Italy Seeks Former US-CIA Diplomat in Kidnapping
By Tracy Wilkinson - The Los Angeles Times*
The warrant links an imam's abduction to the Rome embassy. A
total of 22 people are sought.
Rome - Friday 30 September 2005 - Italian authorities have
ordered the arrests of a former US Embassy official here and two
other people in connection with a "rendition" case in which CIA
operatives allegedly kidnapped a radical Muslim cleric from
Milan and flew him to Egypt, where, he has said, he was
tortured.
The new arrest warrants bring to 22 the number of people
sought on suspicion of planning and executing the plot and
apparently are the first direct connection to the US Embassy in
Rome. US intelligence officials in Washington, though refusing
to acknowledge the operation publicly, have sought to portray it
as conducted by the spy-world equivalent of contractors.
The warrants were signed by a judge this week in response to
a petition from prosecutors Armando Spataro and Ferdinando
Pomarici, an Italian judicial official said Thursday. Details
are contained in court documents reviewed by the Los Angeles
Times.
As with earlier orders in the same case, the named Americans
are believed to have long since departed Italy, and no arrests
appeared imminent.
An imam known as Abu Omar was seized in February 2003 in a
so-called extraordinary rendition, a controversial practice in
which the US snatches suspected terrorists and transports them
to other countries without judicial permission.
Italy, however, stunned Washington during the summer by
attempting to prosecute 19 people, including a man identified in
arrest warrants as the former CIA station chief in Milan, who
are alleged to have taken part in the abduction. It is believed
to be the first time that an ally has attempted to bring US
operatives to justice in such a case.
Italian investigators said their review of telephone traffic
among those who abducted the imam in Milan 2 1/2 years ago led
them to the former US Embassy employee. She is believed to have
made or received a number of calls aimed at coordinating and
organizing the abduction and to have participated directly in
the operation, according to papers filed in court by
prosecutors.
Investigators found evidence that she checked into a Milan
hotel 24 days before the kidnapping and traveled with the other
suspects to the US-run Aviano Air Base in northern Italy, where
Abu Omar was bundled onto a private jet bound for Egypt via the
US military's Ramstein Air Base in Germany, Italian prosecutors
said.
The prosecutors maintain that the participation of the woman
is especially egregious given the diplomatic position she held
at the embassy. According to public records, she served in the
US Embassy in Rome until this year, when she was transferred to
Latin America.
The Italian court file does not identify her as a CIA
officer, though previous Italian court documents have said the
team of agents worked under the former CIA station chief in
Milan.
The Times is not naming the former Rome embassy official.
The paper generally avoids naming undercover intelligence
operatives unless their names are put into public record.
CIA officers often work overseas as US Embassy officials
with the status of diplomats, even though they do not work for
the State Department.
Asked whether the former embassy employee was a CIA officer,
agency spokeswoman Jennifer Millerwise said: "We are not going
to comment on this story."
Efforts to speak to the former Rome embassy worker at her
posting in Latin America were not successful. In a brief
conversation, a person answering the phone initially identified
herself as the woman; when told she was speaking to a reporter,
however, she immediately said she had no idea who the woman was
and refused to respond further.
At the request of the prosecutors, Italian police asked the
domestic secret service to detain her in March, but the agency
reported that it could not find her, the court documents state.
In Rome, the US Embassy said it had no comment on the
matter, the position it has taken since the scandal erupted
early this year.
Two men are also named in the new warrants, but those names
appear to be aliases.
The imam's suspected captors appear to have been sloppy,
leaving behind copies of their passports and credit card numbers
and speaking openly on cell-phones that can be easily tracked by
law enforcement officers, which is how Italian authorities
identified their suspects and built their case.
The names of the former embassy official and the former
Milan station chief thus far are the only apparently authentic
names to have emerged in the investigation.
The former station chief named was Robert Seldon Lady, who
has since retired. Lady, a 51-year-old American born in
Honduras, served in the Milan consulate and, by Italian
accounts, directed Abu Omar's abduction and transfer to Egypt.
His name has been widely reported in connection with this case.
When he vanished, the Egyptian-born Abu Omar, whose real
name is Hassan Osama Nasr and who had been granted political
asylum by Italy, was being investigated by Italian police, who
suspected him of organizing a network of Islamic fighters being
dispatched to Iraq. Italian authorities were furious at the
Americans for allegedly snatching him under their nose,
contending that it hurt their broader efforts to prosecute
terrorism cases.
Abu Omar eventually was able to make contact with his wife
in Milan, whom he telephoned during a brief period out of
prison. He told her he had been tortured and beaten. Italian
authorities believe that Lady was present in Egypt at the time
and may have known what was happening.
At last report, Abu Omar remained jailed in Egypt without
charge. He has told associates that Egyptian authorities tried
to persuade him to spy on Islamic radicals for them, but he
refused.
Since retiring, Lady has bought a home near the northern
Italian city of Turin. Italian police raided the home in June
after the first warrants were executed.
New details emerged in court papers this week about what the
inspectors found in the raid. In addition to a surveillance
photo of Abu Omar taken a month before his disappearance, police
found on Lady's computer hard disk information indicating he
traveled to Cairo four days after the abduction last year. He
left Cairo on March 7. Investigators also discovered research
for determining the best way to travel from Milan to the Aviano
base.
The decision of the Italian judiciary to attempt to
prosecute alleged CIA operatives was previously unheard of in
the world of renditions, a tactic in which the US government
sends suspected terrorists to nations that use coercive
interrogation methods that would not be available otherwise. The
practice, which has grown in use since the Sept. 11 attacks in
the US, has been denounced as illegal by human rights groups.
Italy's judiciary is highly independent of the central
government of conservative Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, a
staunch ally of the Bush administration. He has denied advance
knowledge of the Abu Omar capture. But many Italians presume
that the government secretly approved the operation, and former
agents in the US have also said it could not have been conducted
without official Italian permission. Thinking they had Italian
government approval may also explain the evidently reckless
nature of the actions by the purported CIA operatives.
[enditem] - Url.:
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/093005L.shtml
FOREIGN PRESS FOUNDATION
Editor : Henk Ruyssenaars
http://tinyurl.com/66dmo
The Netherlands
FPF@Chello.nl
* 'The war in Iraq is illegal' - BBC video & text - interview
United Nation's Secretary General Kofi Annan - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/5pl2v
*Corporate News Media: Incompetent, Criminally Negligent or
Complicit? - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/cqpfe
* Brainwashed? Take the free 'Gullibility Factor' test to find
out if you're really a mind slave or not - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/cbgnc
* The World Can't Wait! Drive out the Bush Regime. Mobilize for
November 2, 2005! - Url.:
http://www.worldcantwait.org/
*Help the troops come back from abroad! We need them badly at
home in many countries, to fight our so called 'governments' -
Url.:
http://www.bringthemhomenow.org/
FPF-COPYRIGHT NOTICE - In accordance with Title 17 U. S. C.
Section 107 - any copyrighted work in this message is
distributed by the Foreign Press Foundation under fair use,
without profit or payment, to those who have expressed a prior
interest in receiving the information. Url.:
http://liimirror.warwick.ac.uk/uscode/17/107.html
-0-