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 Rashid Rauf: "an international enigma", Dead or alive or disappeared?
Bridget
Posted: Sep 27 2008, 05:51 PM





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QUOTE
Terror plots and conspiracy theories: the hunt for Rashid Rauf

He is one of the world's most wanted men, linked to a July 21 attacker and implicated in the airline bomb plot. Yet Rashid Rauf is still at large. Kim Sengupta reveals the latest sighting of a notorious fugitive and asks: is he being sheltered by Pakistan's security services?

Saturday, 27 September 2008

user posted image
Rashid Rauf appears at an anti-terrorism in court in Rawalpindi in December 2006

The rugged and beautiful valley of Balakot, rolling down to the blue-green waters of the Kunhar river near the Kashmir border in Pakistan, used to be a popular tourist destination before the devastating earthquake of three years ago wreaked havoc.

Reconstruction has been slow but one development which was back in business fast, supposedly with money siphoned from millions of pounds of international aid, has been a training camp used by Islamist militants.

It is in this area that Rashid Rauf, the 27-year-old from Birmingham accused of being a key organiser of a notorious plot to blow ten airliners out of the sky was said to have been spotted in March this year – his first sighting since his amazing escape from Pakistani police three months previously. The so-called "liquid bomb" plot was one of the most audacious terrorist conspiracies to be uncovered and led to sweeping security measures at airports around the world. The trial ended with seven men convicted of charges in relation to the plot, with a computer studies student Abdulla Ahmed Ali identified as the ringleader in court. They all face a retrial on more serious charges but the man described by law agencies as the real "mastermind", Rashid Rauf, remains on the run as Britain's most wanted terrorist.

He is reported to have broken cover again a month later around the 25th and 26th April. Looking thin and pale, with his once sparse beard down to his chest, he was spotted in Bahawalpur, around 400 miles south of the Pakistani capital, Islamabad. If true this was a remarkably bold move, for this was the same town where he had been arrested by Pakistani police in August 2006 in connection with the airliner plot. He had also chosen to make his appearance at a meeting of the leadership of Jaish-e-Mohammed, a supposedly banned Muslim extremist group, which could have been raided by the country's security forces.

The Balakot camp, in the Manserah district, is run by Jaish-e-Mohammed, and has previous links with extremist UK Muslims, including Shahzad Tanweer, one of the 7/7 bombers. The reasons why Rauf, who is said to have been a conduit for al-Qa'ida in the "liquid bomb" plot, remains free to mix with a Jihadi group with continuing links to British Muslims is shrouded in the realpolitik of espionage and terrorism. It also raises questions about who are the real paymasters of the baker's delivery man from the Midlands who became such an important terrorist target.

Rauf first officially became a subject of police interest over the murder of his uncle Mohammed Saeed, stabbed to death on his way home from work in what was described as a frenzied attack, in Birmingham in 2002. Rashid, who had been working at a bakery in the Bordesley Green area of Birmingham, started by his father, Abdul Rauf, fled to Pakistan soon after his uncle's death and headed for Bahawalpur, a dusty backwater, where the extended family of his wife, the daughter of an imam, were based.

Among them was his brother-in-law, Maulana Masood Azhar who founded Jaish-e-Mohammed at the Binori mosque in Karachi. The terrorist group was outlawed by Pakistan's then ruler, General Pervez Musharraf, after pressure from the US following the 9/11 attack. In reality, like many other groups officially banned in Pakistan, Jaish continued to operate under other guises. It uses the Balakot camp, known as Harkat al-Mujaheddin, to supply fighters in Afghanistan, and carries out attacks in India and Pakistan, where it was responsible for the country's first sustained wave of suicide bombings.

Jaish-e-Mohammed was also suspected of attempting General Musharraf's assassination, which surprised analysts as it is said to have a close working relationship with elements within ISI, the Pakistani secret police. The group went on to forge links with a number of Islamist groups, including, say the Pakistani authorities, al-Qa'ida and its bombmakers, who are suspected of causing the devastating blast at the Marriot Hotel in Islamabad last weekend.

Rauf's radicalisation, according to those who knew him, had begun long before he went to Bahawalpur. There is believed to have been a political element to his uncle's murder and he was in contact with people from an extremist background. Rauf's father had helped set up Crescent Relief, a charity based at Ilford, in Essex, which raised and sent more than £100,000 to Pakistan following the earthquake of 2005. A significant portion of that was said to have been diverted to Islamic militants. There is, however, nothing to suggest that Mr Rauf senior, who stepped down as a director of the charity in 2003, knew about terrorists benefiting from donations.

