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North AmericaWhy is
the US government protecting anthrax terrorist?
By the Editorial Board
3 July 2002
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An extraordinary commentary published in Tuesday’s New York
Times declares that the FBI is refusing to arrest or seriously
investigate the most obvious suspect in the anthrax attacks last fall
which killed five people.
The allegations made by Times columnist Nicholas Kristof are
so serious that they deserve immediate and thorough public
investigation. But so far, both the Bush administration and the media
have remained silent on what is, without exaggeration, one of the most
astounding articles ever to appear in a major American newspaper.
Kristof indicts the FBI’s “lackadaisical ineptitude in pursuing the
anthrax killer,” writing: “Almost everyone who has encountered the FBI
anthrax investigation is aghast at the bureau’s lethargy. Some in the
biodefense community think they know a likely culprit, whom I’ll call
Mr. Z. Although the bureau has polygraphed Mr. Z., searched his home
twice and interviewed him four times, it has not placed him under
surveillance or asked its outside handwriting expert to compare his
writing to that on the anthrax letters.”
Kristof confirms that the identity of the prime suspect is well
known in media and government circles, although he chooses not to name
the name. “If Mr. Z. were an Arab national,” Kristof comments, “he
would have been imprisoned long ago. But he is a true-blue American
with close ties to the US Defense Department, the CIA and the American
biodefense program.”
The columnist places this negligence in the context of a larger
pattern, including a decision to allow anthrax stocks held by Iowa
State University—in Ames, Iowa, namesake of the toxic strain used in
the letters—to be incinerated rather than tested. The FBI delayed
testing the anthrax in the unopened letter to Senator Leahy until
December, and has still not finished testing anthrax strains obtained
from private, US government and overseas labs for comparison. Lie
detector tests were not administered to biowarfare scientists at Ft.
Detrick, Maryland and Dugway Proving Ground in Utah until last month.
Kristof concludes his column with a series of pointed questions to
the FBI. He writes:
“Do you know how many identities and passports Mr. Z. has and are
you monitoring his international travel? I have found at least one
alias for him, and he has continued to travel abroad on government
assignments, even to Central Asia.
“Why was his top security clearance suspended in August, less than
a month before the anthrax attacks began? This move left him
infuriated. Are the CIA and military intelligence agencies cooperating
fully with the investigation?
“Have you searched the isolated residence that he had access to
last fall? The FBI has known about this building, and knows that Mr.
Z. gave Cipro to people who visited it. This property and many others
are legally registered in the name of a friend of Mr. Z., but may be
safe houses operated by American intelligence.
“Have you examined whether Mr. Z. has connections to the biggest
anthrax outbreak among humans ever recorded, the one that sickened
more than 10,000 black farmers in Zimbabwe in 1978-80? There is
evidence that the anthrax was released by the white Rhodesian Army
fighting against black guerrillas, and Mr. Z. has claimed that he
participated in the white army’s much-feared Selous Scouts. Could
rogue elements of the American military have backed the Rhodesian Army
in anthrax and cholera attacks against blacks? Mr. Z’s resume also
claims involvement in the former South African Defense Force; all else
aside, who knew that the US Defense Department would pick an American
who had served in the armed forces of two white-racist regimes to work
in the American biodefense program with some of the world’s deadliest
germs?”
This extraordinarily detailed description reveals that the identity
of the anthrax mailer is well known in official Washington circles.
Hundreds of people in the Bush administration, Congress and the media
must have access to this information, but it has been deliberately
withheld from the American people. The FBI has issued statement after
statement suggesting that there has been little progress in the
investigation, declaring that no definite suspects have been
identified, or appealing to the public for “tips” which might lead
them to a terrorist whose name they were apparently given last
October.
Kristof’s central accusation is that the anthrax investigation has
reached a dead end, not because of the lack of evidence, but because
the prime suspect has powerful friends in high places and enjoys
official protection. “Mr. Z.” can’t be arrested because he knows too
much, and because his backers in the US military-intelligence
apparatus won’t permit it. To arrest him would entail the exposure of
the US government in horrific international and domestic crimes,
including the deliberate killing of American citizens.
Moreover, as one of Kristof’s questions indicates, “Mr. Z.” is
still on active service for the Bush administration, traveling to
Central Asia “on government assignments,” despite being suspected of
murdering five people in the United States. He is truly an
untouchable.
The anthrax terrorist targeted the Democratic leadership in the US
Senate, sending the two letters with the deadliest doses of anthrax to
Senate Majority Leader Thomas Daschle and Judiciary Committee Chairman
Patrick Leahy. Kristof’s column points inexorably to the conclusion
that the Bush administration is an accessory after the fact—if not
before it—in the attempted assassination of the official political
opposition.
The very fact that such a charge is suggested on the editorial
pages of the leading US newspaper is an indication of the extent to
which “normal” democratic processes and procedures have disintegrated
in America. The Times is a major institution of the American
ruling elite, and a longtime conduit for sections of the US national
security apparatus. It could only publish such a column under
circumstances of a raging subterranean battle within the state—one in
which the American people have no say.
Kristof’s column gives a rare glimpse of a sort of parallel
universe, one which normally goes unreported and unacknowledged in the
“mainstream” media. Top officials of the US government—President Bush,
Vice President Cheney, Attorney General Ashcroft, CIA Director Tenet,
FBI Director Mueller—are linked to a criminal conspiracy to protect a
government-trained military assassin. And their Democratic opponents,
the apparent targets of the killer, are too cowed to say anything
publicly, although one can imagine the private discussions on Capitol
Hill Tuesday morning as congressmen and senators read the Times
column. This is not a Costa-Gavras film, but the real state of affairs
in the America of 2002.
See Also:
Anthrax attacks: FBI cover-up and New York
Times whitewash
[15 May 2002]
FBI knows anthrax mailer but won’t make an
arrest, US scientist charges
[25 February 2002]
US anthrax attackers aimed to assassinate
Democratic leaders
Media silent on military links
[23 January 2002]
US anthrax attacks linked to army biological
weapons plant
[28 December 2001]