© AP

© Tom Secker



War on 'Our' Terror?

"The notion intelligence agents actively try to prevent terrorist attacks carried out by people they're actually employing to use terrorist tactics in support of Western policy is untenable. There may be some within agencies trying to stop attacks, but they're thwarted by compartmentalization of information, in order to protect assets and agents on the ground. This leads to an extremely messy situation, and cover-ups. These are 'our' terrorists we've supposedly been fighting, making the war on terror a war against one of the darkest elements of our own societies, masquerading as a moral crusade." - Tom Secker Deep State Researcher

© AFP



ENDURING TIES

© Associated Press



BREAKING UP THE BALKANS

© Associated Press



ENDLESS COLLUSION

Those familiar with Tom Secker know him to be a preeminent deep state researcher. Resolutely averse to going further than evidence allows, committed to demolishing harebrained conspiracy theories along the way, his efforts shine candid light on the nefarious activities of Western intelligence agencies.His work has never been mentioned, or featured, by the corporate media, but mainstream journalists could surely learn a thing or two from Mr. Secker, in particular his aptitude for unearthing compromising internal documents. The determined Brit is quite so skilled at Freedom of Information requests he's even uncovered UK Foreign Office memos complaining about his activities - obviously flustered officials refer to Mr. Secker as a "repeat offender" on a "fishing expedition."As of 2018, his primary areas of interest have included the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, Operation Gladio the 7/7 attacks in London , and Pentagon and CIA meddling in the US entertainment industry. Along the way, he's produced a steady stream of articles, books, documentaries and podcasts.His current focus is the infamous al-Qaeda. In a sense, this represents a full circle journey for the disputatious 35-year-old - he began his research in the wake of 9/11, having watched the event live on TV like so many others."It had quite an impact on me. I saw this hyper-aggressive foreign policy and absurdly paranoid domestic security policy erupt, with al-Qaeda the primary rationale.Mr. Secker's work fundamentally challenges the simplistic conventional narrative of al-Qaeda, which states the group was an unintended outgrowth of Operation Cyclone - the US operation which saw funds, arms and training given to Islamist extremist fighters during the Soviet-Afghan War.It also challenges the more critical, minority mainstream view that al-Qaeda's notorious activities are accidental consequences of an ongoing covert relationship between the group and Western authorities. He believes the attacks are either actively intended by certain individuals within Western intelligence agencies, or seen as a "cost" of intelligence work. According to some reports , the CIA were aware of the group's formal founding in 1988 - whether true or not, the critical factor in al-Qaeda's history for Mr. Secker is just how many undercover agents were embedded within the group at every stage of its existence, and "just how easily" they escaped authorities' clutches in the wake of major terror strikes.The plot was carried out February 26 1993 - a truck bomb detonated below the North Tower of the World Trade Center in New York City. The 606 kilogram urea nitrate-hydrogen gas enhanced device was intended to destroy the North Tower and send it crashing into the South Tower, bringing down both and killing tens of thousands. The plot failed, only killing six and injuring around 1,000.While most of the individuals involved were arrested following the bombing, both Ali Mohamed - the group's lead trainer, former US Special Forces soldier and FBI informant - and bomber Ramzi Yousef got away. Yousef went on to become infamous for the Bojinka Plot , hatched in the Philippines in conjunction with his uncle Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, supposed 9/11 mastermind.Al-Qaeda's network in the Philippines was financed by Mohammed Jamal Khalifa, likely US intelligence agent . Meanwhile, Ali Mohamed flew round the world training terrorists, constructing the cell that would carry out the 1998 US embassy bombings in Africa."The same thing happens with the '98 embassy bombings and 9/11, and in the years running up to 7/7, particularly with UK al-Qaeda franchise Al Muhajiroun There were also frequent bizarre 'intelligence failures' meaning they were never interdicted, remaining free right up until the attacks.," Mr. Secker told Spuntik.Mr. Secker says there are many examples of Western collusion with al-Qaeda throughout the group's history - but the Balkan wars of the 1990s are the "textbook example."- they went on to become the Kosovo Liberation Army, trained by US mercenary firm MPRI, and then the National Liberation Army in Albania. In the early 1990s, the Blind Sheikh helped recruit young men to go and join the fight in the region, later it was the Al Muhajiroun group, the leaders of which - Omar Bakri, Abu Hamza and Abu Qatada - all had relationships with UK intelligence," Mr. Secker told Sputnik. Bin Laden was also active during the war, funding fighters - although his organization did much else conducive to NATO's destabilization plans for the region, which ultimately precipitated the fragmentation of Yugoslavia.On top of "plenty" of Western intelligence assets and agents in their ranks, they fought alongside militants being directed by Western governments, militaries and intelligence agencies. They also, Mr. Secker suggests, benefited from years of "intelligence failures" which meant they avoided interdiction or arrest, even when intelligence agencies had considerable evidence of their criminal activities.Of all Tom's investigations, the tale of Ali Mohamed remains "the most incredible spy story" he's yet come across."When one of the defense lawyers in the US vs Rahman trial attempted to subpoena Mohamed, the prosecution wouldn't reveal where he was. When they eventually tracked him down, the prosecution told him to ignore the subpoena, and he never testified. Years later he was arrested, cooperated with authorities and offered one brief allocution, before disappearing, perhaps into protective custody. He even offered, in the wake of 9/11, to help the US government find Bin Laden and bring him to justice, leading one special forces unit to consider dropping Mohamed into Afghanistan , and injecting him with a time-delay poison pill," Mr. Secker told Sputnik.A "less clear" yet still "incredibly important" example is "whatever was going on" with 9/11 hijackers Khalid Al Midhar, and Nawaf Al Hazmi. The CIA and NSA were monitoring al-Qaeda's communications hub in Yemen - as a result, Mr. Secker believes US authorities should've been able to stop the attempted bombing on USS The Sullivans, the successful bombing of the USS Cole, and "probably" 9/11 as well.The first two were carried out by a local al-Qaeda arm financed by Jamal Khalifa, who also funded the Bojinka Plot - and was Bin Laden's brother-in-law."Finally, 18 months after the two al-Qaeda men arrived in the US, the CIA, in a very low key way, passed a report to the FBI about al-Mihdhar and al-Hamzi. It was too late. Their trail had gone cold. They'd entered the final phase of preparations for 9/11. Nothing in the joint congressional investigation, the 9/11 Commission's work or the CIA Inspector General's investigation explains why the CIA hid its knowledge about these two al-Qaeda operatives," Clarke has alleged However, Mr. Secker believes the behavior of certain officials, most prominently Tom Wilshire of the CIA's Bin Laden unit, suggests even Clarke's narrative doesn't truly get to the bottom of things. Despite alerting superiors to Al Midhar's significance and impending involvement in a major al-Qaeda attack, he continued to protect and hide information on the target.Sputnik contacted the CIA for comment, but is yet to receive a response as of January 31.