THE WORLD
CIA Said to Leave Trail in Abduction
Agents sought by Italy in alleged 'rendition' of a
terrorism suspect apparently checked into flashy hotels and gave out account
numbers.
By Tracy Wilkinson
Times Staff Writer
June 26, 2005
MILAN, Italy — They ran up tabs of thousands of dollars at some of
Milan's best hotels and restaurants. They chatted easily on their cellular
telephones and gave out passport, frequent-flier and driver's license numbers
when booking flights or renting cars.
And now they are fugitives.
If Italian authorities are right, they have exposed a CIA operation here
that on some levels was brazen and perhaps reckless, even as it successfully
spirited away a notorious Egyptian imam.
An Italian judge has issued arrest orders for 13 CIA operatives, and additional
warrants are possible, in what may be the first time an ally of Washington
has attempted to prosecute U.S. spies. The suspects face kidnapping charges,
which carry a penalty of up to 10 years in prison.
Judicial authorities said Saturday that they may also seek the arrest of
a senior U.S. Air Force commander who they say allowed the joint U.S.-Italian
Aviano Air Base in northern Italy to be used in the abduction of Hassan Osama
Nasr, a radical cleric better known as Abu Omar.
Italian authorities contend that Abu Omar was kidnapped by the American
agents nearly 2 1/2 years ago and taken to Egypt, where he was tortured. His
whereabouts remain unknown.
Abu Omar had been long suspected of terrorist activities by Italian authorities,
who had him under surveillance as part of an investigation into a Muslim extremist
cell accused of recruiting and sending suicide bombers and fighters to Iraq.
The alleged former CIA station chief in Milan, a 51-year-old Honduran-born
American, is among those named in the arrest warrants. He is believed to have
accompanied or followed Abu Omar to Egypt and been present for some of the
interrogations, a senior Italian judicial official said Saturday.
That raises the possibility that the American agent was aware of the alleged
torture, the Italian official said. The man's movements were tracked by his
use of a cellphone to make calls from Egypt in the two weeks after the disappearance
of Abu Omar, the official said.
"He was the one who knew everything about Abu Omar," the official said,
referring to the ex-station chief, "so he would have been very useful in the
interrogation."
Abu Omar, during a brief period of freedom in 2004, told associates that
he was abducted by U.S. agents and taken to Egypt, where he was tortured with
electric shocks to his genitals and beatings during the interrogations.
The alleged former station chief apparently planned to retire in Italy
and had bought a home near Turin. Although he has been absent from Italy
for several months, officials say, his wife remained in the home, which Italian
police raided Thursday night, confiscating a computer, computer disks and
papers.
That he thought he could live out his golden years in Italy is another
indication that he and the other alleged agents believed they could operate
with impunity, Italian prosecutors say.
It remains unclear whether the pro-U.S., right-wing government of Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi approved the apparent abduction. Several former
U.S. intelligence officials said it was virtually impossible that such an
operation would have been launched without Italian permission at some level.
All told, 19 American operatives — 13 men and six women — mounted the mission
to capture Abu Omar, according to the warrants and other court documents reviewed
by the Los Angeles Times, as well as interviews with several Italian officials
involved in the case.
The case appears to be an example of the U.S. policy of "extraordinary
rendition," a highly controversial tactic used with increasing frequency
to pursue suspected terrorists since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Dozens
of people have been seized by CIA operatives in foreign lands and sent to
third countries, according to intelligence officials and human rights organizations.
The Milan crew seemed to have made little effort to keep a low profile.
Although much of the information they provided may have been false, they seemed
to have left a trail worthy of Hansel and Gretel.
Arriving individually or in pairs during the weeks leading up to Abu Omar's
disappearance in February 2003, they checked into some of the city's finest
hotels: the $450-a-night Prince of Savoy on Milan's grand Piazza della Repubblica,
the Westin Palace, the Milan Hilton. They ate at good restaurants and rented
cellphones and cars. They offered up their frequent-flier account numbers
as well as their passports, Visa and Diner's Club credit cards and driver's
licenses.
Many of the names, home U.S. addresses and telephone numbers contained
in the indictment, including those of two California residents, appear to
be false or have been changed.
In hotel bills alone, the group ran up a tab of $150,000, the court papers
indicate.
According to the documents, the team divided up, with six agents conducting
reconnaissance and others intercepting Abu Omar as he walked from his Milan
home to a mosque. They loaded him into a white truck and sped off to the
Aviano base, about four hours away, Italian prosecutors allege.
As they traveled, an agent used a cellphone to call a commander at the
base every half-hour or so, as though to alert him of their progress, Italian
prosecutors said. That senior officer, Lt. Col. Joseph Romano,
has since left Italy, but prosecutors said Saturday that they want to question
him and are considering seeking his arrest as well.
"We suspect he knew what the CIA agents were doing and who they had" in
the car, a senior Italian official said.
Once the rendition was completed, several of the agents traveled to Venice
for a celebration, also at a luxurious five-star hotel, the court papers
say. Four others took a vacation along the picturesque Mediterranean coast
north of Tuscany.
Italian judicial officials say they are perhaps most angry with the American
operation because it ruined their own efforts to crack the cell and arrest
numerous terrorism suspects in Italy.
"Not only was Abu Omar's kidnapping illegal in having seriously violated
Italian sovereignty, but it was also an inauspicious act that has contaminated
the overall fight against terrorism," Judge Guido Salvini said in issuing
a separate indictment on the Egyptian-born cleric.
The case has been a bombshell in the Italian political scene. Opposition
political parties especially are demanding that the Berlusconi administration
explain any role it played in the disappearance and whether
it approved the operation.
"Either our authorities knew," said Green Party official Paolo Cento, "or
the American [agents] had full freedom of action on our territory" without
having to ask permission. "If this second hypothesis is true," he continued,
"then the government needs to tell us how they intend to protect our rights
and sovereignty."
Armando Spataro, the lead prosecutor on the case, has said he would like
to seek the extradition of the suspects, and the warrants have been forwarded
to European police agencies, so the named men and women could be arrested
anywhere in Europe.
But Italian judicial officials acknowledge that it is unlikely that any
CIA agent will be brought to trial. The U.S. government has refused to even
acknowledge the warrants publicly.
Still, the Italians said the case highlighted the importance of the rule
of law and due process in the fight against terrorism. And human rights
organizations welcomed the investigation.
"This is a real breakthrough," said Reed Brody, an expert on renditions
with New York-based Human Rights Watch. "Finally someone, somewhere may be
held accountable for this shadowy program of 'renditions.' … At long last,
this warrant shows that no one is above the law, not even CIA agents."