The fugitive Rauf took the first name of Khalid while living in Bahawalpur, where he is said to have made contact with a senior al-Qa'ida operative, Abu Obadiah al-Masri, to plan the airliner attacks. The police then became aware of his identity. By that time British security agencies had uncovered the airliner plot and the Pakistani authorities were requested to track Rauf but not arrest him as it would have alerted the UK players in the illicit operation.

That is precisely what happened on 7 August 2006 before British investigators had gathered what they considered enough evidence to successfully prosecute the plotters. This was the prime reason given when the defendants, although convicted of other charges, were cleared of conspiracy to blow up the planes.

Peter Clarke, then the head of Counter Terrorism Command, said of Rauf's arrest: "This was not good news, we were at a critical point in building our case against them. If they got to hear that he had been arrested they might destroy evidence and scatter it to the four winds. More worrying still, if they were tipped off to the arrest they might panic and mount a desperate attack."

According to some sources within hours of Rauf's arrest someone connected with him had tried to contact the plotters in the UK asking them to launch the attacks as soon as possible. "The plotters received a very short message 'go now'," said Franco Frattini, the European Union's security commissioner, who was briefed by John Reid, then Home Secretary. "I was convinced by the British authorities this message exists." Why Rauf was arrested at that particular point is an issue of continuing controversy. The official Pakistani explanation was that there were fears that he may flee to Afghanistan. It is also said the Americans ordered his arrest because of concerns that the terrorists might slip through the net. There is another view that the arrest was ordered by the ISI to use Rauf to backs claims that the plot had originated in Afghanistan. This version of events was dismissed in the West as a desperate attempt to shift blame.

Britain had no extradition treaty with Pakistan, but the foreign minister said it might be willing to deport Rauf, who holds dual British and Pakistani nationality, if a request was made. In December 2006 a judge in Pakistan threw out terrorism charges against Rauf but he was remanded in custody, accused of possessing explosives and forged identity papers, regarded as holding charges while details were being sorted out for him to be sent back to the UK.

Rauf escaped in December 2007 while being taken back to his place of incarceration, Adiala prison, near Rawalpindi, after a court appearance in Islamabad. His jail record stated: "The accused is a dangerous person and involved in international activities. Therefore, he needs strict security. If any mishap happens while he is travelling, the in-charge police will be responsible." In the event his police escort, just two constables, allowed him to leave their van to travel in his uncle's car, stopped off for lunch at a branch of McDonald's and then allowed him to go into a mosque by himself for afternoon prayers.

Rauf was not seen again. The two constables, Mohammad Tufail and Nawabzada Khan, said they looked for him and were given a lift back to the police station by the uncle who then disappeared. An interim report into the escape concluded: "This is not a case of negligence but a case of criminal collusion."

Nine police officers were sacked over Rauf's escape. And that is where the matter appears to have ended. Al-Masri, the al-Qa'ida official Rauf had allegedly been working with, has, according to security sources, subsequently died of natural causes.

Few in the know in Pakistan accept that a bunch of provincial policemen were responsible for one of the most high profile prisoners in Pakistan, Rauf, fleeing with such ease. His lawyer, Hashmat Ali Habib, said in an interview: "You could call it a 'mysterious disappearance' if you like, but not an escape. The Pakistanis are simply not interested in handing him over to the British. They never have been, although it is not clear why not." Mr Habib says he is certain who was responsible, but like many in his country, he is afraid of publicly blaming the ISI for anything. One Pakistani official, who says he despairs of the Islamist "subversion" of his country, said: "It should not be difficult to understand why Rauf could not be sent to England... Can you imagine what kind of stuff Rauf may reveal under cross-examination in court in Britain?"

Previous experience has shown, however, that protection provided by a court does not necessarily lead to candour. At the 2006 trial of the group accused of plotting to blow up the Bluewater shopping centre and the Ministry of Sound nightclub one of the defendants, Omar Khayyam, 24, had given evidence at the Old Bailey that he was at a training camp in Pakistan where he had seen ISI officials giving lessons in bomb-making. Then, at the start of a day's proceedings, he said: "I just want to say that the ISI has had a word with my family in Pakistan regarding what I have been saying about them. I think they are worried I might end up revealing more about them and right now the priority for me has to be the safety of my family there. Much as I might want to go on and clarify matters I am going to stop. I am not going to discuss anything relating to the ISI any more."

Independent
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Bridget
Posted: Nov 22 2008, 10:25 AM





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QUOTE
Page last updated at 10:09 GMT, Saturday, 22 November 2008

UK militant 'killed in Pakistan'

user posted image
Rashid Rauf escaped from police custody in Pakistan in 2007

A fugitive British militant linked to an alleged UK plot to use liquid bombs to blow up transatlantic airliners has been killed in Pakistan, reports say.

