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SADDAM'S BLOODY BUDDY
Copied from the New York Post | 8/21/02
Source   http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/editorial/55214.htm

August 21, 2002 -- If, as critics of President Bush's foreign policy are quick to claim, there are no proven links between Saddam Hussein and terrorism, what was Abu Nidal - one of the world's most-wanted terrorists - doing in Iraq? 

Saddam's trusted deputy, Tariq Aziz, yesterday confirmed the death of the 65-year-old terrorist mastermind - whose real name was Sabry al-Banna - claiming he had "committed suicide" in his Baghdad home. 

The circumstances of his death remain murky, at best - not that civilized people should particularly care how the blood-drenched monster met his well-deserved end. 

Though, as one Palestinian source reportedly told a local paper, "How could he commit suicide when there are several bullets in his body?" 

Maybe he had put the suicide weapon on full-automatic?

Aziz promised a full media briefing today - whatever that means in Iraq. 

But the leaks so far suggest the Iraqis will link Abu Nidal with an anti-Saddam coup - and maybe with apparently incipient U.S. plans to take action against his regime. 

In the event, Abu Nidal enjoyed a long and mutually fruitful relationship with Saddam Hussein. 

Back in the '80s, he reportedly hired himself out as a free-lance enforcer for Saddam, extorting payments from Kuwait and Saudi Arabia as well as western European nations like France. 

In 1982, for example, when Kuwait cut off its $6 billion subsidy of Saddam, the butcher of Baghdad unleashed Abu Nidal on his neighbors: The Palestinian terrorist started murdering Kuwaiti diplomats and officials.

In 1991, an officer of the Bank of Credit & Commerce International said that the bank "wanted to show that we supported Iraq, and we did that through support of Abu Nidal." 

For two decades, beginning in 1973, Abu Nidal's organization waged bloody war, mostly against Jews and Israelis, but also against Palestinians he considered too "moderate." 

His Fatah Revolutionary Council was responsible over the years for the deaths of as many as 1,000 innocent people in 20 countries - including the 1986 massacre of 22 Jews in an Istanbul synagogue and simultaneous attacks on El Al ticket counters in Vienna and Rome, which killed 18 and wounded 120 others. 

More recently, four of his followers were arrested here in 1993 and accused of running a terrorist ring that plotted to bomb the Israeli Embassy and boasted that it could "slaughter" 3,000 Jews. 

The White House yesterday termed Abu Nidal "one of the most craven and despicable terrorists in the world" - adding his relationship with Saddam "demonstrates the Iraqi regime's complicity in global terror." 

In summary, those pressing the administration to go slow on Iraq need to think long and hard about Abu Nidal's bloody record - and Saddam Hussein's undeniable complicity in it. 


August 19, 2002

Nidal: Palestinian Terror Tyrant

By EARLEEN FISHER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Source: Las Vegas SUN: Nidal: Palestinian Terror Tyrant

CAIRO, Egypt- Abu Nidal, once the premier mastermind of Palestinian terrorism, knew no bounds in more than two decades of assassinations, hijackings, bombings and blackmail. He attacked Jews, Arabs and Westerners alike, eliminating some of the closest associates of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. 

From the early 1970s until the early 1990s, in the days before Osama bin Laden became the household name for devastating attacks, this renegade Palestinian struck from Brussels to Bombay. 

He was long a shadowy figure - a master of disguise, rarely photographed, said to have undergone plastic surgery and probably racked by cancer. Monday's news of his reported death in Iraq at the age of 65 was equally blurred.

Palestinian officials in the West Bank said Abu Nidal's body was found with several bullet wounds three days ago in his home in Baghdad. The circumstances of his death were unclear. 

Abu Nidal was widely believed to have been living in Baghdad since sometime in 1999, although the Iraqi government never acknowledged this.

It was a full-circle odyssey, after years of skipping from country to country for protection or to carry out his gun-for-hire enterprises.

After falling out with Arafat in the mid-1970s, Abu Nidal set up shop in Iraq. Around 1983, he was sent packing as President Saddam Hussein cozied up to the United States. He moved to Iraq's archenemy, Syria, remaining until 1986 when the West pressured then-President Hafez Assad to eject terrorists. Abu Nidal then went to Libya. 

In August 1998, according to reports at the time, he was in Egypt - under arrest or receiving medical care or both. He was said to have moved on, winding up back in Iraq. 

