Adnan G. el Shukrijumah, al Qaeda's
operations chief for North America.
Photos
from the
Rewards for Justice website.
3rd July 2010
The terrorists who plotted to blow up New
York City subways last year may have met with a top al
Qaeda operative who has been wanted by the US since
2003, according to multiple press accounts.
The subway plot was headed by Najibullah
Zazi, an Afghan citizen and US resident, who pled guilty
to terrorism-related charges earlier this year.
According to press accounts, either Zazi or his
coconspirators met with an elusive al Qaeda operative
named Adnan Shukrijumah. Prior to the September 11,
2001, terrorist attacks, Shukrijumah lived in Florida
and had been groomed by senior al Qaeda leaders,
including September 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
(KSM), to be a sleeper agent responsible for launching a
new round of attacks inside the US.
According to the
Associated Press,
three of the subway plotters travelled to Pakistan where
they may have met with Shukrijumah. Two of the three
attempted to join the Taliban’s forces in Afghanistan,
but were turned away by suspicious Pakistani police at
the border. All three of the plotters then regrouped in
Pakistan, where they were recruited by senior al Qaeda
leaders to perform a suicide operation in the US.
Salah
al Somali, who was the head of al Qaeda’s external
operations at the time (al Somali was subsequently
killed in a Predator strike
in North Waziristan, Pakistan,
in December 2009), and Rashid Rauf, a member of Jaish-e-Mohammed
who is suspected of playing a role in al Qaeda’s 2006
plot against British airliners, reportedly recruited the
men for al Qaeda. It was after the subway plotters were
recruited by al Somali and Rauf that they met with
Shukrijumah.
Zazi
himself may have met with Shukrijumah, according to the
New York Daily News.
Shukrijumah is thought to be one of al
Qaeda's top leaders in its external, or global,
operations network. Shukrijumah is al Qaeda's operations
chief for North America, US intelligence officials
stated. Officials told The Associated Press
that Shukrijumah is a top contender to lead al Qaeda's
global operations.
The “next” Mohammed Atta
Since
2003, Shukrijumah has been one of the most wanted al
Qaeda terrorists in the world. On March 20, 2003, the
FBI
released
a "Be on the Lookout" alert for Shukrijumah (aka Jafar
al Tayyar, or Jafar "the Pilot"). In the days that
followed, press outlets reported some of the details on
el Shukrijumah's suspicious career.
Shukrijumah had lived in the US for years
and attended a mosque in Florida where he mixed with
radicals. At some point, Shukrijumah traveled to
Afghanistan where he allegedly received training in al
Qaeda's camps and was groomed by senior al Qaeda leaders
for future missions. In 2003, FBI and US intelligence
officials told the press that Shukrijumah then came back
to the US with a particularly lethal purpose: to
coordinate terrorist attacks on American soil after
September 11, 2001.
Just
days after the FBI's alert was issued, CBS News
("Most
Wanted: The Next Atta?")
and U.S. News & World Report ("A
Hunt for ‘The Pilot'")
published accounts explaining how Shukrijumah was
identified. The press outlets reported that the
interrogation of KSM, who had been captured just weeks
earlier, played an instrumental role. That interrogation
would subsequently become controversial after it was
revealed that certain "enhanced interrogation
techniques," including waterboarding, were used.
The release last year of the CIA
Inspector General's Report on the enhanced interrogation
program and two other CIA analytical documents, as well
as a summary prepared by the Office of the Director of
National Intelligence, confirm the details set forth in
those two early press accounts.
The story of the intelligence that led to
the FBI's alert, according to all of these sources, is
as follows.
In May 2002, US authorities began asking
al Qaeda detainees an urgent question. According to
U.S. News, the officials wanted to know: "Whom
would al Qaeda pick to lead the next big attack against
U.S. targets?" Abu Zubaydah, who was captured in the
early hours of March 28, 2002, fingered an al
Qaeda-trained terrorist who Zubaydah knew by the nom de
guerre Jafar al Tayyar. Other detainees fingered Jafar
as well, but Zubaydah was the first.
According to a June 3, 2005, CIA analysis titled
“Detainee Reporting Pivotal for the War Against Al
Qaeda,” Jafar al Tayyar “first came to the FBI's
attention when Abu Zubaydah named him as one of the most
likely individuals to be used by al Qaeda for operations
in the United States or Europe.” (A document
released
by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
contained the same detail about Zubaydah's role.)
“Several detainees identified a man who
looked like el Shukrijumah,” U.S. News
reported, but it was the wrong suspect. It wasn't until
KSM was captured on March 1, 2003, and then
interrogated, that investigators got a real break. Here
is how U.S. News reported it:
Two weeks ago [in early March 2003], the
search turned up a new name--and a new photograph. But
investigators still were not sure. The crucial moment
didn't come until Khalid Shaikh Mohammad corroborated
the investigators' hunch. El Shukrijumah, he said after
being shown a photograph, was Jafar the Pilot.
A CIA analysis dated July 13, 2004, and
titled “Khalid Sheikh Mohammed: Preeminent Source on Al
Qaeda” includes this corroborating detail: "KSM has also
spoken at length about operative Jafar al Tayyar,
admitting that al Qaeda had tasked al Tayyar to case
specific targets in New York City in 2001."
Recent press reports dealing with
Shukrijumah’s ties to the New York City subway plot do
not mention whether the al Qaeda terrorist briefed Zazi
or his cohorts on specific targets. But it is certainly
possible that Shukrijumah himself had cased the subways
as early as 2001. Al Qaeda also typically maintains
surveillance files on targets that have been cased and
it is possible that such information was shared with the
NYC subway plotters.
The identification of Shukrijumah as
Jafar the Pilot led to a massive manhunt, with
widespread media coverage. It may be the case that this
scrutiny is what prevented Shukrijumah from carrying out
al Qaeda's bidding in 2003. Some press accounts have
suggested that Shukrijumah may have even cased American
nuclear facilities or investigated attacks involving
radiological material. Such reports may exaggerate
Shukrijumah’s intentions. At a minimum, however,
Shukrijumah cased targets for future attacks and planned
to coordinate those attacks with other al Qaeda
operatives.
In March 2003, Pat d'Amuro, who was then
a top FBI counterterrorism official, explained: "We
believe that the targets that he would be affiliated
with, domestically, here in the United States, could be
fuel tankers, apartment buildings, transportation hubs."
D'Amuro
further
warned:
“This individual would rate in the top five with respect
to protection of the homeland... I would say, for
domestic reasons, within the continental United States,
this individual is very important for the FBI to find.”
If recent press accounts are correct,
Shukrijumah is in northern Pakistan and is still
plotting attacks against the continental US on behalf of
al Qaeda.