TERROR, INC.

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CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8
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K
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December 22, 2016
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January 3, 2012
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2
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October 14, 1985
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAG NEW YORK POST 14 October 1985 TERROR, TIM sesjacking a[ the Achille L um surely won't be the last act of terror direness. at the Wes this yew, wam Robert Moss, a recognised authority an terrorism and mpioeage In this lira d a s-part series. Moss is the edi- tor d "Early Warning," a confidential newsletter on In- ? > . hod in ~ naambsek bv_ Pocket Books. By ROBERT MOSS AT the time that the hi- jacking of the Achille Lauro was being planned by members of Yasser Arafat's PLO, one of Ara- fat's deadliest enemies, Abu Nidal, was boasting in Tripoli, Libya, that he had armed underground cells for a major terrorist operation in Cairo. Egypt is likely to be one of the main targets in a wave of terrorist reprisals for the capture of the men who hi- jacked the Italian cruise ship and brutally murdered Leon Klinghoffer. The stunning success of the U.S. operation served notice that the Reagan administra- tion is determined not to let terrorists go unpunished. It was also a double humiliation for Arafat's PLO. First, it now seems clear that Abu Abbas, chief of the Tunis-based faction of the Palestine Liberation Front (PLF) and a close Arafat ally, was behind the hijacking. Together with the murder of two Is- raeli sailors in Barcelona by the PLO's elite "Force 17," the tragedy at sea has exploded Arafat's denials of responsibility and the efforts of his well-spoken, well-tailored academic spokesmen in the U.S. to present his PIA as a "moderate" force in the Middle East. Second. the operation was hopelessly botched. Western intelligence sources believe that rival terrorist warlords will now seize the chance to upstage Arafat by launching a wave of at- tacks on the U.S., Italy ana rgypa, as weu as aa- raeL Arafat's PLO, in order to save face, may be drawn into a bout of competitive terrorism. Egypt is especially at risk. It has long been a major terrorist target so a vital U.S. ally and as Is- rael's interlocutor in the Middle East. The late President Sadat's willing. new to enter into the Camp David accords cost him his life at the hands of Muslim fanatics. What- ever the full truth of Egypt's role In the latest epbode, President Hasal Mubarak now stands ac- cused by the terrorists of striking a tacit deal with the U.S. that enabled the capture of the hijackers to take Said al-Banns, who uses the nom de guerre Abu Nidal, in a key man to watch. He is a highly-pro- fessional killer, once em- by the Iraquis. now Syria and h Libya, w given to o is touring the Midd East In the guise of a Catholic prime His organization, the Fatah Revolutionary Council, was responsible for the murder of an Is- raeli embassy attache and his wife in Cairo last August In 1982, Abu Nidal's government seri- ously wounded Israel's ambassador to Britain in another assassination at- tempt The group has carried out a string- of contract- llings In. European capi- ta tals, including the murder tary facilities in Westeral Europe. A loose network including the so-called Communist Combatant Cells in Belgium, Action, Directe in France, the, remnants of the Red, Army Fraction in West Germany and the Italian Communist Organization for the Liberation of the Proletariat has been shar- explo- 0 elves in anti-NATO operations of Iranian exile leader and has. radical Middle Gen. Ovei si in Paris. Abu, i East links. Nadal brags that he has i ? Terrorist attacks in, unleashed "World War IQ" in Western Europe. Is. Libya last month, along with a small Who's Who of ter- rorist hiding George Habash of the Pea tion of Palestine (who had just come from Moscow), Abu Nadal declared that his group had smuggled arms to the Organization. of Egypt's Revolution- aries, a secret terrorist group dedicated to the .overthrow of Camp David. The extent to which he and. his comrades can count on the backing of their host, Col. 10adaty. In indicated by an incredible speech the Libyan dictator delivered early last month to an audience of military cadets. a depth of blood-lust unusual even for him, ithadafy de- clared: "We must eat the kidneys of the enemies - the Zionists and the Americans and their reac- tionary supporters." Western security ana- lysts are now studying a number of worrying sce`- narios. for possible terror- ist .S and s the Italia the U Thee scenarios include: ? A rash of assaults on ernments have all "soft targets," for exam- been training kami- ple, airline and shipping kaze squads for spe- offices and Jews in West- cial missions. For in- ern countries. stance, Intelligence ? A new hostage-tak- sources say that ing In an attempt to bring Syrian instructors pressure on Italy to free have trained kami- the hijackers. The Ital- kaze,,pilots (some of ians, however, have an impressive track record them Palestinians) of resisting blackmail of this kind ? Terrorist bombings of U.S and NATO mi $- the Western Hemisphere Both the PLO and the Libyans have set up Irn- bases in Nic and there ere Intel nee reports w several months ago that a . against U.S mlitary facili- ties in Honduras was under dbcusdoo. ? Terrorism inside the 'United States. The U.S. has remained largely im- mune to the export of Middle East terrorism up till now. But there Is an ominous precedent. In a largely unpublicized episode In 1973, a hit man from the PLO's Black September or- ganization placed car bombs at three Man- hattan locations, in- cluding