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#22 Posted by stuka on June 27, 2003 7:08:49 am
Qui a tue Daniel Pearl?, by Bernard-Henri Levy
Reviewed by Pepe Escobar
The subject was not breached when ``courageous leader`` Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf was received by George W Bush at Camp David this week. They talked of the Hizb-i-Islami leading the anti-American jihad in Afghanistan, they talked of jihadis not crossing the Line of Control in Kashmir, they talked of Osama bin Laden hiding in the tribal areas. ``Indispensable ally`` Musharraf received a promise of US$3 billion - but no F-16s. But had Bush asked Musharraf who killed American journalist Daniel Pearl, one wonders whether Musharraf would have come up with a proper answer.
Bernard-Henri Levy`s Qui a tue Daniel Pearl? (Grasset) is guaranteed to shake the foundations of neo-conservative land when an English translation is released before the end of the year. The book has become a best-seller in France, and subject to considerable media frenzy. No wonder: since his debut as a nouveau philosophe in the 1970s, BHL - a trademark signature - has meticulously fashioned himself to the status of dandy and arbiter supreme of the Parisian Left Bank intelligentsia. A brilliant, prolific writer coupled with shameless self-promotion, BHL always switched at ease from essay to film making, from Jean Paul Sartre to the gulag, from Bosnia to Charles Baudelaire, from trophy wife to a holiday palace in Marrakesh. Inevitably, he had to confront the top subject of the times - political Islam.
BHL starts his book on January 31, 2002, when Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was tortured and decapitated in Karachi, Pakistan, after being kidnapped by a bunch of jihadis. BHL describes his book as a romanquete - an investigative novel. It`s in fact a variation on Tom Wolfe`s and Guy Talese`s new journalism: investigative journalism turbocharged by literature - sprinkled with a chic dash of metaphysical self-doubt. The literary influences are clear: Fyodor Dostoyevski and Baudelaire. BHL is fascinated by two main themes: the flower of evil (personified by Omar Sheikh, the intellectual mastermind of Pearl`s ordeal); and the double (Omar the killer as the double of the sacrificial lamb Pearl). Most of all, BHL is fascinated by Pearl as his own double. Pearl was an American Jewish journalist trying to come to grips with radical Islam. BHL is an French Jewish writer trying to deconstruct radical Islam.
BHL had one year, plenty of time and resources and at least four trips to Pakistan to weave his plot. The agenda couldn`t be more ambitious: BHL asks rhetorically ``what, in the beginning of a new century, turns abjection into desire and destiny?`` He tries to decode radical Islam, Osama bin Laden`s ``new terrorism``, the ``shock or non-shock`` of cultures and civilizations; he wants to know whether ``the crusader spirit and the combat against the `axis of evil` are the adequate response to the current theological-political madness``.
This all makes for gripping reading. BHL himself had already defined the best journalism as a mix of ``urgency and exigence``. He is a hell of a writer. But his whole journalistic-literary voyage - as fascinating as it turns out to be - ends up undermined by a fatal flaw. Stripped of ethnic, historical and political prejudice, BHL simply didn`t get what Pakistan is all about. Something`s wrong when a sophisticated philosopher and thinker tells us that Pakistan is nothing less than ``the house of the devil``.
Maybe this had something to do with his fixers. Every journalist working in Karachi, Islamabad and Peshawar since the heady days of the anti-USSR jihad in the 1980s knows that a good fixer is the key to open Pakistan`s multilayered Pandora`s boxes. Alternatively, maybe this had something to do with BHL psychedelically identifying himself so much with his double Pearl (``my equal, my brother`` - Baudelaire once again) that his hallucinations took over the narrative. For BHL, Pearl is a sublime martyr - while for many in South Asia he was little else than a Jewish American writer for the Wall Street Journal who landed in Muslim Pakistan from a spell in India without carefully assessing his new role.
BHL`s first hypothesis is that between ``the jihadis and the great liberal journalist, tolerant, open to the cultures of the world and a friend of Islam, there was a relationship of trust, almost of bonding``. During the first part of the investigation, BHL tries to enter the mind of the sacrificial lamb; the next part is flowers of evil territory, BHL trying to understand Omar Sheikh`s motives. BHL meticulously reconstitutes the last days and minutes of Daniel Pearl before he was beheaded by three subcontracted Yemenites in a desolate Karachi suburb. Omar Sheikh was to arrange the interview Daniel Pearl was so obsessed with: the interviewee would be Sheikh Mubarak Gilani, the leader of the al-Fuqrah subsect to which belonged the notorious shoe bomber Richard Reid.
From a literary point of view, the complex, secretive, tortured Omar character is infinitely more appealing than golden boy Pearl. But BHL chooses to interpret Omar as the Western double of Pearl: Omar himself was a Westernized Muslim, born in England and having received a perfectly English education. Omar`s ``master of terrorism`` was Masoud Azhar, the leader of the Pakistani jihadi group Jaish e-Mohammed, ``a mix of saint and serial killer``, a definition that could also be applied to Omar himself.
In perfect Oscar Wilde mode (``Each man kills the thing he loves``), one of BHL`s best intuitions is when he tells us where Omar - the personification of ``evil`` radical Islam - is coming from: ``This enemy of the West is a product of the West. This ardent jihadi was formed in the school of the enlightenment and progress. This Islamist who will yell at his trial that he kidnapped Daniel Pearl because he could not stand the hairdressers of Guantanamo shaving the skulls of Arab prisoners ... is the product of the best English education ... So might terrorism be a natural son of a diabolical couple - Islam and Europe?
As Omar Sheikh is painted as a villain of anti-Christ proportions, there is also a sexual explanation for his rage: ``Islamism and women ... This fear and sometimes this vertigo facing the female sex, I always thought they were the very basis of the fundamentalist desire ... the proof by Omar.`` BHL amplifies the sexual trauma of Islamists by probing Omar`s ``secret``: he suffers because he is caught in a double culture, switching from Pakistan in England to England in Pakistan. His desire is to belong. One thinks of the Saudis who lived quietly for years in the West and a few hours before September 11, 2001, were going to a sex shop, flirting with a Mexican whore and window-shopping lingerie.
