* * * * *
Thursday October 28, 1993 Page A1
"Tapes
Depict Proposal to Thwart
Bomb Used in Trade Center Blast"
Bomb Used in Trade Center Blast"
By Ralph
Blumenthal
Law-enforcement officials were told that terrorists were building a bomb that
was eventually used to blow up the World Trade Center, and they planned to thwart the plotters by secretly
substituting harmless powder for the explosives, an informer said after the blast.
The
informer was to have helped the plotters build the bomb and supply the fake powder, but the plan was called
off by an F.B.I. supervisor who had other ideas about how the informer, Emad Salem, should be used, the
informer said.
The account, which is given in the transcript of hundreds of hours of
tape recordings that Mr. Salem secretly made of his talks with law-enforcement agents, portrays the
authorities as being in a far better position than previously known to foil the February 26th bombing of New
York City's tallest towers.
The explosion left six people dead, more than a thousand
people injured, and damages in excess of half-a-billion dollars. Four men are now on trial in Manhattan
Federal Court [on charges of involvement] in that attack.
Mr. Salem, a 43-year-old
former Egyptian Army officer, was used by the Government [of the United States] to penetrate a circle of
Muslim extremists who are now charged in two bombing cases: the World Trade Center attack, and a foiled plot
to destroy the United Nations, the Hudson River tunnels, and other New York City landmarks. He is the crucial
witness in the second bombing case, but his work for the Government was erratic, and for months before the
World Trade Center blast, he was feuding with the F.B.I.
Supervisor `Messed It Up'
After the bombing, he resumed his undercover work. In an undated transcript of a
conversation from that period, Mr. Salem recounts a talk he had had earlier with an agent about an unnamed
F.B.I. supervisor who, he said, "came and messed it up."
"He requested to meet me in the
hotel," Mr. Salem says of the supervisor.
"He requested to make me to testify, and if he
didn't push for that, we'll be going building the bomb with a phony powder, and grabbing the people who was
involved in it. But since you, we didn't do that."
The transcript quotes Mr. Salem as
saying that he wanted to complain to F.B.I. Headquarters in Washington about the Bureau's failure to stop the
bombing, but was dissuaded by an agent identified as John Anticev.
Mr. Salem said Mr.
Anticev had told him,
"He said, I don't think that the New York people would like the
things out of the New York Office to go to Washington, D.C."
Another agent, identified
as Nancy Floyd, does not dispute Mr. Salem's account, but rather, appears to agree with it, saying of the `New
York people':
"Well, of course not, because they don't want to get their butts chewed."
No comments:
Post a Comment