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Europe
Binny wanted to go after the US military base in Turkey
2003-12-18
Osama bin Laden proposed attacking a Turkish military base used by the United States, but militants stymied by tight security bombed civilian targets instead, killing Muslims and upsetting al-Qaida leaders, Turkish officials told The Associated Press.
"What's the matter, Binny? You look upset!"
"Damn, Ayman! My militants were stymied by tight security around those Merkin bases in Turkey!"
"Oh, that's too bad."
"So they killed a bunch of innocent Muslims instead."
"Oh, well. At least they killed somebody. Here — have a nice cup of tea. That'll make it all better."
The information came from interrogations of a top suspect
"Ooch! Ouch! Hey! Stop that!"
in last month’s deadly bombings in Istanbul that authorities believe were carried out by Turkish militants trained by al-Qaida in Afghanistan, according to the officials. The suspect, Fevzi Yitiz, told interrogators that bin Laden approved attacks in Turkey on condition that Turks were not killed. But the militants instead bombed two synagogues, a London-based bank and the British Consulate, killing 62 people, mostly Muslims.
"Yar! Blood! I wanna see blood!"
The attacks appear to be part of a growing trend in terrorism — bombings by al-Qaida trained activists who have returned to their home countries and are maintaining only weak ties with the central group, terrorism experts say.
The ties they do have seem to be more than enough ...
"They planned and carried out the attack independently after receiving the blessing of bin Laden," said the Turkish intelligence official who is part of the investigation.
That was the same drill for Ahmed Ressam and the LAX plotters too.
The Istanbul bombings, simultaneous attacks against two synagogues on Nov. 15 and two attacks against British targets only five days later, bore the signature of al-Qaida, an anti-terrorism police official said. The attacks killed 62 people. A break in the case came when Yitiz was arrested on Dec. 10 after infiltrating Turkey from Iran, a police official said. Yitiz, a bearded man who appears to be about 30, confessed to police that he was trained by al-Qaida in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, in 1994 and helped make the bombs used in the attacks inside a front workshop called "Rainbow Detergents" that was set up in an industrial section of Istanbul. Yitiz told police that two of his accomplices — Habib Aktas and Ibrahim Kus, who have been identified as key suspects — met with bin Laden in Afghanistan in 2002. The two militants told bin Laden "they wanted to do something in Turkey for the jihad," the intelligence official said. Yitiz told police bin Laden replied, "I am approving it on condition that it is directed against the Americans and their allies but not the Turks." The killing of mostly Muslim Turks led top al-Qaida officials to criticize the attacks, according to Yitiz. Yitiz said he heard from Aktas, who had fled to Iran before the attacks, that al-Qaida "considered the bombings as a failure because it mostly killed Muslim Turks," the intelligence official said. The information attributed to Yitiz was based on his meetings with other accomplices in Turkey and recently in Iran, officials said.
Iran's suddenly becoming the hub of both Shia and Sunni terrorism...
Almost all of the world’s terrorist attacks attributed to al-Qaida or groups linked to the terror network since the Sept. 11 terror attacks have taken place in Muslim countries — including Indonesia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Morocco, Tunisia and Yemen.
The ones with more lax security and plenty of local supporters...
Bin Laden, during his meeting with Aktas and Kus, first suggested an attack against Incirlik Air Base, a sprawling facility used by U.S. troops or U.S. or Israeli ships using the Mediterranean port of Mersin, according to the police description of Yitiz’ interrogation. But security at the air base and the Mersin harbor made the attack too difficult. Coast guard cutters protect the harbor and Turkish forces patrol the base’s perimeters. A high wall also was erected around the base before the Iraq war. That forced the alleged conspirators, Aktas, Kus and Azad Ekinci — all of whom are believed to have trained in Afghanistan — to change the attack plans. It took a few months for the attackers to pick new targets and recruit four suicide bombers, the police said. Binoculars, wireless radios and cameras were seized in raids after the attacks.
"Hey, Mahmoud! Interested in doing a suicide bombing?"
"Uhhh... What's it pay?"
Yitiz’s purported path to a bombmaker illustrates how terror groups have been able to recruit disgruntled radical Muslims. Yitiz is from Van, a poor province bordering Iran, police said. After graduating from high school he attended a university in Pakistan at the prodding of some radical Islamic friends. Broke and far from home, he was drawn to an al-Qaida camp in Afghanistan, where he was told that he could study Quran and Islam for free. It was not clear whether Yitiz had other training or maintained direct links with al-Qaida leaders after 1994 in Afghanistan. He later returned to Van and worked in a restaurant. Then he traveled to Istanbul, where he began to sympathize with Turkish Hezbollah. Yitiz was briefly detained by police in 1998 and questioned about his ties to Hezbollah, which is not suspected of playing a role in the Istanbul attacks. He reportedly traveled to the Netherlands and to Iran for business.
What business? He was a waiter!
His brother, Servet, told the Hurriyet daily that Yitiz found himself jobless in Van, and left for Istanbul seven or eight months ago, telling his family that he started selling detergent. The detergent business, however, was allegedly a cover for bombmaking.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#4  GKarp, the two controllers who skipped to Iran are the ones who say they met bin Laden in 2002. Yitiz met Binny in 1994. The controllers may have been using Binny's name to rouse the faithful. Or, they may have met someone posing as Binny, or been told the message was from him.

Anyone know if bin Laden's son looks anything like him? If he was about as tall, and looked a little like him, in a cave at night with the right lighting?
Posted by: Steve   2003-12-18 2:13:23 PM  

#3  LOL they wouldn't get close to an American base before the Turks blew them away. That is why they are hitting soft targets. Those damn merkins have learned how to defend themselves.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge (VRWC CA Chapter)   2003-12-18 2:04:25 PM  

#2  So, according to these mopes, bin Laden survived at least into 2002. Maybe he isn't a splotch of meat paste on a Tora Bora mountainside. Darn.
Posted by: GKarp   2003-12-18 1:46:43 PM  

#1  Yitiz said he heard from Aktas, who had fled to Iran before the attacks,..

There's that magic word again, "Iran".
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2003-12-18 10:49:31 AM  

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