Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts

Friday, October 23, 2009

Mass man accused of plot to kill U.S politicians

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MINGORA, PAKISTAN - FEBRUARY 25:  Pakistani Ar...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

BOSTON (AP) -- A Massachusetts man and two friends tried and bootless to get into agitator training camps and again plotted to annihilate two prominent U.S. politicians and randomly shoot bodies at American arcade malls, authorities said Wednesday.

Tarek Mehanna, who recently accomplished at a Muslim academy in Worcester, was arrested early Wednesday at his parents' suburban Boston home. Mehanna was charged with conspiring with two other men - an American now in Syria and another man who is allied with authorities - to provide abutment to terrorists.

Ultimately, the leash never came abutting to pulling off an attack. Authorities say they never got the agitator training they sought - that the men told friends they were angry down because of their nationality, ethnicity or inexperience, or that the bodies they'd hoped would get them into such camps were either in jail or on a religious pilgrimage.

The men abandoned the capital attack plans afterwards their weapons acquaintance said he could find alone handguns, not automatic weapons.

The men acclimated code words such as "peanut butter and jelly" for fighting in Somalia and "culinary school" for agitator camps, and talked extensively of their admiration to "die on the battlefield," according to cloister documents.

Mehanna, who has accomplished math and adoration at Alhuda Academy, fabricated a defiant cloister actualization hours afterwards his arrest. He banned to stand to hear the charge adjoin him and assuredly did - tossing his chair audibly to the attic - alone afterwards his father urged him to do so.

"This really, really is a show," his father, Ahmed Mehanna, said as his son was ! actualit y led away in handcuffs. When asked if he believed the charges adjoin his son, he said, "No, absolutely not."

Prosecutors said Mehanna worked with two men from 2001 to May 2008 on the conspiracy that, over time, intended to "kill, kidnap, batter or injure" soldiers and two politicians who were associates of the controlling annex but are no longer in office. Authorities banned to analyze the politicians and said they were never in danger.

Acting U.S. Attorney Michael Loucks said the men justified the planned attacks on malls because U.S. civilians pay taxes to abutment the U.S. government and because they are "nonbelievers," Loucks said. He banned to analyze the targeted malls.

Mehanna - who received a doctorate in 2008 from the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy in Boston, where his father is a professor - allegedly conspired with Ahmad Abousamra, who authorities say is now in Syria.

Mehanna, 27, is actuality captivated without bail until his next cloister actualization on Oct. 30.

"I'm assured that the American bodies will put abreast their fears and instead rely on the fairness guaranteed by our Constitution," said his attorney, J.W. Carney Jr. "Mr. Mehanna is entitled to that."

Rola Yaghmour, 20, of Shrewsbury and her ancestors are friends with the Mehannas and she said she couldn't believe the new charges adjoin Mehanna, calling him a "good man."

"He's not going to go crazy in a mall. There's no way he would do article like that," she said. "I read it and I was laughing, and I was like, 'They have to be kidding.' Because there's no way he would do article like that. It makes no sense. I was in shock. That's not like him at all nor his family, annihilation of them at all."

Mehanna aboriginal was arrested in November and charged with lying to the FBI in December 2006 when asked the whereabouts of Da! niel Mal donado, who is now confined a 10-year prison sentence for training with al-Qaida to overthrow the Somali government.

Authorities said Wednesday that Mehanna and his conspirators had contacted Maldonado about getting automatic weapons for their planned capital attacks, but he told them he could alone get handguns.

Court abstracts filed by the government say that in 2002, Abousamra became frustrated afterwards again actuality alone to accompany terror groups in Pakistan - aboriginal Lashkar e Tayyiba, again the Taliban.

"Because Abousamra was an Arab (not Pakistani) the LeT camp would not accept him, and because of Abousamra's lack of experience, the Taliban camp would not accept him," Williams wrote in the affidavit.

Mehanna and Abousamra traveled to Yemen in 2004 in an attempt to accompany a agitator training camp, according to cloister documents.

Mehanna allegedly told a friend, the third abettor who is now allied with authorities, that their trip was a abortion because they were unable to ability bodies affiliated with the camps.

Abousamra said he was alone by a terror group when he sought training in Iraq because he was American, authorities said.


Monday, October 19, 2009

Iran bombing kills 5 Revolutionary Guard leaders

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TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- A suicide bomber killed five senior commanders of the powerful Revolutionary Guard and at least 37 others Sunday near the Pakistani border in the heartland of a potentially escalating Sunni insurgency.

The attack - which also left dozens wounded - was the most high-profile strike against security forces in an outlaw region of armed tribal groups, drug smugglers and Sunni rebels known as Jundallah, or Soldiers of God.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad promised sharp retaliation. But a sweeping offensive by authorities is unlikely.