The book picks up speed when BHL starts making the inevitable connections between jihadis and the Pakistani intelligence services. An example is the famous September 11, 2002 raid by a ``Pakistani power in panic that a ``satanic interview`` about to be broadcast by al-Jazeera proved that there was an al-Qaeda cell in the heart of Karachi. Khalid Shaikh Muhammad, the all-important al-Qaeda operations chief, was not there at the moment and once again evaded capture. The operation against the alleged brains behind September 11, again on a September 11, was supposed to be a ``birthday gift`` from the Pakistani government to the US. This leads BHL to proclaim that the kidnapping, then the murder of Daniel Pearl was an initial response from dissatisfied sectors of the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) to an America-accommodating Musharraf: ``Omar Sheikh, the Londoner who became a warrior of Allah, was instrumentalized by a branch of the ISI hostile to the evolution of Musharraf.`` A few pages later, we`re entitled to a little more nuance: ``Daniel Pearl was kidnapped and then murdered by Islamist groups manipulated, yes, by a faction of the services - the most radical, the most violent, the most anti-American ... This faction, from the beginning to the end of the affair, behaved itself as if it was very much at home in Musharraf`s Pakistan.``
The next step could only be the inevitable connection between ISI and al-Qaeda. An informant tells BHL ``how everything started by the dismantling ... of a cell making fake papers for al-Qaeda clandestines``; and how the investigation led to ``a trafficker specialized not only in fake papers but in the export of clandestine workers to Riyadh, 11 or 12-year-old kids selected in Karachi and Dacca to work as jockeys in camel races on the beaches of Dubai and, last but not least, al-Qaeda combatants exported, through the Oman Straits, to the Emirates, Yemen and other Middle East countries``. This man, the real target of the anti-terrorist operation of September 11, 2002, was not Ramzi bin al-Shibh (who was arrested) or alleged September mastermind Khalid Shaikh (who was not there), but Saud Memon, the owner of the lot where Pearl was kept captive, tortured, executed and buried. BHL describes it as ``a house belonging to a fake welfare organization which served as a front for bin Laden``. He is referring to the Islamic NGO al-Rashid Trust, which after September 11 made it to the US list of terrorist organizations.
For BHL, the ``house of the devil`` - or ``the terrorist Vatican`` - par excellence is the legendary Binori town mosque in Karachi, which has educated many a Taliban. He takes us on a guided tour. The mosque is where Masoud Azhar, Omar Sheikh`s mentor, founded Jaish e-Mohammed in the beginning of 2000, an ``organization that would lend its elite battalions to al-Qaeda``. The famous audio cassette of November 2002 where bin Laden talks about the attacks in Yemen, Kuwait, Bali and Moscow and renews his calls for jihad against the West, came from Binori town. For American, Indian and British intelligence, as well as for BHL, probably a raid on Binori town would be enough to dismantle most of radical Islam in Pakistan.
It will come as no surprise to anyone covering and following the ``war on terror`` that the best of BHL`s sources reveals himself to be a Saudi lawyer in Dubai - the Arab capital of big money and privileged Oriental crossroads. The lawyer paints a striking picture of Islamism as pure business: after all ``we draft the papers. We establish the contracts. And I can tell you that most of them don`t give a damn about Allah. They enter Islamism because, especially in Pakistan, it`s nothing other than a source of power and wealth.`` The Saudi lawyer confirms that ``very few people in Pakistan become Islamists by conviction or fanaticism. They are just looking for a family, a mafia, capable of protecting them from hard times.``
BHL is scandalized by these ``jihad golden boys``. And there`s no doubt these Islamist golden boys are very much aware of Omar Sheikh when he leaves Indian jails - as he was one of the three militants exchanged for the passengers of an Indian Airlines jet that was hijacked and landed in Kandahar in Afghanistan in December 1999.
When BHL starts to follow the money, his investigation really takes off. It all starts with the famous $100,000 wired to September 11`s chief operative Mohammed Atta`s account in the US by one Ahmad Umar Sheikh, following instructions by Pakistani General Ahmad Mehmoud - the ISI director general at the time. General Mehmoud was removed by Musharraf less than a month after September 11. The Pakistani press reported at the time that Mehmoud was removed because US investigations had proved a liaison between himself and none other than Omar Sheikh. So BHL then arrives at an even juicier hypothesis: ``Not only an Omar linked to al-Qaeda through its most spectacular terrorist operation - but of a collusion ... between al-Qaeda and ISI working together to destroy the Towers. For the Indian services, there`s no doubt about the association.``
Neo-conservatives may eventually be tortured by self-doubt, but Indian and Israeli intelligence will certainly love the fact that the information they shared led BHL to an explosive conclusion: ``The possible Pakistani responsibility in the September 11 attack remains the great unsaid in George Bush and Donald Rumsfeld`s America ... to admit that Ahmad is Omar and he wired the money ... wouldn`t it be to question the whole foreign policy which, already at the time, made Iraq as the enemy and Pakistan as an ally?``
Not only because of Saud Memon - the murder scene was on his property - and Binori town - the ``terrorist Vatican`` - BHL slowly becomes convinced that Daniel Pearl`s murder was ordered by al-Qaeda. It may be no more than fascinating literature, but BHL is persuasive. Omar, an unknown jihadi, is freed against the passengers of the hijacked Indian Airlines jet. He arrives in Kandahar as a hero - and is received by Taliban leader Mullah Omar himself, who presents him to none other than bin Laden. Bin Laden is vividly impressed by ``this rare mix of faith and culture, of fanaticism and competence``. So bin Laden starts thinking how he can profit from ``an ardent jihadi who doubles as an unrivalled financier, an expert in electronics and the Internet, as well as a connoisseur of the West and its mechanisms``.
One of BHL`s sources - as well as, he admits, Indian intelligence - tells him that Omar successively enters the Majlis al-Shura, al-Qaeda`s political council; conceives and operates al-Qaeda`s web sites; and in the role of a hungry trader installs a computer terminal in a Kandahar house permanently linked to the world`s major financial capitals: so the short selling that al-Qaeda profited from - and paid for - September 11 might have been the brainchild not of bin Laden, but Omar. BHL`s conclusions: ``Omar liberated by al-Qaeda and the ISI; Omar as an agent, very soon, of both al-Qaeda and the ISI; Omar as a precocious link between both organizations.`` No one has ever been able to verify it, but according to one of BHL`s sources, bin Laden called Omar ``my favored son``. So here we have Omar - the flower of evil who masterminded the killing of Daniel Pearl - as the spiritual son of bin Laden.
What about Daniel Pearl himself? The truth about his death may be much less heroic and more pedestrian than BHL claims. If we analyze what happened from a journalistic point of view, Pearl may have been merely a victim of media wars - of information treated as merchandise. He was a reporter unfamiliar with such an extremely complex beat as Pakistan, under pressure from the Wall Street Journal main office to find scoops capable of beating the New York Times or the Washington Post. What led him to his fate was a story in a rival American paper about the obscure Sheikh Gilani, leader of the Al-Fuqrah sect and alleged mentor of shoe bomber Richard Reid.
Pearl may have thought that he got a break to build a story on banned Islamist groups. For Asia Times Online`s own Pakistan-based Syed Saleem Shahzad, as well as for this correspondent, it is easy to see what happened next. He asked his fixer to try to get a meeting or an interview with Gilani. The fixer calls a journalist friend with close contacts with jihadi groups acting in Afghanistan and Kashmir. The journalist remembers a contact he saw a few times. He calls and sets up a meeting. Pearl and his fixer go to the meeting. Then they go to a house to see somebody who can lead them to Gilani. But the house is empty. They have to keep trying other leads. Then one day they call the same contact again and he says that he knows somebody who can take Pearl to Gilani. Pearl goes to yet another meeting and he finds the enigmatic Omar. It`s in the course of this tortuous process that a Western journalist operating in an Islamic hothouse has to proceed with ultimate care. If anything feels remotely weird, the whole enterprise has to be called off. Pearl was doing anything to get his scoop. When Omar saw him he immediately knew that he had found the perfect, gullible sacrificial lamb.
