Secret papers claim the feared assassin was hired to find links between Saddam and al-Qa'ida.
By Robert
Fisk
October 25,
2008 "The
Independent"
-- -Iraqi
secret
police
believed
that the
notorious
Palestinian
assassin Abu
Nidal was
working for
the
Americans as
well as
Egypt and
Kuwait when
they
interrogated
him in
Baghdad only
months
before the
Anglo-American
invasion of
Iraq.
Hitherto
secret
documents
which are
now in the
hands of The
Independent
– written by
Saddam
Hussein's
brutal
security
services for
Saddam's
eyes only –
state that
he had been
"colluding"
with the
Americans
and, with
the help of
the
Egyptians
and
Kuwaitis,
was trying
to find
evidence
linking
Saddam and
al-Qa'ida.
President
George Bush
was to use
claims of a
relationship
with al-Qa'ida
as one of
the reasons
for his 2003
invasion,
along with
Iraq's
possession
of weapons
of mass
destruction.
Western
reports were
to dismiss
Iraq's claim
that Abu
Nidal
committed
suicide in
August 2002,
suggesting
that
Saddam's own
security
services
murdered him
when his
presence
became an
embarrassment
for them.
The secret
papers from
Iraq suggest
that he did
indeed kill
himself
after
confessing
to the
"treacherous
crime of
spying
against this
righteous
country".
The final
hours of Abu
Nidal, the
mercenary
whose
assassinations
and
murderous
attacks in
20 countries
over more
than a
quarter of a
century
killed or
wounded more
than 900
civilians,
are revealed
in the set
of
intelligence
reports
drawn up for
Saddam's
"presidency
intelligence
office" in
September of
2002. The
documents
state that
Egyptian and
Kuwaiti
intelligence
officers had
asked Abu
Nidal, whose
real name
was Khalil
al-Banna, to
spy for them
"with the
knowledge of
their
American
counterparts".
Five days
after his
death,
Iraq's head
of
intelligence,
Taher Jalil
Habbush,
told a press
conference
in Baghdad
that Abu
Nidal had
committed
suicide
after Iraqi
agents
arrived at
the
apartment
where he was
hiding in
the city,
but the
secret
reports make
it clear
that the
notorious
Palestinian
had
undergone a
long series
of
interrogations
prior to his
violent
demise. The
records of
these
sessions
were never
intended to
be made
public and
were written
by Iraqi
"Special
Intelligence
Unit M4" for
Saddam.
While Abu
Nidal may
have lied to
his
interrogators
– torture is
not
mentioned in
the reports
– the
documents
appear to be
a frank
internal
account of
what the
Iraqis
believed his
mission in
Iraq to be.
The papers
name a
Kuwaiti
major, a
member of
the ruling
Kuwaiti al-Sabbah
family, as
his
"handler"
and state
that he was
also tasked
to "perform
terrorist
acts inside
and outside
Iraq". His
presence in
the country
"would
provide the
Americans
with the
pretext that
Iraq was
harbouring
terrorist
organisations,"
the reports
say.
"Coded
messages
indicate
that the
Kuwaitis
asked him
indirectly
to find out
whether al-Qa'ida
elements
were present
in Iraq. Our
conclusions
were
confirmed
when he [Abu
Nidal]
started to
mitigate his
actions with
irrational
answers when
asked about
the data
against him.
He attempted
to sidetrack
his answers
by not being
specific and
referring to
historical
matters. It
was noted by
the
investigators
that he went
from short,
ambiguous
and unclear
replies to
generalities
... he
seemed
perturbed
... But once
he became
convinced of
the weight
of the
evidence
against him
concerning
his
collusion
with both
the American
and Kuwaiti
intelligence
apparatuses
in
co-ordination
with
Egyptian
intelligence,
he realised
that his
treacherous
crime of
spying
against this
righteous
country had
been exposed
..."
Abu Nidal
was no
stranger to
Iraq. He had
operated
from
Baghdad,
Damascus and
the Libyan
capital of
Tripoli when
the regimes
wanted to
use him as a
"gun for
hire". It
was Iraq
which paid
him to
organise the
attack on
the Israeli
ambassador
to London,
Shlomo Argov,
in 1982, an
attempted
assassination
which
prompted
Israel to
accuse
Yasser
Arafat of
responsibility
and to begin
its
disastrous
invasion of
Lebanon, and
Colonel
Muammur
Gaddafi
later
established
a close
relationship
with Abu
Nidal. In
1985, his
crazed
gunmen
attacked
Israeli-bound
passengers
at Rome and
Vienna
airports,
killing a
total of 18
people. His
biographer
Patrick
Seale, who
suggests
that for
some time
Abu Nidal
even worked
for Israel's
Mossad
intelligence
agency, has
written of
how, when he
feared
treachery in
his own
ranks, a
suspected
spy would be
buried
alive, fed
through a
tube for
days and
then – if
Abu Nidal's
"court"
deemed death
appropriate
– a bullet
would be
fired down
the tube.
