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View Full Version : Bad company: 'Jack' Idema and the bounty hunters of Kabul



ariweiner
07-10-2004, 09:42 PM
US payouts for Taliban and al-Qa'ida captures are attracting strange and dangerous adventurers to the 'Wild East'
By Kim Sengupta and Paul Lashmar and Nick Meo in Kabul

11 July 2004 (http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/story.jsp?story=539995)

It was a discovery startling and disturbing even by the standards of the anarchic violence of Afghanistan. Prisoners hanging upside down in a private prison, tortured by heavily armed soldiers of fortune seeking the millions of dollars in bounty on offer from the Americans.

The arrest of Jack Idema and two companions after a shootout in Kabul gave a glimpse of a savage and largely unreported war taking place in the shadow of the Iraq conflict, and the assortment - mercenaries and misfits, fortune-seekers and fantasists - who have come to take part. Idema, now in custody of the notorious Afghan security chief, Baba Jan, in many ways epitomises these latter-day men who would be king in this part of the "Wild East". His is a colourful background across three continents: author, adventurer and convict.

Some of us first met "Jack" in 2001, when the Taliban had retreated from Kabul, victorious Northern Alliance fighters were parading in the streets, and US and British forces were pouring into Bagram airbase. A dapper man in a black T-shirt and combat trousers, a Glock pistol strapped in his shoulder holster, Idema gave a graphic account of his supposed experiences as a former US army Green Beret who had trained with the SAS and, as an adviser to the Tajik and Uzbek militias, had helped plan the operation to take the Afghan capital.

The meeting took place at the Mustafa Hotel, then being built in the city centre. It was another example of the seemingly endless carpetbagging opportunities then on offer. The owners were, and continue to be, a family of Afghan expatriates from New Jersey, the hotel named after one of three brothers. Sipping whiskey, then retailing at $140 a bottle at the Chelsi supermarket off Chicken Street, Idema offered to organise a convoy to Tora Bora, where the Taliban and al-Qa'ida were making what was thought to be their last stand and where, the Americans were confident, Osama bin Laden was trapped.

After making a few checks with the British military, some of us decided to decline his offer. Those who went were robbed at gunpoint a quarter of the way through the journey by their "guards" and made their way, bedraggled, back to Kabul. Jack professed to be outraged. He would take the matter up immediately with his "good friends" General Quononi, the new Defence Minister, and Abdul Rashid Dostum, the warlord, and the bandits would be summarily executed.

After that Idema would regularly turn up at the Intercontinental Hotel, where most of the foreign journalists were staying, attempting to sell videos and photographs purporting to show Taliban and al-Qa'ida terrorists training for assassinations and rehearsing gas attacks using dogs.

Some of these were bought for large sums of money, and one tape was shown on American network TV. However, Idema later declared he was going to sue over alleged breach of contract, and also threatened to "punch out" Geraldo Rivera and a Fox TV presenter in a dispute over the recordings.

Idema had also taken legal action against the director Stephen Spielberg and his DreamWorks production company, accusing them of plagiarising a biographical book he had written, Red Bull Rising, in making a film, The Peacemaker, with George Clooney and Nicole Kidman. Idema, who was said to be demanding a $130m settlement, maintained that Clooney's character, a special forces soldier who heroically prevents rogue Russian soldiers from exporting a nuclear warhead to Iran, was based on his own life in Lithuania, where he worked as an "undercover intelligence source".

His mission, undertaken on behalf of "private interests", was sabotaged by the CIA and FBI, he claims, because he was exposing deals with terrorists that embarrassed President Bill Clinton's attempts to improve relations with the Russians. Idema has co-authored another book, Taskforce Dagger: the Hunt for Bin Laden, with Robin Moore, who wrote The French Connection and The Happy Hooker, in which he develops his theme of playing a pivotal part in the fall of the Taliban. The cover has a dramatic picture of him, bare-chested, semi-automatic rifle in his hand, flanked by two Afghan guerrillas.

Back in America, however, Idema, known as Keith rather than Jack, was known for another type of combat - paintball. He ran a magazine called Paintball Planet and produced "combat helmets" for the game. It was while running another company, Idema Combat Systems, which sold military clothing and equipment, that he was convicted in 1994 of swindling 60 companies out of $200,000. Sentencing Idema to three years in federal prison, the judge ordered that he should undertake psychological tests. Timothy Connolly, then an assistant secretary of defence at the Pentagon, appeared as a character witness for the defence. Records show that Idema served with the 11th Special Forces Group as a "rigger" - essentially a supporting role ensuring that equipment and supplies reached those in the frontline.