Pakistani media said Rashid Rauf, born in Birmingham, was killed in a US air strike in North Waziristan, a haven for militants and the Taleban.

Mr Rauf, on the run after escaping from a Pakistani jail, was alleged to have helped the group planning the attacks.(yet wasn't even mentioned during the trial afaik)

Three men were convicted in the UK in September of conspiracy to murder.

News of the liquid bomb plot paralysed global air travel, prompting authorities to implement stringent security measures at airports around the world.

Rashid Rauf was arrested in Pakistan on 9 August 2006, at the request of US authorities, who feared he was about to disappear into the remote north-west of the country.

One day later authorities in the UK and the US implemented strict security measures at airports, fearing possible bomb attacks.

Hundreds of flights were delayed at airports around the world with massive disruption at major UK terminals and in the US, amid security service fears that militants were planning to mix liquids into lethal explosives.

Terrorism charges against the Briton were eventually dropped but he remained under detention in Pakistan as a "preventative measure".

Mr Rauf, who is thought to have Pakistani citizenship through his family connections, then escaped custody in December 2007 while on his way to an extradition hearing under police guard.

West Midlands Police in the UK were seeking his extradition from Pakistan in connection with a separate case over the suspicious death of an uncle.

'Safe haven'

Several Pakistani TV channels reported that Mr Rauf was one of five people killed on Saturday by a presumed US attack in the country's remote north-western region.

Unnamed Pakistani intelligence sources said that a wanted Egyptian militant, Abu Zubair al-Masri, was among the others killed.

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However, the BBC has so far been unable to independently confirm the news.

Islamist militants use the mountainous tribal areas along the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan as a safe haven for training and resupply.

The US regularly uses pilotless drones to attack militant targets in the region, a tactic that has caused growing resentment among Pakistan's leaders.

On Thursday the government summoned the US ambassador in Islamabad to protest one day after an attack deep inside Pakistani territory killed five people - including at least one alleged militant.

Pakistan says the constant missile strikes infringe its sovereignty. The BBC's Barbara Plett, in Islamabad, says the attacks spark widespread anger in Pakistan - especially among tribal figures.

In that context, Saturday's attack will be reported in Pakistan as another violation of Pakistan's sovereignty and not for the possible killing of Rashid Rauf, our correspondent says.

The US says the insurgents use the territory to launch attacks against coalition forces in Afghanistan.

Islamabad has been pursuing a policy of ad-hoc peace deals with local Taleban commanders.
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amirrortotheenemy
Posted: Nov 22 2008, 10:44 AM





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QUOTE
U.S. missile kills four in North Waziristan

Updated at: 0905 PST, Saturday, November 22, 2008


PESHAWAR: A missile strike by a suspected US drone killed at least four militants and injured six others early Saturday in North Waziristan.

The attack on a house in Alikhel village came just two days after Pakistan lodged a protest with the U.S. ambassador over missile attacks on its territory.

The strike destroyed a militant hideout in the village of Alikhel in North Waziristan, killing at least four militants and injuring six others, an intelligence officer told a foreign news agency.

Source


QUOTE
Spokesman: Pakistan summons U.S. envoy over missile strikes
www.chinaview.cn 2008-11-20 19:37:16

ISLAMABAD, Nov. 20 (Xinhua) -- Pakistan Thursday summoned U.S. Ambassador Anne Patterson to lodge protest with her over a fresh U.S. missile strike in Pakistan's northwest, which killed at least six people.

"A strong protest was lodged by the foreign secretary on the two missiles fired by U.S. drones on a residential compound in Bannu district on Nov.19, 2008," Foreign Office spokesman Muhammad Sadiq told reporters Thursday at a weekly briefing.

"The foreign secretary emphasized that continued drone attacks undermined public support for government's counter-terrorism efforts. He stressed that these attacks must be stopped," Sadiq said. "The ambassador assured that Pakistan's concern and position would be conveyed to the U.S. government."

The spokesman said that there was no understanding of "Don't ask, don't tell" between Pakistan and the United States about drone attacks.

Sadiq also said that British Foreign Secretary David Miliband would visit Pakistan next Wednesday for exchange of views with the Pakistani leadership on the regional situation, particularly developments in Afghanistan and the common fight against terrorism and extremism.

Miliband is expected to call on Pakistani President Asif Zardari, Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani and hold in-depth discussions with Foreign Minister Makhmood Shah Mahmood Qureshi.

He will also call on Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.

Source


QUOTE
3 Cops Killed In Bannu Checkpost Attack

Saturday, November 22, 2008 at 10:31 am Under Pakistan News  33 views

BANNU: At least three policemen were killed when unknown militants fired rocket-propelled grenades at a security checkpost in Bannu here late night Friday.

