathomable
damage, deaths and destruction. She added, The devastation
that would be caused had this plot succeeded is just unthinkable.
The words unfathomable and unthinkable
were undoubtedly chosen carefully, as the type of chain reaction
of explosions described in the indictment was quite simply impossible.
Both airport security officials and pipeline experts dismissed
the allegedly catastrophic disaster that supposedly would have
been triggered by blowing up a fuel pipeline or storage tanks.
While the federal indictment suggested that such an explosion
could travel along the pipelines linking tanks in Linden, New
Jersey into Brooklyn, New York and across the borough of Queens,
this is impossible, both because the pipelines are equipped with
safety valves that shut off the flow of fuel in event of a leak
and because there is inadequate oxygen inside the pipes to sustain
a fire.
The New York Times, whose skepticism about the federal
indictment was clearly signaled by the newspaper placing stories
on the JFK plot on its Metro pages, quoted Neal Sonnett,
a defense lawyer and former federal prosecutor, as saying, There
unfortunately has been a tendency to shout too loudly about such
cases.
The Times article went on to say that Sonnett, also
a former president of the National Association of Criminal Defense
Lawyers, noted that there is a broader risk in overstating
the sophistication of a terror plot. At a time when many Americans
live in justified fear of an attack, the risk is that drumbeating
creates a climate of fear and drives public policy.
There is every reason to believe that the succession of terror
cases, each one weaker than the last and virtually all of them
driven by informants who seem to play more the role
of agents provocateur, are aimed at achieving precisely this effect.
They serve as a means of intimidating public opinion with fear,
justifying attacks on democratic rights and diverting attention
from the ongoing debacle in Iraq.
The problem faced by the government is that the public is growing
increasingly skeptical about these cases, with a sizeable portion
of the population having concluded that they are trumped up for
political purposes.
Under these conditions, the danger is that those who now control
the reins of power in Washington may be concluding that something
more tangible is needed.
On the same day that the alleged JFK terror plot
broke in the news, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette published
a revealing interview with that states new Republican Party
chairman, who described himself as 150 percent for Bush.
At the end of the day, said state party chairman
Dennis Milligan, the owner of a water treatment business, I
believe fully the president is doing the right thing, and I think
all we need is some attacks on American soil like we had on [Sept.
11, 2001 ], and the naysayers will come around very quickly...
The question is whether elements in the Bush administration
are reaching similar conclusions and preparing to engineer or
allow another round of terrorist attacks on American soil
as a pretext for suppressing the overwhelming popular opposition
to its policies.
See Also:
British terror trial raises
question of what MI5 knew about 2005 London bombings
[9 May 2007]
The Miami indictments:
Manufacturing terror as a means of intimidation
[28 June 2006]
Miami terror
arrestsa government provocation
[26 June 2006]
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