Wall Street. Tragedy was averted thanks to good intelli- gence; the FBI has re- portedly bugged a PLO information of- fice In Houston. ? A return to kami- kaze bombings. Im- pressed by the spec- tacular slaughter in- flicted by suicide car bombers in Beirut and Kuwait.. Syrian, Ira- nian and Libyan gov- STAT this ear at no. air force base, north of Aletto, and at Rayak in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon. The seajack drama exposed some of the rifts within Terror. Inc. There are compet- ing International net- works - some run by Iranian Mullahs. some by drug lords - and a whole menagerie of fringe fanatics. Rela- tions between ' them tend to be no more cor- dial than. say, between rival gang, for tLn prohibi- tion Chicago. The fissures have wi- dened and become more complex since Yasir Arafat lost his bases in Lebanon. Ara- fat's dilemma will be exp# *red in the next artl41e.. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 NEW YORK POST ARTICLE APPEARED 15 October 1985 ON PAGE HIS POWER FADING, ARAFAT MUST BEG THE weakness of Yasser Arafat's PLO has forced the infamous terror leader to seek dangerous new alliances with old enemies, warns Robert Mess In this sea and of a six-I&ft series. Moss, an au- thority on terrorism and espionage, is the editor of "Early Warning.- a news. letter on Intelligence, and the author of the paperback by Pocket Books). soon By ROBERT MOSS IT'S OFTEN said that terrorism Is a weapon of the weak. That truism is not al- ways a reliable guide in the Middle East, where radical governments use the same terrorist methods against their own populations as against enemies abroad. Witness the case of Syria, a Ieading sponsor of international terror- ism. In 1982, the Assad regime used long-range artillery on the people of Hama, the nation's fourth-largest city and a hub of Sunni Muslim op- position. By the end of this exercise, an esti- mated 10,000-20,000 Syrians had been killed and the city center re- duced to a heap of ash and rubble. Significantly, Col. Ghazi Kana'an. one of the architects of popula- tion control in Hama, is now Syria's procounsel in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon, the home of the terrorist leaders re- sponsible for the massa- cre of U.S. Marines in Beirut. In a region of "one-bul- let" regimes, terror and assassination are every- day methods of achiev- ing political goals. Today, Yasser Ara- fat's PLO is weak. The fear of new defections from within its ranks may account for its in- volvement in the latest spate of terrorist at- tacks - in Cyprus, Barcelona, and on the high seas. Ironically, the weak- ness of the PLO also ex. plains Arafat's efforts to present himself as a peacemaker, and to pur- FOR CRUMBS sue diplomacy in con- cert with his old enemy, Jordan's King Hussein. But this "two-track" ap- proach - erecting a fa- cade of moderation while licensing terrorist atrocities, usually under a "false flag" - has been the modus oper- andi for Arafat and the PLO for decades. For instance, after Arafat's guerrillas were driven out of Jordan in 1970, the Black Septem- ber organization was set up. Black September was responsible for the massacre of Israeli ath- letes at the 1972 Munich Olymplci , - were _nWftA* RY PIA in- volvement. But In his re- cent memoirs, Arafat's security chief (and cur- rent No. 2), Abu Iyad, de- scribed himself as the leader of Black Septem- ber. Consider Arafat's di- lemma today. Since he was driven out of Tripoli in north Lebanon in 1985, he controls no territory of his own. In Tunis, he is dependent on the hospitality of the pro-Western Bourguiba government, which was less than enchanted when his hit men in Cy- prus provoked Israeli retaliation in the form of an air strike against his headquarters. Arafat's forces are widely scattered. The main base for his fight- ers is North Yemen, where the PLO has been permitted to set up camps around Sana, the capital, named after the Sabra and Shatila camps it once occupied in Lebanon. Guerrillas from the PLO's ,Djermak" bri. Counsel in Amman, and gads were taken from denounced Arafat as a in north Lebanon, late in once a iavorea sun- August, in a failed at- contractor for the Sovi- tempt to recapture an ets, who have long made old stomping-ground. use of the PLO to train The hijack of the Ital- and supervise terrorists ian ship, which was sup-' for missions as far posed to be used in an afield as Central operation against the Is- America and Africa, raeli port of Ashdov, Arafat now has to beg ' s highlighted the PLO biggest deficiency. It has no bass in territory, bordering Israel from which to mount attacks against its main enemy. This - not any change of heart - is the moti- vation for Arafat's re- cent dealings with Jor- dan's King Hussein. As Khalid el Hassan, the head of the PLO's inter- national department, has explained it, "The return of the PLO to Jordan is the only way to prevent the virtual suicide, and to revitalize ibe. PLO's operations." Thtye~- ~J 0 hopes fo use Jordan as the spring- board for new terror at- tacks on Israel Under cover of the expanded PLO office in Amman, "Force 17" hit teams have already relocated to Jordan. Syria, which is deter- mined to run things in .Lebanon, has engi- neered a major split in Arafat's movement. The Syrians directly control a number of extreme Palestinian factions out- side the PLO, headed by Abu Musa, Abu Nidal and Abu Ahmad. They are all plotting against Arafat's life. Arafat aiso has to con- tend with two major Palestinian organiza- tions - the PFLP (George Habash's group) and the DFLP, a Marxist group closely aligned with the Soviets that boycotted the last congress of the Palestine National for crumbs. For the first time, he came close to open criticism of Mos- cow when, in a message of congratulations to Andrei Gromyko on