According to ARY OneWorld, the incident occurred in Mandaan Police Station where militants attacked a security checkpost with light weapons, killing at least three cops on spot. A cop also suffered bullet injuries in the incident.

The miscreants flee the scene on retaliation of security personnel present at the post, says DPO Bannu.

Heavy contingent of paramilitary forces have been sent in the area in search of the miscreants.

Source


QUOTE
Pakistan army practises shooting drone aircraft

Reuters

Published: November 21, 2008

By Zeeshan Haider

Pakistani soldiers practised shooting at pilotless "drone" aircraft on Friday, the military said a day after the government lodged a protest with the U.S. ambassador over drone missile strikes in Pakistani territory.

Anti-aircraft guns and short-range surface-to-air missiles were used during the exercise conducted at a desert range near the city of Muzaffargarh in the central Pubjab province.

"The elements of Army Air Defence demonstrated their shooting skills by targeting the drones flying at different altitudes," the military said in a statement.

Air defence commander Lieutenant-General Ashraf Saleem praised the "precision and agility" of the gunners.

Pakistan is bristling over a series of missile strikes by U.S. drones targeting al Qaeda and Taliban militants in the lawless tribal regions along the Afghan border in recent weeks.

The U.S. forces have carried out more than 20 such drone attacks in the last three months, reflecting U.S. impatience over militants from Pakistan fuelling the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan and fears that al Qaeda fighters in northwest Pakistan could plan attacks in the West.

A U.S. commando raid on September 3 led to a diplomatic storm, and there has not been any subsequent incursion by ground troops.

But the controversy over the drones flared again after the latest missile strike on Wednesday hit a target in Bannu district in North West Frontier Province, deeper inside Pakistani territory and south of the semi-autonomous Waziristan tribal region that has borne the brunt of the attacks.

Protesting the strike in Bannu during a session of the National Assembly, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani voiced hope that the incoming U.S. administration of President-elect Barack Obama would exercise more restraint.

Pakistan says the attacks violate its sovereignty, undermine efforts to win public support for the fight against militancy, and make it harder to justify the U.S. alliance.

(Reporting by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Paul Tait)

Source


QUOTE
Pakistani chief minister urges end to US missile strikes

3 hours ago

HONG KONG (AFP) — The chief minister of Pakistan's most populous province called Saturday for Washington to stop aerial missile strikes on the nation's soil, as the latest raid killed four more suspected militants.

Shahbaz Sharif, chief minister of Punjab and the president of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party, said the strikes targeting Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants were only stoking tensions with Washington's "war on terror" ally.

"This is creating anger in Pakistan. This is creating friction between our two countries," Sharif, the brother of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, told AFP in an interview.

"I hope there's no further tension and escalation of friction, but no sovereign country can allow this to happen," he said. "Pakistan is a sovereign, independent country and our territory, our independence cannot be flouted."

Sharif said he hoped the incoming administration of US president-elect Barack Obama would stop such strikes and help reduce the current tensions with the Pakistan government of President Asif Ali Zardari.

"President-elect Obama taking over the reins next January should result in better understanding of Pakistan's problems and difficulties and sensitivities and should result in better cohesion between the two countries," he said.

He said Obama should "disallow his forces to enter Pakistan and engage with Pakistan in a manner where we consult with each other."


"We should be given a free hand. We are a sovereign country. There should be no intrusion and we should consult with each another like two friendly countries as we have always been," he added.

His comments came as Pakistan security officials said an overnight missile strike by a suspected US drone killed an Al-Qaeda operative along with at least three other militants in a northwestern Pakistani tribal district.

US spy planes have carried out more than 20 attacks in recent months and Islamabad this week lodged a strong protest with Washington over the strikes.

"It is for Pakistan and Pakistanis to deal with this problem within the country," Sharif said.

He also backed negotiations with militants, as proposed by President Hamid Karzai of neighbouring Afghanistan, if talks resulted in lasting peace.

"If Karzai is negotiating with Taliban and if the Brits are supporting negotiations with Taliban, what is the harm in Pakistan holding talks with them under broad daylight, as long as it results in improvement in the situation?"

Sharif, along with his brother, was exiled under the government of Pervez Musharraf, who came to power in a 1999 coup and turned Pakistan into a loyal US ally after the September 11 attacks on the United States in 2001.

Source


QUOTE
U.S. missile kills five in North Waziristan

Updated at: 1000 PST, Saturday, November 22, 2008 


PESHAWAR: At least five militants, including three foreigners, were killed and six others injured when a suspected US missile struck a house early Saturday in North Wazirsistan.

