Turkish wife of a CIA bomber says he considered America as an adversary
By Selcan Hacaoglu, APWednesday, January 6, 2010
Wife says CIA bomber saw US as adversary
ANKARA, Turkey — The wife of the suspected Jordanian double agent who killed seven CIA workers in Afghanistan said Wednesday her husband regard the United States as an adversary.
Defne Bayrak, the Turkish wife of Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi, told Turkish media by telephone she was shocked at the news that her husband blew himself up at a base in Afghanistan on Dec. 30, killing himself and the officers.
Bayrak, who lives in Istanbul, said her husband had plans to become a specialist in surgery in Turkey and doubts he was working for the CIA.
“I don’t believe that he was an agent for CIA or for Jordan,” she told private NTV television. “He was someone who even did not like to leave home.”
Bayrak, an Arabic language translator for some Turkish media outlets, later told private CNN-Turk television that while in Jordan her husband wrote articles for Jihad Web sites, in which the United States is considered an adversary.
Al-Balawi spoke openly about wanting to die in a holy war, calling tirelessly for jihad against Israel and the United States, said Mohammed Yousef, one of his high school classmates in Jordan.
Jordanian intelligence was aware of these statements when they arrested al-Balawi last March, according to counterterrorism officials based in the Middle East.
Jordanian intelligence believed the devout 32-year-old doctor had been persuaded to support U.S. efforts against al-Qaida in Afghanistan and wanted al-Balawi to help capture or kill Ayman al-Zawahri, a fellow doctor from Egypt who is Osama bin Laden’s right-hand man, according to another counterterrorism official based in the Middle East.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment on matters involving the CIA and Jordan’s national security.
Bayrak confirmed that al-Balawi was jailed for three days last March and left Jordan shortly after that, saying he was going to Pakistan to become a specialist in surgery.
After those plans did not work out, al-Balawi said he got another job there, Bayrak said.
But anti-terrorism experts say he traveled to Afghanistan, suggesting he had agreed to take on the mission against al-Qaida, providing valuable intelligence information about al-Qaida leaders to U.S. and Jordanian agents.
Bayrak and her two daughters left Jordan in October and now live in Istanbul.
She last spoke to al-Balawi over a month ago, Bayrak said.
“It was a normal conversation, he talked about his plans to come to Turkey and become a specialist here,” she told NTV television.
Later she told CNN-Turk television: “I was shocked when I heard the news because he constantly spoke about coming to Turkey…I was not expecting it.”
Associated Press Writer Suzan Fraser in Ankara and Jamal Halaby in Zarqa, Jordan contributed to this report.
Tags: Afghanistan, Ankara, Asia, Central Asia, Europe, Istanbul, Jordan, Middle East, National Security, North America, Terrorism, Turkey, United States, Western Europe