Gilani may not have been worth so much trouble. He was indeed the leader of al-Fuqrah - almost a subsect, with nothing to do with the big jihadi organizations. Even Moinuddin Haider, Pakistan`s Interior Minister, had never heard of al-Fuqrah before the Pearl affair - although some sources say that Gilani was Osama`s most committed follower in Pakistan. Al-Qaeda is a purely Arab organization. The International Islamic Front is an international organization - a de-territorialized federation of groups linked to emir bin Laden. Gilani was a member of neither. But according to some sources, he had spiritual ascendancy - maybe even ideological - over bin Laden: he is a pir, ``venerated master`` in urdu. Anyone familiar with Pakistan knows that a pir would never discuss such matters with an unknown, unchecked Western journalist.
BHL also advances the hypothesis that Daniel Pearl was investigating al-Qaeda`s American network - based on the fact that Gilani was linked to the ISI, but maybe also to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA): ``Could the key to the mystery of his death be found in the hard disks of agencies in Washington?`` What then: a nosy Pearl eliminated by an ISI-CIA tandem?
BHL writes that he was against Bush`s war on Iraq - but at the same time he blamed the world`s masses who claimed that ``it`s better to live as a slave under Saddam than to be free thanks to Bush``. This basic misunderstanding from his part will endear him to neo-conservatives, Americans or otherwise, as much as it will discredit him to anybody around the world whose principles opposed an illegal war.
BHL is certain that ``Pakistan is the roguest of all of today`s rogue states``. He is certain that ``between Islamabad and Karachi, a real black void is being formed, compared to which the Baghdad of Saddam Hussein was just a depot of out-of-date weapons``. BHL is dead sure that Pakistan is Apocalypse Now. This configures BHL as a Western darling of Indian intelligence. But one wonders how will this all be played out when the book is published in the US. Preemptive war against a nuclear Islamabad, anyone? Maybe Washington should wait to read an investigative novel by the flower of evil himself, the spiritual son of Osama bin Laden, the unfathomable Omar Sheikh.
Qui a tue Daniel Pearl? by Bernard-Henri Levy, Grasset et Fasquelle April, 2003. ISBN: 2246650518, Price: US$25, 538 pages.
Reviewed by Pepe Escobar
The subject was not breached when ``courageous leader`` Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf was received by George W Bush at Camp David this week. They talked of the Hizb-i-Islami leading the anti-American jihad in Afghanistan, they talked of jihadis not crossing the Line of Control in Kashmir, they talked of Osama bin Laden hiding in the tribal areas. ``Indispensable ally`` Musharraf received a promise of US$3 billion - but no F-16s. But had Bush asked Musharraf who killed American journalist Daniel Pearl, one wonders whether Musharraf would have come up with a proper answer.
Bernard-Henri Levy`s Qui a tue Daniel Pearl? (Grasset) is guaranteed to shake the foundations of neo-conservative land when an English translation is released before the end of the year. The book has become a best-seller in France, and subject to considerable media frenzy. No wonder: since his debut as a nouveau philosophe in the 1970s, BHL - a trademark signature - has meticulously fashioned himself to the status of dandy and arbiter supreme of the Parisian Left Bank intelligentsia. A brilliant, prolific writer coupled with shameless self-promotion, BHL always switched at ease from essay to film making, from Jean Paul Sartre to the gulag, from Bosnia to Charles Baudelaire, from trophy wife to a holiday palace in Marrakesh. Inevitably, he had to confront the top subject of the times - political Islam.
BHL starts his book on January 31, 2002, when Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was tortured and decapitated in Karachi, Pakistan, after being kidnapped by a bunch of jihadis. BHL describes his book as a romanquete - an investigative novel. It`s in fact a variation on Tom Wolfe`s and Guy Talese`s new journalism: investigative journalism turbocharged by literature - sprinkled with a chic dash of metaphysical self-doubt. The literary influences are clear: Fyodor Dostoyevski and Baudelaire. BHL is fascinated by two main themes: the flower of evil (personified by Omar Sheikh, the intellectual mastermind of Pearl`s ordeal); and the double (Omar the killer as the double of the sacrificial lamb Pearl). Most of all, BHL is fascinated by Pearl as his own double. Pearl was an American Jewish journalist trying to come to grips with radical Islam. BHL is an French Jewish writer trying to deconstruct radical Islam.
BHL had one year, plenty of time and resources and at least four trips to Pakistan to weave his plot. The agenda couldn`t be more ambitious: BHL asks rhetorically ``what, in the beginning of a new century, turns abjection into desire and destiny?`` He tries to decode radical Islam, Osama bin Laden`s ``new terrorism``, the ``shock or non-shock`` of cultures and civilizations; he wants to know whether ``the crusader spirit and the combat against the `axis of evil` are the adequate response to the current theological-political madness``.
This all makes for gripping reading. BHL himself had already defined the best journalism as a mix of ``urgency and exigence``. He is a hell of a writer. But his whole journalistic-literary voyage - as fascinating as it turns out to be - ends up undermined by a fatal flaw. Stripped of ethnic, historical and political prejudice, BHL simply didn`t get what Pakistan is all about. Something`s wrong when a sophisticated philosopher and thinker tells us that Pakistan is nothing less than ``the house of the devil``.
Maybe this had something to do with his fixers. Every journalist working in Karachi, Islamabad and Peshawar since the heady days of the anti-USSR jihad in the 1980s knows that a good fixer is the key to open Pakistan`s multilayered Pandora`s boxes. Alternatively, maybe this had something to do with BHL psychedelically identifying himself so much with his double Pearl (``my equal, my brother`` - Baudelaire once again) that his hallucinations took over the narrative. For BHL, Pearl is a sublime martyr - while for many in South Asia he was little else than a Jewish American writer for the Wall Street Journal who landed in Muslim Pakistan from a spell in India without carefully assessing his new role.
BHL`s first hypothesis is that between ``the jihadis and the great liberal journalist, tolerant, open to the cultures of the world and a friend of Islam, there was a relationship of trust, almost of bonding``. During the first part of the investigation, BHL tries to enter the mind of the sacrificial lamb; the next part is flowers of evil territory, BHL trying to understand Omar Sheikh`s motives. BHL meticulously reconstitutes the last days and minutes of Daniel Pearl before he was beheaded by three subcontracted Yemenites in a desolate Karachi suburb. Omar Sheikh was to arrange the interview Daniel Pearl was so obsessed with: the interviewee would be Sheikh Mubarak Gilani, the leader of the al-Fuqrah subsect to which belonged the notorious shoe bomber Richard Reid.