the occasion of his elevation to the Soviet presidency, he complained that Syria was supplying Russian-made tanks to the Lebanese Amai or- ganization. Arafat knows, from bitter experience, that the Soviets value Syria - their main forward base in the Middle East, where they now have an estimated 8000 military personnel deployed - more than him. His old friend Alexander Solda- tov, the veteran Soviet ambassador in Beirut, stood on the sidelines while Syrians made mincemeat of Arafat's loyalists in Lebanon. Arafat can take comfort from the fat handouts he is still getting from Saudi Arabia. The Saudis re- portedly gave one of his envoys a check for $28.5 million in July. But Saudi and checkbook diplomacy TV talk shows are un- likely to bring a funda- mental change in Arafat or the PLO. The PLO has never backed away from its original objective the de- struction of the state of Israel In this fundamen- tal sense, the PLO, founded in June 196 , has never been - and will never be - a "moderate" influence. The emblem of the PLO faction that hijacked the Italian cruise ship con- tains a map of Palestine within its pre-1947 bor- ders. Arafat can never recognize Israel, because by so doing he would for- feit his claim to lead what is left of the PLO - and risk a bullet in his back. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 AR1TICLE APPEARED ON FAG.F J~~ - NEW YORK POST 16 October 1985 INSIDE THE MINDS OF THE MUSLIM AS you read this, kamikaze killers are being trained to attack more American targets, warns Robert Moss, In this third of a sts-part series. Moss, an au- tbuity on espionage and terrorism, Is the of "Early Warning," a news. letter on Intelligence. and the author of the novel "Moscow Rules" (coming soon in paperback by Pocket Books). KAMIKAZES TODAY, the suicide in the greatness of mar- bomber is the most omi- tyrdom (shahadab) and nous exponent of inter- the importance of sacri- natiolW terrorism. fice since my youth." He Shiite fanatics loyal glorified the kamikaze to Iran's Ayatollah pilots who would "strike Khomeini were respon- enemy ships, airports sible for the series of and other targets by truck bombs to Lebanon turning himself, his In 1183-'84 that claimed planes and his bombs hundreds of American, into one fireball- French and Israeli lives. Assad, who is suffer- Thess kamikazes came ing from an obscure from a group, Islamic blood disease that laid Jihad, him up for two weeks in that is still holding August, went on to say: U.S. hostages in Lebanon "My conviction of mar- and boasts that it carried tyrdom is neither inci- out the brutal slaying of dental nor temporary American Embassy offi- . I hope that my own cial William Buckley. life will end only in mar- They are headquar- tyrdom." tered in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, where An old Arab proverb runs: "You don't have to they prepare for their pay tax on words." But operations under the protection Assad's bizarre rhetoric of the Syrian Army was more than hot air. and Iranian Revo- He proceeded to order lutionary Guards. They Gen. al-Khoull to ar- have yet to be punished range for the training of for their role in the TWA suicide flyers at Syria's hijack, although the ARinakh airbase, near identities and where- abouts of their leaders the border with Turkey, and and in the Bekaa Valley. sponsors are known. to a reliable At the same time, the fate ce source Ira- Iranians have stepped slan up the training of ew- an scores struc- teharia, or suicide and two are 12 of kamlkazes~ IN a new squads. goes on in the mind of a suicide-bomb- 's trusted aide, er+ Gen. Shiite kamikazes are won s hen - isolated in special e r camps and put through chaired a lengthy brainwashing b1i _ Ayatollah Manta:eri. process under the tute- ort of lage of uleeta, religious c teachers. They are --vywavlowu 4% taught that martyrdom strange personal fixa- in the cause of the jihad, the holy war against the tion with the kamikaze. In infidel, is the supreme an extraordinary speech to the National achievement of the true Federation of Syrian believer. Self-sacrifice, Students last May, they are led to believe, president de- Syria's will open the gates of clared: "I have believed paradise. These teachings may sound wildly implausi- ble is the West. But it must be understood that Shia Islam was born in blood. with the murder of the Caliph All. the Prophet's son-in-law. The millenial tradition of the sect glorifies mar- tyrdom for the cause. It also insists on absolute, unwavering obedience to a theocratic despot. A terrorist imbued with these beliefs makes a for- mutable antagonist. How do you deter a killer who's willing - even eager - to give up his life, in the conviction that the bourns of Paradise are waiting to greet him? But a close investiga- tion of recent suicide bombings that not all the kamikazes are religious fanatics. For ex- ample, a leftist Lebanese terror group controlled by Syria recruits psycho- logically disturbed indi- viduals for kamikaze at- tacks. The group, the Pro- gressive Socialist Party (PPS), is based in the Druze community. Its suicide bombers appear to be motived by a "death wish" syndrome, not an Islamic vision of martyrdom. Lebanon's fanatical Shiite terrorists - Is- lamic Jihad and the various factions of the Hezbollah or Party of God - tend to hug the shadows. But the Syrian-inspired PPS seeks maximum media exposure for its "mar- tyrs" among its target audience. Some of its terror operations might have been staged by a pro- ducer of X-rated movies. Two teenagers, a boy called Wadi Fad- lallah Shair and a girl, Flssbhedc. Oct. 23. 