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				 Posted: Tue Oct 19, 2004 4:04 pm    Post subject: !!Laurie Mylroie -Oct 19 - NY Sun- Saddam's Terrorist Ties | 
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				www.nysun.com
 
op ed
 
 
The New York Sun
 
October 19, 2004
 
Saddam's Terrorist Ties
 
By Laurie Mylroie
 
October 19, 2004
 
 
The central issue in the presidential race is, arguably, the legitimacy of
 
the Iraq War. Is this conflict a necessary part of the war on terrorism? The
 
answer is decidedly yes, although this seems to be a fight the White House
 
would rather duck, even as documents now trickling out of Baghdad suggest
 
Saddam Hussein had extensive ties with terrorists, including with Islamic
 
militants.
 
 
One source for this claim is the widely discussed, but scarcely read, report
 
of the Iraq Survey Group, the coalition intelligence team that went into
 
Iraq after the war. As Richard Spertzel, an Iraq Survey Group member who
 
also had served with the United Nations Iraq weapons inspections team,
 
explained in the Wall Street Journal, "Documentation indicates that Iraq was
 
training non-Iraqis at Salman Pak in terrorist techniques, including
 
assassination and suicide bombing. In addition to Iraqis, trainees included
 
Palestinians, Yemenis, Saudis, Lebanese, Egyptians and Sudanese."
 
 
Soon after September 11, 2001, two Iraqi defectors came forward, explaining
 
that Iraqi intelligence had trained non-Iraqi Arab militants at itsextensive
 
compound at Salman Pak, an area south of Baghdad. Among the skills taught
 
there was hijacking airplanes. One defector even drew a sketch of the area,
 
showing a passenger plane parked in the southwest corner of a large
 
compound.
 
 
When American marines took over Salman Pak in early April 2003, they indeed
 
found the terrorist training camp, the airplane, and the foreign terrorists.
 
An American military spokesman affirmed, "The nature of the work being done
 
by some of those people we captured. ..gives us the impression that there is
 
terrorist training that was conducted at Salman Pak." The marines "inferred"
 
that the airplane "was used to practice hijacking," the Associated Press
 
reported. Saddam's apologists claim the camp was for counterterrorism
 
training, but that seems highly improbable.
 
 
Iraqi documents, dating from January to May 1993, suggest that Baghdad's
 
training of terrorists goes back over a decade - at least to the period
 
following Iraq's August 1990 invasion of Kuwait. That training was
 
interrupted by the 1991 war, but appears to have resumed not long
 
afterwards.
 
 
These documents, leaked by a Pentagon official to Scott Wheeler of Cybercast
 
News Service, are posted on its Web site. Bruce Tefft, a retired CIA
 
counter-terrorism official who worked on Iraq; MEMRI's Nimrod Raphaeli;
 
Middle East scholar Walid Phares; and this author have all expressed their
 
confidence in the documents' authenticity. They are on official Iraqi
 
letterhead and are essentially a 40-page correspondence between Iraqi
 
intelligence and Saddam's office.
 
 
Responding to a request from Saddam, M-14, the division of Iraqi
 
intelligence responsible for training and conducting special operations,
 
produced a report dated April 1, 1993. The seven page document lists 100
 
"Arab fedayeen," whom it had trained in Iraq during the fall of 1990.Their
 
nationalities include a wide swath of the Arab world: Palestinians, Syrians,
 
Lebanese, Egyptians, Moroccans, Tunisians, Sudanese, and Eritreans, who are
 
not usually considered Arab.
 
 
One important relationship discussed in the documents is Iraq's support for
 
the militant domestic opponents of the Egyptian government, a key Arab
 
member of the 1990-91 coalition against Iraq. Three weeks prior to the
 
Persian Gulf War, on December 24, 1990, Iraqi intelligence concluded an
 
agreement on a plan of sabotage against Cairo with a representative of the
 
Egyptian Islamic Group, whose leader, Shaykh Omar Abdul Rahman, was
 
subsequently tried and convicted for terrorism in New York. Those operations
 
ended with the February 28, 1991, cease-fire, according to these papers.
 
