- Alliance Base
Alliance Base is the cover name for a secret Western
Counterterrorist Intelligence Center (CTIC) established in2002 inParis . The existence of CTICs were first revealed byDana Priest in a 17 November 2005 "Washington Post " article [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/17/AR2005111702070_pf.html Foreign Network at Front of CIA's Terror Fight] ,Dana Priest , "The Washington Post " 17 November 2005 en icon] , while she referred to the Alliance Base in a July 2, 2005 article cite news|first=Dana |last=Priest |author= |url= http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/07/02/AR2005070201361_pf.html|title=Help From France Key In Covert Operations |work= |publisher=Washington Post |pages= |page= |date=July 3 2005 |accessdate=2006-06-30] . The name was chosen in reference ofAl Qaeda , which means "The Base" in Arabic. It is headed by a French General assigned to theGeneral Directorate for External Security (DGSE), and largely funded by theCIA 'sCounterterrorist Center . It hosts officers from Great Britain,France ,Germany ,Canada ,Australia and theUnited States and is used for intelligence exchange and operational planning. First revealed by "The Washington Post " in 2005, its existence was confirmed on 8 September 2006 byChristophe Chaboud , chief of theUCLAT ("Unité de Coordination de la Lutte contre le Terrorisme", "Fight against Terrorism Coordination Unit"), in an interview to RFI [ [http://www.lemonde.fr/web/article/0,1-0%402-3224,36-812394%4051-812238,0.html "La France abrite une cellule antiterroriste secrète en plein Paris"] , "Le Monde "] . Although intelligence exchange betweenintelligence agencies has become more and more widespread in the last decade, in particular following theSeptember 11, 2001 attacks , this organisation also engages in operations.International cooperation between intelligence agencies
Its existence was first revealed by a 17 November, 2005 article by
Dana Priest in "The Washington Post ", who also broke the story concerning the existence of the CIA's "black site s" [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/17/AR2005111702070_pf.html Foreign Network at Front of CIA's Terror Fight] ,Dana Priest , "The Washington Post " 17 November 2005 en icon] . In the article, both the CIA and the French government declined to comment on Alliance Base, while all intelligence officers requested anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the project, in particular relating to its political and judicial dimensions. "No country wanted to be perceived as taking direction from the CIA," wrote Dana Priest, while France was the only European state willing to engage in more than simple information exchange. "To play down the U.S. role, the center's working language is French," told an anonymous source to the Washington Post investigative reporter. "The base selects its cases carefully, chooses a lead country for each operation, and that country's service runs the operation." Furthermore, this cooperation permits "German case officers to read information from their own country's law enforcement authorities", which is prohibited byGerman law .Alliance Base also takes advantage of the "harsh laws" of France concerning anti-terrorism. French magistrates are allowed to detain people suspected of "conspiracy in relation to terrorism" while gathering evidence. According to the top anti-terrorist magistrate,
Jean-Louis Bruguière , he has in the past ordered the arrest of more than 500 suspects, some with the assistance of US authorities . Dana Priest cited him as saying: "I have good connections with the CIA andFBI ." Dana Priest described the working of Alliance Base, writing that "The CIA brings money from its classified and ever-growing 'foreign liaison' account — it has paid to transport some of France's suspects from abroad into Paris for legal imprisonment' [thus rendering them to France] — and its global eavesdropping capabilities and worldwide intelligence service ties." France, on the other hand, "brings its harsh laws, surveillance of radical Muslim groups and their network in Arab states, and its intelligence links to its former colonies. "By handing out information to its counterparts, French intelligence agencies helped the US to convict
Ahmed Ressam , arrested in 1999, as well asZacarias Moussaoui , who lived a long time in France .In the days following the attacks, President
Jacques Chirac issued an edict toFrench secret services ordering them to share information with US counterparts "as if they were your own service," according to two officials who read it and were cited by Dana Priest. According to the "Washington Post" investigative reporter, the arrest ofChristian Ganczarski , alleged to be an important Al Qaeda responsible, was one of the 12 major operations it has engaged in during its first years. Since the end of 2001, France has detained about 60 suspects, some with the help of the CIA, according to a CIA veteran cited by Priest .Pierre de Bousquet de Florian , director of theDirectorate of Territorial Surveillance (DST), said "There's an easy exchange of information. The cooperation between my service and the American service is candid, loyal and certainly effective." Jean-Louis Brugière, on the other hand, was quoted by Dana Priest as saying that "The relations between intelligence agencies in the United States and France has been good, even during the transatlantic dispute over Iraq, for practical reasons. "John E. McLaughlin , former director of theCIA , has claimed that the cooperation between the DGSE and the CIA "is one the best of the world".Christian Ganczarski and Ahmed Medhi
Christian Ganczarski , a German convert to Islam, took anAir France flight fromRiyadh on June 3, 2003, back to Germany, with a change of planes in Paris. But he was secretly followed on board by an undercover officer. In Paris' airport, a senior CIA officer was waiting for him, while French authorities separated him from his family and arrested him, on charges of association with terrorists. This operation was conceived at the Alliance Base .On 20 May, 2003, Alliance Base learned that Ahmed Mehdi, who lived near Ganczarksi in Germany, was about to travel for a 14-day vacation to
La Réunion , a French island in the Indian Ocean. Although the GermanBND thought that he was planning an attack, they had not enough evidence to arrest him. The CIA arranged someone to suggest that Mehdi stop in Paris on his way to La Réunion. The French services clandestinely helped him to have a visa, while the Germans monitored calls and contacts. On June 1, 2003, he was arrested by French authorities atCharles de Gaulle International Airport and sent toFresnes Prison . Two days later, Ganczarksi was also there .Following interrogations of both men, investigators now suspected that they had links with the
Hamburg cell which plotted the September 11 attacks. Interior MinisterNicolas Sarkozy implicitly refers to Alliance Base on June 11, 2003, declaring to the National Assembly that "This arrest took place thanks to the perfect collaboration between the service of the great democracies."References
See also
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Abu Ali al-Harithi , shot in Yemen with six others by aPredator drone commanded from Langley and based atCJTF-HOA , hosted at a French military base inDjibouti
*Franco-American relations
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