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Bombings: ex-sergeant pleads guilty
By Sridhar Krishnaswami
WASHINGTON, OCT. 21. In what is seen as a major victory for
prosecutors and investigators, a former U.S. Army Sergeant has
pleaded guilty to conspiring with Osama bin Laden in the American
embassy bombings of Kenya and Tanzania in 1998. ``Among the
targets I did surveillance for was the American embassy in
Nairobi,'' Mr. Ali Mohammed told a judge in New York.
Mr. Mohammed has also gone on record saying that he had briefed
Osama in 1993 after going over American, British, French and
Israeli targets in Kenya. ``Bin Laden looked at the picture of
the American embassy (in Nairobi) and pointed to where the truck
could go in as a suicide bomber.''
A naturalised American citizen, Mr. Mohammed was from Egypt; and
was discharged from the Army in 1989 after he had served for
three years. In court papers, Mr. Muhammad also said that he had
trained Osama's Al Qaeda network and that he had also arranged a
meeting between Osama and the head of the Hizbollah group in
Sudan. The involvement of Mr. Mohammed with the Egyptian Islamic
Jihad had started prior to his joining the U.S. army, it was
said.
Mr. Mohammed will be charged on five criminal felony counts and
is expected to go on trial starting January. The charges include
murder, kidnapping, and conspiring to destroy American defence
facilities. The U.S. has warrants out for at least 11 others in
the embassy bombings of 1998 that killed 223 persons. One of the
persons sought is Osama; and Afghanistan is under pressure to
turn him over either directly or through a third country.
The direct implication of Osama in the Africa embassy bombings
comes at a time when the Clinton administration has said in plain
terms that the Saudi fugitive is one of the top suspects in the
blast of the USS Cole in the Port of Aden last week that killed
17 sailors. From the President, Mr. Bill Clinton, down there has
been the message that justice will be served and that the
perpetrators of the attack will be tracked down.
The guilty pleading has not materially changed the nature and
scope of the USS Cole investigations. According to the Director
of the FBI, Mr. Louis Freeh, it was early to narrow the suspect
list. But the President of Yemen has said that some of the
suspects who have been detained in his country belong to the
Egyptian al Jihad whose leader is a top aide of Osama.
Meanwhile, the Navy has altered the sequence of events leading to
the attack on the USS Cole. It now says that the destroyer was
moored and in the process of refuelling when a small boat filled
with explosives rammed it on the side last week. Earlier, the
assertion was that the small boat had been a part of the mooring
team and hence difficult to detect that something was amiss.
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