From a literary point of view, the complex, secretive, tortured Omar character is infinitely more appealing than golden boy Pearl. But BHL chooses to interpret Omar as the Western double of Pearl: Omar himself was a Westernized Muslim, born in England and having received a perfectly English education. Omar`s ``master of terrorism`` was Masoud Azhar, the leader of the Pakistani jihadi group Jaish e-Mohammed, ``a mix of saint and serial killer``, a definition that could also be applied to Omar himself.
In perfect Oscar Wilde mode (``Each man kills the thing he loves``), one of BHL`s best intuitions is when he tells us where Omar - the personification of ``evil`` radical Islam - is coming from: ``This enemy of the West is a product of the West. This ardent jihadi was formed in the school of the enlightenment and progress. This Islamist who will yell at his trial that he kidnapped Daniel Pearl because he could not stand the hairdressers of Guantanamo shaving the skulls of Arab prisoners ... is the product of the best English education ... So might terrorism be a natural son of a diabolical couple - Islam and Europe?
As Omar Sheikh is painted as a villain of anti-Christ proportions, there is also a sexual explanation for his rage: ``Islamism and women ... This fear and sometimes this vertigo facing the female sex, I always thought they were the very basis of the fundamentalist desire ... the proof by Omar.`` BHL amplifies the sexual trauma of Islamists by probing Omar`s ``secret``: he suffers because he is caught in a double culture, switching from Pakistan in England to England in Pakistan. His desire is to belong. One thinks of the Saudis who lived quietly for years in the West and a few hours before September 11, 2001, were going to a sex shop, flirting with a Mexican whore and window-shopping lingerie.
The book picks up speed when BHL starts making the inevitable connections between jihadis and the Pakistani intelligence services. An example is the famous September 11, 2002 raid by a ``Pakistani power in panic that a ``satanic interview`` about to be broadcast by al-Jazeera proved that there was an al-Qaeda cell in the heart of Karachi. Khalid Shaikh Muhammad, the all-important al-Qaeda operations chief, was not there at the moment and once again evaded capture. The operation against the alleged brains behind September 11, again on a September 11, was supposed to be a ``birthday gift`` from the Pakistani government to the US. This leads BHL to proclaim that the kidnapping, then the murder of Daniel Pearl was an initial response from dissatisfied sectors of the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) to an America-accommodating Musharraf: ``Omar Sheikh, the Londoner who became a warrior of Allah, was instrumentalized by a branch of the ISI hostile to the evolution of Musharraf.`` A few pages later, we`re entitled to a little more nuance: ``Daniel Pearl was kidnapped and then murdered by Islamist groups manipulated, yes, by a faction of the services - the most radical, the most violent, the most anti-American ... This faction, from the beginning to the end of the affair, behaved itself as if it was very much at home in Musharraf`s Pakistan.``
The next step could only be the inevitable connection between ISI and al-Qaeda. An informant tells BHL ``how everything started by the dismantling ... of a cell making fake papers for al-Qaeda clandestines``; and how the investigation led to ``a trafficker specialized not only in fake papers but in the export of clandestine workers to Riyadh, 11 or 12-year-old kids selected in Karachi and Dacca to work as jockeys in camel races on the beaches of Dubai and, last but not least, al-Qaeda combatants exported, through the Oman Straits, to the Emirates, Yemen and other Middle East countries``. This man, the real target of the anti-terrorist operation of September 11, 2002, was not Ramzi bin al-Shibh (who was arrested) or alleged September mastermind Khalid Shaikh (who was not there), but Saud Memon, the owner of the lot where Pearl was kept captive, tortured, executed and buried. BHL describes it as ``a house belonging to a fake welfare organization which served as a front for bin Laden``. He is referring to the Islamic NGO al-Rashid Trust, which after September 11 made it to the US list of terrorist organizations.
For BHL, the ``house of the devil`` - or ``the terrorist Vatican`` - par excellence is the legendary Binori town mosque in Karachi, which has educated many a Taliban. He takes us on a guided tour. The mosque is where Masoud Azhar, Omar Sheikh`s mentor, founded Jaish e-Mohammed in the beginning of 2000, an ``organization that would lend its elite battalions to al-Qaeda``. The famous audio cassette of November 2002 where bin Laden talks about the attacks in Yemen, Kuwait, Bali and Moscow and renews his calls for jihad against the West, came from Binori town. For American, Indian and British intelligence, as well as for BHL, probably a raid on Binori town would be enough to dismantle most of radical Islam in Pakistan.
It will come as no surprise to anyone covering and following the ``war on terror`` that the best of BHL`s sources reveals himself to be a Saudi lawyer in Dubai - the Arab capital of big money and privileged Oriental crossroads. The lawyer paints a striking picture of Islamism as pure business: after all ``we draft the papers. We establish the contracts. And I can tell you that most of them don`t give a damn about Allah. They enter Islamism because, especially in Pakistan, it`s nothing other than a source of power and wealth.`` The Saudi lawyer confirms that ``very few people in Pakistan become Islamists by conviction or fanaticism. They are just looking for a family, a mafia, capable of protecting them from hard times.``
BHL is scandalized by these ``jihad golden boys``. And there`s no doubt these Islamist golden boys are very much aware of Omar Sheikh when he leaves Indian jails - as he was one of the three militants exchanged for the passengers of an Indian Airlines jet that was hijacked and landed in Kandahar in Afghanistan in December 1999.
When BHL starts to follow the money, his investigation really takes off. It all starts with the famous $100,000 wired to September 11`s chief operative Mohammed Atta`s account in the US by one Ahmad Umar Sheikh, following instructions by Pakistani General Ahmad Mehmoud - the ISI director general at the time. General Mehmoud was removed by Musharraf less than a month after September 11. The Pakistani press reported at the time that Mehmoud was removed because US investigations had proved a liaison between himself and none other than Omar Sheikh. So BHL then arrives at an even juicier hypothesis: ``Not only an Omar linked to al-Qaeda through its most spectacular terrorist operation - but of a collusion ... between al-Qaeda and ISI working together to destroy the Towers. For the Indian services, there`s no doubt about the association.``
Neo-conservatives may eventually be tortured by self-doubt, but Indian and Israeli intelligence will certainly love the fact that the information they shared led BHL to an explosive conclusion: ``The possible Pakistani responsibility in the September 11 attack remains the great unsaid in George Bush and Donald Rumsfeld`s America ... to admit that Ahmad is Omar and he wired the money ... wouldn`t it be to question the whole foreign policy which, already at the time, made Iraq as the enemy and Pakistan as an ally?``
Not only because of Saud Memon - the murder scene was on his property - and Binori town - the ``terrorist Vatican`` - BHL slowly becomes convinced that Daniel Pearl`s murder was ordered by al-Qaeda. It may be no more than fascinating literature, but BHL is persuasive. Omar, an unknown jihadi, is freed against the passengers of the hijacked Indian Airlines jet. He arrives in Kandahar as a hero - and is received by Taliban leader Mullah Omar himself, who presents him to none other than bin Laden. Bin Laden is vividly impressed by ``this rare mix of faith and culture, of fanaticism and competence``. So bin Laden starts thinking how he can profit from ``an ardent jihadi who doubles as an unrivalled financier, an expert in electronics and the Internet, as well as a connoisseur of the West and its mechanisms``.