The strike destroyed a militant hideout in the village of Alikhel in North Waziristan, killing at least five militants and injuring six others.

The attack on a house in Alikhel village came just two days after Pakistan lodged a strong protest with the U.S. ambassador over missile attacks on its territory.

Source


QUOTE
U.S. issues travel advisory for Pakistan

Updated at: 1050 PST, Saturday, November 22, 2008


WASHINGTON: The U.S. State Department has issued a warning for American citizens traveling to Pakistan.

In a travel advisory issued here on Saturday, the State Department has advised the American officials in Pakistan to avoid unnecessary stay in hotels in Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore and Peshawar.

The fresh advisory has been issued in the wake of rising attacks by Taliban and Al-Qaeda in Pakistan particularly along western border. European and American citizens could be attacked in Pakistan, it warned.

Earlier, a warning was issued in October this year in which some staff members of the U.S. Consulate in Peshawar were also directed to shift to Islamabad on temporary basis.

Source


QUOTE
Rashid Rauf, Abu Al-Asr among five killed in U.S. missile strike

Updated at: 1225 PST, Saturday, November 22, 2008


PESHAWAR: Al-Qaeda’s operatives Rashid Rauf and Abu Al-Asr Al Misri have been reportedly killed in suspected U.S. missiles strikes in North Waziristan on Saturday.

A U.S. spy plane fired two missiles early Saturday at the house of one Khaliq Noor in Alikhel area of North Waziristan, killing five people, including three foreigners, and injuring six others.

The attack came just two days after Pakistan lodged a strong protest with the U.S. ambassador over missile attacks on its territory.

Source


QUOTE
British terror mastermind Rashid Rauf 'killed in US missile strike'
A fugitive British terrorist has been killed in a US missile strike in Pakistan.

By Andrew Alderson, Chief Reporter
Last Updated: 8:30AM GMT 22 Nov 2008

user posted image
Rauf has been on the run since escaping from a Pakistani jail nearly a year ago Photo: AP

Rashid Rauf, 27, who was born in Birmingham, was killed along with at least three other militants in the attack on the house of a local tribesman in the North Waziristan area,

A US drone targeted the home in the village of Alikhel, part of a district known as a stronghold for al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

"The transatlantic bombing plot alleged mastermind Rashid Rauf was killed along with an Egyptian al-Qaeda operative in the US missile strike in North Waziristan," a senior security official said.

Rauf, who has been on the run after escaping from a Pakistani jail nearly a year ago, was said to have played a key role in a liquid bomb plot targeting transatlantic airliners in 2006. Three men were convicted in Britain two months ago of conspiracy to murder, although several others were acquitted.

Rauf, a British national who used to live in Birmingham, escaped from Pakistani authorities after appearing before a judge in an Islamabad court in December last year. At the time, he could have faced extradition to Britain within weeks.

After the escape, Khalid Pervez, a city police official, said that Rauf managed to open his handcuffs and evade police guards taking him back to Adiala prison in the nearby city of Rawalpindi.

After the escape, 12 policemen were questioned and two had been accused of assisting the escape or negligence. Despite a huge manhunt, he was never recaptured.

Rauf was arrested in Pakistan in August 2006 along with seven other suspects, after a tip-off from British intelligence, over alleged attempts to blow up 10 transatlantic jets.

News of the liquid bomb plot paralysed global air travel, prompting authorities to implement stringent security measures at airports around the world.

Police believe that the plan was for different passengers to carry peroxide-based liquid explosive in drinks containers and detonators disguised as electronic devices and combine them on board.

The arrests sparked a security alert and mass flight cancellations as well as restrictions on carry-on luggage.

A dual citizen of Britain and Pakistan, Rauf was married to a relative of Maulana Masood Azhar, the head and founder of Jaish-e-Mohammed, an Islamist militant group in Pakistan that has been linked to al-Qaeda. Azhar has lived in Bahawalpur, a city in eastern Pakistan where Rauf had also settled.

A senior Pakistani official called Rauf "an al-Qaeda operative with linkages in Afghanistan",

Rauf is understood to have left Birmingham following the stabbing to death of his uncle, Mohammed Saeed, 54, near his home in Alum Rock in April 2002.

Source


QUOTE
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) - Pakistani television channels reported that Rashid Rauf, a British Islamist militant with al Qaeda links, was killed along with an Egyptian militant by a U.S. missile strike in the North Waziristan tribal region of Pakistan Saturday.

...

They named the dead Egyptian as Abu Zubair al-Masri. Arab casualties are usually taken as a sign of an al Qaeda presence.

...

The attack Wednesday that sparked the diplomatic protest was unusual in that it took place deeper in Pakistani territory, in Bannu district, an area outside the semi-autonomous tribal lands bordering Afghanistan where most other attacks have focussed.

