when he learned that Saudi Arabia had put a million dollar bounty on him. Carlos eventually chose to settle in Aden, South Yemen where he felt safer. Again, it was Qathafi who paid his expenses. During his stay, he spent some time training other terrorist groups, giving them the benefit of his experience, but training others was not what he wanted to do with his life. From the time of his involvement with the Popular Front, Carlos had thought of only one thing, running his own terrorist organisation. Several problems had to be solved before he could achieve his goal, mainly where to base his operation and how to raise the funds necessary to run such a group. Another factor was recruiting a band of loyal followers. Just as Haddad had taught him, Carlos looked to the West German Revolutionary Cells for an able assistant. As his first choice, Wilfred Bose, had been killed at Entebbe, Carlos sent for Johannes Weinrich, the man who had assisted in the rocket attack at Orly airport. Weinrich had previously been arrested for provided the cars used in the Orly attack and was subsequently sent to prison. However, just eight months into his sentence he was released on probation for health reasons and promptly jumped bail. He was still on the run when Carlos's offer reached him, which he promptly accepted. His first task was to recruit Hans-Joachim Klein but after tracking him to a chalet in the Italian Alps, he found a different Klein, one who was disillusioned with the revolutionary cause and opposed to violence to the point that he had tipped off the German authorities about a planned murder of two members of the German Jewish community by the Revolutionary Cell. Carlos was not impressed that his former accomplice had defected "to the other side." Shortly after receiving the news, Carlos left Aden for Columbia where he hoped to establish himself as a modern-day Che Guevara. He quickly found the atmosphere in Latin America less than r...