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Dubai Port Deal is Nothing Compared to Ptech
By Devlin Buckley
Online Journal Contributing Writer
 
 
Mar 6, 2006, 00:49
 
While Congress and the media focus on the potential dangers of a UAE-owned 
company running American port operations, any possible threat is dwarfed by the 
current insecurity of the US government’s computer infrastructure, which has 
been compromised by a company with alleged multiple connections to terrorist 
financing.
 
The company, once known as Ptech (now GoAgile), has been contracted to provide 
sophisticated computer software to several government agencies, including the 
Army, the Air Force, Naval Air Command, Congress, the Department of Energy, the 
Department of Justice, Customs, the FAA, the IRS, NATO, the FBI, the Secret 
Service, and the White House.
 
Shortly after 9/11, the company’s primary investor, Yassin al-Qadi (al-Kadi), 
was identified by the US government as a specially designated global terrorist. 
Officials describe al-Qadi as one of Osama bin Laden’s "chief money 
launderers," and allege he transferred as much as $3 billion to al-Qaeda during 
the 1990s.
 
Al-Qadi is a wealthy Saudi with connections to banking, diamonds, chemicals, 
construction, transportation, and real estate. He once headed Muwafaq, an 
Islamic charity the US Treasury Department described as an al Qaeda front 
that receives funding from wealthy Saudi businessmen.
 
Al-Qadi also maintained an unusually close relationship with notable US 
politicians. While attempting to defend Ptech, the American Arab 
Anti-Discrimination Committee of Massachusetts (ADCMA) revealed the fact that 
al-Qadi was prominent in Washington circles and even showed President Jimmy 
Carter and Dick Cheney around during their visits to Saudi Arabia.
 
Al-Qadi told an Arab newspaper in October of 2001 that he spoke to [Dick 
Cheney] at lengths and they even became friends. Similarly, while 
speaking with Computer World Magazine, Ptech cofounder Oussama Ziade said that 
al-Qadi talked very highly of his relationship with [former President] Jimmy 
Carter and [Vice President] Dick Cheney."
 
Ptech, under al-Qadi’s ownership, supplied the US government with what is 
known as enterprise architecture. According to Glenn Watt of Backbone Security, 
"Enterprise architecture is really the design, the layout, the blueprint if you 
will for the computer networks and computer systems that are going to go into an 
organization." In regard to Ptech, he said, The software they put on your 
system could be collecting every key stroke that you type while you are on the 
computer. It could be establishing a connection to the outside terrorist 
organization through all of your security measures."
 
John Zachman, who is considered the fathers of enterprise architecture, 
said, "You would know where the access points are, you'd know how to get in, you 
would know where the weaknesses are, you'd know how to destroy it."
 
Former FBI counterterrorism analyst Matthew Levitt has said, For someone like 
[al-Qadi] to be involved in a capacity in an organization, a company that has 
access to classified information, that has access to government open or 
classified computer systems would be of grave concern.
 
While trying to play down such fears, Ptech cofounder Oussama Ziade, along with 
Ptech’s vice president of professional services, Joseph Johnson, have claimed 
many times to the press that al-Qadi had little to do with the company and did 
not give any money to Ptech after 1994.
 
Other Ptech employees, however, told the FBI that al-Qadi was introduced to them 
as the owners of the company.
 
Confirming this, Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld, who is described by the conservative 
Front Page Magazine as the world’s leading expert on Narco-Terrorism and a 
noteworthy authority on international terrorism, political corruption, money 
laundering, drug trafficking, and organized crime,s reported that al-Qadi made 
a $14 million investment in Ptech in 1998, making him the company’s major 
investor.
 
In total, according to Ehrenfeld, al-Qadi invested at least $18 million 
directly in Ptech, $5 million through the Isle of Man, and $9 million indirectly 
through BMI, a now-defunct New Jersey-based Islamic investment firm with 
connections to other members on Ptech’s management and investors. . . . 
Al-Kadi also transferred $2 million USD to Ptech from Switzerland between 1997 
and 2000, according to Swiss investigators.
 
Adding further concerns, al-Qadi was only one of many Ptech investors and 
managers with alleged connections to terrorist financing.
 
Former Ptech board member Soliman Biheiri, who was recently convicted of lying 
to investigators regarding his affiliations with known terrorists, was in charge 
of the above-mentioned New Jersey investment bank, BMI, which according to court 
documents was used as a financial conduit for al-Qaeda and Hamas supporters. The 
FBI discovered the true principals behind BMI were actually Yassin al-Qadi and 
Hamas leader Musa abu Marzook.
 
Investigators also accuse Ptech’s Biheiri of using BMI to funnel $3.7 million 
from an Islamic charity, entitled the SAAR Foundation, to Islamist terrorists. 
The president and CEO of the SAAR Foundation was Yakub Mirza, who was also on 
Ptech’s board of directors, and who is said to have contacts high within the 
FBI.
 
Furthermore, Ptech’s vice president and chief scientist, Hussein Ibrahim, was 
the founder and president of the aforementioned BMI. In fact, Ptech, al-Qadi, 
Biheiri, Ibrahim, BMI, Mirza, and SAAR, all maintained financial connections 
with one another, as well as with other organizations and fronts allegedly 
connected to money laundering and terrorist financing, such as the Muslim 
Brotherhood, al-Taqwa, the Safa Foundation, the International Islamic Relief 
Organization (IIRO), and others.
 