An Arab killed in the attack in Bannu was identified by a Pakistani intelligence officer as a known al Qaeda operative, Abdullah Azam al-Saudi, though there has been no other corroboration.

A rocket attack by militants killed three policemen at a checkpost in Bannu overnight, officials said.

(Reporting by Zeeshan Haider; Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore; Editing by David Fox)

Source


This post has been edited by amirrortotheenemy on Nov 22 2008, 10:45 AM
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Bridget
Posted: Nov 23 2008, 01:57 AM





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QUOTE
From The Sunday Times
November 23, 2008

Hunt for Rashid Rauf that ended with hellfire

A British terror suspect was killed by US forces in Pakistan yesterday. MPs want to know: did they tell Britain first?

At 10pm on Friday night the tribesmen in the villages of North Waziristan heard a sound they have learnt to fear. The hum of American reconnaissance planes high above the lawless tribal lands that span the Pakistan-Afghan border usually presages an imminent strike by Predator drones, targeting the Taliban and Al-Qaeda fighters who shelter in their midst.

There have been more than 20 such attacks since August, but this time it appeared to be a false alarm. The locals were relieved when the sound faded at midnight.

Three hours later, however, they were woken by explosions in Khaisoor, as three Hellfire missiles from a Predator destroyed a mud-built bungalow in the village.

Inside, among the five people killed and six injured, were Rashid Rauf, the British militant alleged to have masterminded a plot to blow up transatlantic airliners in 2006, and two senior Al-Qaeda comrades, Abu Nasr Al-Misri and Abu Zubair Al-Masri, according to Pakistani intelligence sources.

The bungalow belonged to Khaliq Noor, who locals say is not a Taliban figure but who rented it out to the militants. They would have regarded the house as the safest of havens. The village is a Taliban stronghold; it was here that the Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud and Pakistan government officials signed a 2005 “peace deal” that the Americans regarded as a surrender to terrorism.

But their location had been betrayed, either by their own use of a mobile telephone, or by the spies and special forces tracking them. Senior Pakistani government sources say the attack was lined up by the country’s intelligence services who tipped off their American counterparts about Rauf’s whereabouts. They added that he, rather than the two Arabs, was the main target of the attack.

After the bombing, Taliban fighters under the local commander Aleem Kha will stand trial next year charged with the alleged plot.

Rauf had been tracked by British, American and Pakistani intelligence ever since he escaped from the custody of the Pakistani authorities in mysterious circumstances earlier this year. Now, he had been found and eliminated.

RAUF was born in Pakistan but was brought up in the Midlands after his family emigrated to the UK in the 1980s. He first came to the attention of police in 2002 when his uncle, Mohammed Saeed, was murdered in Birmingham.

Then a 21-year-old, Rauf had been working as a delivery driver at a bakery in the Bordesley Green area of Birmingham, started by his father Abdul Rauf. Another employee was Tayib Rauf, his younger brother, subsequently arrested over the Heathrow liquid bomb plot but later released without charge. There is nothing to suggest the family was aware of Rauf’s activities.

A few weeks after Saeed was stabbed to death on his way home from work in what was described as a frenzied attack, Rauf fled to Pakistan, where he has been ever since.

As the West Midlands police issued an international warrant for his arrest, he went to stay with relatives in Bahawalpur, a remote backwater where the extended family of his wife was based.

There Rauf came under the influence of Masri, one of the men also believed to have been killed yesterday and a top Al-Qaeda bombmaker and operations expert. Together, it is believed they planned the alleged airliner attacks.

Rauf’s role remains murky. His name cropped up during Operation Overt, the covert surveillance operation run by Scotland Yard’s counter-terrorist command in the spring of 2006. His movements then became the subject of close scrutiny, but the Pakistanis were asked not to arrest him so as not to alert the alleged British cell.

There were other links that rang alarm bells. Intelligence reports suggested Rauf was linked to Ibrahim Muktar, the leader of the failed July 21 suicide bomb plot that targeted London in 2005. Pakistani intelligence has suggested he was the link between senior Al-Qaeda figures there and in Afghanistan and cells in Britain.

In early August 2006, the Pakistani intelligence service (ISI) became concerned that Rauf might be planning to flee to a remote tribal area. The Pakistanis swooped, setting off a chain of events that led to more than 20 arrests in the UK for the alleged airliner plot.

Peter Clarke, who as head of Scotland Yard’s counter-terrorism command was in overall charge of Operation Overt, yesterday said he could not discuss Rauf because of a forthcoming trial. But earlier this year he expressed his bitter disappointment at what he saw as Rauf’s premature arrest.