One of BHL`s sources - as well as, he admits, Indian intelligence - tells him that Omar successively enters the Majlis al-Shura, al-Qaeda`s political council; conceives and operates al-Qaeda`s web sites; and in the role of a hungry trader installs a computer terminal in a Kandahar house permanently linked to the world`s major financial capitals: so the short selling that al-Qaeda profited from - and paid for - September 11 might have been the brainchild not of bin Laden, but Omar. BHL`s conclusions: ``Omar liberated by al-Qaeda and the ISI; Omar as an agent, very soon, of both al-Qaeda and the ISI; Omar as a precocious link between both organizations.`` No one has ever been able to verify it, but according to one of BHL`s sources, bin Laden called Omar ``my favored son``. So here we have Omar - the flower of evil who masterminded the killing of Daniel Pearl - as the spiritual son of bin Laden.
What about Daniel Pearl himself? The truth about his death may be much less heroic and more pedestrian than BHL claims. If we analyze what happened from a journalistic point of view, Pearl may have been merely a victim of media wars - of information treated as merchandise. He was a reporter unfamiliar with such an extremely complex beat as Pakistan, under pressure from the Wall Street Journal main office to find scoops capable of beating the New York Times or the Washington Post. What led him to his fate was a story in a rival American paper about the obscure Sheikh Gilani, leader of the Al-Fuqrah sect and alleged mentor of shoe bomber Richard Reid.
Pearl may have thought that he got a break to build a story on banned Islamist groups. For Asia Times Online`s own Pakistan-based Syed Saleem Shahzad, as well as for this correspondent, it is easy to see what happened next. He asked his fixer to try to get a meeting or an interview with Gilani. The fixer calls a journalist friend with close contacts with jihadi groups acting in Afghanistan and Kashmir. The journalist remembers a contact he saw a few times. He calls and sets up a meeting. Pearl and his fixer go to the meeting. Then they go to a house to see somebody who can lead them to Gilani. But the house is empty. They have to keep trying other leads. Then one day they call the same contact again and he says that he knows somebody who can take Pearl to Gilani. Pearl goes to yet another meeting and he finds the enigmatic Omar. It`s in the course of this tortuous process that a Western journalist operating in an Islamic hothouse has to proceed with ultimate care. If anything feels remotely weird, the whole enterprise has to be called off. Pearl was doing anything to get his scoop. When Omar saw him he immediately knew that he had found the perfect, gullible sacrificial lamb.
Gilani may not have been worth so much trouble. He was indeed the leader of al-Fuqrah - almost a subsect, with nothing to do with the big jihadi organizations. Even Moinuddin Haider, Pakistan`s Interior Minister, had never heard of al-Fuqrah before the Pearl affair - although some sources say that Gilani was Osama`s most committed follower in Pakistan. Al-Qaeda is a purely Arab organization. The International Islamic Front is an international organization - a de-territorialized federation of groups linked to emir bin Laden. Gilani was a member of neither. But according to some sources, he had spiritual ascendancy - maybe even ideological - over bin Laden: he is a pir, ``venerated master`` in urdu. Anyone familiar with Pakistan knows that a pir would never discuss such matters with an unknown, unchecked Western journalist.
BHL also advances the hypothesis that Daniel Pearl was investigating al-Qaeda`s American network - based on the fact that Gilani was linked to the ISI, but maybe also to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA): ``Could the key to the mystery of his death be found in the hard disks of agencies in Washington?`` What then: a nosy Pearl eliminated by an ISI-CIA tandem?
BHL writes that he was against Bush`s war on Iraq - but at the same time he blamed the world`s masses who claimed that ``it`s better to live as a slave under Saddam than to be free thanks to Bush``. This basic misunderstanding from his part will endear him to neo-conservatives, Americans or otherwise, as much as it will discredit him to anybody around the world whose principles opposed an illegal war.
BHL is certain that ``Pakistan is the roguest of all of today`s rogue states``. He is certain that ``between Islamabad and Karachi, a real black void is being formed, compared to which the Baghdad of Saddam Hussein was just a depot of out-of-date weapons``. BHL is dead sure that Pakistan is Apocalypse Now. This configures BHL as a Western darling of Indian intelligence. But one wonders how will this all be played out when the book is published in the US. Preemptive war against a nuclear Islamabad, anyone? Maybe Washington should wait to read an investigative novel by the flower of evil himself, the spiritual son of Osama bin Laden, the unfathomable Omar Sheikh.
Qui a tue Daniel Pearl? by Bernard-Henri Levy, Grasset et Fasquelle April, 2003. ISBN: 2246650518, Price: US$25, 538 pages.
#21 Posted by veeresh on June 24, 2003 12:09:55 pm
a) What the Chinese will do with Tibet and Tibetans, they will do anyway.
b) The Dalai Lama will continue with his export business.
c) Aksai Chin, Siachen and points therein will become a nature biosphere and mountaineers will pay vast amounts to climb virgin peaks.
b) The Dalai Lama will continue with his export business.
c) Aksai Chin, Siachen and points therein will become a nature biosphere and mountaineers will pay vast amounts to climb virgin peaks.
#19 Posted by veeresh on June 24, 2003 10:34:16 am
Leon Uris died earlier today. One of the inspirations for a generation now greying.
Point is, the same author, writer, can look at an evolution, history if you will, with a variety of results. Take Exodus, Mila 18 and The Haj as examples.
India recognises China`s position on Tibet, as well as the ``one China`` policy, on the same date.
Decades later, this will also be interpreted variously in its wider ramifications vis-a-vis Pakistan, Taiwan, LOC, Aksai Chin, Siachen, Sikkim, Nagaland . . .
Point is, the same author, writer, can look at an evolution, history if you will, with a variety of results. Take Exodus, Mila 18 and The Haj as examples.
India recognises China`s position on Tibet, as well as the ``one China`` policy, on the same date.
Decades later, this will also be interpreted variously in its wider ramifications vis-a-vis Pakistan, Taiwan, LOC, Aksai Chin, Siachen, Sikkim, Nagaland . . .
#18 Posted by Studebaker on June 24, 2003 7:18:06 am
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#17 Posted by nazarhayatkhan on June 24, 2003 1:22:19 am
Romair # 14 & 15
We are always late in doing good things. Pakistan should have recognized Israel years back. We would have avoided a lot of bad internation Press which is in control of Israel friendly lobby.
