The 9/11 Pentagon Terrorist Attack, 2000 Al-Qaida Kuala Lumpur Summit and The Malaysian Connection by Hakimi Abdul Jabar - HTML preview

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FACTS CLEARLY DISTINGUISHED

1) KUALA LUMPUR appears in the 9/11 Commission Report 51 times,  and

2) MALAYSIA appears in the 9/11 Commission Report 49 times. And

3) Kaua Lumpur and Malaysia are the highly-suspected planning venues of the  9/11 Pentagon Terrorist Attack and AA Flight 77 Hijacking.

Former FBI agent, Ali Soufan in his declasssified published memoirs had already clearly stated that the identification of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (K.S.M) as an AQ leader and 9/11 architect/mastermind was through lawful means.

https://www.ketr.org/post/former-fbi-agent-addresses-post-sept-11-torture-newly-declassified-book

Excerpts from Staff Statement No. 16 prepared for the Commission on Terrorist Attacks show that KSM was the originator of the 9/11 attacks :

Osama Laden had provided K.S.M. with four potential suicide operatives: Nawaf al Hazmi; Khalid al Mihdhar; Walid Muhammad Salih bin Attash, also known as Khallad; and Abu Bara al Taizi. Hazmi and Mihdhar were both Saudi nationals - although Mihdhar was actually of Yemeni origin -- and experienced mujahidin, having fought in Bosnia together. They were so eager to participate in attacks against the United States that they already held U.S. visas. Khallad and Abu Bara, being Yemeni nationals, would have trouble getting U.S. visas compared to the Saudis. Therefore, K.S.M. decided to split the operation into two parts. Hazmi and Mihdhar would go to the United States.

Following their training, all four operatives for the operation traveled to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Khallad and Abu Bara were directed to study airport security and conduct surveillance on U.S. carriers, and Hazmi and Mihdhar were to switch passports in Kuala Lumpur before going on to the United States. Khallad - who traveled to Kuala Lumpur ahead of Hazmi and Mihdhar - attended a prosthesis clinic in Kuala Lumpur. He then flew to Hong Kong aboard a U.S. airliner and was able to carry a box cutter, concealed in his toiletries bag, onto the flight. He returned to Kuala Lumpur, where Hazmi and Mihdhar arrived during the first week in January 2000. The al Qaeda operatives were hosted in Kuala Lumpur by Jemaah Islamiah members Hambali and Yazid Sufaat (a highly suspected AQ operative), among others. When Khallad headed next to a meeting in Bangkok, Hazmi and Mihdhar decided to join him to enhance their cover as tourists.

Khallad had his meetings in Bangkok and returned to Kandahar. Khallad and Abu Bara would not take part in a planes operation; in the spring of 2000, Bin Ladin canceled the Southeast Asia part of the operation because it was too difficult to coordinate with the U.S. part. Hazmi and Mihdhar spent a few days in Bangkok and then headed for Los Angeles, where they would become the first 9/11 operatives to enter the United States on Jan. 15, 2000.

A Malaysian Islamist party cleric and leader, Mohd Lotfi Ariffin’s credentials as an Al-Qaida/Al-Qaeda linked militant-insurgent with Samir Saleh Khattab’s brigade in the Tajikistan Civil War were flaunted by the Malaysian Islamist party on its website.  The same Malaysian Islamist party is now part of the Malaysian Un-Mandated and Un-Elected Federal government.  As reported by the BBC in August 2014, Lotfi was in a group of Malaysians in Syria who say they are engaged in jihad, fighting against Bashar al-Assad.  According to their Facebook accounts, they are based in the city of Hama, and they claim to be members of Ajnad al-Sham, which they say is loosely linked to the al-Nusra Front.  The Nusra Front has been clarified by its leader, Julani as an independent AQ branch.

http://penerangandppnk.blogspot.com/2012/08/sebuah-lagi-karya-dari-tirai-besi.html

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-28755907

https://cisac.fsi.stanford.edu/mappingmilitants/profiles/hayat-tahrir-al-sham

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The US Military Academy’s Combating Terrorism Center had in 2014 stated that the Malaysian group operates as a self-contained group within the relatively small Ajnad al-Sham Ittihadiyya al-Islamiyya (Soldiers of the Levant Islamic Union) jihadist group, sometimes in conjunction with al-Qa`ida’s official affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra and appears to be composed of around 15 fighters, grouped around a core of older individuals, but including others from a wide range of backgrounds. The group’s main leader, until his death in early September 2014 following a Syrian government airstrike in Hama, was 49-year-old Mohammed Lotfi Ariffin, a preacher who fought in Afghanistan in the 1980s and Tajikistan in the early 1990s; upon his return to Malaysia he was detained under the Internal Security Act from 2001 to 2006.15 He subsequently joined the Islamist PanMalaysian Islamic Party (PAS), and was a leader of its youth wing in the northern state of Kedah.

https://ctc.usma.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/CTCSentinel-Vol7Iss103.pdf