Utah go boom, not in the public domain
Khoder bin Hakkin
hakkin at sarin.com
Fri Dec 21 06:36:26 PST 2001
http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20122001-044449-5310r
One report currently being investigated by U.S.
intelligence officials came from Pakistani Inter-Service
Intelligence sources who had conducted an interrogation of
a "terrorist suspect" in early November. Under
"coercion," the suspect said that agents of bin Laden had
smuggled two portable nuclear weapons into the
United States, according to the report seen by a U.S.
government expert.
The government expert, who has had access to the Pakistani
investigation, said ISI provided "the highest
levels of the U.S. government" with materials from the ISI
interrogation including a summary of the suspect's
confession, which this source had seen. The summary did
not give the specific dates of the smuggling, the
method, or time of entry. The suspect said only that the
smuggling had been carried out, the U.S.
government expert said.
The sources of the report "were current ISI officers who
had kept contact with U.S. counterparts" they had
known from the 1980s, this U.S. government expert said.
The summary was accompanied by "collateral" or
supporting documents, he said. The package was given to
senior U.S. officials in mid-November.
The ISI had not rated the report's credibility but felt it
important enough to alert the U.S. government, this
source said.
"What was disconcerting about the (suspect's) information
was that he knew details of the activation of the
weapons and their construction that are not in the public
domain," the U.S. expert analyst said.
.......
"Coercion" is a nice word for raping his wife?
--
foo
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