This fact sheet updated December
18, 2012
While traveling across the country and around the globe,
claiming credit for the killing of Osama bin Laden, President Barack Obama
has forged a deep alliance with al-Qaeda to overthrow first the government
of Libya and now the government of Syria. This reckless and lawless policy
of allying with the perpetrators of 9/11 2001 and now 9/11 2012 to conduct
war without the consent of Congress in violation of the U.S. Constitution
runs the immediate danger of leading to world war, which can only mean
thermonuclear war.
This is “the elephant in the room,” which explains why the Obama
administration has lied and covered up the true facts about Benghazi.
The policy of allying with al-Qaeda and covering up that alliance and
its consequences, is, indeed an impeachable offense. The question is whether
members of the Congress will have the courage to fight for the truth and
for justice on behalf of the victims of this criminal policy.
This updated fact sheet presents the presently available
evidence from the public domain. A serious Congressional investigation
would uncover far more. Here are the facts known thus far:
In the case of Libya, the evidence is overwhelming. Under the guise
of humanitarian interventionism, President Obama ordered American military
forces to create a no-fly zone and provide close air cover for al-Qaeda
groupings to overthrow
Muammar Gaddafi.
The opposition in Libya was dominated by the Libyan Islamic Fighting
Group (LIFG) which was created in the 1990s by Abel Hakim Belhadj who
had fought with Al-Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan from 1988 to 1992.
(On February 15, 2011 the LIFG changed its name to the Libyan Islamic
Movement for Change.) After Kabul fell in 1992, Belhadj moved to Sudan
with Osama bin Laden. In 1995, MI6 approached the LIFG to carry out a
coup against Gaddafi. After the coup and four assassination attempts against
Gaddafi failed many members of the LIFG were jailed in the Abu Selim prison
in Tripoli. Others including Belhadj escaped.
In 2001 when the US invaded Afghanistan two members of
the LIFG, who later participated in the Obama led overthrow of Gaddafi,
were arrested by the Pakistanis and handed over to the U.S., Abul Hakim
al-Hasadi and Abu Sufian bin Qumu, both originally from Derna. Al Hasadi
who had fought for 5 years in Afghanistan against the U.S. was sent back
to Libya and jailed. Qumu was sent to Guantanamo until he was later returned
to Libya. Both were jailed in Abu Selim prison.
In 2004, Belhadj and Sami Al-Saadi, who also later participated
in the Obama led overthrow of Gaddafi, were captured by the CIA and MI6
in Bangkok, Thailand and returned to Libya where they were also imprisoned
in Abu Selim prison. This was shortly after Tony Blair had organized the
recognition of Gaddafi by the West. At the time Blair stated that Gaddafi
wanted to join the West in combatting Al-Qaeda.
Al-Saadi, who Taliban leader Mullah Omar once called the “Sheikh
of the Arabs,” was the author of a plan to overthrow Gaddafi which was
found in the home of Abd Al-Rahman al-Faquih in Birmingham, UK during
a police raid in the middle of the last decade. Al-Faquih had been convicted
in absentia by a Moroccan court for complicity in the May 2003 suicide
bombings in Casablanca. This war plan would later be employed against
Gaddafi beginning in February 2011.
In March 2010, due to the intervention of Tony Blair, Saif Gaddafi
announced the release of Belhadj and 233 other members of the LIFG from
Abu Selim prison as part of a reconciliation. Less than a year after they
were released Belhadj and the other members of the LIFG became the core
of the opposition to Qaddafi.
LIFG Designated as a Terrorist Organization by the U.S., U.K. and
the UN
At the time of the operation to overthrow Qaddafi under the cover
of a UN resolution, the LIFG was designated as a terrorist group by the
U.S. State Department, the U.K. Home Office and the United Nations Security
Council. An excerpt from the U.S. State Department report reads as follows:
“On November 3, 2007, senior Al Qaeda leaders announced that LIFG had
officially joined Al-Qaeda…. Activities: Libyans associated with the LIFG
are part of the broader international terrorist movement. The LIFG is
one of the groups believed to have planned the Casablanca suicide bombing
in May 2003. Spanish media in August 2005 linked Ziyad Hashem, an alleged
member of the LIFGs media committee, as well as the imprisoned amir Abdallah
al Sadeq (Belhaj), with Tunisian Islamist Serhane Ben Abdelmajid Fakhet,
the suspected ringleader in the 2004 Madrid attacks.” Abdallah al Sadeq
is the nom de guerre of Abel Hakim Belhadj.