“This was not good news,” he said. “We were at a critical point in building our case. If word got out that he had been arrested evidence might be destroyed and scattered to the four winds. More worrying still was the prospect of a desperate attack.”

In December 2006 a judge in Pakistan dismissed terrorist charges against Rauf. He was, however, remanded in jail on lesser charges while preparations were made for his deportation to the UK.

A year later he managed to escape while on his way back to Adiala prison from a court hearing. In a bizarre lapse of security, which raised immediate suspicions of collusion, his police escort of just two officers allowed him to stop off for lunch at McDonald’s. He disappeared after being told he could go into a mosque to worship unaccompanied. Until yesterday, that was his last contact with the authorities.

RAUF’S apparent killing is just one part of a wider assault by America on the tribal areas, with at least 20 such attacks having taken place since the summer. Like the previous strikes, this one was planned by a special unit from the CIA’s counter-terrorism centre, with the logistics carried out by military commanders based in Bahrain and Kuwait.

The attacks were stepped up earlier this year following the visit of CIA director Michael Hayden and other high-ranking US security officials to Pakistan. Under a deal agreed with the country’s then president, Pervez Musharraf, the US would have virtually unrestricted authority to attack border areas in the country. Pakistan would then officially deny any knowledge of the attacks and publicly condemn them for domestic political purposes.

The new strategy is based on an assessment that the next major Al-Qaeda attack on the West will originate from the country’s tribal areas. It was this assessment that is thought to be behind a warning issued three months ago by Lord West, the security minister, that: “There is another great plot building up again and we are monitoring this.”

The new intensity of American attacks followed the approval this summer by President George W Bush of more relaxed rules of engagement for American forces in the area. Previously the Pentagon required “90%” confidence that a “high-value target” was at a location before approving a Predator strike. Now that threshold was dropped to 50%-60%.

However, even British commanders are wary of their effectiveness, given the resentment they produce among locals. One has described them as “utter madness”.

They seem likely to continue. Barack Obama, the US president-elect, has vowed to step up the hunt for Osama Bin Laden, the Al-Qaeda leader, regardless of borders.

Bruce Riedel, a counter- terrorism expert and adviser to Obama, spoke approvingly of this weekend’s mission. “Rauf epitomises the Pakistan-UK connection that Al-Qaeda is trying to exploit to attack Britain and the United States,” he said. “He also has ties to Kashmiri terror groups closely aligned with Al-Qaeda.”

Last night British officials were saying they were still seeking formal confirmation of the identities of those killed in the missile strike, but questions will be raised about what, if anything, London knew about an attack by coalition forces that resulted in the death of a British citizen.


Officially, Britain is not told of impending American missile attacks on terrorist figures and both MI5 and MI6 state that they do not get involved in assassinations.

The arrangements under which the CIA consults with Britain about such strikes remain a closely guarded secret, but it seems hard to believe that, given the intensity of interest in Rauf, the agencies here would not have known that the Americans had tracked him down.

Yesterday British intelligence officials refused to say whether they were aware of Rauf’s location, although if Pakistani intelligence was aware it is certain that both MI6 and MI5 had been told.

The attack has alarmed some MPs who say it raises important questions about Britain’s co-operation with America in the war on terror. MPs have been probing the role of MI5 and other agencies in Pakistan, following allegations that MI5 officers may have supplied questions to Pakistani intelligence officers who subsequently tortured detainees.

Andrew Dismore, the Labour chairman of the parliamentary committee on human rights, said he would be referring the matter to the committee for possible investigation.

“This is a very serious matter, particularly if the attack was based on intelligence provided by the British security agencies. We can investigate whether British security services had involvement in providing intelligence concerning British nationals in Pakistan. I anticipate this is a matter the committee might like to follow up.

“If there is any suggestion of complicity of the UK security services in this particular incident then that is certainly something we would want to take into account in our work on this subject.”

Patrick Mercer, the Tory MP for Newark and former shadow security minister, said Rauf’s killing raised serious issues. “This raises the question of how much co-operation the British intelligence agencies provided in what is ultimately the execution of a British subject. The government must explain its involvement and its future policy in this area.”

At Rauf’s family home in Birmingham yesterday the only response came from a bearded man in his twenties. The man, who would not identify himself, said: “I’m very angry right now, so you should leave for your own safety.”

QUOTE
From The Sunday Times
November 23, 2008
MPs question killing of terror suspect
David Leppard

The government is under pressure to disclose what it knew about an American missile strike that has reportedly killed a British terrorist suspect in Pakistan.

