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- <text id=94TT0592>
- <title>
- May 09, 1994: Intelligence: A Hero's Unwelcome
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 09, 1994 Nelson Mandela
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- INTELLIGENCE, Page 50
- A Hero's Unwelcome
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Washington's shabby handling of a Palestinian informant undercuts
- U.S. antiterrorism efforts
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> As he paced in his room in Washington's Hyatt Regency Hotel
- last Monday, Adnan Awad felt both exhilaration and melancholy.
- A long, unhappy chapter of his life was about to end, but it
- would not be sealed by the recognition Awad knew he had earned.
- For 10 years, the Palestinian businessman had helped U.S. officials
- to track down and prosecute Mohammed Rashid, a notorious Palestinian
- terrorist. In all that time, Awad felt, the U.S. had treated
- him shabbily. While he had been hailed by a Senate panel as
- "a hero for the American people," Washington had taken seven
- years to issue him a green card--and still would not honor
- his request for citizenship and a passport. Moreover, payment
- of his reward money had been stalled after Rashid's murder conviction
- in 1992, then again a year later when the verdict was upheld.
- Now, finally, a check for $750,000 was going to be placed in
- his hands. But he had given up hoping for the presidential handshake
- he had been promised long ago.
- </p>
- <p> At 1 p.m., the knock came. First, two FBI agents entered Awad's
- room, then two State Department officials. After some chatter
- and praise, Awad was handed his check. Then one of the officials
- picked up the telephone, dialed and handed Awad the receiver.
- At the other end was retired airline captain Ron Hawk, the pilot
- of a Pan Am passenger jet on which a bomb had exploded en route
- to Hawaii in August 1982, killing a teenage passenger. Hawk
- extended warm thanks to Awad for his role in convicting Rashid
- for that murder. All told, the event lasted 45 minutes. Admitted
- a U.S. official: "It was kind of the Motel 6 version of a ceremony."
- </p>
- <p> Awad's send-off and his long-delayed payoff are an apt reflection
- of the insensitive treatment too often meted out to foreign
- informants. Officials involved in Awad's case warn that if the
- U.S. fails to devise a coordinated approach for fostering informants
- during the long years of a terrorist prosecution, the trickle
- of foreign informants will dry up. That would be a situation
- the U.S. could ill afford. Typically, terrorist groups comprise
- people bound by geography, political injury, even bloodlines.
- Since U.S. agencies find it almost impossible to penetrate such
- tight-knit networks, they must rely on defectors for the information
- they need to help pre-empt attacks and prosecute known terrorists.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. intelligence community is already struggling to regain
- its standing abroad. The February arrest of CIA officer Aldrich
- Ames was an enormous embarrassment. Last week Ames pled guilty
- to spying for Moscow since 1985 and agreed to help authorities
- assess the damage. In the case of Awad, damaging publicity about
- his mishandling threatens to impede overseas operations by giving
- the U.S. a reputation for running a bait-and-switch program.
- "We promise ((informants)) the moon in the beginning," says
- FBI special agent Frank Scafidi. "But when they come through
- for us, there's not much there. If the government doesn't hold
- up its end of the bargain, people are not going to come forward."
- </p>
- <p> Awad's case began on Aug. 30, 1982, when he walked into the
- U.S. embassy in Bern, Switzerland. He claimed he was a prosperous
- Baghdad-based businessman whom Rashid had coerced, by blackmailing
- Awad's business, to blow up Geneva's Noga Hilton. The story
- sounded farfetched, but when Swiss police went to the Noga Hilton,
- they found a bomb-rigged suitcase in Awad's room. As Awad volunteered
- more detail about Rashid's modus operandi, U.S. officials began
- to detect a link between the bomb in Awad's suitcase and the
- one that had blown a hole in the Pan Am jet three weeks earlier.
- But U.S. policy did not yet support a pursuit of Rashid. So
- Awad stayed where he was, content with the passport, BMW and
- $1,750-a-month salary offered by the grateful Swiss.
- </p>
- <p> Two years later, Awad was approached by a U.S. prosecutor. Would
- he enter the Witness Protection Program and testify against
- Rashid? Awad was told the Rashid case would be wrapped up in
- two years, after which he could receive a State Department reward
- of as much as $500,000. More interested in the prospect of U.S.
- citizenship than in a hefty reward, Awad asked only that he
- be able to live as well as he had in Switzerland.
- </p>
- <p> But after Awad moved to America, he was shunted from city to
- city. Little effort was made to help him learn English or start
- a new life. In 1986 he quit the witness program and opened a
- convenience store. After Rashid was arrested in Greece in 1988,
- Awad was persuaded to return to the witness program. While Athens
- and Washington wrangled over Rashid's extradition for the next
- three years, Awad was refused a passport and permission to visit
- his relatives abroad. He grew so depressed that he threatened
- to kill himself.
- </p>
- <p> When the trial began in Athens in 1991, Awad was flown to Greece
- on a military plane and housed on a U.S. military base in Crete.
- Despite the dangers implied by such heavy security, Awad did
- not flinch. His detailed testimony about Rashid helped put the
- terrorist away for 18 years. For his pains, Awad was told his
- reward would be delayed until after he testified again during
- Rashid's appeal. Even after that, the check was withheld for
- another eight months while government departments bickered over
- the amount. State officials backed the FBI's recommendation
- for a $1 million payment, but the bureau's overseers at Justice
- insisted that the sum was excessive and that Awad should get
- only $750,000.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, last December, Awad's patience ran out. He filed a
- $15 million lawsuit, complaining that his rights had been violated
- and demanding a passport. "I came to America because I love
- this country," he told TIME several weeks ago. "They took my
- freedom and put my life in danger. Everything put in front of
- me was like a mirage." A Justice official then tried to kill
- the reward altogether, arguing that Awad would use the money
- to finance his suit against the government. That proposal ignited
- yet more bureaucratic wrangling.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, it was largely the determined campaign of Bradley
- Smith, the head of the State Department's reward program, that
- secured Awad his payment. For the neglected Awad, Smith's efforts
- represented the dose of appreciation and human kindness that
- had been missing all along. Last week when Awad was finally
- given his long-awaited check, he seemed less interested in the
- record-breaking payment than in the presence of Smith at the
- paltry ceremony. "He took my heart," Awad said. "I know he did
- everything he could." Later that afternoon, Awad announced he
- would advise his lawyers to drop his suit.
- </p>
- <p> Awad is now living under a new name somewhere in the U.S.--and still dreaming of citizenship.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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