Excerpts from the UN resolution read as follows: “LIFG commanders,
including Abu Yahya al-Liby and the now-deceased Abu al-Laith al-Liby,
have occupied prominent positions within Al-Qaeda’s senior leadership.
On 3 November 2007, LIFG formally merged with Al-Qaeda. The merger was
announced via two video clips produced by Al-Qaeda’s propaganda arm, Al-Sahab.
The first clip featured Usama bin Laden’s (QI.B.8.01) deputy, Aiman Muhammed
Rabi al-Zawahiri (QI.A.6.01), and the second featured Abu Laith al-Liby,
who then served as a senior member of LIFG and a senior leader and trainer
for Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan.”
The Perpetrators of the Benghazi Attack
After Gaddafi was overthrown by the Al-Qaeda affiliated LIFG, the
Tripoli Military Council was initially run by General Abd al-Fatah Yunis.
However, he was assassinated by Ansar al-Sharia on July 28, 2011 and the
former emir of the LIFG, Belhadj, became its military commander. The Benghazi
Military Council in turn was run by Sallabi an ally of Belhadj.
Three of the military brigades operating in the Benghazi area, Ansar
al-Sharia, Libyan Shield and the February 17th Brigade, the latter two
of which operate in coordination with the Libyan Ministry of Defense,
participated in the attack on the United States mission and a CIA “annex”
in Benghazi on the eleventh anniversary of the September 11, 2001 al-Qaeda
attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, killing U.S. Ambassador
Chris Stevens and three CIA officers. These three organizations were chief
American combat allies in the drive to overthrow Qaddafi.
To be specific: Ansar al-Sharia, led by Abu Sufian bin Qumu, a former
Al-Qaeda Guantanomo detainee; the Libya Shield, which met the marines
who came from Tripoli at the airport and accompanied them to the CIA annex,
led by Wisam bin Hamid, identified by the Library of Congress as possibly
the head of Al-Qaeda in Libya; and the February 17th Brigade, which provided
security for the mission, led by Ismail Sallabi, are all run by the al-Qaeda
affiliated LIFG.
Ansar al-Sharia
The leader of the Ansar al-Sharia group in Derna that actually carried
out the assault on the U.S. mission and CIA annex in Benghazi on 9/11/12
is Sufyan bin-Qumu. According to his Guantanamo detainee assessment report,
Qumu received monthly stipends from one of the financiers of the original
9/11/2001:
"Detainee's alias is found on a list of probable Al-Qaida personnel
receiving monthly stipends. His alias was found on Al-Qaeda's 11 September
attacks financier Mustafa Al Hawsawi’s laptop as an Al-Qaeda member receiving
family support."
The assessment continues: "Detainee is assessed as a former member
of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, a probable member of Al Qaeda. The
detainee is assessed as a MEDIUM to HIGH risk, as he is likely to pose
a threat to the US, its interests and allies.
"Prior history: he served as a tank driver in the Libyan armed forces
as a private. The Libyan Government states he was addicted to illegal
drugs/narcotics and had been accused of a number of crimes including murder,
physical assault, armed assault and distributing narcotics. He was sentenced
to 10 years in prison. In 1993 he escaped and fled eventually to Afghanistan
and trained at Osama Bin Laden's Torkham Camp. After Afghanistan he moved
to Sudan where he worked as a truck driver for one of OBLs companies.
He joined the LIFG and was assigned to the military committee. He left
Sudan, allegedly withdrew from the LIFG in 1998 and returned to Afghanistan.
Captured in 2001, he was sent to Guantanamo."
According to the report, he has admitted associations with Ayyub
Al Libi, Al-Qaida/LIFG facilitator, Abu Abdullah al Sadiq, which is the
nome de guerre of Abdul Hakim Belhadj who is the leader of LIFG, and Abu
Al Munihir, a.k.a. Sami Al Saadi, who drew up the war plan to overthrow
Gaddfi in the mid-2000s.
Libya Shield
The last signed diplomatic cable from Ambassador Stevens back to
the State Department in Washington dated September 11 described a tense
Sept. 9, 2012 meeting in Benghazi between U.S. security officials and
two leaders of Libyan Shield, Wissam bin Hamid (misidentified as Wisam
‘bin Ahmed”) and Shaykh Muhammad al-Garabi, in which they argued that
if the Muslim Brotherhood candidate for Prime Minister, Alwad al Barasi,
should win, he would appoint the commander of the February 17th Brigade,
Fawzi Bukatif, as Minister of Defense.