Whatever Idema's credentials are, the fact remains that he and others like him are common sights in Afghanistan. They have an eye for bounty, the top prize being the $25m offered by the US government for Osama bin Laden. There are also claims that some are involved in heroin trafficking - in the country that produces three-quarters of the world supply - and smuggling antiquities.

The Mustafa, now much expanded, is the favourite hangout in Kabul. Men in cropped hair, camouflage clothing and keffiyehs, packing guns, lounge in the Irish Bar, drinking bourbon with the Thai girls flown in to work at the hotel's new massage parlour.

Some operating in this murky world do indeed have official connections. David Passaro, a former Green Beret who arrived on a CIA security contract, is currently under arrest, accused of beating a 28-year-old Afghan detainee to death. US federal prosecutors have filed a protective order seeking to restrict the use of classified material at his trial.

The war on terror is lavishly funded when it comes to bounties. The US State Department is offering $340m in bounties for information leading the capture or killing of 30 top suspects worldwide. The reward for Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the al-Qa'ida commander believed to be a leading player in the Iraqi insurgency, was recently doubled to $25m, the same as Saddam Hussein and Bin Laden. So far, $56m has been paid out internationally. Small wonder, then, that all kinds of adventurers are now buzzing round this honeypot.

ariweiner
07-10-2004, 09:44 PM
Hanging in horror house
By AMIR SHAH
11jul04

BEATEN and abused prisoners have been found hanging by their feet in a private Afghanistan dungeon run by a US bounty hunter who believes he is a real-life George Clooney.

The prisoners were found in a torture chamber in a house rented by Jonathan "Jack" Idema - a purported former Green Beret who claims to have inspired The Peacemaker, the Clooney blockbuster also starring Nicole Kidman.

Afghan forces this week raided the house in the Afghan capital, Kabul, and arrested Idema, two other Americans and four Afghans.

Officials said yesterday the prisoners - all Afghans - were found hanging by their feet. It is believed the prisoners were also beaten.

Idema was detained for impersonating a US soldier and kidnapping eight innocent men who were abused for months.

Idema had no legal power to arrest people. He is one of several Western mercenaries in Afghanistan who hunt al-Qaida for US rewards.

Idema and his men told police they were running the prison to assist the war on terror.

But the US military has distanced itself from the claims. "The US Government does not employ or sponsor these men," State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said.

Afghan officials also dismissed claims by Idema, that he was a "special adviser" to their security forces. In fact, it has been reported his methods were too crude for an expert.

He chose his prisoners by cruising the streets and nabbing Afghans suspected of al-Qaida links because of their long beards.

The prisoners would then be beaten until they "confessed".

Some prisoners released this week had been missing for several months.

US officials confirmed Idema had a military background, but they did not release details. He has been described in reports as an ex-special forces operative who went to Afghanistan in late 2001, when the US and its allies routed the Taliban.

He featured in a top-selling book, The Hunt for Bin Laden, which says he fought alongside the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance.

Idema is suing the producers of The Peacemaker for almost $100 million, asserting that Clooney's character in the film is based on him. Clooney plays a maverick army man up against Russian nuclear smugglers.

Idema left the special forces in 1992 and returned home to North Carolina where he was jailed in 1994 for four years on fraud charges.

He said he was framed by authorities because he refused to reveal details about a plot to sell Russian nuclear material to terrorists.

Idema is expected to be handed over to US forces rather than face trial in Kabul.

Kilgor
07-10-2004, 09:49 PM
Middle eastern countries fund terrorists and mercenaries, and deny their funding and exsistance. It must be a bitter pill to swallow when the west does the same, whats good for the goose is good for the gander right ?

These are men to get the job done. Brutal, rough, and without the red tape and "international laws" to hinder their work.

Enemies of the west use such men to great effect, why do you cry when such tactics are being used against you ?

OB Kenobi
07-10-2004, 10:25 PM
Idema, now in custody of the notorious Afghan security chief, Baba Jan, in many ways epitomises these latter-day men who would be king in this part of the "Wild East".