If the Israeli occupation of Palestine is the excuse, we should now stop recognizing America which has occupied Iraq. It is just one of those many short sighted blunders that our policy makers have been making in past years.
A pilot with only basic Cessna flying can not do what they have done. At least I could not do.
But I believe that these people had 8-axis Simulator experience. 8-Axis simulator duplicates the exact cockpit switchology, sounds, three-dimensional view, actual feel.
If this is true, then a clever person may be able to descend, fly straight and into a building. I am sure in that Simulator they must have practiced the approaches and landing at the JFK where the Manhattan skyline is just next.
I do not have the full information on their experience so really I can not give you a solid answer.
#16 Posted by Romair on June 23, 2003 10:05:06 pm
Another reason why Pakistan needs to recognize Israel......to get people like Mr. Levy off its back.
Conspiracy theories are like certain body parts....everyone has one.....and the more influential get a chance to use theirs more than others......what is even more surprising is that others are willing to take so much interests in such conspiracy theories......I guess since they cannot be proven to be incorrect, people follow them. The real criteria should be for them to be proven correct.
``And when somebody writes that, tells us to our face what we know but seldom talk about, then maybe that person has more truth and strength than we have.``
Maybe. But does that mean that we should start believing all the conspiracy theories that person throws out, without trying to put facts together ourselves. Does this gentleman provide proof, facts, pictures, documents, witnesses with names who give statements in public? If yes, then he could be considered genuine. If not, then I am afraid, he is taking everyone for a ride, regardless of how much he, ``tells us to our face what we know but seldom talk about`` I think you need a better criteria than this for evaluating theories.......
Conspiracy theories are like certain body parts....everyone has one.....and the more influential get a chance to use theirs more than others......what is even more surprising is that others are willing to take so much interests in such conspiracy theories......I guess since they cannot be proven to be incorrect, people follow them. The real criteria should be for them to be proven correct.
``And when somebody writes that, tells us to our face what we know but seldom talk about, then maybe that person has more truth and strength than we have.``
Maybe. But does that mean that we should start believing all the conspiracy theories that person throws out, without trying to put facts together ourselves. Does this gentleman provide proof, facts, pictures, documents, witnesses with names who give statements in public? If yes, then he could be considered genuine. If not, then I am afraid, he is taking everyone for a ride, regardless of how much he, ``tells us to our face what we know but seldom talk about`` I think you need a better criteria than this for evaluating theories.......
#15 Posted by Romair on June 23, 2003 10:05:06 pm
A question for Nazarhayatkhan:
I looked at the tapes of the two airliners flying into the WTC, as well as followed the information about the one flying into the Pentagon. I have a bit of experience with flying, and was wondering whether you could provide furthur detailed insight.
The US reports stated that the hijackers had around 200 hours of flying time on small Cessna planes. They had some simulator training on Boeings, flying straight and level and, ``not landing or taking-off.`` Isn`t it extremely difficult for pilots with just this much simulator exprience, to take an airliner, in such stressful condition, with no radio contact and assistance, reach New York, approach the tower, descend perfectly and execute a perfect turn, and hit the target like that. I can understand an experienced pilot doing that with ease, but is it possible for a pilot with only 200 Cessna hours to do it?
Furthur more, the pilot that hit the Pentagon building must have carried out a perfect landing, without any kind of landing systems. He must have spotted the building from the air, and made a perfect approach, flared, and flown the aircraft perfectly during the flare, and placed it right on top of the Pentagon. All this in an area, where the person had zero flying experience, with zero beacons, ground markers etc. Wouldn`t it be quite difficult for even an experienced pilot to hit a building like that in an airliner with no assistance from landing systems, in an area he had never flown in before?
I know I couldn`t fly an airliner with just 200 Cessan flying hours, and a few hours in the simulator. It takes a few hours in the simulator, with no previous experience, just to figure out where all the switches are, and just to keep the plane straight and level. I talked to an airliner friend of mine, he agreed that with such limited exprience and that too on a small airplane, it would be difficult to make it to Manhattan, much less carry out a perfect turn right into the target. And all of this, while hijacking an airplane.
What would be your opinion?
I looked at the tapes of the two airliners flying into the WTC, as well as followed the information about the one flying into the Pentagon. I have a bit of experience with flying, and was wondering whether you could provide furthur detailed insight.
The US reports stated that the hijackers had around 200 hours of flying time on small Cessna planes. They had some simulator training on Boeings, flying straight and level and, ``not landing or taking-off.`` Isn`t it extremely difficult for pilots with just this much simulator exprience, to take an airliner, in such stressful condition, with no radio contact and assistance, reach New York, approach the tower, descend perfectly and execute a perfect turn, and hit the target like that. I can understand an experienced pilot doing that with ease, but is it possible for a pilot with only 200 Cessna hours to do it?
Furthur more, the pilot that hit the Pentagon building must have carried out a perfect landing, without any kind of landing systems. He must have spotted the building from the air, and made a perfect approach, flared, and flown the aircraft perfectly during the flare, and placed it right on top of the Pentagon. All this in an area, where the person had zero flying experience, with zero beacons, ground markers etc. Wouldn`t it be quite difficult for even an experienced pilot to hit a building like that in an airliner with no assistance from landing systems, in an area he had never flown in before?
I know I couldn`t fly an airliner with just 200 Cessan flying hours, and a few hours in the simulator. It takes a few hours in the simulator, with no previous experience, just to figure out where all the switches are, and just to keep the plane straight and level. I talked to an airliner friend of mine, he agreed that with such limited exprience and that too on a small airplane, it would be difficult to make it to Manhattan, much less carry out a perfect turn right into the target. And all of this, while hijacking an airplane.
What would be your opinion?
#14 Posted by dybbut on June 23, 2003 10:05:06 pm
a recent book( a best seller) came out, in which a clear link has been established showing RAW was responsible for 9/11, & that vajpayee & Advani, personally chalked out the plans , & yes later on after months george fernandes jumped in & we got the botched shoe bomber incident.
Unfortunately the book is in japanese, 12 of my friends discussed it only 6 knew japanese, & only 6 believed the author, you guess which 6.
What rubish is this, a review of a book in a language which you cant speak, give it a break man. stick to the beer & pizza.
FOR SR #12 & Urstruly# 13
Ralph Nader in a recent speech said that judging by the erosion of civil liberties post 9/11 , the U.S is 4 terror attacks away from becoming a fascist state, i think the figure of 4 terror attacks is a bit high!!
Unfortunately the book is in japanese, 12 of my friends discussed it only 6 knew japanese, & only 6 believed the author, you guess which 6.
What rubish is this, a review of a book in a language which you cant speak, give it a break man. stick to the beer & pizza.
FOR SR #12 & Urstruly# 13
Ralph Nader in a recent speech said that judging by the erosion of civil liberties post 9/11 , the U.S is 4 terror attacks away from becoming a fascist state, i think the figure of 4 terror attacks is a bit high!!
