Rolfe
Adult human female
Yes, but going on from your quote,
It wasn't till April 1989 that Sheila Hershow contacted him about Jafaar, and he immediately realised that a DEA drug courier had been on the plane.
[And as an aside, if this is all so dynamite and the book was suppressed, I'm not entirely sure why it's now public domain, free to reproduce, with no interference that I can see.]
That's still early enough to have been making TV programmes about the matter the same year. However, why nothing about any "Kenyan Three" in Trail of the Octopus then? Is it possible the wiki statement is just disinfo from someone? As far as I remember, Coleman thinks it was the Palestinians, just like the rest of us, and his main point of difference is simply that he believes Jafaar's bag was switched at Frankfurt (a la Aviv) rather than the bomb being loaded at Heathrow as the Bedford suitcase.
Odd.
Coleman is a lot of the reason I don't believe Mama Jafaar or the other people who declare that Khalid was just a very lucky 20-year-old who got to fly to the Lebanon a lot, to visit his old grandparents or something. Or the people who declare that the farmer who reported finding the suitcase containing heroin was just mistaken, and had agreed that during a surprisingly confidential police interview.
Rolfe.
Chapter 2 said:The Libyans probably had a role in it, he told Brokaw, because they had a large cache of Semtex explosives and about 20,000 pounds of C4, its American equivalent, supplied by CIA renegade Edmund Wilson. They also had access to electronic timers and other components, and the necessary expertise to construct a sophisticated explosive device. For some years, he said, the Libyans had acted as quartermasters for terrorist groups around the world.
Coleman went on to suggest that the Iranians had probably inspired the attack and commissioned Syrian-backed terrorists to carry it out, but that part of the interview was not aired.
If Brokaw had asked him how they had managed to get a bomb aboard Flight 103, Coleman would have had to pass, because he didn't know he knew.
It wasn't till April 1989 that Sheila Hershow contacted him about Jafaar, and he immediately realised that a DEA drug courier had been on the plane.
Chapter 3 said:'Okay,' she said. 'I'm going to send you a picture. And I want you to tell me if you know who it is. If you ever saw him before. Will you do that for me?'
'Sure. Why not? Is it somebody I knew out there?'
'I don't know. You tell me.'
The picture was faxed to him two days later. It was of a young man, an Arab, about 20 years old, and, after penciling in a moustache, Coleman recognized him at once.
'That's Khalid Nazir Jafaar,' he told Hershow. 'Nice kid. We used to call him Nazzie.'
'Well, well,' she said. 'That's interesting. You mind telling me how you know him?'
'Nazzie was one of the boys, one of Hurley's people. The DEA had a front operation in Nicosia, down the street from the embassy. The Eurame Trading Company. That's where I worked. And that's where I met Nazzie. Saw him there several times.'
'Well, well,' she said again. There was a funny note in her voice. 'The Jafaars -- they're into heroin, right?'
'Biggest in the Bekaa. Or they were until the Syrians moved in. The Jafaars were Lucky Luciano's heroin connection. They go back a long way in the dope business.'
'This kid, Nazzie -- are you saying he worked for the DEA?'
'Oh, sure. And probably for the CIA as well. Seemed like the whole damn family were CIA assets.'
'But why? I mean, why would they want to work for the US government?'
'Why? Hell, the Jafaars'll work for anybody against the Syrians -- they hate 'em so bad. They'd do anything to get Assad off their backs.'
'Okay. So what did he do?'
'Nazzie? Well, he was under age to be an informant, so he was probably on the DEA books as a subsource. I know for a fact he ran two or three controlled deliveries of heroin into Detroit.'
'You mean he was a DEA courier?'
'Among other things. But how come you're interested in Nazzie?'
'You don't know?'
'No, I kind of lost touch with those people when I got back here, you know how it is. I've no idea what he's doing now.'
'He's dead,' she said.
'Yeah? Oh. Well, I'm sorry to hear that. Like I say, he was a nice kid. But I'm not surprised. It's a tough business.'
'Yeah. He was on Flight 103 when it went down.'
Coleman chewed that over.
'No ****,' he said.
That probably explained everything.
And when she went on to say that at least two intelligence agents had also died with Nazzie Jafaar, having switched to Flight 103 through RA Travel Masters of Nicosia, the DEA's travel agents on Cyprus, he knew without a doubt that his life was in danger.
[And as an aside, if this is all so dynamite and the book was suppressed, I'm not entirely sure why it's now public domain, free to reproduce, with no interference that I can see.]
That's still early enough to have been making TV programmes about the matter the same year. However, why nothing about any "Kenyan Three" in Trail of the Octopus then? Is it possible the wiki statement is just disinfo from someone? As far as I remember, Coleman thinks it was the Palestinians, just like the rest of us, and his main point of difference is simply that he believes Jafaar's bag was switched at Frankfurt (a la Aviv) rather than the bomb being loaded at Heathrow as the Bedford suitcase.
Odd.
Coleman is a lot of the reason I don't believe Mama Jafaar or the other people who declare that Khalid was just a very lucky 20-year-old who got to fly to the Lebanon a lot, to visit his old grandparents or something. Or the people who declare that the farmer who reported finding the suitcase containing heroin was just mistaken, and had agreed that during a surprisingly confidential police interview.
Rolfe.
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going on that might lead the investigation who the hell knows where - even to Libya, the US's favourite bogey-man.