NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 29, 2001 - 5A Top al-Qaida agent captured The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Anti-Taliban forces in Afghanistan have apparently captured their biggest known trophy to date, a top al-Qaida operative who is the son of a sheik convicted in the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Cen- ter, U.S. intelligence officials said yesterday. Ahmed Abdel Rahman ran a key terrorist training camp in Afghanistan, U.S. terrorism officials said. He is being held at an undis- closed location as the Pentagon and Afghan opposition leaders weigh what to do with a growing number of prisoners belonging to Osama bin Laden's terror network. Rahman has been an important and popu- lar figure in al-Qaida, sources said. He has been widely used in recruiting for the net- work, the sources said, because he was believed to be carrying on the work of his father, Omar Abdel Rahman, the so-called "blind sheik" who is being held in one of the highest-security federal prisons in the United States. The father remains an enormously influential figure in the jihad, or holy war, movement even as he languishes behind bars. There were unconfirmed reports that the younger Rahman and up to a dozen other captured al-Qaida operatives were being flown to the Pacific region to be held at a U.S. military facility, perhaps on Guam or Wake Island. This has fueled speculation that such facilities could be the site for military trials for captured terrorists. A Bush administration official with exten- sive knowledge of terrorist organizations said: "This is a significant catch. He is a known terrorist, a member of the top al- Qaida hierarchy." The younger Rahman "shows up in (pro- motional) pictures, and they have been show- casing him, promoting the ties between al-Qaida and the 'blind sheik,"' said Daniel Benjamin, a former staff member with the National Security Council and now a terror- ism expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "He is the new model of the jihad and is important symbolically," Benjamin said. "His connection confers legitimacy on bin Laden and al-Qaida." Administration officials said the younger Rahman spent many years in Afghanistan, in the al-Qaida training camps, where he played a leadership role among bin Laden's inner circle. Rahman spent several years "trying to cook up ideas on how to get his father released from prison, including kidnapping, but nothing came of it. The blind sheik is not going anywhere," Benjamin said. Rahman could become an early test of the Bush administration's plan to try terrorists in a military tribunal rather than U.S. civilian courts, a proposal that has triggered substan- tial controversy. Justice defends military tribunals The Washington Post WASHINGTON - The Bush administra- tion was considering the use of military tri- bunals to prosecute suspected foreign terrorists prior to the passage of a tough new anti-terrorist law last month, but did not tell Congress of the plan because it did not require legislative action, a top Justice Department official testified yesterday. Speaking at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing called to examine sweeping new anti-terror policies that some lawmakers have criticized, Assistant Attorney General Michael Chertoff said that military trials fall within the president's power "as commander- in-chief." But Democratic senators at the hearing, led by Chairman Patrick Leahy of Ver- mont, were sharply critical of the Nov. 13 order that empowered Bush to order mili- tary trials for non-U.S. citizens - and of the failure to consult Congress before issu- ing the directive and others that are part of the broad new anti-terror campaign. Republican senators, with the exception of Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, were high- ly supportive of the crackdown. Despite the cooperation between the White House and Congress that led to swift passage of the new anti-terror law, Leahy said, the administration has since disregarded "the checks and balances that make up our Constitutional framework." Instead, he said, the executive branch "has chosen to cut out judicial review" in a new order that allows Attorney General John Ashcroft to initiate monitoring of attorney- client communications of suspected terror- ists, "and to cut out Congress in determining the appropriate tribunal and procedures to try terrorists." Chertoff, who heads the Justice Department's criminal division, said he was confident that all the steps taken thus far have been "within carefully estab- lished constitutional limits." Emphasiz- ing the carnage of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, he said the suspected master- mind, Osama bin Laden, and members of his al-Qaida terrorist network have since announced "they will kill more of us. "So for those of us who question whether we are at war," Chertoff said, "my answer is,, Mr. Bin Laden has declared war on us.... Are we being aggressive and hard-nosed? You bet. But let me emphasize that every step that we have taken satisfies the Constitu- tion and federal law as it existed both before and after September 11lth." Leahy, however, said he was especially dismayed by Bush's order for military tri- bunals, voicing fears that it could