Idema before Baba Jan:

http://www.fayettevillenc.com/photos/2004/jul/n10idema.jpg

After:

http://es.rapidswaterpark.com/i/p/hamburger.jpg

Flagg
07-10-2004, 11:00 PM
http://www.fayettevillenc.com/photos/2004/jul/n10idema.jpg

So I guess that means we can expect Webster's 2005 Dictionary to include this photo next to the expression, "Ugly American".

How unfortunate for him.....I've heard buggery is a common perq for prisoners of the Afghans

2RHPZ
07-11-2004, 12:53 AM
Kabul’s Colonel Kurtz

http://www.sundayherald.com/img9146

Special report: Kabul

Nick Meo delves into the murky world of Afghanistan’s freelance soldiers of fortune

They hang out at Kabul’s Mustafa Hotel, muscles and automatic weaponry on display, guzzling beer and flirting with the giggling Thai girls flown in to staff the hotel’s new massage parlour and beauty salon.

The American ex-soldiers who have flocked to Afghanistan tend to be men of mystery, their ranks dominated by laconic Southerners.

They are to be found in the Irish bar of the Mustafa, a former secret police detention centre hurriedly converted into a hotel after the fall of the Taliban and now run by an Afghan-American car dealer from New Jersey.

Over expensive glasses of Jack Daniel’s, they swap hair-raising tales, compare weaponry and joke with the massage parlour girls who dress in camouflage waistcoats.

In reality, the most exciting it gets for most of these macho men is guarding Western businesses for several hundred dollars a day, and usually they cause little trouble – even in the bar.

Last week, however, Afghanistan’s most flamboyant soldier of fortune was seized by Afghan security forces with two American and four Afghan sidekicks at a private torture chamber he was running in the basement of a Kabul house.

What the Afghan police found when they stormed in after a brief shoot-out was as surprising as it was disturbing.

Eight terrified men with long beards, showing signs of beatings, were imprisoned, three of them hanging upside down, their feet tied with ropes.

Exactly what information former-Green Beret Jonathan K Idema was trying to extract from them was not clear.

But the incident has turned a spotlight on Afghanistan’s murky world of private security men and freelance bounty hunters, men who inhabit a world of shadows and live lives straight from the pages of airport thrillers.

Or fantasise about doing so, at least. Idema, however, is the real deal. Afghan officials said after arresting him that the former Special Forces soldier turned bin Laden-hunter was an anti-terrorist vigilante and “rebel”.

He was hurriedly renounced by the US authorities in a press release that claimed he had been masquerading as an American government representative.

American sensitivities to the Idema torture case have been heightened by the US military’s own ongoing Afghan prison abuse scandal, which mirrors the one in Iraq, with claims that prisoners died under interrogation.

The most popular theory about Idema speculated that the prisoners were being tortured to provide information on Osama bin Laden’s whereabouts. Idema is thought to be chasing the $25 million (£13.4m) bounty on the al-Qaeda leader, as well as avenging 9/11. Or possibly the victims were business rivals in the illegal gems-smuggling or antiquities trades, which some say the American is involved in.

Idema, known as “Jack”, turned up in Afghanistan as a freelance advisor to the Northern Alliance with no official link to the US military. He claims to have killed Taliban from Mazar-e-Sharif in the north to Kandahar in the south, and says he tracked down Osama bin Laden at Tora Bora during the campaign which almost snared al-Qaeda’s leader.

Individuals such as Idema are usually thought to be CIA operatives, but unlike the agency’s retiring types, Idema loves publicity and has wooed the news media, offering videos he said he found in terrorist camps which showed al-Qaeda members training.

Idema was a major source for a best-selling book, Taskforce Dagger: The Hunt For Bin Laden. Although it was a hit with armchair warriors, the Special Forces soldiers it lionised – intelligent men who speak several languages and can plan intricate military campaigns in the most difficult circumstances – found the book a disappointment, too gung-ho and bloodthirsty for their sophisticated tastes. The book made Idema out to be one of the great unsung heroes of the campaign to get rid of the Taliban.

The New Yorker magazine even called him Afghanistan’s Colonel Kurtz, after the deranged soldier in Francis Ford Coppola’s classic Vietnam movie Apocalypse Now, who wages a bloody campaign against communists in Cambodia. Idema, however, believes he is more George Clooney than Marlon Brando, who played Kurtz in Coppola’s film.

