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Former sailor praised the USS Cole bombing
A former U.S. sailor who sent e-mail messages to a radical Islamic Internet site while a crewman on a Navy destroyer in the Middle East was identified Friday as a communications specialist and Muslim convert, according to sources familiar with the investigation and Navy records. But a woman speaking on behalf of Hassan Abujihaad, who left the Navy in January 2002, denied Friday that he had posted anti-American views on the site, as authorities assert, or did anything wrong.
"No, no! Certainly not!"
Abujihaad has not been arrested or charged with any wrongdoing. Federal officials had previously declined to identify him by name. According to federal officials, Abujihaad, while serving on the guided missile destroyer Benfold in the Middle East in late 2000 and 2001, sent e-mail messages to a pro-Taliban website, allegedly including one that praised the deadly October 2000 attack on the U.S. destroyer Cole by terrorists in Yemen. The messages surfaced in court documents last week in connection with the arrest in Britain of Babar Ahmad, a 30-year-old college employee wanted by U.S. authorities on charges that he acted as a fundraiser and propagandist for the Taliban and for Muslim separatist fighters in Chechnya. Ahmad is also accused of operating the defunct pro-Taliban website with which the sailor allegedly exchanged messages. He is a cousin of suspected Al Qaeda member Mohammed Naeem Noor Khan, whose arrest in Pakistan triggered terrorism alerts this month in New York, New Jersey and Washington.
Khan appears to be related to approximately 11,000 people at this point...
Federal agents are trying to determine how Ahmad ended up in possession of detailed and highly classified information about the San Diego-based aircraft carrier battle group that the Benfold was part of, including its classified travel plans and its vulnerability to attack. On Friday, Lt. Mike Kafka, a Navy spokesman, said, "There is currently no tie between the former sailor and the documents recovered during the raid in London" that contained details on the ships accompanying the aircraft carrier Constellation. The battle group was involved in actions against Afghanistan and Iraq. Authorities said that Ahmad knew when the battle group was scheduled to pass through the narrow Strait of Hormuz and that one document noted the ships were vulnerable to attack by small craft armed with rocket-propelled grenades.
Posted by: Dan Darling 2004-08-14
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=40596