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Turkish intelligence: al-Qaeda a "secret service operation"?
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Fri, 08/19/2005 - 17:23.
Louai Sakra, a supposed al-Qaeda operative held responsible for the November 2003 bombings in Istanbul and plans to launch attacks against cruise liners carrying Israeli tourists in Turkish ports, was arrested by Turkish authorities in the southeastern city of Diyarbakir last week. The apprehension of the Syrian national was hailed by the British embassy as "a significant success in the global struggle against Al-Qaeda and other terrorist organisations." (MSNBC, Aug. 17) Right on cue, paranoid blogger Kurt Nimmo responds by striking yet again his single, relentless chord:
Nimmo fails to provide either a link or a date for the Zaman commentary, but here it is (Aug. 14). Additionally, his headline, "Turkish Intelligence: Al-Qaeda a U.S. Covert Operation," is not warranted by the quotes he cites (the unnamed officials never said "US covert operation"). We too have noted the precedent of Gladio and its "strategy of tension." And we don't doubt there is a sleazy incestuous relationship between al-Qaeda and western intelligence agencies. But we are skeptical of paraphrased quotes from un-named intelligence officials. And we think it is most likely at this point that al-Qaeda (spare us the smart-alecky "al-CIA-duh", willya Kurt?) is neither exactly an "organization" or "an element of an intelligence agency operation," but a loose network of like-minded militants with varying ties to either the core al-Qaeda group around Osama bin Laden and Ayman Zawahiri or to Western intelligence operations. Once again, the world is probably more complicated than either the conspiracy theorists or the peddlers of conventional wisdom can conceive. See our last post on terror in Turkey. See also our last posts on Nimmo's claims regarding al-Qaeda and its local Iraq franchise.
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