Cnn Sources: 3 al Qaeda operatives took part in Benghazi attack
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- "Three or four members of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula," took part, one source says
- Western intelligence services suspect they may have been sent to carry out the attack
- They were later traced to northern Mali, where the trail appears to have gone cold
One senior U.S. law
enforcement official told CNN that "three or four members of al Qaeda in
the Arabian Peninsula," or AQAP, took part in the attack.
Another source briefed on
the Benghazi investigation said Western intelligence services suspect
the men may have been sent by the group specifically to carry out the
attack. But it's not been ruled out that they were already in the city
and participated as the opportunity arose.
The attack on the
compound and subsequently on a "safe-house" to which Americans had been
evacuated left four U.S. citizens dead, including the ambassador to
Libya, Chris Stevens.
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The trail appears to have
then gone cold. In early 2013, jihadists were driven out of many areas
of northern Mali in a French-led offensive.
Another source briefed on
the investigation had previously told CNN that Belmoktar had received a
call in the aftermath of the Benghazi attack from someone in or close
to the city. Whoever made the call was excited.
"Mabruk, Mabruk!" he repeated, meaning "Congratulations" in Arabic.
There is no proof the
call was specifically about the attack, but the source says that is the
assumption among those with knowledge of the call. One source says the
phone call was discovered when a Western intelligence service trawled
through intercepts of communications made in the wake of the attack.
CIA officials told CNN they had no comment on whether any call had been intercepted.
One other source briefed
by Western intelligence told CNN a call was intercepted but said only
that it was placed to an AQIM commander, not specifically Belmoktar.
Belmoktar is an Algerian
terrorist operative linked to al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb who
claimed responsibility for the attack on the In Amenas gas facility in
southern Algeria in January this year. Some 38 people were killed during
a three-day siege there.
Chadian troops supporting the French intervention in Mali claimed in March that Belmoktar and others in his group had been killed during an operation in the remote Adrar des Ifhogas mountain range.
There has never been any
confirmation of his death, and one source briefed by Western and
regional intelligence officials told CNN that Belmoktar may have started
operating in the "desert triangle" straddling the borders of Algeria,
Niger and Libya.
Belmoktar is believed to
have moved to the region in late 2012 after signs that an international
intervention in Mali was growing more likely. Known as 'the Salvador
pass,' the area is a key transit points for drug traffickers and
international criminal groups.
The FBI released grainy
photographs Wednesday of three men said to have been at the Benghazi
compound on the night of the attack, saying it was "seeking information"
on them. It is not known whether any of them are the AQAP individuals.
AQAP is regarded as one
of the most active and dangerous of al Qaeda franchises. It has tried to
launch several attacks on the U.S. homeland. On Christmas Day 2009, a
Nigerian recruited by the group attempted to blow up a plane flying into
Detroit but failed because his device malfunctioned. The following
October the group attempted to blow up planes heading to the United
States with printer bombs disguised as air cargo. The packages were
intercepted after a tip from Saudi intelligence. And in April 2012, a
British informant working for Saudi counterterrorism thwarted a new plot
by the group to bomb a U.S-bound airliner. The informant had
infiltrated the group and was selected by them to launch the attack.
AQAP was the first al
Qaeda affiliate to comment on the Benghazi attack. On September 14 it
released a statement arguing the attack was revenge for the death of Abu
Yahya al-Libi, a senior al Qaeda operative, in Pakistan in June 2012.
It did not claim responsibility for the attack.
On September 10 -- at
least 18 hours before the attack -- al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri,
in a video timed for the anniversary of 9/11, called for attacks on
Americans in Libya to avenge the death of al-Libi.
In March, Libyan
authorities detained a man called Faraj al-Shibli in Libya on suspicion
of links to the attack, according to several officials. The FBI was able
to interview him in the presence of Libyan officials, according to one
Libyan source. It appears al-Shibli was detained after returning from a
trip to Pakistan, sources said.
It remains unclear
exactly whether al-Shibli was present at the U.S. compound at the time
of the attack. It's also unclear whether his detention is likely to lead
to charges in connection with the attack. Investigators have learned
that al-Shibli has had contact with the Yemen-based al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula as well as al Qaeda members in Pakistan, sources said.
The Libyan Interior Ministry refused to confirm he is still in custody, saying it could not comment on an ongoing investigation.
Al-Shibli is the only
known suspect in custody in connection with the attack in Benghazi. A
26-year-old Tunisian, Ali Ani al-Harzi, was held in Tunis for several
weeks in connection with the assault on the compound after being
extradited from Turkey. But he was released by a Tunisian judge in
January on grounds on insufficient evidence.
In December, a U.S.
official with direct knowledge of the investigation said authorities
were examining whether the alleged leader of a post-revolution terrorist
network in Egypt had played a role in the September 11 attack. Mohammed
Jamal Abu Ahmed was released from jail after the downfall of Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak and is believed to be the driving force behind a
new militant group, according to two U.S. officials.
Abu Ahmed was previously
a member of al-Zawahiri's group, Egyptian Islamic Jihad. He is
currently in prison in Egypt after being arrested in December, when
police raided a Cairo apartment allegedly being used by a jihadist
group. An associate of Abu Ahmed's subsequently said that he had not
been in Benghazi or anywhere in Libya on the day of the attack on the
compound.
In the wake of the
revolts that have shaken the Arab world, al Qaeda sympathizers have
found new space in which to operate, and would-be jihadists have found
new causes to embrace. In Syria, the al-Nusra Front has proclaimed its
links to the al Qaeda affiliate in Iraq. Militants from Tunisia, Libya
and elsewhere have gone to Syria. In west Africa, Nigerian jihadists
with Boko Haram have established links with al Qaeda in the Islamic
Maghreb and trained in Mali.
If AQAP sent members
thousands of miles to help launch an attack on U.S. diplomats, it would
show that even if al Qaeda central remains under pressure, its fellow
travelers are finding new ways to continue its campaign of terror.
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