From Rappler (Mar 13):
BOI: 6 Americans gave 'real-time' info to SAF
(UPDATED) The PNP BOI's report on the Mamasapano clash confirm 6 Americans were at the SAF's tactical command post on January 25
US military personnel (L) help their Philippine counterparts prepare to load an injured police commando from one stretcher to another and onto a waiting US military helicopter in the town of Mamasapano on January 26, 2015, following clashes with Muslim rebels. File photo by Mark Navales/AFP
“Six American nationals” provided “real-time information” during a police
operation on January 25 that claimed the lives of 65, including 44 elite cops,
5 civilians, and 18 Muslim rebels, according to a report by police
investigators.
The American nationals, the Philippine National Police (PNP) Board of
Inquiry (BOI) said in its report, were at the tactical command post during
“Oplan Exodus,” a PNP Special Action Force (SAF)-led operation
that targeted bomb makers and terrorists Zulkifli bin Hir (alias “Marwan”) and
Abdul Basit Usman.
"The US
counterparts provided real-time information on the actual movements of friendly
and enemy forces in the area of operations. The US
personnel at the tactical command post were able to do this by providing the
special technical equipment and aircraft, which they themselves operated,"
read the 130-page report.
The report, however, emphasized that no armed US
troops were at the area of operations on January 25.
Marwan was killed but Usman escaped in
what would be the bloodiest one-day operation in PNP history.
Marwan is one of
the most wanted terrorists of the United
States’
Federal Bureau of Investigation, which put a US$5 million bounty for his
capture. The Philippine government offered P7.4 million for his arrest. (READ: Marwan
and the ties that bind)
Usman, on the
other hand, has a US$1 million bounty from the US
government and a P6.4 million bounty from the Philippine government on his head.
The US
was involved even after the operation.
According to sacked PNP SAF commander Police Director Getulio Napeñas, the
left index finger of Marwan that was taken for DNA sampling was “sent to two
representatives of the US FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) waiting at General
Santos City
on January 28.”
But this, the BOI
report noted, should not have happened. "The standard procedure should
have been to turn-over the DNA sample to the PNP Crime Laboratory," it
said.
Photos of a dead
Marwan taken by the SAF assault team were also handed over to the FBI, the PNP,
and the Interior Department.
The report, or at
least parts of the report shown to media, did not explain why the FBI was
already waiting at General Santos
City, or what the protocols of the FBI’s involvement post-operation were.
Technical
intelligence
But even prior to the bloody police operation, the US
“had been providing reliable information about Marwan and Usman… The technical intelligence support also facilitated
the formulation and execution of the Oplan Exodus,” said the report, which was
submitted to PNP office-in-charge Deputy Director General Leonardo Espina on
Thursday, March 12. (READ: Senate hearings: Was there US involvement
in SAF ops?)
Quoting from
interviews and the affidavit of Superintendent Michael John Catindig Mangahis
from the SAF, the BOI noted that the 6
Americans also “helped in the medical evacuation of the besieged and wounded
SAF Commandos.”
Mangahis also said the “pilots of the helicopter who helped in evacuating
wounded personnel to the hospital” were the same ones present at the tactical
command post.
The FBI has since
said that based on “preliminary test results the FBI has evidence that supports
the claim that the DNA
sample provided by the Government of the Philippines (GOP) on 27 January
2015 is related to the currently incarcerated subject Rahmat Abhdir.”
Abhdir is
Marwan’s brother, who is currently detained in the US.
Sticky issue
“Oplan Exodus”
has become controversial for a score of reasons. The SAF command decided to
keep the Philippine military and top PNP brass out of the loop, informing them
of the operation only after troopers had entered Mamasapano town in Maguindanao.
US involvement has also been a sticky issue,
with various reports – from media outfits and Mamasapano residents – of
sightings of foreigners during the operation and of a drone that hovered over
the area prior to and during the operation.
Napeñas said during a Senate hearing that having US
counterparts involved in the operation “is authoritzed as such involvement is
part of a continuing legitimate project.”
The BOI in its report said it “cannot ascertain the validity of this claim”
and that it would be up to the Philippine-US Security Engagement Board to
determine if Napeñas’ reasoning was valid.
An expert has
dismissed US
intelligence description of Marwan as a top terrorist. He was “a little snake
who has been blown up into a dragon," said the Institute for Policy
Analysis of Conflict headed by Sidney Jones. (READ: Marwan
not 'world-class terrorist')
The BOI report is
the result of a 6-week long probe by selected police officers. The board was
formed the day after the bloody operation in Mamasapano.
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