His own
interrogation
at the hands
of Saddam's
secret
police, will
therefore
appear
equally
appropriate
punishment
for so cruel
a man. Among
the other
crimes of
which he was
accused in
the Iraqi
intelligence
report was
the
preparation
of 14
booby-trapped
suitcase
bombs to be
used on
foreigners –
Swiss and
Austrian,
according to
the
intelligence
file – in
the northern
Kurdish area
of Iraq, at
the time a
US-supported
"safe
haven", and
an attempt
to recruit
new members
for his
so-called
Fatah
Revolutionary
Council
among
Palestinians
wounded by
the Israelis
in the West
Bank and
Gaza who
were
recovering
in Baghdad
hospitals.
There are
some
oddities in
the report
and some
unanswered
questions.
It says, for
example,
that Abu
Nidal
originally
infiltrated
Iraq from
Iran on a
false Yemeni
passport
years
earlier, but
that this
was
facilitated
by his own
representative
in Kuwait,
named as
Nabil Uthman.
Abu Nidal
was said to
have
communicated
to Kuwait
via coded
messages
sent through
Lebanon and
Dubai. The
papers give
his date of
birth as
1939 – he is
believed to
have been
born in
Jaffa in
what was
then
Palestine in
1937 – and
state that
he resided
in Libya in
1984 but
"had no
links with
the Libyan
authorities".
He is also
stated to
have been
imprisoned
by the
Egyptian
security
services for
two months.
The man who
is said to
have
provided Abu
Nidal with a
"safe house"
in Baghdad
was
interrogated
in 2002
alongside
the
Palestinian
and is named
as
Abdulkareem
Mohammed
Mustapha.
Could Abu
Nidal really
have entered
Iraq from
Iran, whose
own
intelligence
services,
would surely
have
questioned
him? Could
Abu Nidal
have lived
in secret in
the Baathist
state of
Iraq without
Saddam's own
mukhabarat
finding him?
And for how
long was he
interrogated?
The
documents
give us no
answers to
these
questions.
His end is,
however,
recorded
bleakly.
"Upon being
asked to
accompany
those
charged with
guarding him
to a more
secure
location to
continue the
interrogation
procedures,
he requested
that he be
allowed to
change his
clothes. On
entering his
bedroom, he
committed
suicide.
Unsuccessful
attempts
were made to
resuscitate
him ..."
Nothing is
known of the
fate of
Abdulkareem
Mustapha,
only that he
was
"submitted
to court".
But we do
know where
Abu Nidal
now lies.
"The corpse
of Sabri al-Banna",
the final
report
concludes,
"was buried
on 29/8/2002
in al-Karakh's
Islamic
cemetery [in
Baghdad].
Until a
final
resting
place is
found, a
marker
designates
the place of
burial and
it was
documented
on video as
well as on
still
photographs
as 'M7'." No
"final
resting
place" for
this savage
man appears
ever to have
been found.
Years of
terror: A
man as
feared as
Bin Laden
Abu Nidal,
was once as
feared as
Osama bin
Laden. His
most
notorious
attacks
included:
*1978 His
"Black June"
movement
blamed for
murdering
PLO members
in London,
Paris,
Madrid,
Brussels,
Kuwait and
Rome.
*1982
Israeli
ambassador
to Britain,
Shlomo Argov,
shot in
Mayfair,
leaving him
permanently
paralysed.
*1984
Jordanian
airliner
attacked by
rocket on
take-off
from Athens.
Assassinations
included the
British
cultural
attaché in
Athens and
the British
deputy high
commissioner
in Mumbai.
*1985
Egyptian
airliner
hijacked –
six
passengers
murdered and
60 killed
when the
plane is
stormed by
Egyptian
commandos
*1985 Gunmen
massacre 18
and wound
120 in
attacks on
El Al ticket
desks at
Vienna and
Romeairports,
bottom left.
*1986
Machine-gun
attack kills
22 in a
synagogue
inIstanbul;
at least 20
passengers
and crew are
killed when
Pan Am jet
hijacked in
Karachi,
bottom
right.
*1988 Nine
killed and
98 wounded
when
gunmenattack
the Greek
cruise ship
the City of
Poros.