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Associated Press
By KATHERINE SHRADER and JOHN SOLOMON
Associated Press Writers
 WASHINGTON
- U.S. intelligence and foreign allies have growing evidence that
wanted terrorists have been residing in Iran despite repeated American
warnings to Tehran not to harbor them.
The evidence,
which stretches over several years, includes communications by a
fugitive mastermind of the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing and the capture
of a Saudi militant who appeared in a video in which Osama bin Laden
confirmed he ordered the Sept. 11 attacks, according to U.S. and
foreign officials.
They spoke on condition of anonymity because much of the evidence remains classified.
Saudi
intelligence officers tracked and apprehended Khaled bin Ouda bin
Mohammed al-Harbi last year in eastern Iran, officials said. The arrest
came nearly three years after the cleric appeared with bin Laden and
discussed details of the Sept. 11 planning during a dinner that was
videotaped and aired across the world.
The capture was a
coup for Saudi Arabia, which spent months tracking him and setting up
the intelligence operation that led to his being taken into custody in
exchange for eventual amnesty.
The officials said
interrogations of al-Harbi, who is now in Saudi Arabia, have yielded
confirmation of many al-Qaida tactics, including how members crossed
into Iran after the U.S. began military operations to rout al-Qaida and
the Taliban from Afghanistan.
Al-Harbi is believed to
have been paralyzed from the waist down while fighting in the 1990s
alongside Muslim extremists in Bosnia and Afghanistan, and he surprised
intelligence officials when he appeared in the December 2001 video with
bin Laden.
``Everybody praises what you did,'' al-Harbi said on the tape.
U.S.
and foreign intelligence agencies also have evidence stretching back to
the late 1990s that indicates Ahmad Ibrahim al-Mughassil remains hiding
in Iran. He is wanted as one of the masterminds of the Khobar Towers
bombing in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 Americans.
Al-Mughassil,
who also goes by the alias Abu Omran, has been charged as a fugitive by
the United States with conspiracy to commit murder in the attacks and
has a $5 million bounty on his head.
U.S. authorities
have long alleged the 1996 bombing was carried out by a Saudi wing of
the militant group Hezbollah, which receives support from Iran and
Syria.
Intelligence agencies gathered evidence, including
a specific phone number, as early as 1997 indicating al-Mughassil was
living in Iran, and have other information indicating his whereabouts.
U.S.
officials have not publicly discussed the Saudi capture of al-Harbi or
their evidence on al-Mughassil's whereabouts, but have increasingly
raised questions about Iran's efforts to turn over other suspected
terrorists believed to be under some form of loose house arrest.
Nicholas
Burns, State Department undersecretary for political affairs, told
Congress last month that Iran has refused to identify al-Qaida members
it has in custody.
``Iran continues to hold senior
al-Qaida leaders who are wanted for murdering Americans and others in
the 1998 East Africa Embassy bombings and for plotting to kill
countless others,'' Burns said.
Top administration officials have repeatedly warned Iran against harboring or assisting suspected terrorists.
U.S.
intelligence this week has been checking some reports, still
uncorroborated as of Friday, that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, al-Qaida's
leader of the Iraqi insurgency, may have dipped into Iran, officials
said.
On Wednesday, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld warned countries in the Middle East not to help al-Zarqawi.
``Were
a neighboring country to take him in and provide medical assistance or
haven for him, they, obviously, would be associating themselves with a
major linkage in the al-Qaida network and a person who has a great deal
of blood on his hands,'' Rumsfeld said.
The U.S. and
foreign officials said evidence gathered by intelligence agencies
indicates the following figures are somewhere in Iran:
-Saad bin Laden, the son of the al-Qaida leader whom U.S. authorities have aggressively hunted since the Sept. 11 attacks.
- Saif al-Adel, an al-Qaida security chief wanted in connection with the deadly 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Africa.
-Suleiman Abu Ghaith, the chief of information for al-Qaida and a frequently quoted spokesman for bin Laden.
U.S.
and foreign intelligence officials say they believe those three are
under some form of house arrest or surveillance by Iranian authorities.
Kenneth
Katzman, a Middle East analyst at the Congressional Research Service,
said the conditions that some of suspected terrorists are living under
are unclear. Katzman said it's possible they are being held in guarded
villas and he doubts any detention is uncomfortable.
``I think that Iran sees these guys as something of an insurance policy,'' he said. ``It's leverage.''
Rasool
Nafisi, a Middle East analyst who studies conservative groups in Iran
and travels there frequently for research, said Iran has returned some
lower-rank operatives to their home countries but probably is keeping
higher-ranking operatives as a bartering chip.
``Remember,
Islamic tradition is very much based on haggling,'' Nafisi said.
``Everything is negotiable, and you haggle for everything. If I were
the Iranian government, I'd be very happy to have them and to use them
in future negotiations with the United States.'' |