Senior MPs from both main parties said they would be asking if British intelligence knew the CIA was planning the attack, which reportedly killed Rashid Rauf, 27, a UK citizen and terrorist suspect said to have led the alleged 2006 liquid bomb plot to blow up aeroplanes. Rauf is believed to have been one of five militants killed in Pakistan yesterday.

Critics of the action include Andrew Dismore, who chairs parliament’s human rights committee, and Patrick Mercer, former shadow security minister, who said: “This raises the question of how much cooperation the British intelligence agencies provided in what is ultimately the execution of a British subject. The government must explain its involvement.” The Foreign Office said it was unable to confirm that Rauf died when a drone fired three missiles at a house. He has been on the run since last year.
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numeral
Posted: Nov 23 2008, 02:49 AM





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Bridget
Posted: Nov 24 2008, 02:27 PM





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Wanted dead or alive, or both:
QUOTE
British-Pakistani terror suspect still alive: lawyer

3 hours ago

LONDON (AFP) — British-Pakistani terror suspect Rashid Rauf is still alive, his lawyer told the BBC on Monday, saying reports that he had died in a US missile attack in Pakistan were "fake."

The alleged Al-Qaeda mastermind of a 2006 transatlantic jet bombing conspiracy was reportedly killed at the weekend in a US raid in a northwestern border district that is a known stronghold of Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants.

"We don't believe that this story is true... It is a fake story," lawyer Hashmat Ali Habib told BBC radio, adding: "We still believe that my client, Rashid, is alive."

He noted that requests for Rauf's body to be returned to his family had not been answered. "This is a new technique of the government to dispose of the cases like Rashid or other missing people," he said.


Rauf died Saturday when a missile hit a tribesman's house in the village of Alikhel, a Pakistani security official told AFP.

The strike site is in a lawless tribal territory and militants there usually surround the place after such attacks, preventing access of government representatives or the army, before burying the bodies themselves.

Rauf was arrested in 2006 in Pakistan over the bomb plot and 24 people were detained in Britain in a major swoop.

A day later a massive security operation at London Heathrow Airport resulted in mass cancellations for several days, amid fears of a terrorist attack using liquid explosives on London flights bound for North America.

The Foreign Office said Saturday it was probing reports that Rauf had been killed. "We are currently investigating this at the moment, but we do not have any information," a spokesman said.
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Sinclair
Posted: Nov 24 2008, 04:05 PM





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QUOTE

MPs demand Rashid Rauf confirmation
Last Modified: 23 Nov 2008

Source: ITN


Two senior MPs have called for the Government to reveal whether it knew in advance about a US missile strike in Pakistan that reportedly killed a British terror suspect.

Rashid Rauf, who escaped from custody in Pakistan last year, was suspected of involvement in an alleged plot to blow up transatlantic jets.

His relatives are said to be distraught at reports that he was among five people killed by the attack in the tribal North Waziristan region.

The British Foreign Office said it was still investigating the reports and could not confirm whether Rauf, who is originally from Birmingham, had been killed.

But Pakistan's government confirmed that Rashid Rauf and a Saudi militant called Abu Zubair al-Masri were the apparent targets of the pre-dawn strike near the border with Afghanistan.

Andrew Dismore, the Labour chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Human Rights, told a newspaper he would ask the committee to investigate whether British intelligence services had been consulted about the attack.

He said: "This is a very serious matter, particularly if the attack was based on intelligence provided by the British security agencies.

"We can investigate whether British security services had involvement in providing intelligence concerning British nationals in Pakistan. I anticipate this is a matter the committee might like to follow up.

"If there is any suggestion of complicity of the UK security services in this particular incident then that is certainly something we would want to take into account in our work on this subject."

Patrick Mercer, the Tory MP for Newark and former shadow security minister, said: "This raises the question of how much co-operation the British intelligence agencies provided in what is ultimately the execution of a British subject.

"The government must explain its involvement and its future policy in this area."

Rauf was suspected of having links to an alleged plot in 2006 to bring down up to ten transatlantic passenger jets.

He was arrested in Pakistan in 2006 following an apparent tip-off from British anti-terrorism officers, days before a series of raids in the UK which were followed by the tightening of hand baggage restrictions on flights.

Eight men went on trial at Woolwich Crown Court in April accused of conspiring to smuggle home-made liquid bombs on board a series of Atlantic passenger flights.

Three men were found guilty of conspiracy to murder [& not connected to airplanes], but they will face a retrial next year on a more serious charge alongside four other defendants on whom the jury did not return verdicts.

© Independent Television News Limited 2008. All rights reserved.

http://www.channel4.com/news/articles/uk/m...rmation/2839962


This is the first I've heard about a re-trial?!

This post has been edited by Sinclair on Nov 24 2008, 04:05 PM
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