George
Soros, the billionaire
financier, accused the Bush
administration of deliberately
manipulating the aftermath of
September 11 and the arrest of
Padile to promote an
authoritarian
agenda. |
Edinburgh, Sunday, June 16, 2002
War on
terror: FBI 'guilty of cover-up' over
anthrax suspect NICK PETERS IN WASHINGTON AMERICAN investigators
know the identity of the killer who
paralysed the US by sending anthrax in the
post but will not arrest the culprit,
according to leading US scientists.
For several months the Federal Bureau
of Investigation has claimed it has few
leads and little evidence about the group
or individual who targeted politicians and
media organisations. Their failure to arrest a suspect has
compounded other failures of the American
security agencies to take action which
could have prevented the September 11
attacks on the Twin Towers and the
Pentagon. This week, the FBI and John
Ashcroft, the attorney general, were
at the centre of controversy when they
claimed that they had apprehended an
American citizen intent on detonating a
'dirty bomb', a conventional bomb which
would contaminate a large area with
radioactive material. Both were forced to admit that there
was no evidence that Jose Padile
had done little more than associate with
suspected al-Qaeda agents in Pakistan.
Last week scientists at Fort Detrick, the
US Army's top secret biological warfare
research centre at Fort Detrick, Maryland
said the FBI had looked at ways in which
anthrax could have been smuggled out of
the complex. At a time when the Bush administration
is beefing up America's Homeland Security
defences any indication of progress by the
FBI should be good news, but one prominent
and well-respected biowarfare expert
believes the FBI has not only known the
identity of the terrorist for months but
has conspired with other branches of the
US government to keep it secret. Dr Barbara Hatch Rosenberg,
director of the biological warfare
division at the Federation of American
Scientists, first accused the FBI of
foot-dragging in February with a scathing
investigation that included a portrait of
the possible perpetrator so detailed that
it could only match one person. Rosenberg
said she knows who that person is and so
do a top-level clique of US government
scientists, the CIA, the FBI and the White
House. "Early in the investigation," Rosenberg
told Scotland on Sunday, "a number
of inside experts, at least five that I
know about, gave the FBI the name of one
specific person as the most likely
suspect. That person fits the FBI profile
in most respects. He has the right skills,
experience with anthrax, up-to-date
anthrax vaccination, forensic training,
and access to the US Army Medical Research
Institute for Infectious Diseases (AMRIID)
and its biological agents through
2001." Rosenberg's profile suggests that the
suspect is a middle-aged scientist with a
doctoral degree who works for a CIA
contractor in Washington DC. She adds he
has to know or have worked closely with
Bill Patrick, the weapons
researcher who holds five secret patents
on how to produce weapons-grade anthrax,
that he suffered a career setback last
summer that embittered him and
precipitated his campaign and that he has
already been investigated by the FBI. Most crucially, she believes the
suspect has in the past actually conducted
experiments for the government to test the
response of the police and civil agencies
to a bioterror attack. "It has been part
of the suspect's job to devise bioterror
scenarios," Rosenberg said. "Some of these
are on record. He is known to have acted
out at least one of them, in hoax form,
perhaps as part of an assignment to test
responses. Some hoax events that have
never been solved, including several
hoax-anthrax events, also correspond to
his scenarios and are consistent with his
whereabouts." The question she wants the FBI and the
Bush administration to answer is, why it
has taken so long to arrest this man? In
the unlikely event that the government
divulges all it knows about what she now
believes to be a full blown cover-up,
Rosenberg said responsibility can be
expected to fall on a number of government
agencies, all with a vested interest in
shielding the truth. "Either the FBI is under pressure from
the Pentagon or CIA not to proceed because
the suspect knows too much and must be
controlled forever from the moment of
arrest," she said, "or the FBI is
sympathetic to the views of the biodefence
clique or the FBI really is as incompetent
as it seems." Rosenberg's analysis suggests a
combination of all three. The American
defence establishment guards its secrets
well and given the suspect's covert work
on their behalf their reluctance to see
him publicly exposed appears natural.
Equally there is evidence that some of the
suspect's colleagues are not unhappy with
the fallout from his terror attacks. Rosenberg cites David Franz, a
former commander of
USAMRIID who
earlier this year said of the anthrax
campaign: "I think a lot of good has come
from it. From a biological or a medical
standpoint, we've now five people who have
died, but we've put about $6bn in our
budget into defending against
bioterrorism." As for FBI incompetence there are few
in America today who have any doubt that
the venerable agency made a serious of
terrible errors before 9/11 and has
conspicuously failed to conduct a solid
investigation since. Earlier this week,
congressmen questioned George
Tenet, the director of the CIA, about
the arrest of Padile and the claims made
about his mission. The congressmen were
concerned that the attorney general was
unduly alarmist about the nature of the
plans Padile had made. It appeared that Padile's arrest was
announced to bolster the image of the FBI
and emphasise the continuing threat to the
US. Instead the announcement raised
questions about why Padile was arrested on
arriving in the US rather than being
watched to establish the identity of his
associates and the source of the
radioactive material he would need for a
dirty bomb. George Soros, the billionaire
financier, accused the Bush administration
of deliberately manipulating the aftermath
of September 11 and the arrest of Padile
to promote an authoritarian agenda. '"I
feel that what happened was that Ashcroft
(the attorney general) basically detonated
a 'dirty bomb' plot. The plot is his. The
detonation is his. The Bush administration
is exploiting the terrorist threat for its
purposes, to generate fear and to overcome
constitutional constraints on the use of
force,' he said. Related
items on this website: - FBI's
top anthrax suspect is not an Arab.
Anything but...
- July
2001 story shows FBI warned Ashcroft
not to fly commercial airlines
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