19ei, SukIds bomber at. tacks Nlrue Mad,asrtarr N U.S. Marino possekogars. The Meth tad rsadn4 241. Shona Mahidli, blew themselves up along with their car bomb in Lebanon last spring, gunning for the Israeiis. TV viewers in Damns- cum were promptly treated to videotapes showing them getting ready for their mission, with the seal of the PPS and an official portrait of Assad in the back- ground Neither fits the profile of an Islamic fanatic. Rather, they were two sad, disoriented kids ready to self-destruct. Their personal hangups made them ripe for ex- ploitation by ruthless terrorist controllers. The boy, Wadi, 19, was a rootless orphan who joined up with a Pales- tinian faction in south Lebanon before he was in his teens - for much the same reason that a ghetto kid might try to join the toughest gang in the neighborhood. At 16, he became a member of the PPS. But according to friends, he was prone to deep de- pressions and unlucky with girls: an adolescent with a death wish. The girl, Shona, 17, who died when her car bomb blew up at Bator of-Shut on April 9, had only joined the PPS. Hers was an especially tragic case. According to a reliable source, she had run away from her family after she had be- come pregnant and been abandoned by her boy- friend. In her distress, she was looking for self- immolation. The PPS has active cells in . New York, Chicago and Oregon, but has not been implicated in political violence here. Another kamikaze in- cident involving the Shiite Amal suggests that, even among the Ayatollah's adherents, the Islamic vision of shahadah may not be the primary motive for a suicide bomber. Israeli soldiers cap- tured a 18-year-old Shiite, Muhammad Biro? In January before he could carry out a kami- kaze misson. He told his captors that he had agreed to perform a sui- cide mission after his father had been badly Injured in a car acci- dent. He claimed that his family was starving and had no money to pay for brain surgery urgently required by his father. By his account, his recruiters promised that his family would be provided for and that 'his father would receive the medical treatment he deserved. The boy seems to have agreed to offer himself up in the same spirit that a man beset by crushing financial prob- lems might think of doing away with him- self so his family can collect the insurance. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 The men behind the mad bombers s the U.S. should not take reprisals for terrorist acts, It is often said that you can't deter a suicide bomber. This may be true, whether the kamikaze Is a religious fanatic or a pathatic, brainwashed kid. But you can both pun. ish and deter the control. lees. Who are the men behind AMONG those who al. cent t of the a e ) wa Had reason Shiites are the larnest f oamm?gi!7,.:1!wt'xa ...r reelected president. She fled to Baghdad earlier this year to Join her how band, Shdk All TehraaL She described how Ayatollah Montazeri, the bead of the Ministry of Islamic Revolution. chairs a powerful coor- dinating council that aims to export Khomei- ni's Ideas throughout the Muslim world. The Immediate goal I. to turn Lebanon (where trolled terrorist state. Longer term, Montazerl's council Is working for the overthrow of the conser- vative Gulf monarchies. Pro-Khomeini Islamic Revolutionary Organi. zations are active in Bahrain (where more than half the population is Shiite), Kuwait and Saudi Arabia (where there Is a high concen- tration of Shiites In the eastern oil fields). 'l+ehraa . has . give, W. K ::!q council. In. scone Iieiu~~nsl K e' ; th*Ies'. M6gr'adifiter of Mrs. Bader Ehamenet the Lumumbs University In sister of Iran's recently Moscow, used by the A recent refugee from crdtment office. Other alumni Include "CYrlos," the notorious Venesudan- born terrorIat. Another member of the council Is AbasNI 7&ma- ni, better known as "Abu Shan!," be was the origi- nal chief of Khomeini's Revolutionary Guards. Accordlnlf to one i lfence source. e s with the operatloa. The pared meetlup be tween HojatoieOam Whalegl, Khomdni's chief advisor on Arabi affairs, and Shifts terror lead- en In Lebanon.. "Abu SharW has at- tended training courses In the Soviet Union and East Germany. This opens up the ques- tion: Are the Soviets also workhug behind the scenes In a bid to cripple the Reagon administration through ? new hostage AYATOLLAH WAWAZUI o%eel eoarcN head. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 ARTICLE ON NEW YORK POST 17 October 1985 THE SOVIET STAKE IN By ROBERT Moss WORLD TERROR ALTHOUGH the Soviets recently fell prey to Muslim ban. dits in Beirut, Moscow still controls world terrorism, warns Robert Moss in this fourth of a six-part series. Moss, an au- thority on terrorism and espionage, is the editor of "Early Warning," a newsletter on intelligence, and the author of "Moscow Rules" (soon in paperback from Pocket Books). WHEN terrorists kid naped four Soviet diplo- mats in Beirut last month, a lot of Ameri- cans said to themselves: it's about time. While U.S. and West European envoys in Lebanon lived with the daily threat of the bullet and the car bomb, the Soviets seemed to lead charmed lives. Some thought the terrorist left the Russians alone be- cause they were scared that Moscow would exact rapid and ruthless re- venge. In fact, the reason the most active terrorist groups don't gun for the Russians is simple: why bite the hand that feeds you? The Soviet Bloc, both directly and via, subcontractors like Libya, Syria and North Korea, provides money, weapons and training for terrorists from all over the world. In Beirut, the Soviets at last fell victim to Lebanon's immensely complicated communal vendettas. Forces loyal to Moscow's ally, Syria, had laid siege to the northern town of Tripo- li. ruled since 1983 by Sunni fundamentalist chieftain Sheik Sayid Shaaban. Hit men from a little know Sunni group grabbed the Soviet diplo- mats to force Moscow to put pressure on Syria's President Assad to call off the siege. It's not clear whether any of the Rus- sians - some