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The War Profiteers - War Crimes,
Kidnappings, Torture and Big Money |
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July 17th,
2006 - Italian Spy Chief Faces Sack over Alleged Role in CIA Kidnapping |
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Italian
spy chief faces sack over alleged role in CIA kidnapping The Independent By John Phillips in Rome Published: 17 July 2006 Speculation
is mounting that Nicoḷ Pollari, the head of Italy's embattled military
intelligence agency Sismi, is about to be dismissed after he failed to
convince magistrates that he was not involved in the CIA kidnapping of the Egyptian
imam Abu Omar, in Milan. Two
investigating magistrates, Judge Ferdinando Pomarici and Judge Armando
Spataro, subjected the Italian spymaster to a humiliating four-hour
interrogation at the Palace of Justice in Milan on Saturday after he
evidently was implicated directly in the 17 February, 2003,
"extraordinary rendition" of Abu Omar. Judicial
sources quoted by La Repubblica said that two of his top operatives at Sismi,
Marco Mancini, the head of the agency's counter-espionage department, and
Gustavo Pignero, Mr Mancini's predecessor at counter-espionage, had
implicated their boss. The two Sismi officers were arrested on 5 July on
charges of assisting the CIA in the abduction of the 40-year-old Egyptian on
a Milan street. Magistrates ordered on Saturday that the two be released. The
magistrates were not convinced by the testimony of General Pollari, who in
the past always had insisted his service had nothing to do with the affair.
The general has been placed under interrogation on suspicion of aggravated
aiding and abetting a kidnapping, said the sources. Romano
Prodi, the centre-left Italian Prime Minister, wants to replace General
Pollari as soon as possible if it is established that he sanctioned Sismi
involvement in the kidnapping, sources at the Prime Minister's office say.
Among those Mr Prodi is considering for the sensitive post, according to La
Repubblica, is Giuseppe Cucchi, head of the military policy office at the
Italian Defence Ministry, who was Mr Prodi's military adviser during his previous
government between 1996 and 1998. If
evidence is not found against General Pollari, he will probably be eased out
of the Sismi job with an appointment to another prestigious security job,
said the paper's sources. Mr
Prodi is said to be considering a "summer blitz" on the
intelligence leadership in which he would also replace Mario Mori, the aging
head of the domestic intelligence service, Sisde. There
is growing concern that the rendition affair has left Italy's intelligence apparatus
rudderless at a time when the country is more vulnerable to terrorist
threats. In the past, Sismi has prided itself on having one of the most
efficient intelligence services in the Middle East region. "Although
the leadership of Sismi has frequently worked in the region, and many in the
centre-left acknowledge its work has been sensitive, it now could be called
upon to make an extra effort," La Repubblica wrote. "But with its
management effectively decapitated, it hardly can preside over the terrain
with efficiency. Worst of all, it could be incapable of defending the
national frontiers, as it has done up to now. This clearly is a worry for the
government." After
the disclosure of the kidnapping and subsequent torture of Abu Omar, Italian
magistrates issued arrest warrants for 22 CIA agents allegedly involved,
straining relations between Washington and Rome. Mr
Prodi followed developments in the Abu Omar investigation while in St
Petersburg for the G8 summit of leading industrial powers, but told reporters
he stopped short of mentioning the affair when he met President George Bush.
"I don't think that President Bush knows the Sismi initials," Mr
Prodi said. "We didn't talk about it." Speculation
is mounting that Nicoḷ Pollari, the head of Italy's embattled military
intelligence agency Sismi, is about to be dismissed after he failed to
convince magistrates that he was not involved in the CIA kidnapping of the
Egyptian imam Abu Omar, in Milan. Two
investigating magistrates, Judge Ferdinando Pomarici and Judge Armando
Spataro, subjected the Italian spymaster to a humiliating four-hour
interrogation at the Palace of Justice in Milan on Saturday after he
evidently was implicated directly in the 17 February, 2003,
"extraordinary rendition" of Abu Omar. Judicial
sources quoted by La Repubblica said that two of his top operatives at Sismi,
Marco Mancini, the head of the agency's counter-espionage department, and
Gustavo Pignero, Mr Mancini's predecessor at counter-espionage, had
implicated their boss. The two Sismi officers were arrested on 5 July on
charges of assisting the CIA in the abduction of the 40-year-old Egyptian on
a Milan street. Magistrates ordered on Saturday that the two be released. The
magistrates were not convinced by the testimony of General Pollari, who in
the past always had insisted his service had nothing to do with the affair.
The general has been placed under interrogation on suspicion of aggravated
aiding and abetting a kidnapping, said the sources. Romano
Prodi, the centre-left Italian Prime Minister, wants to replace General
Pollari as soon as possible if it is established that he sanctioned Sismi
involvement in the kidnapping, sources at the Prime Minister's office say.
Among those Mr Prodi is considering for the sensitive post, according to La
Repubblica, is Giuseppe Cucchi, head of the military policy office at the
Italian Defence Ministry, who was Mr Prodi's military adviser during his
previous government between 1996 and 1998. If
evidence is not found against General Pollari, he will probably be eased out
of the Sismi job with an appointment to another prestigious security job,
said the paper's sources. Mr
Prodi is said to be considering a "summer blitz" on the
intelligence leadership in which he would also replace Mario Mori, the aging
head of the domestic intelligence service, Sisde. There
is growing concern that the rendition affair has left Italy's intelligence
apparatus rudderless at a time when the country is more vulnerable to
terrorist threats. In the past, Sismi has prided itself on having one of the
most efficient intelligence services in the Middle East region. "Although
the leadership of Sismi has frequently worked in the region, and many in the
centre-left acknowledge its work has been sensitive, it now could be called
upon to make an extra effort," La Repubblica wrote. "But with its
management effectively decapitated, it hardly can preside over the terrain
with efficiency. Worst of all, it could be incapable of defending the
national frontiers, as it has done up to now. This clearly is a worry for the
government." After
the disclosure of the kidnapping and subsequent torture of Abu Omar, Italian
magistrates issued arrest warrants for 22 CIA agents allegedly involved, straining
relations between Washington and Rome. Mr
Prodi followed developments in the Abu Omar investigation while in St
Petersburg for the G8 summit of leading industrial powers, but told reporters
he stopped short of mentioning the affair when he met President George Bush.
"I don't think that President Bush knows the Sismi initials," Mr
Prodi said. "We didn't talk about it." External link: http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article1181618.ece |