Iranian officials have been reluctant to open full-scale military operations in the southeastern border zone, fearing it could become a hotspot for sectarian violence with the potential to draw in al-Qaida and Sunni militants from nearby Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The region's top prosecutor, Mohammad Marzieh, was quoted by the semi-official ISNA news agency as saying Jundallah claimed responsibility for the blast in the Pishin district near the Pakistani border.

There was no immediate statement directly from the group, which has carried out sporadic kidnappings and attacks in recent years - including targeting the Revolutionary Guard - to press their claims of persecution in the Shiite government and officials.

In May, Jundallah said it sent a suicide bomber into a Shiite mosque in the southeastern city of Zahedan, killing 25 worshippers.

The latest attack, however, would mark the group's highest-level target. It also raised questions about how the attacker breached security around such a top delegation from the Revolutionary Guard - the country's strongest military force, w! hich is directly linked to the ruling clerics under Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The official Islamic Republic News Agency said the victims included the deputy commander of the Guard's ground forces, Gen. Noor Ali Shooshtari, as well as a chief provincial Guard commander, Rajab Ali Mohammadzadeh. The others killed were Guard members or tribal leaders, it said.

The agency quoted the provincial forensics director, Abbas Amian, as saying 42 bodies had been handed over to his department.

More than two dozen others were wounded, state radio reported.

The commanders were entering a sports complex to meet tribal leaders to discuss Sunni-Shiite cooperation when the attacker detonated a belt fitted with explosives, IRNA said.

Ahmadinejad - who counts on support from the Revolutionary Guard - vowed to strike back.

"The criminals will soon get the response for their inhuman crimes," IRNA quoted him as saying.

But controlling the scrubland and arid hills along the southeastern borders is a huge challenge that has been out of Iran's reach.

Drug traffickers ferry opium and other narcotics through the cross-border badlands - a key source of income for the Taliban in Afghanistan and the ethnic Baluchi tribes that straddle the three-nation region and include members of Jundallah. Iran has pleaded for more international help to cut off the drug routes and criminal gangs.

Iran also has accused Jundallah of receiving support from al-Qaida and the Taliban, though some analysts who have studied the group dispute such a link.

"There is no evidence of outside help for Jundallah from wider militant networks," said Mustafa Alani, director of security and terrorism studies at the Gulf Research Center in Dubai. "It's a homegrown group that moves across the borders within fel! low Balu chi tribes. It is very hard to control the border."

In an attempt to boost security in the region, Iran in April put the Revolutionary Guard directly in control of the Sistan-Baluchistan Province in Iran's southeastern corner.

The 120,000-strong Guard also controls Iran's missile program, guards its nuclear facilities and has its own ground, naval and air units.

The Revolutionary Guard led the blanket crackdown on dissident after Ahmadinejad's disputed re-election in June. But the attack Sunday appeared to have no link to the political showdowns.

State television accused Britain of supporting Jundallah, without providing any evidence.

The Revolutionary Guard blamed the attack on what it called the "global arrogance," a reference to the United States.

On the eve of talks about Tehran's nuclear program, Washington was quick to react.

State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said the United States condemned what he called an "act of terrorism." Reports of alleged U.S. involvement are "completely false," he said.

Iran's parliamentary speaker, Ali Larijani, told lawmakers that the bombing was aimed at further destabilizing the uneasy border region with Pakistan and Afghanistan.

"The intention of the terrorists was definitely to disrupt security in Sistan-Baluchistan Province," Larijani said.

Iranian officials summoned Pakistan's charge d'affairs in Tehran to lodge allegations that "terrorists" use bases in Pakistan to carry out attacks against Iran, IRNA reported.

In Quetta, Pakistan, police official Akbar Sanjrani said Iran had closed at least one border crossing. He said Iranian authorities did not give a reason for blocking the route, but Sanjrani speculated it was related to the bombing.

Pakistan's Fore! ign Offi ce spokesman, Abdul Basit, also rejected Iranian claims that Jundallah's leader is in Pakistan.

"We are struggling to eradicate the menace of terrorism," Basit told Geo TV.

The group also has claimed responsibility for a February 2007 car bombing that killed 11 members of the Revolutionary Guard near Zahedan.

Despite Iran's claims of an al-Qaida link, Chris Zambelis, a Washington-based risk management consultant who has studied Jundallah, said in a recent article that there is no evidence al-Qaida is supporting the group. He does note, however, that the group has begun to use the kinds of suicide bombings associated with the global terror network.

"Jundallah's contacts with the Taliban are most likely based on jointly profiting from the illicit trade and smuggling as opposed to ideology," Zambelis wrote in the July issue of West Point's CTC Sentinel.

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Associated Press writer Abdul Sattar in Quetta, Pakistan, contributed to this report. Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.


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