#13 Posted by Urstruly on June 23, 2003 7:11:40 am
SR # 12
I think it was and still is a common beleif in overwhelming number of Europeans and Americans (basically the white folk), prior to 9/11, that the colored people by nature like totalitarian authoritative governments and regimes. Such is the power of this mental conditioning that our very own people subscribe to this nonsense. You must have heard the phrase a million times that ``danda hi sab ko theek kar sakta hai``.
9/11 changed everything. Prior to that, for the past 800 years or so white folk had monoply over violence. As long as this violence remained unidirectional they claimed themselves to be the harbingers of liberty and freedom and to some degree enjoyed its benefits too. But now we can see that such were the hollow foundations of these ideas of liberty and freedom that just one incident has changed everything. Now all of them are in ``love`` with totalitarianism and authoritarianism.
The cause of this hollowness of these foundations has its origin in the idea of social contract. The social contract was never based on some principles or ethical values. Europeans lost their moral compass as they dumped their religion. The bargain was made between capitalists and people that people will be given some freedoms if they did not interfere in the affairs of capitalists (lasaize faire). I think that bargain is over now. But that will not end the people`s eternal quest to be free. There is a chance this time that people might see freedom and liberty as an expression of an ethical value and not as a bargain. And you know where they will find the answer.
#12 Posted by SR on June 22, 2003 11:54:28 pm
Regardless of what role the ISI did or did not play in the WTC-Pentagon attack, and irrespective of whether CIA or Mossad did or did not know it before hand, the present ground reality is that the post-911 political climate in the West, and particularly in the English speaking countries, is becoming dark, cold and windy..!! This is far more significant in terms of the future of democracy and individual rights than anything else. The arbitrary power of the governments is becoming greater, laws are becoming more draconian and civil libery is under attack everywhere.
We`ve seen what Patriot II threatens to do to the Bill of Rights in America, and now Australia is going a step further.
Never has Australia`s Parliament fallen lower than it will when it passes the ASIO (Australian Security Intelligence Organisation) Powers Bill, which will set up the political machinery for a police state. It will pass because the ``opposition`` Labor party has caved in.
In exchange for a few trifling amendments to this politically and morally obscene bill, such as raising the minimum detention age from 14 to 16, the opposition in Parliament gave up and stood aside after seventeen long months of effort. For three years - until the ``sunset clause`` comes in (if it comes in) - Australians will all be living in a police state similar, in all essentials, to the ones in East Germany, Stalinist Russia, Apartheid`s South Africa or General Pinochet`s Chile.
Central to the ASIO Powers Bill is DETENTION WITHOUT CHARGE!
The other central item is the imposition of FIVE YEARS IN JAIL FOR A REFUSAL TO ANSWER QUESTIONS WHILE IN THE HANDS OF ASIO.
The first of these items, detention without charge, cancels Habeas Corpus. This is the historical right of any person held by any agency of the state to be taken before a judge in open and public court and have the state explain to the judge under what heading of law that person was being held. But NOW, with this bill, a person held by ASIO can be held for seven days, solely in a place agreeable to ASIO up to and including such a person`s own home. A held person can ask for a lawyer to be present, but interrogation can begin before the lawyer even arrives. On top of that, the lawyer would be unable to stay there for the whole period of the seven days. And on top of THAT, ASIO can refuse any lawyer it happens not to like. This Australian law gives a new meaning to the term Kangaroo Court.
A detained person`s circumstances would be ``supervised`` by a serving or retired judge. There is next to nothing describing, what this sort of ``supervision`` amounts to. While ``detained`` by ASIO, a person can be interrogated in time-blocks of up to eight-hours straight - three times. It is HERE - where the five- year jail sentence comes in. A refusal to answer ANY question leads straight to that sentence.
This provision makes ASIO into a STAR CHAMBER COURT. That was the tool of the personal tyranny of Charles I in seventeenth-century Britain. This was the tyranny that the British Parliament rose up against and Oliver Cromwell`s ``martial law`` years followed which ultimately led to the ``Glorious Revolution`` of 1688.
Lastly, the right of an individual to maintain TOTAL SILENCE, the oldest valid action open to any individual held by the Crown or State, has been cancelled by this bill. Even before King John signed the Magna Carta in 1215, this was a recognised action upheld by the courts. The well known echo across the centuries has been seen on numerous cops and robbers TV shows: ``You have The RIGHT to remain SILENT...etc``
Any personal privacy, in all its forms including those upheld previously by law, is gone under this bill. ASIO can seek information in any way they choose. All professional privilege is gone. ASIO can ask any doctor, dentist, neighbour or friend whatever questions it likes. Journalists are especially at risk.
Any journalist can be asked by ASIO for his SOURCES. Failure to answer, of course, invokes the five-year jail term. This provision crudely challenges the foundation of a FREE PRESS. And with that goes the public`s right to know and to be told by journalists (or to tell journalists in total personal anonymity and safety) what is REALLY going on.
Like Herr Adolf Ashcroft in America, Prime Minister John Howard wants to resurrect the KGB, STASI, GESTAPO.
He has called it ASIO.
And here we are more concerned about what some rag tag group of naswar chewing, half starved, half mad fanatics did or did not do, while the world`s most powerful governmental machineries are gearing up to re-create totalitarianism.
...SR
PS: Sorry, for not commenting on the review itself, but this subject is a logical extension of the theme under review.
We`ve seen what Patriot II threatens to do to the Bill of Rights in America, and now Australia is going a step further.
Never has Australia`s Parliament fallen lower than it will when it passes the ASIO (Australian Security Intelligence Organisation) Powers Bill, which will set up the political machinery for a police state. It will pass because the ``opposition`` Labor party has caved in.
In exchange for a few trifling amendments to this politically and morally obscene bill, such as raising the minimum detention age from 14 to 16, the opposition in Parliament gave up and stood aside after seventeen long months of effort. For three years - until the ``sunset clause`` comes in (if it comes in) - Australians will all be living in a police state similar, in all essentials, to the ones in East Germany, Stalinist Russia, Apartheid`s South Africa or General Pinochet`s Chile.
Central to the ASIO Powers Bill is DETENTION WITHOUT CHARGE!
The other central item is the imposition of FIVE YEARS IN JAIL FOR A REFUSAL TO ANSWER QUESTIONS WHILE IN THE HANDS OF ASIO.
The first of these items, detention without charge, cancels Habeas Corpus. This is the historical right of any person held by any agency of the state to be taken before a judge in open and public court and have the state explain to the judge under what heading of law that person was being held. But NOW, with this bill, a person held by ASIO can be held for seven days, solely in a place agreeable to ASIO up to and including such a person`s own home. A held person can ask for a lawyer to be present, but interrogation can begin before the lawyer even arrives. On top of that, the lawyer would be unable to stay there for the whole period of the seven days. And on top of THAT, ASIO can refuse any lawyer it happens not to like. This Australian law gives a new meaning to the term Kangaroo Court.