Ptech’s chief architect, Suheil Laher, headed yet another Islamic charity 
entitled Care International, which the FBI and IRS claim was engaged in the 
solicitation and expenditure of funds to support the mujahideen and promote 
jihad.
 
Top Ptech investor and manager, Muhamed Mubayyid, served as Care’s treasurer, 
and has since been indicted for lying on tax returns and concealing the 
charity’s true activities. Mubayyid also donated money to the Alkifah Refugees 
Center, which maintained the same corporate office as Care, and from where the 
1993 World Trade Center bombing was launched.
 
Also part of this financial nexus was Ptech founder Abdurahman Muhammad 
Alamoudi, who, according to the US Treasury Department, had a close 
relationship with al Qaida and had raised money for al Qaida in the United 
States. He has since been sentenced to a maximum of 23-years in prison for 
illegal dealings with Libya, including his admitted involvement in a plot to 
assassinate Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah.
 
Alamoudi also founded a US Army chaplain program for which he served as a 
consultant for over a decade. A former Justice Department official has described 
the program as a spy service for al-Qaeda."
 
Like al-Qadi, Alamoudi was also influential in elite Washington circles. 
According to The Washington Post, as head of the American Muslim Council, 
Alamoudi met with senior Clinton and Bush administration officials in his 
efforts to bolster Muslim political prominence.
 
In February 2003, Boston Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby wrote:
 
[In 2000] Alamoudi was one of several Muslims invited to meet with candidate 
[George W.] Bush in Austin, Texas. Alamoudi is certainly influential -- but he 
is also an open backer of terrorism. In October 2000, he was cheered at a 
pro-Palestinian rally in Washington, DC, when he declared: "We are all 
supporters of Hamas. . . . I am also a supporter of Hezbollah." Three months 
later he was in Beirut for a terrorist summit, along with leaders of Hamas, 
Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah, and Al Qaeda.
 
Amazingly, Alamoudi -- who allegedly has direct connections to the 9/11 
conspirators -- was invited to a prayer service with President Bush three days 
after the 9/11 attacks.
 
There are indications that al-Qadi, Alamoudi, and other suspected terrorists 
were protected from prosecution by high-ranking US officials, effectively 
preventing the FBI from stopping 9/11.
 
FBI Agent Robert Wright, who was in charge of pursuing al-Qadi and his 
associates during the 1990s, said the FBI "intentionally and repeatedly thwarted 
and obstructed" his attempts to arrest terrorists, seize assets, and expand his 
investigation into the financial network of which al-Qadi allegedly was a part.
 
After his investigation into al-Qadi was shut down entirely in 1999, Wright 
completed a manuscript, entitled "Fatal Betrayals of the Intelligence Mission," 
which, he said, "outlines, in very specific detail, what I believe allowed 
September 11th to happen." The government has banned the manuscript from being 
released.
 
Approximately three months prior to the 9/11 attacks, agent Wright wrote a memo 
warning that American citizens would die as a result of the FBI’s 
incompetence. He said there was virtually no effort on the part of the FBI's 
International Terrorism Unit to neutralize known and suspected international 
terrorists living in the United States."
 
According to former Justice Department prosecutor John Loftus, even after 9/11 
people in the intelligence community came and said-guys like Alamoudi . . . 
and other terrorists weren’t being touched because they’d been ordered not 
to investigate the cases, not to prosecute them, because they were being funded 
by the Saudis and a political decision was being made at the highest levels, 
don’t do anything that would embarrass the Saudi government." He went on to 
say:
 
[W]ho was it that fixed the cases? How could these guys operate for more than 
a decade immune from prosecution? And, the answer is coming out in a very 
strange place. What Alamoudi and al-Arian have in common is a guy named Grover 
Norquist. He’s the super lobbyist. . .
 
Grover Norquist’s best friend is Karl Rove, the White House chief of staff, 
and apparently Norquist was able to fix things.
 
Shortly after 9/11, several Ptech employees -- upon hearing reports of Yassin 
al-Qadi’s connections to terrorist financing – began pleading with the FBI 
to investigate the company. However, as reported by the National Review Online, 
the bureau did nothing, despite knowing that Qadi was a primary financier of 
Ptech. . . . Frighteningly, when an employee told the President of Ptech he felt 
he had to contact the FBI regarding Qadi's involvement in the company, the 
president allegedly told him not to worry because [Ptech board member] Yaqub 
Mirza . . . had contacts high within the FBI. . . . After months of the FBI 
refusing to do anything substantive, it took the efforts of U.S Customs, now a 
part of Homeland Security, to raid the business in December 2002 and jumpstart 
the investigation into the alleged terrorist financial network.
 
Despite the raid, no charges were ever brought against Ptech.
 
Company cofounder Ziade, who has gone to great lengths to profess Ptech’s 
innocence, said all the innuendos made it impossible to attract new 
clients, forcing Ptech to become a virtual company and market its software 
through an unidentified third party.
According to The Patriot Ledger of Boston, despite the forced transition, 
most of the company's clients, including several federal agencies, did not 
drop Ptech as a vendor. In May of 2004, Ziade told The Ledger, We still 
have government agencies as customers, including the White House.
 
Copyright © 1998-2006 Online Journal
http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_570.html