of whom are believed to be KGB officers - had been in contact with their abduc- tors before the kidnap. Now one of them, Arka- dly Katakov, is dead, shot at point blank range, his body dumped near the shelled out soccer sta- dium. And the kidnapers are threatening to bomb the Soviet Embassy. For once, the Soviets came up against terror- ists they couldn't con- trol or intimidate. But it would be wildly optimis- tic to imagine that this episode is going to change Moscow's long- term relationship with the international terror network. The Soviets have too much at stake. Marxist-Leninist ideol- ogy consecrates the use of political violence, and Moscow has been en- gaged in international terrorism since the earli- est days of the Soviet state. In 1922, Soviet agents met in Rome with the leader of Nasrat al Hakh ("Victory of Right"), an Egyptian ter- rorist group, to plot the assassination of Lord Al- lenby and other British officials. Today, when the Sovi- ets are embarked 'on a "peace offensive" to un- dermine U.S. efforts to rebuild NATO defenses, they don't want to be seen to be involved in terrorism. Hence their panicky propaganda ef- forts to cover up one smoking gun: the proven involvement of the Bulgarian secret service, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Soviet KGB in the plot to mur- der Pope John Paul II. There are two ultra- secret departments in Moscow that are charged with planning and executing "wet operation" (mokrie dela) including assassi- nations. One Is Depart- ment 8 of the KGB's Di- rectorate responsible for running illegal agents. According to a recent KGB defector, it relies on the Bulgarians, more than any other satelite service, to sup- ply hit men. The other department is the so-called "Second Direction" of Soviet Military Intelligence, the GRU, which ar- ranges for training for Third World terrorists, some of whom are maintained as "sleeper agents." to be mobilized in time of need for joint operations with the GRU-directed Spetsnaz forces, Russia's answer to the Green Berets or Britains SAS. The Spetsnaz units muster a total of about 30,000 men. Some are sent to scout targets in the West in the guile of visiting athletes. The proficiency of these Soviet profes- sional killers was demonstrated in Kabul, Afghanistan, in Decem- ber 1979, when a hit team was sent in ahead of the tanks to assassi- nate Afghan President Hafizollah Amin. They stormed Amin's palace, and cut him in' half with machine-gun fire. More than 1000 Pales- tinian terrorists have been trained at camps inside the USSR, like the ones at Odessa and at Simferopol in the Crimea. The notorious Venezuelan-born "Car- los" attended the Pa- trice Lumumba Univer- sity in Moscow, whose faculty includes a high proportion of KGB tal- ent spotters. So did key radicals in the present Iranian regime who are involved in sponsoring international terrorism. Many more terrorists receive training under Soviet Bloc instructors at camps in East Ger- many, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, Cuba, Nicara- gua, Lebanon, Libya and South Yemen. But in their dealings with Terror Inc.. the Soviets prefer - wher- ever feasible - to con- ceal their hand by work- ing through middle men, or cut-outs. In the Western Hemi- sphere, the Soviets princi- pal subcontractors are Cuba and Nicaragua, both profitably engaged in the drug-for-guns bar- ter trade between cocaine traffickers and "narco- terrorists" in Colombia. Bolivia and, most recent- ly, Venezuela. In the Middle East, where rival clans and Islamic sects use terror against each other as well as against western- and "Zionist" targets, the Soviets spread their beta. They have used the PLO as a proxy to train and arm 10,000 terror. ists from as far afield as Sri Lanka and Argen- tina and to provide ac- cess to the conservative Gulf monarchies. The Soviets don't "own" any Middle East government, with the possible exception of the orthodox Marxist- Leninist regime in South Yemen. The three most ag- gressive terror states in the region are Syria. Libya and Iran. None of them is a Soviet satel- lite. Syria's Assad is an astute political poker player, preoccupied with the survival of his own extended family, through . hamula. Libya's Khadafy is er- ratic, prone to mes- sianic delusions. And Iran's Ayatollah thinks that the ' Soviet Union, though perhaps not a "Great Satan" on the order of the U.S., is at least somewhat devil- ish; Khomeini has exe- cuted large numbers of Tudah (Communists) Party members and al- leged KGB agents and backs the guerrillas fighting the Soviet In- vaders in Afghanistan. However, the Soviets exercise effective con- trol over Syria and Libya through their massive arms ship- ments, their thousands of advisors on the - ground, and the recruit- ment of hundreds of KGB and GRU agents inside the local armed forces and intelligence services. They're using the same techniques to ensure that the Iranian mullahs continue ter, 0-44 1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 4MMONr Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 focus their wrath on the U.S. and its allies. The dividends can be enormous. Remember how the Beirut hostage crisis completely para- lyzed the Carter Admin- istration for most of its last year? The Soviets remember too. It's of more than passing in- terest that the man be- hind the seizure of the U.S. Embassy, Ayatol- lah Khoeiniya, was re- cently made Iran's At- torney General. Today, Khoeiniya is re- , sponsible for the SAVA- MA. Iran's security and intelligence organization, and is a key figure on the coordinating council, headed by Ayatollah Montazeri, that plots ter- rorism acts abroad. The Soviets would love to see the Reagan admin- istration hamstrung and exhausted by a rerun of the Tehran hostage crisis. Hence the value of "non- attributable" friends in Terror Inc JOHN PAUL II Survived KGS- backed death plot. HAFIZOLLAH AMIN Afghan big gunned down by Soviets. 2. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 NEW YORK POST ARTICLE APPEARED 18 October 1985 ON pas DRUGS & 0 BLOOD$ THE CUBAN CONNECTION Terrorists don't live on bread alone. To feed and arm their guerrilla bands, some Red nations have resorted to another deadly practice: drug smuggling. In part five of this six-part Poet series, Robert Moss, an authority on espionage and ter- rorism, details the dangers of the "narco-terrorists." By ROBERT MOSS OFF the northern coast of Cuba is a tiny island, Cayo Piedra, that has been fortified and is teeming with security guards armed with au- tomatic weapons. It is a regular port of call for Cuban warships and for President Fidel Castro and his brother Raul, the armed forces supremo. According to U.S. in- vestigators, it is also a base for drug racketeers operating under Cuban protection. Former Colombian deputy Pablo Escobar Gaviria, on his coun- try's most wanted list because of his alleged involvement in a major cocaine ring, and fugi- tive U.S. financier Ro- bert Vesco have both found safe haven in Cuba. They are both said to be active in ar- ranging drug deals that net the Castro regime a minimum of $10 million a month. The Colombian is said to travel to Nicaragua frequently on Cuban military planes. Last Christmas, he report- edly made a flamboyant gift to a Colombian guerrilla movement that controls cocaine laboratories and mari- juana plantations in the Guajira peninsula: 1000 Czech-manufactured pistols. engraved with his own initials. There is a mounting body of evidence that the Castro government and several other pro-Soviet regimes - notably Bul- garia, Syria and Nicara- gua - are skimming the profits of the drug traffic to finance international terrorism and other cov- ert activities. Four top Havana offi- cials, including the head of Castro's navy, have been indicted by a fed- eral court in South Flor- ida on charges of direct involvement with a Co- lombian ring smuggling cocaine into the U.S. Colombia is the source of 75 percent of the co- caine and more than half the marijuana that is smuggled into the U.S. each year. The gov- ernment, with U.S. en- couragement, has been trying to crack down on the druglords. but they have been fighting back. Last year, Colombia's Justice Minister. Ro- drigo Lars, Bonilla, was murdered and since then more than a hun- dred Colombian police- men have died in shoot- outs. Mob bosses are of- fering a bounty $300,000 for the lives of U.S. drug enforcement agents as- sisting the anti-drug campaign. The unholy alliance that has been spawned between organized crime and Marxist regimes and the revolutionary groups they sponsor poses a seri- ous threat to the stability of U.S. allies in the Wdst- ern Hemisphere. It also provides unlimited funds for terror operations against U.S. targets. The major terrorist groups in Colombia are all profiting from the drug trade. The largest and oldest of them is the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colom- bia) which was founded as a military wing of the Communist Party in 1964. Its chief, Manuel Marulanda Velez, is known by his nickname Tirofijo. or "Sureshot." The FARC levies a war tax (gramaje) of 30 per- cent of the estimated profits of drug traffickers in the regions it controls. Another group, the April 19th Movement ("M-19") pioneered "narco-terrorism" with the help of Cuban offi- cials In Bogota and Panama. M-19 has close ties to Libya as well as Cuba. Some of its lead- ers, including Hector Pineda, the M-19 chief in the Cali district, have been trained in the Mid- dle East. M-19 kidnaped and held the then U.S. Am- bassador to Colombia. Diego Asencio, and 17 other diplomats for more than two months in 1981. It staged a Cas- tro-backed mass inva- sion attempt that same year, with 200 comman- dos trained in Cuba, that inspired the Colombian government to break off diplomatic relations with Havana. Flush with funds from its drug connections, the M-19 now plays a leading role in coordinating ter- ror groups from other Latin American coun- tries. It is believed to have played midwife to a new terrorist movement, the Alfaro Lives organi- zation, that is trying to undermine Ecuador's fledgling democracy. It also has close contacts with the "Shining Path" guerrillas in Peru and Chile's MIR. According to intelli- sources, some 1400 terrorists mom both the and t e FARC are now receiving guerrilla trainin in Nicar a The Colombian govern- ment is alarmed that the Sandinistas' enthusiasm for exporting Marxist revolution seems to have spread beyond El Salva- dor and Central America. Amongst documents captured by the Colom- bian army during a raid on a guerrilla arms cache was a letter al- legedly signed by Nica. raguan President Dan- iel Ortega. It contained details of a revolution- ary offensive planned for next year, involving the landing of hundreds of guerrillas from Cuba and Nicaragua. Colombia's narco-ter- rorists pose a fast-grow- ing threat to neighbor- ing Venezuela too. As a result of the crackdown in Colombia, some of the major druglords and their terrorist friends have moved their bases over the border, into the state of Zulia and the thinly populated Amazo. nas territory. Venezuelan Justice Minister Jose Manzo Gonzales narrowly es- caped the same-fate as his Colombian counter. Part in 1984. He has ac- cused a Colombian dru- glord with friends and business partners in M-19 of having plotted his assassination. RODRIGO BONILLA Slain after ordering drug crackdown, ROBERT VISCO Fugitive financier said to aid Castro with drug deals. DANIEL ORTEGA Nicaragua chief joins Fidel in training guerrillas. DIEGO ASENCIO U.S. diplomat kid- naped in 1981. Continued Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 