"Bukatif's appointment," the memo says, "would open the MOD and
other security ministries and offices to plum appointments for his most
favored brigade commanders -- giving February 17 and Libya Shield tacit
control of the armed forces." On the other hand, if Jibril, whom the U.S.
government was supporting, won, “they would not continue to guarantee
security in Benghazi, a critical function they asserted they were currently
providing.”
According to al-Fetn.com Bin Hamid fought against American forces
in both Iraq and Afghanistan before returning to the Benghazi-Derna area
of eastern Libya to ``ally'' with Washington to overthrow and execute
Qaddafi. The same al-Fetn.com reported in late October 2011 that bin Hamid
became the head of a newly formed “supreme board of the Libyan mujahideen.”
According to an August 2012 report from the Library of Congress,
``Al-Qaeda in Libya: A Profile,'' bin Hamid is widely identified as the
actual head of al-Qaeda in Libya. He also held a demonstration in Sirte
in March 2012 which was attended by the head of Al-Qaeda in Magreb in
Sahel Mokhtar ben Mokhtar. Yet, his Libya Shield militia was entrusted
with security for the U.S. mission in Benghazi, and the Sept. 9, 2012
meeting likely provided the group with the travel plans of Ambassador
Stevens, who arrived in Benghazi on Sept. 10 for a scheduled ten day visit.
The attack on the CIA annex only began after Libyan Shield fighters escorted
a Marine rescue team from the airport to the location hours after the
initial attack on the U.S. mission, where Ambassador Stevens was killed.
February 17th Brigade
According to Joan Neuhaus Schaan, a fellow in Homeland Security
and Terrorism at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy in
Houston, the February 17th Brigade, which provided security for the U.S.
Mission in Benghazi, was founded by Ismail Sallabi, who is a known member
of al Qaeda and the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG). A Brookings
Doha Center policy briefing dated May 2012, entitled "Libyan Islamists
Unpacked: Rise, Transformation, and Future," also reports that Sallabi
heads the February 17th Brigade based in Benghazi.
On Sept. 16, 2011 the Guardian identified Sallabi as the head of
the Benghazi Military Council, the counterpart to the Tripoli Military
Council led by Abul Hakim Belhadj, According to Al Arabiya News, the commander
of the February 17 brigade is Fawzi Bukatif.
According to al-Hayat, Belhadj was in Benghazi in April 2011, where
he helped organize the February 17th Brigade. Included in the security
force for the Benghazi mission proper were four members of the February
17th Brigade, described by a State Department source as "a friendly militia
which has basically been deputized by the Libyan government to serve as
our security, our host government security." A further 16 militia members
were part of the quick reaction security team based at the CIA compound
described as the mission's "annex."
Ismael al-Sallabi (who is the brother of Libya's leading Islamist,
Ali al-Sallabi) also leads the Martyr Rafalllah Sahati Brigade, which
began as a battalion of the February 17th Brigade. The Brigade's commander,
Shaykh Muhammad al-Garabi met with U.S. officials on Sept. 9 along with
Wisam ben Hamid of the Libya Shield.
Abdel Hakim Belhadj
Any serious investigation of Benghazi would have to look closely
at the role of Abdel Hakim Belhadj, the founder of the Libyan Islamic
Fighting Group and, after the overthrow of Gaddafi, the commander of the
Tripoli Military Council. As such, he was given responsibility as of Aug.
30, 2011 until he stepped down as commander of the TMC to form his own
political party (Watan) in May 2012 for the security of all international
embassies in Tripoli including the U.S. embassy. He was also put in charge
of coordinating defense on a national level.
On Nov. 17, 2012, the Saudi-based publication Arab News published
an article by Ali Bluwi, which reports that the attack on the Benghazi
mission was carried out in revenge for the killing of Abu Yahya al-Libi,
a senior Libyan member of Al-Qaeda, killed in a U.S. drone attack in Pakistan
in June 2012.
The article also reports that the U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens
"prevented Abdel Hakim Belhadj from assuming the portfolio of defense
or interior in Libya."
Furthermore, according to former Muslim Brotherhood member
Walid Shoebat, Belhadj is the al-Qaeda operative that the Libyan expatriates
claim was the principal organizer who directed the Sept. 11 terrorist
attack in Benghazi.
Al-Qaeda in Syria
While Belhadj was commander of the Tripoli Military Council he deployed
in behalf of Obama, the British Empire and Saudi Arabia to provide Al-Qaeda
military personnel and weapons in the attempt to overthrow the Syrian
government. Numerous news sources including the Daily Telegraph have reported
that in November 2011, Belhadj traveled to Turkey to meet with the Syrian
Free Army to provide them with training and weapons to overthrow Assad.
