A Rush to Judgment in Bulgarian Blast?

A Rush to Judgment in Bulgarian Blast?
One problem in assessing blame for terror attacks in the Middle East is
that governments have political interests in linking these outrages to enemies
and then pushing that case in public forums. That dynamic may now be influencing
the probe of a terror bombing in Bulgaria, reports Gareth Porter for Inter Press
Service.
By Gareth Porter
Bulgarian Interior Minister Tsvetan Tsvetanov’s dramatic announcement last
Tuesday on the Bulgarian investigation of the July 2012 terror bombing of an
Israeli tourist bus was initially reported by Western news media as suggesting
clear evidence of Hezbollah’s responsibility for the killings.
But more accurate reports on the minister’s statement and the only details he
provided reveal that the alleged link between the bomb suspects and Hezbollah
was merely an “assumption” rather than a conclusion based on specific evidence.
Tsvetanov was quoted by various Western news outlets as saying, “We have
established that the two were members of the militant wing of Hezbollah.” The
minister also said, “There is data showing the financing and connection between
Hezbollah and the two suspects,” according to the BBC and Jerusalem Post.
Those statements implied that the Bulgarian investigators had uncovered direct
evidence of Hezbollah’s involvement in the Burgas bombing.
But the New York Times on Wednesday quoted Tsvetanov as saying, in remarks to a
session of Bulgaria’s Consultative Council on National Security Tuesday, “A
reasonable assumption, I repeat a reasonable assumption, can be made that the
two of them were members of the militant wing of Hezbollah.” That statement
appeared to acknowledge that he was merely speculating on the basis of data that
doesn’t necessarily support that conclusion.
In a report on Wednesday by Sofia News Agency, Bulgaria’s largest Englishlanguage news provider, Tsvetanov was quoted as saying that the investigation
had led to a “well-founded assumption” that two of the perpetrators of the
deadly attack belonged to what the Bulgarian government is calling the “militant
wing of Hezbollah.”
In an interview with Bulgarian National Radio Wednesday, the Bulgarian chief
prosecutor, Sotir Tsatsarov, emphasized that the investigation of the Burgas bus
bombing had not been concluded and expressed concern about the term “wellfounded assumption.”
The chief prosecutor implied that Tsvetanov’s conclusion about Hezbollah might
have been swayed by political pressures. Tsatsarov said that the prosecutor’s
office “could not be used to make political decisions or to justify them,”
according to Sofia News Agency.
In a television interview for the morning broadcast of Bulgarian National
Television, Bulgarian Foreign Minister Nikolay Mladenov defended Tsvetanov’s use
of the phrase “well-founded assumption.” Mladenov explained that it meant that
Bulgaria had “good reason” to believe that the attack had been organized and
inspired by members of the militant branch of Hezbollah at this stage of the
investigation, Sofia News Agency reported. But Mladenov did not claim that any
of those “good reasons” consisted of hard evidence.
In an interview with Associated Press on Tuesday, Europol Director Rob Wainright
said, “The Bulgarian authorities are making quite a strong assumption that this
is the work of Hezbollah.” But Wainright also cited only the most general
arguments in support of Tsvetanov’s “assumption,” declaring, “From what I’ve
seen of the case from the very strong, obvious links to Lebanon, from the modus
operandi of the terrorist attack and from other intelligence that we see I think
that is a reasonable assumption.”
Europol had sent several investigators to help the Bulgarian authorities on the
Burgas bombing investigation, Wainwright told Associated Press.
None of the details provided by Tsvetanov, according to press reports, involved
evidence showing that two of the alleged conspirators belonged to Hezbollah or
to Hezbollah financing of the terror plot. The most important piece of evidence
cited by Tsvetanov was the lengthy stays in Lebanon by two of the three alleged
participants in the bombing and driver’s licenses that were forged in Lebanon.
Tsvetanov said the two alleged conspirators with Canadian and Australian
passports who are believed to have helped the third member of the cell carry out
the Burgas bombing lived in Lebanon between 2006 and 2010. He also indicated
that two of driver’s licenses used by the conspirators were “forged in Lebanon,”
and that Bulgaria was able to piece together the movements of two of the
suspects from Lebanon to Europe.
Those connections between the alleged conspirators and the bombing by themselves
could hardly support an assumption of Hezbollah responsibility for the bombing.
Al-Qaeda terrorist cells have been operating in Lebanon for years, and have the
technical capability for such a bombing plot.
Members of one Al-Qaeda network of 13 men organized in different cells arrested
in 2006 and 2007 confessed to having planned and carried out the 2005
assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, although they retracted
their confessions before trial.
Furthermore, Al-Qaeda has claimed responsibility for a series of terrorist
bombings involving Israeli tourists in the past, whereas there is no known case
of a Hezbollah bombing of Israeli tourists, as a Hezbollah spokesman pointed out
Wednesday.
In November 2002, Al-Qaeda carried out a terrorist attack on Israeli tourists in
Mombasa, Kenya in November 2002 that involved an attempted shoot-down of an
Israeli passenger aircraft and a triple suicide car bombing of an Israeli-owned
hotel.
Two years later, an Al-Qaeda affiliate took responsibility for bombings at three
Red Sea resorts, killing 34 Israeli tourists. And in July 2005, the same AlQaeda-related organization took responsibility for suicide bomb attacks that
killed at least 88 people at a shopping area and hotel packed with tourists,
including Israelis, in the Egyptian Red Sea resort city of Sharm el Sheik.
Nevertheless, Tsvetanov offered no other specific evidence to support his
conclusion about the assumed Hezbollah connection.
Another aspect of the Bulgarian investigation suggesting that information about
the alleged participants is still very limited is the fact, reported by the
Bulgarian daily newspaper Sega, that the investigators had found no direct
communication and only “indirect indications” of ties between the Arab holding
an Australian passport and the perpetrator of the attack.
The Bulgarian charge of Hezbollah responsibility for the bombing based on little
more than assumption has raised the suspicion in Bulgaria that the government
was under pressure from the United States and Israel to reach a conclusion that
aligned with the Israeli-American position.
Foreign Minister Mladenov denied that Bulgaria was pressured into issuing a
statement on the progress of the investigation. But both Israel and the United
States have given evidence of wanting such a statement. Bulgaria is a member of
NATO and has expanded military and intelligence ties with Israel since Israeli
relations with Turkey soured in 2009.
Israel also played a key role in the Bulgarian investigation, as Interior
Minister Tsvetanov acknowledged in his presentation Tuesday. He specifically
thanked the Israeli government for its support in regard to the investigation
and said Israel had provided “relevant expertise” in regard to one of the
indicators implicitly cited as pointing to Hezbollah the identification of the
false driver’s licenses used by the alleged bomb cell.
Ha’aretz reported Tuesday that Israel and the United States had both feared
that, “while the investigation’s finding would be clear, Bulgaria’s public
statement would be ambiguous and would not name Hezbollah responsible.”
John Brennan, President Barack Obama’s primary adviser on homeland security and
counter-terrorism, issued a statement that portrayed the Bulgarian investigation
as having reached a definitive conclusion. Brennan praised the Bulgarian
authorities for “their determination and commitment to ensuring that Hizballah
is held to account for this act of terror on European soil.”
Gareth Porter, an investigative historian and journalist specialising in U.S.
national security policy, received the UK-based Gellhorn Prize for journalism
for 2011 for articles on the U.S. war in Afghanistan. [This story was originally
published by Inter Press Service.]