Omar Nasiri
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Omar Nasiri(born 1960s) is thepseudonymof aBelgianspyof Moroccan origin who infiltratedal-Qaeda,attending training camps inAfghanistanand passing information to the UK and French externalintelligence services,theDGSE.He claims in an exclusive interview presented on theBBC'sNewsnightprogramme on 16 November 2006 that the UK intelligence services were warned in the mid-1990s about the threat posed by al-Qaeda, but failed to act quickly enough. He also claims thatIbn al-Shaykh al-Libideliberately gave interrogators acting on behalf of theUnited Statesfalse information in order to encourage the USA to overthrowSaddam Hussein,thus allowing al-Qaeda to useIraqas ajihadistbase.
In his book, he claims to be deaf in his left ear due to an accident when he was younger, when he was using a Q-tip to clean his ears when his brothers, who wereroughhousingon a bed next to him, fell on him and drove the Q-tip deep into his left ear. While this is heavily considered to be true, because his book mentions how "minor details have been edited or fabricated for protection of the author", it is unclear if he is deaf in his left ear instead of his right, or if this ever really happened.
Introduction to Abdullah and Abdurahman Khadr
[edit]Nasiri's bookInside the Jihad: My Life with al Qaeda, a Spy's storycontains Nasiri's account of meeting two boys he was to learn were sons of theKhadr family.[1]Although he identified them asAbdurahmanandOmar Khadr,the family has disputed his identification, stating that it wasAbdullahand Abdurahman who were at the camp.[2]
Nasiri states that, when he was attending theKhaldan training camp,ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi,the camp's director, introduced the two boys as "Hamza" and "Osama".[3]
According to Nasiri the two boys constantly fought with one another.[3] He said their fights were unlike those of normal brothers, and gave an account of an incident on the marksmanship range, where the two boys were yelling at one another, turned their guns on one another, and all the other people on the firing range thought they were going to open fire on one another.
Nasiri's account of Osama, the younger of the two sons, was that he was "almost hyperactive", and was constantly talking, bragging.[3]According to Nasiri, he bragged about how important his father was, and offered Nasiri his first hint ofOsama bin Laden's role in running the camp—telling him "the other Osama" paid for all the food consumed there.
Nasiri described the older son as much quieter, but he did tell about an incident, when he had been present in a public square, during the siege ofKhowst,in 1991.[3] A mortar shell landed in the square, but didn't go off. Nasiri said that the older son told him the Afghans were so desperate for money that a crowd started to try to dismantle the mortar shell, in order to sell the parts to the fighters. Nasiri said that he told him that everyone trying to dismantle the shell was killed in the explosion when one of the salvagers tried to get it open by hitting it with a hammer.
See also
[edit]- Belgian State Security Service
- Belgian General Information and Security Service
- DGSEorDirection générale de la sécurité extérieure
- DSTorDirection de la surveillance du territoire
- MI6
- MI5
- GIAorArmed Islamic Group
- Afghan training camp
- Khalden training camp
- Derunta training camp
References
[edit]- ^ Reid Morden,Running with, and from, al-QaedaArchived1 May 2009 at theWayback Machine,The Globe and Mail,25 November 2006
- ^Guantanamo's Child, 2008
- ^abcdInfiltrating Al-Qaeda: At a terrorist camp, a French spy meets the battling Khadr brothers[permanent dead link],Maclean's,27 November 2006
Publications
[edit]He authored the following books:
- ISBN978-1-85065-861-0"Inside the Global Jihad: How I Infiltrated Al Qaeda and Was Abandoned by Western Intelligence"
- ISBN978-0-465-02388-2"Inside the Jihad: My Life with al Qaeda, a Spy's story"
External links
[edit]- "UK 'ignored spy's al-Qaeda fear'"- fromBBC News16 November 2006
- "Spy lifts lid on al-Qaeda"- fromBBC News16 November 2006
- The Newsnight special - online video(only available in the UK. Link may possibly expire within a few days).
- A shorter (4 minute) versionof the interview presented in the Newsnight special.
- Al-Qaida 'planted information to encourage US invasion'-Guardianarticle 17 November 2006
- After a Decade at War With West, Al-Qaeda Still Impervious to SpiesbyCraig WitlockArchived5 May 2008 at theWayback Machineof theWashington Post20 March 2008
- Al-Qaeda
- British spies
- Federal Intelligence Service informants
- Counterinsurgency theorists
- Counterterrorism theorists
- Historians of espionage
- Espionage writers
- French spies
- Muslim writers
- Moroccan writers
- Moroccan non-fiction writers
- Moroccan emigrants to the United Kingdom
- Living people
- Post–Cold War spies
- 21st-century spies
- Psychological warfare theorists
- Terrorism theorists
- War on terror
- English people of Moroccan descent