become a model for use by foreign governments against Americans overseas. The order allows the Pentagon to set rules and proce- dures less rigorous than those that govern U.S. criminal prosecutions, permits convic- tions and death sentences on a two-thirds vote and ostensibly prohibits judicial review of verdicts. Chertoff said such tribunals had a solid history dating back to the American Revolu- tion. Leahy, however, pointed to Spain's reluc- tance to extradite suspects to the United States if they are to be tried by military com- missions. In bypassing the civilian courts, he said, "it sends a terrible message to the world that, when confronted with a serious chal- lenge, we lack confidence in the very institu- tions we are fighting for." Like Leahy, Specter derided Chertoff's claims that Congress was "a full partner" in the fight when "nobody let us know" the military order was being prepared. Leahy noted that he had asked Ashcroft after a Sept. 25 hearing whether the Presi- dent was considering "using the military tribunal system." AP PHOTO The site of the World Trade Center attack, still smouldering after nearly three months, has become a top attraction for those visiting New York City. Ground.ero becomes mtajor tourstattraction Los Angeles Times NEW YORK - From world leaders pulling up in stretch limousines to cheerleaders in town from Ohio, Ground Zero at the former World Trade Center is drawing thousands of people a day who feel a need to view the wreckage firsthand and somehow pay homage. The very event that drove tourists away from New York City now appears to be draw- ing them back. While attendance at Broadway shows and museums is still down, hotel occu- pancy numbers are nearly where they were a year ago. Concierges, cab drivers and even somewhat reluctant city officials say the site of the attacks is exerting a powerful pull. "It's a hot spot," said Keith Yazmir, spokesman for the New York Convention and Visitor's Bureau. "It's certainly not something we're out there marketing as a visitor destina- tion. At the same time, we understand there is something in people that makes them want to serve witness to what happened, and to the people who were lost." Only the site itself remains blocked off by a perimeter of chain link fencing and plywood walls - still an almost incomprehensible scene of destruction stretching five blocks wide and four blocks long. All nearby streets have reopened, and entire adjacent buildings are shrouded in red and black netting to keep debris from falling onto the growing number of pedestrians below. People arrive daily from around the world to peer through gaps in the walls or aim video cameras down side streets at bits of twisted wreckage, Recognizing the growing crush of visitors, city officials are now discussing where to erect a possible viewing platform that would not inter- fere with construction and recovery workers. Spain and U,S. set aside differences Need Cash? RECEIVE $10 WE ARE LOOKING FOR 80 MORE PEOPLE WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush and Spain's prime-minister set aside their differences yesterday about U.S. military tribunals for terrorist tri- als, focusing instead on joint efforts to battle Osama bin Laden and his al- Qaida network. On a day of wartime diplomacy, Bush also said the military conflict in Afghanistan has hurt international efforts to feed starving Afghan civil- ians. "We have difficulties reaching the needy," the president said during a White House meeting with U.N. Sec- retary-General Kofi Annan. He met separately with Annan and Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar as Afghan factions gathered in Germany for negotiations aimed at crafting a new multiethnic Afghanistan government to replace the Taliban. "So far, they are off to a good start," Annan told Bush in the Roosevelt Room, across the hall from the Oval Office. "I hope they will be able to set- tle the establishment of the govern- ment before they leave Bonn." But even as Annan spoke, the north- em alliance rejected a proposal for an international force to keep security in post-Taliban Afghanistan. The issue of Ga. couple char ged with faking WTC death security is key to U.S.-led efforts to replace the Taliban with a stable, diverse government. In a Rose Garden appearance, Bush praised Aznar's government for the arrest of eight people suspected of helping to prepare for the Sept. I1 sui- cide attacks. In addition, six Algerian suspects were arrested in Spain on Sept. 26 suspected of membership in the bin Laden-financed Salafist Group for Call and Combat. Aznar said Spain "will support all the United States' efforts" to fight ter- rorism. But he did not say what the Madrid government would do if the Bush administration asked to try the sus- pects _ either in American civilian courts or before military tribunals recently authorized by Bush. Both Democratic and Republican lawmak- ers have questioned how the tribunals, designed for non-citizens accused of terrorism, would affect civil liberties. Thus far, Aznar's government has expressed opposition to extradition partly because it opposes Bush's tri- bunals. "If and when the United States requests that extradition, we will study the issue," Aznar told reporters. 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