By Clinton W. Taylor on 11.30.06 @ 12:07AM
That may be even too much for Hugo Chavez.
It's pretty rare that I have an occasion to congratulate Hugo
Chavez's government on anything, especially anything related to the
War on Terror. But two cheers are in order for Venezuela's capture
of the leader of an international terror organization which looks
to be responsible for an attack on a U.S. embassy last month.
Teodoro Darnott, aka "Sheidy Daniel," thought he was immune from
Hugo's attentions. Darnott, in the remote Zulia section of
Venezuela, near the Colombian border, had begun preaching a weird
fusion of militant Islam, Marxist theory, and even a sprinkling of
Catholic "Liberation Theology" to a group of disaffected Indians.
He detested the United States and Israel and called for jihad -- or
in Spanish, "yihad," against their interests in Latin America.
Sheidy Daniel called his group "Hezbollah Latin America" -- a
dangerous choice given that the "real" Hezbollah operates quietly
in Venezuela, though primarily in ventures designed to raise cash
for its Middle Eastern operations. Claiming an association with
Hezbollah is like claiming membership with a New York crime family
in order to get better service in a restaurant: if you do so, the
claim ought to be true, or you must really be looking for trouble.
Darnott denied receiving funding from Hezbollah's Lebanon HQ, but
he was allowed to go about unmolested while using Hezbollah's name
in his very successful organizing and bomb-making -- and his less
successful bomb-planting.
Not content to rally his tiny section of followers to jihadi
mayhem in Venezuela, Darnott took Hezbollah in Latin America to the
Internet. Using free web services like Blogspot and MSN Groups, he
set up multiple mirrored websites which guaranteed that even if a
few of his sites were taken down he would still have a web
presence. And he began advertising: he sent an invitation to join
his MSN group to people across the globe, including, for some
reason, to me.
Darnott's jihadi message attracted followers in several Latin
American countries, including (according to his website) Mexico,
and his rhetoric became more violent as well. On August 18th he
announced his intention to use explosives against American
interests in Venezuela. I called the FBI the next day, but heard
nothing new about his bomb plans until October 3. (In the meantime
I put together a detailed two-part report about the group for
HotAir.com, both parts of which you can see here.)
October 3 was the anniversary of the Hezbollah bombing of the
U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, and a student named Jose Miguel
Reyes Espinosa allegedly decided to commemorate the event by
setting off two pipe bombs in front of the U.S.
Embassy. The nervous Reyes sent his taxi driver into a panic,
however, and he was arrested. The recovered pipe bombs (or niples in local parlance) were found to
include leaflets referring to Hezbollah -- exactly as Hezbollah
Latin America's sites had warned. Subsequent postings on the sites
removed any doubt in my mind that Darnott was the mastermind behind
these attacks.
Then things took a turn for the strange. On November 13th,
Darnott posted a short screed claiming that Reyes had been
assassinated by the CIA and the Mossad while in DISIP custody. He
called for a much more serious and damaging attack in retaliation,
and the site now included a picture of a propane-cylinder device
that would probably be much more lethal than the pipe bombs used in
the failed October 3rd attack. He also posted a picture of U.S.
Ambassador to Venezuela William Brownfield with an annotation that
he was "worthy of death." Since the failed attempt in October
corresponded precisely to prior warnings on the websites, this new
threat was worth taking very seriously.
That was the last posting he would make for a while. Now we know
why: On November 18th, the Venezuelan newspaper El
Universal reported that the DISIP -- Venezuela's FBI --
had detained a Teodoro Rafael "Nardot" (sic) in a suburb of
Maracaibo. He was charged in connection with the October 3rd
bombing and with violations of Venezuela's "delinquent
organizations" law, and remains in DISIP custody -- along with Jose
Miguel Reyes Espinosa, the tales of whose martyrdom by the CIA and
Mossad were, apparently, greatly exaggerated.
Darnott will have some time to contemplate where he went wrong.
It wasn't the terrorist recruiting, per se, that led to his arrest.
Chavez is reported to look the other way for another terrorist
group, Colombia's FARC, who occasionally find refuge from Colombian
troops by lying low in Venezuela. Projecting power throughout Latin
America through a proxy terror group might actually appeal to
Chavez's ambition.
But terrorists within Venezuela need to keep a low profile. No
one wanted a buffoon like Darnott drawing attention to Hezbollah's
presence. Chavez is drawing ever closer to Iran, Hezbollah's chief
sponsor, and before this story broke reporters had already begun to
question the relationship between the Iranian embassy in Venezuela
and Hezbollah's activities there. Given a likely Iranian-embassy
connection to Hezbollah's 1994 bombing of a Jewish Community Center
in Buenos Aires, such scrutiny is quite justified. Darnott's
anti-Israel and anti-American activities stirred up resistance
among the local synagogues, and attracted attention in the
blogosphere and on Fox News.
Also, while Chavez frequently relies on a mythical impending
U.S. invasion as an excuse for further tightening his control over
his country, the last thing he wants is an actual U.S.
invasion. A major strike against an American embassy or ambassador
would have invited retaliation from the United States, especially
since Darnott was able to recruit terrorists publicly and with
impunity all summer long and Chavez had done nothing about him.
El Universal's writeup includes an admission by a DISIP
officer that Darnott had been under investigation for three months
-- and interestingly, his arrest was almost three months to the day
from when I reported the bomb threat to the FBI. I've no way of
knowing this, but I like to think that the FBI let the DISIP know
they were interested in Darnott -- and thereby made him that much
harder for Chavez to ignore.
However this arrest came about, the story is not over, since
there still several other Hezbollah in Latin America cells that
Darnott set up in different countries that bear watching. And his
relationship to the Hezbollah Home Office needs to be clarified.
But for now I'm quite pleased that this callow bozo is safely in
the calabozo.
topics:
Islam, Law, Iran, Israel