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TERROR WARS
Deadly Hezbollah agent awaits release
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (UPI) May 8, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

The likely release by Baghdad of a veteran Hezbollah commander accused of plotting to kill U.S. soldiers while operating with Iranian forces in Iraq won't do U.S.-Iraqi relations any good.

But it will also unleash the seasoned Lebanese clandestine operative, Ali Musa Daqduq, back into a region teetering on the brink of a multi-front conflict.

Iran and Hezbollah, its main Arab proxy, are involved in a string of covert operations across the region, such as stiffening the beleaguered minority Alawite regime of their ally, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, against a 14-month-old uprising.

Daqduq is one of Hezbollah's most experienced covert operatives and according to the U.S. military was sent to Iraq in 2005, then under U.S. occupation, to help Iran's al-Quds Force, an elite unit of the Revolutionary Guards Corps and its covert arm, train Iraqi Shiites to fight the Americans.

Daqduq was captured by U.S. forces in the southern city of Basra in March 2007 and charged with masterminding an attack two months earlier in which Iraqi Shiites wearing U.S. uniforms kidnapped and killed five American soldiers.

He was considered a prize catch. For weeks he pretended to be deaf and dumb, refusing to talk because he feared his distinctive south Lebanese accent would give him away.

U.S. authorities held onto him right up until the last U.S. troops withdrew from Iraq in mid-December. But putting him on trial was stymied by an array of legal obstacles.

The administration of President George W. Bush wanted to try him in a U.S. criminal court.

But under a 2008 status-of-forces security agreement the Americans could not take Daqduq out of Iraq without Baghdad's permission.

When President Barack Obama took office he wanted to put Daqduq in the dock in an unprecedented military tribunal on U.S. soil. U.S. lawmakers blocked that fearing terrorist trials carried too many risks.

But with U.S. forces pulling out of Iraq, the Shiite-dominated government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, under growing Iranian influence, refused to allow the Americans to take Daqduq out of the country to stand trial.

Daqduq was the last prisoner the Americans handed over to Iraq's Justice Ministry Dec. 16, two days before the last U.S. soldier departed.

The Obama administration was assured "he will be tried for his crimes."

But Daqduq was only charged with entering Iraq illegally with a forged passport, which carries a maximum sentence of five years on conviction.

On Monday, an Iraqi court ruled Daqduq should be released because of "a lack of evidence."

That was no doubt due in large part to the fact the Americans refused to share evidence with the Iraqis because it included highly sensitive intelligence.

It's not clear when Daqduq will actually be released. But U.S. Republicans -- and quite a few Western intelligence officials -- believe it's only a matter of time before an operative with Daqduq's vast experience will be back in the field.

The conflict in Syria, eliminating key opponents of the regime, seems tailor-made for Daqduq's deadly skills and clandestine instincts.

He's probably one of the most experienced covert operators in a region replete with such men.

Daqduq has been with Hezbollah since the Revolutionary Guards set it up in south Lebanon after the 1982 Israeli invasion.

He's hard core and was a close associate of Imad Mughniyeh, Hezbollah's iconic military chief, and was a senior figure in the special operations unit Mughniyeh set up in the 1980s.

Mughniyeh, the Americans' No. 1 enemy until Osama bin Laden came along in the late 1990s, was assassinated in Damascus, Syria's capital, Feb.12, 2008.

His associates all hold high rank in Hezbollah now, and Daqduq probably does too.

"Hezbollah's as bad as it gets, and Daqduq's as bad as Hezbollah gets," observed Andrew C. McCarthy, a senior fellow at the National Review Institute.

At one point, Daqduq headed the security unit guarding Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah. "He ran Hezbollah's most lethal cells," says McCarthy.

Hezbollah is widely reported to have provided its fighters to back up Assad's forces. Syria is Iran's sole Arab friend, in an alliance forged by Assad's late father, Hafez, in 1980.

Syria, with neighboring Iraq, is Tehran's gateway to Lebanon and the eastern Mediterranean, and Shiite Iran cannot afford to have the country fall under the rule of Sunnis championed by Saudi Arabia, its arch-rival.

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Bali bomber suspect asks forgiveness
Jakarta (UPI) May 8, 2012 - A man accused of involvement in the deadly Bali bombings and who waged jihad for more than a decade has asked forgiveness in an Indonesian court.

Umar Patek, who faces the death penalty if convicted, told judges his role was minor and that he didn't plant the bombs that killed more than 200 people.

The bombs, which were planted in Paddy's Bar and the Sari Club, exploded with devastating effect. The dead were from 21 countries, including 88 Australians, 38 Indonesians and 28 Britons.

Patek told judges at the West Jakarta District Court that he didn't want the bombs to be detonated in Bali and tried to reason with the people making the bombs, a report in the Jakarta Globe said.

"I was very sad and regret that the incident happened," Patek said. "I was against it from the start, I never agreed with their methods," said Patek who appeared in white clothes and sporting a small beard.

Patek, 45, said he believed the Bali bombers were motivated by the Palestinian conflict but didn't know how to get to Palestine to wage jihad there, the Globe reported.

"They wanted to bomb a place with a lot of Westerners in retaliation for the killing of Muslims in Palestine," he said.

"I asked 'why Bali? Jihad should be carried out in Palestine instead.' But they said they didn't know how to get to Palestine. Dulmatin told me not to think so hard, just to help."

Dulmatin, killed by police during a raid in March 2010, was a senior member of the terrorist group Jemahh Islamiyah, which allegedly has links to al-Qaida.

Patek said he had ''no idea'' in which Bali bars the bombs were going to be planted but knew the people making the bombs were looking for places frequented by many foreigners, a report by the BBC said.

"I am taking this opportunity to seek forgiveness from the victims, their families and whoever suffered losses," he said.

Patek also said he lived in the Philippines from 2000 to 2002 and fought with the Moro National Liberation Front, a local terrorist organization operating in the southern Mindanao Island.

He said he visited Abu Bakar Asy-Syidiq's training camp and helped fight off an attack by the Philippine army.

"Around May and July of 2000, there was this huge battle at Abu Bakar Asy-Syidiq's military camp," Patek recalled. "The Philippine military tried to take over the camp. I was there, joining the fight."

Patek was arrested in January 2011 in the Pakistani garrison town of Abbottabad -- where Osama bin Laden was later killed in a U.S. raid -- and extradited to Indonesia.

Last week an American survivor of the bombing at Paddy's Bar told the court there was total confusion immediately after the blast, a report in the Jakarta Post said.

"Inside the bar was like being in the eye of a hurricane," Cabler said. "I have no compassion for the people who committed this crime. I love this country and have much respect for the people and the culture."

Cabler was with a friend of 25 years celebrating his birthday when the bomb went off.

"My friend John was between me and the explosion ... when the explosion happened, it was big, it was massive, I hit my head very hard against my friend's head ... and my eardrums exploded."

His friend, Stephen Webster, was among the dead.

Patek's trial began in February and is expected to end June 21.



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Washington (UPI) May 8, 2012
For two years, much of the global financial community has been in an uproar about a pending U.S. law that has barely been noticed in the United States. That may soon change as the unacceptable costs of the "Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act" become fully apparent. Enacted in 2010 as a supposed revenue-raiser pasted into an unrelated bill with almost no debate, FATCA requires every fore ... read more


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