Secret plans of the Tripo/i Moscow axis WHEN Libya's Col. Khadafy threatens to "eat the kidneys" of his enemies - the Ameri- cans and the "Zionists" - there's a tendency in the West to write him Ott as a crackpot. The Soviets see him rather differently. They treat him as a precious ally - which he Is. According to a reliable into ence source, ya recently became e secon ddle East- ern country to receive Soviet SA-5 missiles. They are being deployed at two bases on the Mediterranean coast, threatening . NATO bases in Sicily, and around the al-Kufrah oasis, within striking distance of Sudan and southern Egypt. A top Czech intelli- ence ffi ervin a, who is said to handle liaison with tor. rorist group.. recently flew to Libya, It w a reed that his service, the t , w Post about 40 additional intent. enceeofficers to Tripoli, cl cludin a large ntin. en o communications specialists Some of these Czech spies will use the cover of trade or- ganizations like KOVO and FERROMET. They will complement the estimated 5000 Soviet military person- nel and thousands more East Europeans now in Libya. These exerts in- clude the bin deleaatlon from East Germany's Ministry of State Se, curity that supervises l~hadafv's intelligence services. The Soviets have created huge arms dumps in Libya, pre. MOAMMAR KHADAFY Soviets' best pal. positioning weapons for a future conflict. They have a chain of air and naval bases. Soviet engi- neers have been work- ing on a big new naval facility at the Libyan port of al-Bardiyah. They have built a root . over half a mile of dry docks to conceal what is LOUIS FARRAKHAN Libya beneficiary. going on from U. S. satel. I e surveillance, This Isn't the way you treat a madman. In fact, Khadafy is a prize asset for the Soviets. This isn't just because of the strategic value of the real estate he holds at gunpoint. It is also be- cause he can load up the mdet dubious friends with cash and Soviet-made weapons and leave the Russians free to say they don't know a thing about It. The long list of the beneficiaries of Khada- fy's largesse includes Central American guer- rillas; the IRA; Muslim fanatics In Indonesia, the Philippines and southern Thailand; Egyptians fundamen- talists; and America's own Louis Farrakhan. Khadafy's agents have been implicated in assas- sination plots against Egypt's late President Sadat and against Presi- dent Libyan The dictator has been notably active of late in trying to install pro-Soviet revolutionaries in power in strategic is- lands like Mauritius and French-owned Reunion, in the Indian Ocean, and New Caledonia, In the Pacific. Khadafy's recent ex- pulsion of foreign work. ers, including 30,000 Tunisians, provided per. fect cover for the infil. tration of Libyan agents. It's in the cards that some of those Tuni. sian expellees will now be used in a Libyan plot to punish President Bourguiba for refusing landing rights to that Egyptian plane with the hijackers on board. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 AtTl',;LE AFr- ED ON PAGE 19 October 1985 FIGHTING BACK WHEN TERROR HITS AT HOME ALTHOUGH past episodes have been few. U.S. soil Is n?t Immune to attacks by violent radicals, warns terrorism and espionage authority Robert Moss In his final Installment of this special Post series. By ROBERT MOSS THERE'S an ugly rumor about Yasser Arafat circulating in- side the PLO itself. It may help to explain why he authorized the hi- jacking of the Achille Laura, and why he is likely to license a new wave of terror attacks. According to intelli- gence sources, Arafat received a tip-off that the Israelis were about to strike half an hour be- fore the Israeli air force attacked his headquar- ters in Tunis at the start of this month. This ex- plains why Arafat and key lieutenants like Abu Iyad and Abu al-Mutas- sam (PLO operations chief) fled the scene be- fore the Israeli war- planes arrived. What is being said is that Arafat didn't bother to warn second-echelon leaders to evacuate the headquarters. Lesser PLO chiefs, including Jamal Hamami and All al-Zabek of the "Force 17" terror command, were left to perish in the rub- ble. Whether or not the rumor L true, the episode has left a residue of bit- terness among the PLO contingent in Lebanon. From Arafat's point of view, It's a highly com- bustible situation. His PLO fighters are frus- trated. lacking a land- base of their own from which to strike at Israel. Some have been ap- proached by Syrian and oust Arafat as seeking PLO supremo or, failing that, toPLOstage a new split in the Only by a new terror of- fensive abroad can Arafat hope to divert the ener- gies of his restive follow- ers and defuse the threat to his own leadership. Since the seajack ended in disaster - despite the Italians' release of Abul Abbas, Arafat's confidant and the mastermind in the hijack - Arafat's sup- porters will be driven to try again. The U.S. could be the main target. In the past, many more Americans have died at the hands of ter- rorists abroad than in- side the U.S. This does- n't mean that the U.S. is somehow magically im- mune to the orgy of vio- lence taking place in the Middle East, Europe and Latin AXterica. The support networks are already in Discs here for a terror campaign by extremists bent on pun- ishing the U.S. for its per- ceived policies in the Middle East and Central America. Here's the kind of sce- nario that has been preoc- cupying security experts since the capture of the PLO hijackers: ? A PLO hit team is sent to the U.S. to exact reprisals. It selects a high-profile target, say, the headquarters of a well-known Jewish or- ganization in New York. The terrorists, new to the U.S. find their target too well-guarded. But they see, in the phone book, that the next entry is for an organization with an almost Identical name. It