According to Albawaba.com and thetruthseeker.co.uk, during that
same month some 600 LIFG terrorists from Libya entered Syria and began
military operations. The individual who leads the Libyan fighters is Mahdi
al-Harati, now head of the Liwa al-Ummah brigade in Syria. According to
an August 9, 2012 article in Foreign Policy magazine by Mary Fitzgerald
entitled "The Syrian Rebels' Libyan Weapon," al-Harati is a Libyan-born
Irish citizen who was a commander of the Tripoli Brigade run by Belhadj
during overthrow of Qaddafi in Libya.
The Tripoli Brigade was one of the first rebel units to enter the
Libyan capital in August 2011. After Tripoli was taken over he was appointed
deputy head of the Tripoli Military Council, serving under Abdel Hakim
Belhaj. In late 2011 Harati stepped down as commander of the Tripoli Brigade
and as deputy head of the Tripoli Military Council and left for Syria.
According to Harati, more than 6,000 men across Syria have joined
Liwa al-Ummah since its establishment. Harati stresses that 90 percent
of the brigade are Syrians, the rest are Libyans, most of them former
members of the Tripoli Brigade, along with a smattering of other Arabs.
According to Reuters, Liwa al-Ummah includes 20 senior members of the
Tripoli Brigade.
One of the State Department documents released by the House Oversight
Committee in October was from the Research and Information Support Center,
dated March 1, 2012. It gives the following assessment of the presence
of Al Qaeda in the Benghazi area:
“In late December 2011, reports indicated that the al Qaeda leadership
in Pakistan had sent experienced jihadists to Libya to build a new base
of operations in the country. Between May and December 2011, one of these
jihadists had recruited 200 fighters in the eastern part of the country.
Documents seized in Iraq indicate that many foreign fighters who participated
in the Iraqi insurgency hailed from eastern Libya.” According to the Library
of Congress Al-Qaeda in Libya report, the individual sent is believed
to be Abd al- Baset Azzouz who has been close to Al-Zawahiri since 1980.
According to the Library of Congress report, he is likely co-located currently
in Libya with another senior Libyan Al-Qaeda operative Abd al Hamid al
Ruqhay, alias Abu Anas al-Libi who moved in the late 1980s to Afghanistan
and Sudan, where he is believed to have met Osama Bin laden and joined
al-Qaeda.
According to documents obtained and released by former Muslim Brotherhood
member Walid Shoebat an array of records provided to Libyan expatriates
from sources inside the Libyan government establish that al-Qaeda operatives
in Libya are facilitating the passage of jihadists through Libya to Syria.
Specifically, Abdul Wahhab Hassan Qayad, the brother of Al-Qaeda leader
Yahya al-Libi, who was killed in Pakistan in June
2012 by a U.S. drone attack, now works in the Libyan
Interior Ministry in charge of Border Control and Strategic Institutions.
The position allows him to arrange open-border passage for al-Qaeda operatives,
facilitating not only the flow of terrorists into Libya, but also al-Qaeda
efforts to transport terrorists and weapons into Syria from Libya via
Turkey.
LaRouche Political Action Committee (LPAC) has produced a detailed
documentary [1] on President Obama's filthy dealings with the very British
and Saudi-backed Jihadists who have the blood of American Ambassador Chris
Stevens and countless others on their hands. Congressional demands for
the creating of a select committee to get to the bottom of the Benghazi
9/11/12 attacks must begin with a thorough airing of the ongoing alliance
between the Obama White House and al-Qaeda. Nothing short of a thorough
probe will prevent a replay of the first two 9/11 attacks on a far grander
scale.
What makes this particularly urgent is that in using
Al-Qaeda to overthrow Assad in Syria the British Empire, Saudi Arabia
and their stooge Obama are pushing the world to the edge of a thermonuclear
war with Russia and China. The crimes of Obama are much greater than not
providing sufficient security to the mission or not responding after the
attack by providing military assistance. The reason for this is that the
killings of the Ambassador and three other Americans were carried out
by the very terrorists Obama and his masters relied upon to overthrow
Qaddafi and are relying on now to overthrow Assad. The designation of
Al-Nusra as a terrorist organization is just a fig leaf.
!! The entire Syrian opposition is al-Qaeda as this fact sheet conclusively
demonstrates and the Syrian opposition itself has affirmed by proclaiming
that they are all Al-Nusra. !!
Links
[1] http://larouchepac.com/al-qaeda-executive |