Along the way, Abu Nidal's men attacked American jetliners, shot up synagogues, blackmailed Arab nations with the threat of attacks and mowed down Arafat loyalists who made behind-the-scenes peace feelers to Israelis. 

Among the most notorious attacks were the twin assaults on the Israeli airline El Al's ticket counters at Rome and Vienna airports on Dec. 27, 1985. Eighteen people were killed and 120 wounded. 

His most famous victim was Arafat's longtime friend and Palestine Liberation Organization deputy leader, Salah Khalaf, known as Abu Iyad. Khalaf was gunned down in his apartment in Tunis in January 1991, along with PLO security chief Hayel Abdel Hamid, code-named Abu Hol. 

Another front-page attack was the attempted assassination of Israel's ambassador to Britain, Shlomo Argov, in June 1982. The shooting was Israel's stated pretext for invading Lebanon four days later and laying siege to Beirut for three months until Arafat and his fighters were forced out of the country. 

Abu Nidal was born Sabri al-Banna in May 1937, the son of a wealthy merchant in Jaffa, just south of Tel Aviv in what was then British-governed Palestine. The family had an 18-room mansion and 6,000 acres of orchards and orange groves. 

When the Arab-Israeli war broke out in 1948 and ended with the creation Israel, the Bannas joined the mass flight of Palestinians to nearby Jordan. The Bannas spent nearly a year in a refugee camp - dumped from great wealth to abject poverty, an experience that branded him with a bitterness that would remain with him for life. 

He wanted nothing less than the obliteration of Israel, with all its land restored to the Palestinians. Anyone willing to settle for less, as Arafat eventually did, was his enemy. 

He studied engineering in Cairo, didn't graduate and wound up a schoolteacher. His first born son was named Nidal, the Arabic word for "struggle," and following Arab tradition, al-Banna took the name Abu Nidal, or "Father of Nidal." 

After the Arabs' defeat in the 1967 Mideast War, he joined the PLO and quickly became a close Arafat ally. 

But he soon accused Arafat of growing soft and split with him in 1974. A year later the PLO sentenced him to death in absentia, triggering an internecine war that led to shootouts in London, Paris, Beirut, Istanbul and Karachi. Abu Nidal's men assassinated British diplomats in Athens and Bombay and Arafat envoys in Brussels, Rome and Lisbon.

Among his first terrorist attacks was the bombing of a Pan Am jetliner at Rome Airport in December 1973, killing 32 passengers. The 1974 bombing of a TWA jet over the Aegean Sea killed all 88 people aboard.

Security officials in Jordan, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Monday Abu Nidal had suffered from serious heart problems since the mid-1980s and, later, from cancer. They said he underwent open-heart surgery three times - once in the United States, where they said he traveled on a forged passport bearing the name of a Saudi prince.

After the 1991 Gulf War - which left his chief financier, Iraq, defeated and impoverished - his spectacular operations virtually ceased. His last serious attack was thought to be the assassination of a Jordanian diplomat in Beirut in 1994, the year Jordan signed its peace treaty with Israel.


BENJAMIN NETAYAHU Speech   At the Pro Israeli Washington Rally April 15, 2002 National Christian Leadership Conference
No!   It was NOT bin Laden that Oliver North mentioned... it was Abu Nidal.
See Urban legends
LOCAL COPY - More MISC LINKS

LOCAL COPY - BIBLIO OF TERROR BOOKS & REFS (Copied from from SKYNET) 
EXTERNAL LINKS

...Terrorism: Q & A | Abu Nidal Organization || Terrorism: Q & A - Main
...Abu Nidal Organization
    Dudley Knox Library Naval Postgraduate School/Terrorist Group Profiles
...Abu Nidal   Encyclopaedia of the Orient
...Muslimgauze - Press Releases & Reviews (Abu Nidal) They adore Nidal
...Abu Nidal Organization - FAS
...Abu Nidal: Coming in from the Cold? ||  ICT Main
...Court tries Abu Nidal in absentia for murder of diplomat (Jordan Embassy)
...Abu Nidal Organization (ANO) || Terrorism 101 main
...Biblio - http://users.skynet.be/terrorism/html/abounidal.htm
...http://www.publicfigure.com/abu-nidal-organization.html
...A Much-Shunned Terrorist Is Said to Find a Haven in Iraq
...Background Information on Foreign Terrorist Organizations
...The complete history of the ABU NIDAL organisation

...Abu Nidal is back



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