From Left: Hussein Hassan Mustafa, Ibrahim Adan Dheq, Liban Abdulahi
and Mohammed Ahmed. The four were on November 4th charged over the
Westgate shopping mall terror attack in which at least 70 people were
killed and over 200 others injured on September 21.
Western intelligence agencies at one point worked with a man
suspected to have masterminded the Westgate mall terrorist attack in
Nairobi, a former informant for both the CIA and the Danish intelligence
service has claimed
.
.
Mr Morten Storm, a Dane who
worked as an informer for the two intelligence units for five years,
told CNN in a chilling interview that he had forged a close relationship
with the Westgate attack organiser, Kenyan-born Abdukadir Mohamed
Abdukadir alias Ikrima.
Ikrima has been responsible for planning attacks inside Kenya for Al-Shabaab, according to CNN.
Mr
Storm, told the US news channel Danish intelligence agency PET had, in
March 2012, offered him one million Danish krone (Sh17 million) on
behalf of the CIA if he could lead them to Ikrima.
The story does not disclose if he took the money and what happened in regards to offer.
Mr
Storm revealed that Ikrima was the target during the unsuccessful raid
by US Navy SEALs last month at an Al-Shabaab compound at Barawe on the
Somali coast. Ikrima escaped.
INTERCEPT WESTGATE ATTACK
The
former informant claimed that he could have intercepted the planning of
the Westgate attack, had he still been working for Western
intelligence.
Mr Storm disclosed that his relationship
with PET and the CIA ended in mid-2012 after a disagreement over a
different mission in Yemen. This stymied advanced efforts to capture
Ikrima.
“I get really frustrated to know that Ikrima
had been maybe involved in the Westgate terrorist attack. It frustrates
me a lot because it could have been stopped and I’m sad I can’t be
involved in this,” Mr Storm told CNN.
CNN said CIA
declined to comment on the claims with a spokesperson for the PET
saying: “We can’t confirm or deny ever knowing Morten Storm.”
The report further cites Kenyan counter-terrorism sources as saying they believe Ikrima played a role in the Westgate attack.
He
is also suspected to be behind plots targeting Kenya in the last two
years, including a plot to target Kenya’s parliament in late 2011.
Mr Storm said he first made contact with Ikrima in 2008 when he met him on the first floor of Jamia shopping mall in Nairobi.
The
second meeting took place in 2009 in Nairobi when Abdelkadir Warsame, a
senior Al-Shabaab operative, sent Ikrima to pick up electronic
equipment from Mr Storm. The equipment were meant for one of
Al-Shabaab’s leaders, he said.
The former informant says Ikrima was not aware that he (Storm) was working for PET, Britain’s MI6, and the CIA.
He said tracking devices had been hidden in the equipment, which included a laptop.
The
equipment, according to Storm’s Al-Shabaab handlers, was for Saleh al
Nabhan, one of the senior planners of the 1998 bombing of the US embassy
in Nairobi, CNN reported.
Several months later Nabhan was targeted and killed in a US Navy SEALs operation.
Storm’s
Al-Shabaab contacts subsequently told him they believed Nabhan had been
tracked through the electronic equipment but blamed a junior courier.
After
Al-Shabaab carried out a twin suicide bombing attack in Kampala, Uganda
in July 2010 Ikrima told Mr Storm it was now difficult for him to
travel to meet him in Nairobi.
From then on the two
kept in frequent touch through encrypted emails providing Western
intelligence with real-time information on his movements and plans.
In
early 2010, Mr Storm says he connected Ikrima to Anwar al Awlaki, the
American-Yemeni cleric who had by then begun overseeing al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula’s operations against the West.
According to Mr Storm, the two then began communicating over encrypted emails.
They
eventually came up with a joint plan of action to attack the West:
Ikrima would send Shabaab recruits, including Westerners, to Yemen for
terrorist training, and they would then be sent back to Somalia or on to
the West.
“And as for going to hooks [Awlaki’s] place
... then I was told by hook that they want to train brothers and then
send them back or to the west,” Ikrima wrote to Storm in November 2010.
Storm
believes Ikrima’s connection to Awlaki -and his delivery of equipment
secretly supplied by Western intelligence - enabled Ikrima to quickly
climb Al-Shabaab’s hierarchy.
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