A detained person`s circumstances would be ``supervised`` by a serving or retired judge. There is next to nothing describing, what this sort of ``supervision`` amounts to. While ``detained`` by ASIO, a person can be interrogated in time-blocks of up to eight-hours straight - three times. It is HERE - where the five- year jail sentence comes in. A refusal to answer ANY question leads straight to that sentence.
This provision makes ASIO into a STAR CHAMBER COURT. That was the tool of the personal tyranny of Charles I in seventeenth-century Britain. This was the tyranny that the British Parliament rose up against and Oliver Cromwell`s ``martial law`` years followed which ultimately led to the ``Glorious Revolution`` of 1688.
Lastly, the right of an individual to maintain TOTAL SILENCE, the oldest valid action open to any individual held by the Crown or State, has been cancelled by this bill. Even before King John signed the Magna Carta in 1215, this was a recognised action upheld by the courts. The well known echo across the centuries has been seen on numerous cops and robbers TV shows: ``You have The RIGHT to remain SILENT...etc``
Any personal privacy, in all its forms including those upheld previously by law, is gone under this bill. ASIO can seek information in any way they choose. All professional privilege is gone. ASIO can ask any doctor, dentist, neighbour or friend whatever questions it likes. Journalists are especially at risk.
Any journalist can be asked by ASIO for his SOURCES. Failure to answer, of course, invokes the five-year jail term. This provision crudely challenges the foundation of a FREE PRESS. And with that goes the public`s right to know and to be told by journalists (or to tell journalists in total personal anonymity and safety) what is REALLY going on.
Like Herr Adolf Ashcroft in America, Prime Minister John Howard wants to resurrect the KGB, STASI, GESTAPO.
He has called it ASIO.
And here we are more concerned about what some rag tag group of naswar chewing, half starved, half mad fanatics did or did not do, while the world`s most powerful governmental machineries are gearing up to re-create totalitarianism.
...SR
PS: Sorry, for not commenting on the review itself, but this subject is a logical extension of the theme under review.
#11 Posted by veeresh on June 22, 2003 9:16:49 pm
I await the English version, as mentioned before. I am just the messenger in this case.
The review was done by as impartial a group of French readers/speakers of 4 different nationalities, as I could assemble at very short notice. This short review is a brief distillate.
One note: As I get along in years, one thing I increasingly listen to is . . . ``what is the buzz on the streets?``
Can anybody on this board deny that there is a definite effort by parties unknown to glorify the September11 events with masses worldwide? And if street buzz is that these parties unknown are linked to Pakistan, then what do you and I think the street believes?
The review was done by as impartial a group of French readers/speakers of 4 different nationalities, as I could assemble at very short notice. This short review is a brief distillate.
One note: As I get along in years, one thing I increasingly listen to is . . . ``what is the buzz on the streets?``
Can anybody on this board deny that there is a definite effort by parties unknown to glorify the September11 events with masses worldwide? And if street buzz is that these parties unknown are linked to Pakistan, then what do you and I think the street believes?
#10 Posted by SameerJB on June 22, 2003 9:16:49 pm
A while back author of the book was on Charlie Rose show on PBS. Basically what he said was same as Veeresh and other reviewes have said about the book. What is missing though is that ISI sent its head, Lt. General Mahmood Ahmed, to USA 6 months beofre Sept. 11 to warn USA. Mossad has also supposed to have warned USA but neither could provide finer details. At least 2 of th 18 were known to CIA and NSC and their activities were monitored. This kind od information led to another French bestseller whose name and author I can not fully recall..author was somebody like Thierry Mayyan or Mayessan. His thesis was that US actually allowed it to happen bit did not realize the possibility of falling of towers or they actually took control of the plane from ground remote and they were never hijacked. French are good at conspiracy theories and twisted plots like Delicatassen and Hairdresser`s Husband movies
My complain to Veeresh dada is that whay kind of intelligent friends you have to discuss this book that lasted on bestseller list in France less than another book coming out about the same time whose Englsh Edition has just been published by Columbia University Press. Are you familiar with the book I am talking about. One by a German author whose thesis is that USA is trying to hide economic and monetary decline vis-a-vis Europe through turning world attention to terrorism and war in Afghanistan and Iraq. Have you heard of:
Weltmacht USA - Ein Nachruf
by Emmanuel Todd
It would be interesting to review this book for chowk. Any takers? FerozK?
My complain to Veeresh dada is that whay kind of intelligent friends you have to discuss this book that lasted on bestseller list in France less than another book coming out about the same time whose Englsh Edition has just been published by Columbia University Press. Are you familiar with the book I am talking about. One by a German author whose thesis is that USA is trying to hide economic and monetary decline vis-a-vis Europe through turning world attention to terrorism and war in Afghanistan and Iraq. Have you heard of:
Weltmacht USA - Ein Nachruf
by Emmanuel Todd
It would be interesting to review this book for chowk. Any takers? FerozK?
#9 Posted by dost_mittar on June 22, 2003 9:16:48 pm
Veeresh:
You served an appetizer but the meal was missing.
We have not seen any evidence of the direct involvement of ISI in demolishing WTC. What was the ISI to gain from such a misadventure? But it probably did have something to hide re. the Daniel Pearl case. What is known is that:
-Omar Sheikh was involved in sending funds to one of the bombers
-he most probably had some connection with the ISI, especially wrt his India-specific activities, which does not necessarily mean that he was their agent.
-ISI was desperate to shied Omar from the American justice system, probably the only case where Musharraf refused to bend to the American wishes. This is because Omar was openly threatening to expose the ISI if he was tried in the U.S.
-The U.S is fully aware of the ISI-lashkars connection. It is willing to ignore it as long as Musharraf is prepared to do their bidding. But they probably remind him of this nexus from time to time and threaten to expose it if he does not deliver. This keeps everyone happy, except the Indians, of course!
You served an appetizer but the meal was missing.
We have not seen any evidence of the direct involvement of ISI in demolishing WTC. What was the ISI to gain from such a misadventure? But it probably did have something to hide re. the Daniel Pearl case. What is known is that:
-Omar Sheikh was involved in sending funds to one of the bombers
-he most probably had some connection with the ISI, especially wrt his India-specific activities, which does not necessarily mean that he was their agent.
-ISI was desperate to shied Omar from the American justice system, probably the only case where Musharraf refused to bend to the American wishes. This is because Omar was openly threatening to expose the ISI if he was tried in the U.S.
-The U.S is fully aware of the ISI-lashkars connection. It is willing to ignore it as long as Musharraf is prepared to do their bidding. But they probably remind him of this nexus from time to time and threaten to expose it if he does not deliver. This keeps everyone happy, except the Indians, of course!
#8 Posted by Studebaker on June 22, 2003 9:16:48 pm
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