OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, December 3 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Israeli
intelligence came under fire again Tuesday, December 3, as it emerged
that the Mossad knew of terror attacks being planned by Osama bin
Laden’s Al-Qaeda network in the Kenyan city of Mombasa, a few days
before Israeli tourists were targeted.
The
head of the rival military intelligence services told the Knesset
Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee that Mossad had “received
advance information on planned Al-Qaeda attacks in Africa and notably
Mombasa in Kenya.”
General
Yossi Kuperwasser was answering Labor party secretary general Ofer
Pines, who was questioning Mossad’s competence for the second time
this week, following his condemnation Sunday, December 1, of the spy
agency’s “failure” to warn its citizens of a terrorist threat.
Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
According
to Israeli newspaper, Ha’artez, Germany and Australia had put
out advisories in mid-November warning their citizens against visiting
Mombasa, based on intelligence they had that terror groups were planning
attacks on Western targets in the Kenyan port city.
Three
Israelis were among the 13 victims of last Thursday’s car-bomb attack
on a hotel in the Kenyan coastal city of Mombasa.
Minutes
later, a tourist-packed Israeli charter flying 261 passengers back from
Mombasa to Tel Aviv was targeted by two missiles which could have caused
the deadliest anti-Israeli attack in recent history but missed their
target.
Kupperwasser
stressed that the information received gave no indication as to when
Osama bin Laden’s network would strike nor did it specify that
Israelis would be targeted, but his remarks were the first admission of
shortcomings on the part of the Israeli intelligence services.
The
accusations were likely to pile further pressure on Mossad agents
currently investigating the twin attacks.
On
Monday Israel questioned Kenya’s ability to lead an efficient enquiry.
“We
welcome the cooperation of Kenya, which has let us investigate on site,
but we believe this country does not have the technological means nor
the experts to successfully complete this mission,” Sharon spokesman
Raanan Gissin told AFP.
Meanwhile,
in Kenya, a newspaper reported Tuesday that Kenya’s security agencies
were warned four times of a plot to bomb Western targets eight months
before last week’s anti-Israeli attack on the Kenyan coast.
A
police spokesman in Nairobi, King’ori Mwangi, told AFP that he had no
immediate comment on the front-page story in the Daily Nation,
Kenya’s largest newspaper, which cited well-placed sources.
The
security agencies “were even given the names and pictures of two Iraqi
terrorists who planned to enter Kenya from Somalia to carry out the
attack” against Western interests, said the daily.
Kenyans
investigating last Thursday’s bombing of an Israeli-owned hotel and a
failed missile attack on an Israeli passenger plane, both in the Mombasa
area, have not raised a possible Iraqi connection.
The
newspaper alleged the first warning was sent to Police Commissioner
Philemon Abong’o on March 11 and talked of reports that terrorist
attacks on Western interests in Kenya were planned.
The
daily quoted Abong’o as saying that: “We have a close and warm
relationship with out our intelligence counterparts. We receive several
intelligence reports from them daily.”
The
U.S. government has said it was not aware of “anything specific and
credible enough” to have prevented the attacks in Kenya.