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Once again, an explosion has ripped through the Indonesian resort island of
Bali, killing at least 23 people. “We think it’s almost certainly
a terrorist attack, I doubt that there’s any other explanation for it,
you could assume it’s an attack by an organization like Jemiaah Islamiah
speaking from experience, but of course at this stage no one’s claimed
responsibility for the attack and we have no evidence,” Australian Foreign
Affairs Minister Alexander
Downer told ABC News. It was almost exactly three years ago (October 14,
2002) “terrorists, allegedly linked to Osama bin Laden and his al Qaeda
network, blew up a nightclub in the resort town of Kuta Beach in Bali killing
202 people and wounding another 100,” as the Crime
Library summarizes. As CNN
reported on November 8, 2002, an al-Qaeda message posted on the al-Neda website
claimed responsibility for targeting “nightclubs and whorehouses in Indonesia.”
It was claimed a local “terrorist” organization, Jemaah Islamiyah,
supposedly linked to al-Qaeda, planted the bombs.
“On 30 April 2003, the first charges related to the Bali bombings were
made against Amrozi bin Haji Nurhasyim, known as Amrozi, for allegedly buying
the explosives and the van used in the bombings,” notes Wikipedia.
On 8 August he was found guilty and sentenced to death. Another participant
in the bombing, Imam Samudra, was sentenced to death on 10 September. Amrozi’s
brother, Ali Imron, who had expressed remorse for his part in the bombing,
was sentenced to life imprisonment on 18 September. A fourth accused, Mukhlas,
was sentenced to death on 1 October. All those convicted have said they
will appeal, and none of the death sentences have yet been carried out….
On 15 August Riduan Isamuddin, generally known as Hambali, described as
the operational chief of Jemaah Islamiyah and as al-Qaeda’s “point
man” in Southeast Asia, was arrested in Bangkok. He is in American
custody in an undisclosed location, and has not been charged in relation
to the Bali bombing or any other crime. It was reported that the United
States is reluctant to hand Hambali over to Indonesian authorities in light
of the lenient sentence given to Abu Bakar Bashir [an Islamic cleric who
is the alleged spiritual head of Jemaah Islamiyah].
It is interesting to note another “al-Qaeda” functionary, Omar
al-Faruq, who fingered Bashir and Jemaah Islamiah for a bombing outside the
largest mosque in Jakarta in 1999, also disappeared. “Former State Intelligence
Coordinating Board (BAKIN) chief A.C. Manulang has said that Kuwaiti citizen
Omar Al-Faruq, a terrorist suspect who was arrested in Bogor, West Java, on
June 5, 2002 and handed over to the US three days later, is a CIA-recruited
agent,” Tempo
Interactive reported on September 19, 2002. ‘When Al Faruq finished
his assignments, the CIA created a scenario that he had been arrested,’
Manulang told Tempo News Room…. ‘Anti-Islam intelligence agencies
committed the bombings in Indonesia. They have been trained for this and they
are very organized,” said Manulang.”
It is no secret the Indonesia military has documented links to Islamic
terrorist groups, although this is often explained away as simply a few bad
apples or the unfortunate connections of “corrupt elements within the
military,” as the Sydney
Morning Herald put it. Indonesia’s ruthless Army Special Forces,
Kopassus, was trained by the CIA (and U.S. Special Operations Forces in psychological
operations) and is known for its covert ops (for instance, “Ninja”
assassinations; see Peter
Dale Scott, Murder in Java: Psychological warfare and the New York
Times). Kopassus was also responsible for the murder of over 200,000 people
on the island of East Timor.
Moreover, Indonesian intelligence has links to Jemaah Islamiah and
other terrorist groups. “The links between JI [Jemaah Islamiah]
and Indonesia’s Intelligence Agency (BIN) are acknowledged by the International
Crisis Group (ICG),” writes Michel
Chossudovsky, who quotes the ICG as follows: “This link [of JI to
the BIN] needs to be explored more fully: it does not necessarily mean that
military intelligence was working with JI, but it does raise a question about
the extent to which it knew or could have found out more about JI than it has
acknowledged,” an assertion to which Chossudovsky responds: “The
ICG, however, fails to mention that Indonesia’s intelligence apparatus
has for more than 30 years been controlled by the CIA.” Suspicion is also
cast on General A. M. Hendropriyono, the head of Indonesian intelligence. “The
agency and its director, Gen. A. M. Hendropriyono, are well regarded by the
United States and other governments,” Raymond Bonner and Jane Perlez write
for the New York Times (25 November 2002). “But there are still senior
intelligence officers here who believe that the C.I.A. was behind the [first
Bali] bombing.”
Of course, none of these suspicious connections will be investigated
by the corporate media now that a second Bali bombing has occurred. Instead,
attention will turn in a predictable and well-scripted direction toward a cast
of usual suspects—”al-Qaeda in Indonesia,” Jemaah Islamiah,
or a new terrorist formation—as the point here is to keep up the strategy
of tension and barrage the public with one nightmarish terrorist incident after
another, usually aimed at innocents, non-combatants, tourists, and women and
children in Iraq, etc., thus sending a message repeatedly and incessantly: Islam
has declared an immoral and psychotic war against the people of America and
much of the western world. Our response should be, as Ann Coulter so famously
(and disgustingly) explained, to “bomb them and convert them to Christianity,”
or at least wreck their societies and culture.
It is too early to speculate on the motivations of the latest Bali bombing.
But we can rest assured it will be the same story—crazed Muslims declaring
war on infidels wherever they find them and for the usual murderous religious
reasons—and al-Qaeda will once again post a video or audio message on
the internet. No doubt this claim for responsibility will come over the next
few days and the latest outrage and carnage will be laid at the feet of “al-Qaeda,”
the database of Mujahedeen organized by the CIA and used in Afghanistan, the
Balkans, Chechnya, and elsewhere. For the neocons, “al-Qaeda”
is the best thing since the invention of sliced bread.
See from Looking Glass News
Bali II: Another Elusive Terror Mastermind on the Loose...
http://www.lookingglassnews.org/viewstory.php?storyid=2770
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