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- <text id=93TT1248>
- <title>
- Mar. 22, 1993: The $400 Bomb
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TERRORISM, Page 40
- The $400 Bomb
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>New arrests and a hot money trail lead investigators to wonder
- who else might be behind the Tower bombing
- </p>
- <p>By JILL SMOLOWE--With reporting by Edward Barnes and John F.
- Dickerson/New York and Jamil Hamad/Zarka
- </p>
- <p> Assembling the explosives that blew out seven stories of
- the World Trade Center sounds so simple that it is easy to
- forget just how dangerous it is. First, go to any gardening
- center and chemical-supply house. For little more than $400, buy
- several 100-lb. bags of urea and some bottles of nitric and
- sulfuric acid. Mix the urea and acids into a thick paste, put
- the glop in plastic bags, then pack them in a cardboard box.
- Next attach either a blasting cap or a detonator made of some
- batteries, an alarm clock and a container of nitroglycerine. But
- be very, very careful. "If it spills on the floor, and you scuff
- your shoe in it," says an explosives expert, "you could make it
- go off."
- </p>
- <p> Before playing with such ingredients, it helps to have a
- degree in chemical engineering, like the man federal agents
- arrested last week and added to their list of suspects in
- connection with the bombing of the World Trade Center. The ease
- with which the agents found him suggests a criminal so careless
- that it was hard to imagine him pulling off such a delicate
- mission. And despite astonishingly swift police work, the
- absence of a motive left several key questions unresolved. Given
- the size of the bomb, why target a parking garage, where the
- cost to human life would be relatively small? Given the failure
- of any group to claim responsibility before the blast, is it
- possible the bomb went off prematurely? If so, what was the
- intended target? And who was providing the cash?
- </p>
- <p> The black comedy of errors that followed the explosion
- suggests either a costly mistake--or the work of rank
- amateurs. By the time federal agents arrested Nidal Ayyad, 25,
- at his home in Maplewood, New Jersey, they had several pieces
- of evidence linking him to the first suspect seized, Mohammed
- Salameh, starting with the business card they found in Salameh's
- pocket. Although Ayyad is from Kuwait and Salameh is from
- Jordan, both men are of Palestinian descent and they have been
- friends for more than a year. One of Ayyad's brothers says they
- met at a mosque, though it is still not certain if he was
- referring to Al-Salam Mosque in Jersey City, where Salameh
- worshipped on occasion and Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman, a radical
- Egyptian cleric, often preaches.
- </p>
- <p> The federal complaint against Ayyad states that on Feb.
- 25, the day before the blast, Salameh made several trips to a
- storage shed in Jersey City, where he kept his bombmaking
- materials. Four times that day he phoned from a nearby booth to
- Ayyad's office at AlliedSignal, calls that Salameh's lawyer,
- Robert Precht, insists concerned "a family matter." Moreover,
- the complaint states, sometime around Feb. 15, Ayyad rented a
- red General Motors sedan and listed "Salameh" as a second
- driver. A Ryder truck-rental employee says that on Feb. 23, when
- Salameh rented the yellow van believed to have been used in the
- bombing, he was accompanied by a man driving a red General
- Motors sedan.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps most intriguing, the two men shared a joint bank
- account at the branch of the National Westminster Bank located
- near Al-Salam Mosque, where investigators say the men placed
- several deposits of less than $10,000. Federal agents say at
- least $8,000 was transferred to the account from Germany last
- year and was withdrawn by Salameh. One bank employee said, "We
- are talking about small amounts--well under anything that
- would raise any kind of suspicion." Precht insists that the
- total account never exceeded $10,000 and was closed shortly
- before Ayyad's marriage last December.
- </p>
- <p> The evidence that an overseas group might have been
- funneling funds to militants in the U.S. prompted some experts
- to speculate that the bombing may represent the prototype for
- a new kind of terrorism, and not only because it was the first
- major attack on American soil. Before this incident, there was
- little evidence that terrorists had the infrastructure in the
- U.S. to organize and plan operations. "What the tower bombing
- suggests is that under our noses they've been building up," says
- Bruce Hoffman of the Rand Corp. "It may not be a typical Islamic
- terrorist organization that comes to mind--not full-time
- terrorists that live life underground plotting operations. These
- could be part-time terrorists that are in isolated cells."
- </p>
- <p> The two men do not fit the profile of the typical
- terrorist bomber. Ayyad's relatives depict the chemical engineer
- as a devout Muslim who had achieved the American Dream since
- immigrating from Kuwait eight years ago. In 1991 he became a
- naturalized citizen, earned a bachelor's degree from Rutgers
- University and began work at AlliedSignal. A year later, his
- mother arranged for him to marry a Middle Eastern woman.
- </p>
- <p> Salameh, by contrast, was a drifter, never settling into
- a permanent home or regular job. His grades in school were so
- mediocre that he could not get into the university law or
- science programs; his only option was to attend the University
- of Jordan's college of religious law, where one professor
- recalls that Salameh was involved in fundamentalist student
- activities.
- </p>
- <p> Back in the Jordanian city of Zarka, his father and
- brothers wept openly as they insisted Salameh was innocent. They
- spoke of the many letters they had received from Salameh
- praising the free and democratic society in which he now lived.
- They also received financial help. A local money changer says
- he cashed checks from America for sums that ran as high as four
- figures. "Mohammed wanted to go to the U.S.A. to make money and
- help me," says his father Amin Abdul-raheem Salameh, a retired
- Jordanian army officer. "He said, `I am ready to work in
- America as a toilet cleaner or garbage collector rather than
- stay here.' " It is a decision Salameh may now regret.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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