Since his seizure it has emerged that Idema is also involved in a $130 million legal action, claiming that he was the inspiration for Clooney’s character in the thriller The Peacemaker, about a maverick Special Forces officer who saves Manhattan from a terrorist nuclear bomb. Idema claims, as Clooney’s character does, to have saved the US from terrorists – he did so by intercepting uranium in Lithuania which was about to fall into the clutches of a terrorist group.

Idema joined the Green Berets in 1975 aged 18, just missing the Vietnam war. He claims to have trained extensively in anti-terrorist operations with the SAS at Hereford.

He says that in 1992 he retired from the army and set up his own business, and it is not clear whether he ever actually saw combat before arriving in Afghanistan. Since his arrest, however, it has been claimed that he served only three years full-time in the army. Other reports have said he spent three years in a US jail for fraud.

Task Force Dagger describes him, ambiguously, as one of the most controversial soldiers ever to serve in Special Forces, and quotes TV journalist Dan Rather, who met him during the brief war to topple the Taliban. Rather described him as “politically incorrect, abrasive, unconventional, and unquestionably heroic”.

On September 12, 2001, Idema answered the patriotic call to duty, a sort of living embodiment of George Bush’s “Dead or Alive” rhetoric and an avenging latter-day Wild West figure on the trail of al-Qaeda.

Not all the Western security men in Kabul see him as a hero, however. One said: “What this guy was doing was not exactly heroic, unless you are an admirer of the SS. What the hell was happening in this torture chamber?

“This kind of thing could cause problems for us all.”

Others think of him more fondly. Afghan shopkeeper Mohammed Shah said: “He’s a friendly guy and he always wants to stop and chat. He is very interested in the history and culture of Afghanistan.”

Idema seems to have vanished for some time before his arrest, perhaps going on the run, and in the Mustafa Hotel nobody claims to have seen him recently.

He is not Kabul’s first mercenary to land himself in trouble. Freelance ex- military men seem to play a significant role in the secret intelligence war against terrorists in Afghanistan, perhaps because they have more freedom of action than serving soldiers and they cause less of a political problem if things go wrong.

That was the claim made by ex-SAS man Colin Berry after he was involved in a shoot-out in his Intercontinental Hotel room which left two Afghan arms dealers dead.

Berry was accused of murder and thrown into one of the capital’s stinking jails, only released last summer after nearly a year in jail and with many questions still unanswered. He maintains his innocence, claiming the men had been killed by his CIA handlers who left him to take the blame.

Before his arrest he was gathering information on the opium trade and trying to buy back stinger anti-aircraft missiles sold to anti-Soviet guerillas in the 1980s, which it is now feared could be used against coalition aircraft.

The arms dealers were selling weapons to al-Qaeda and the Taliban, he said, describing them as the “scum of the earth” and claiming they were involved with Iranian intelligence.

His CIA contacts had decided it was time to assassinate them, Berry says, and they asked him to lure the two men to a lonely mountain road but he refused. Instead, the CIA men tried to arrest the Afghans in Berry’s Kabul hotel room where they became violent and shot him in the stomach. Then they were blasted to death by the Americans in a cowboy-style shootout.

Berry says he was warned to remain silent but recounted his tale to bemused Afghan investigators only after he was abandoned in jail by the CIA, who had promised to get him out.

“I was basically hung out to dry,” is how he put it, although the British embassy poured cold water on his story.

He is back home in Essex writing a book which threatens to blow the lid off the intelligence war. His account promises to fill in what is, in effect, a blank space. Hardly anything is known about how Special Forces and spooks operate in Afghanistan, although they played a decisive role in the Taliban’s fall by directing warlords and air strikes, and are still thought to be the most effective weapon against surviving terrorists.

It does seem, however, that the military professionals sometimes have problems with the freelancers – perhaps the true cause of Idema’s and Berry’s troubles.

Rumours of ex-soldiers-turned-bounty-hunters in Afghanistan or in Pakistan’s North-West Frontier Province are widespread, but such individuals keep a low profile if they really exist. They would be competing with the world’s biggest military, and face formidable problems operating in dangerous tribal territory.

But there are plenty of CIA and SAS veterans of the 1980s anti-Soviet campaign who are familiar with Afghanistan’s languages and culture.

They may be able to take short-cuts not open to their military ex- colleagues, such as torturing suspects.

And for some bored retired soldiers, the lure of adventure and bounty at the ends of the earth may prove irresistable.

11 July 2004

moughoun
07-11-2004, 04:22 PM
No matter what the ****hole there's alway's an Irish bar p-)