happens to be a Jewish nursery school. Bingo: they have a ae- fenseless target for a re taking. beeme that (And these people have no compunction about tak- ing children's lives.) I've suppressed real names here because the scenario is only too plausible. It's an exam- ple of the arbitrary logic by which terrorists se- lect "targets of oppor- tunity." It's a reminder of how many easy tar- gets an open, demo- cratic society offers for terrorist attack. Here's another scenario that security analysts have been studying: ? The Reagan Admin- istration, either by di- rect action or through subcontractors (like the anti-communist govern- ments in Guatemala and Honduras) deals a body-blow to the Marx- ist regime In Nicaragua. The Sandinistas. some of whose chiefs were trained in PLO camps, provide a base for the Cubans, the PLO and terrorists from all over the region. The so-called "emer- gency response network," a grouping of pro-Sandin- ista organizations in more than 80 US. towns and cities, springs into action. Offices are closed, roads and bridges are blockaded, military bases picketed by demonstra- tors. Terrorist cells, organ- ized and infiltrated Into the U. by Cuban in a i- ence are sen in o ac. tion. to ina- a van age of the chaos. One avail- able uni unit is the Castro- based Puerto Rican FALN, which has carried out bombings in the New York area. One of Its leaders was caught in possession of detailed blueprints of the power system of lower Manhattan - presumably not because he was pursuing ad- vanced studies in elec- trical engineering. The FALN's sister group, the Macheteros wiped out most of the fighter planes of the Air National Guard in Puerto Rico and used an ad- vanced LAW ground-to- ground missile against the FBI. headquarters in San Juan, narrowly mias- ma its target. The second scenario. according to the profes- sionals, is no less realis. tic than the first. The masters of inter- national terrorism have friends In America. There is Colonel Khada. fy's friend Louis Farrak- han, whore gospel of race hate semitaam vulgar anti- are creating a climate of violence. Far. takhan boasts of a $ mil- lion "loan" Khadafy gave his Nabs of Islam or- ganlzation. Khadafy has been cu. tivating U.S. radicals since the early 19704. In recent years, the accent has been on militant black organizations like Farrakhan's group, the Republic of New Africa, and a shadowy Califor- nia-based outfit called Black Argus. Khadafy's Intelligence service IS rlnRPiv Allied to one of the deadliest Palestinian terror groups, George Ha- bash's PFLP, which pio- neered aircraft -hijack-. ings and has integrated non-Arabs - notably Germans, Japanese and Latin Americans - into its own ranks. The PFLP has active cells in the U.S., in southern California, Chicago, New York and other areas with significant Arab communities. Another Khadafy ally, Syria, exercises effec- tive control over an- other secret terror group that is well-estab- lished in the U.S. This is ASALA - the Armenian Secret Army for the Lib- eration of Armenia. ASALA hit men gunned down a Turkish diplo. mat in Los Angeles. The Iranian network is bigger still. It includes a Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8 , Washington-based group. the Islamic Guerrillas in America (IGA), some of whose members were im- plicated in the 1980 mur- der off an anti-Khomeini Iranian at his home in suburban Maryland. IGA members. who are mostly black ex-convicts, have been employed as security guards at the "Iranian Interests Sec- tion" at the Algerian Em- bassy in Washington, D.C. And then there are Fidel Castro's friends. A huge support apparatus for Latin American revo- lutionaries has been created in the U.S., under the supervision of the twin Cuban spy agencies: the DGI and the Departa mento de America. which specializes in subversion and terror- ism in the Western Hemisphere. Let's prevent it from happening herei , AS CAN be seen from this Post series, the men behind Terror Inc. have abundant resources in the U.S. They may now have the motive to bring their dirty wars here. What can be done to reduce the risk? Tighteaft up security around possible targets can never be a sufficient answer. There are just too many targets on offer. If not a cruise ship, then a tour bus. If not a Jewish organisation, then a nurs- ery school. An effective answer to terrorism depends on three things: penetra. tion, pre-emption and punishment. ? Penetration means recruiting In ormers and i i trat me - ence a ent n s Ins a r- rorist organizations. I have already reported the 1073 incident when a Black September terror- ist planted three car. bombs in New York, out. side the Israeli consul. ate, the El Al office and on Wall Street. He was foiled because of rood intelligence - not an a ent in this case but an FBI wiretap. ? With foreknowledge of the terrorists' plans, the authorities can move to preempt them. The Is. raelis, with multiple sources inside Arab ter- ror groups, have been able to tip off the U.B. and allied governments in ad. vanceof terrorist strikes. Alerted H the Israelis, for exam We--Wet German authorities were able to intercept a PFLP it m en rou tow up o amps West Berlin - a target selected I v ast er- ? i_g egell~ens. ? Negotiations can't always be ruled out. But the message can and must be sent out loud and clear that, every time terrorism is com. mitted, those responsi. ble with illegal acts must be made to pay. The Israelis sent that message when they dis. patched their warplanes to Tunis. To date, the U.S. has failed to send it to the men responsible for the Beirut bombings and the TWA hijack and, for that matter, to the people who arranged the long agony at the U.B. Embassy in Tehran. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/03: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504600002-8