 
The documents also indicate that Iraqi intelligence, along with Sudan's
 
Islamic government, allied with Iraq, pressed in early 1993 to resume
 
operational support for Egypt's militants. Saddam rejected this, ordering
 
that Iraq's backing for them remain limited to financial support for the
 
time being.
 
 
Nonetheless, the director of Iraqi intelligence informed the palace that the
 
vice chairman of Sudan's governing National Islamic Front would be sending a
 
leader of Egyptian Islamic Jihad - a group headed by Ayman al-Zawahiri, who
 
subsequently became Osama bin Laden's deputy - to Baghdad on a Sudanese
 
plane carrying meat. The U.N. Security Council actually gave Sudan an
 
exemption for such flights, creating a strange, unnecessary breach in the
 
air embargo then imposed on Iraq.
 
 
An 11-page document dated January 25, 1993, lists various organizations with
 
which Iraqi intelligence maintained contacts. It recommends "the use of Arab
 
Islamic elements which were fighting in Afghanistan and now have no place to
 
go and who are currently in Somalia, Sudan, and Egypt." Saddam approves the
 
suggestion, with the order to "concentrate on Somalia."
 
 
The document also mentions a group called Hezb-e-Islami, headed by Gulbuddin
 
Hekmatyar. Noting that Iraqi intelligence established a relationship with
 
this party in 1989, the document states that Iraq now had a direct
 
relationship with Hekmatyar. This man was, in turn, an important ally of
 
Osama bin Ladin. In a terrorism case in Chicago, the U.S. Attorney's Office
 
affirmed, "Hekmatyar was aligned with Osama bin Ladin in Afghanistan after
 
al Qaida was formed in 1988, and indeed many of al Qaida's camps were
 
located in territory controlled by Hekmatyar."
 
 
The report of the Iraq Survey Group presents further evidence of Iraq's
 
involvement in hostile activities. It includes the most comprehensive
 
account of the Iraqi Intelligence Service ever published in open-source
 
literature, depicting an organization that consisted of "over twenty
 
compartmentalized directorates." Section M-14 included the "Tiger Group" -
 
"primarily composed of suicide bombers. "It also supervised the "Challenge
 
Project," a highly secretive enterprise involved with explosives, about
 
which the Iraq Survey Group could learn little. Another section - M-21 - was
 
formed in 1990 to create explosive devices for Iraqi intelligence. Its
 
chemistry department developed explosive materials; its electronics
 
department prepared timers and wiring; and its mechanical department
 
produced igniters and designed the bombs.
 
 
This picture shows the substantial, longstanding involvement of Iraq's
 
intelligence services in terrorist training and support operations,
 
including collaboration with Islamic militants. Its activities were
 
infinitely more sophisticated than anything that was taught to the
 
mujahideen fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan. This underscores just how
 
odd it is that our default explanation for terrorism has now become Al
 
Qaida - which did not have a chemistry department, one of countless points
 
that distinguishes that organization from the intelligence service of a
 
major terrorist state.
 
 
The Iraqi documents described here have received little public attention, as
 
the Bush administration has said virtually nothing about them. Many people
 
find it incomprehensible that significant information linking Iraq to
 
terrorism would exist, and the White House would say virtually nothing about
 
it. Every discussion of that link, particularly between Saddam's so-called
 
secular regime and Islamic militants, produces an enormous caterwauling from
 
a variety of parties vested in the notions that the militants acted on their
 
own and that Saddam was little threat.
 
 
Yet never before has a president sent America's soldiers into combat, while
 
understating the reasons for that conflict. A full explanation of the
 
reasons for a war is strategically as well as morally essential. It is
 
critical for maintaining support on the home front. And the soldiers who
 
risk life and limb are entitled to understand why they are being asked to
 
make such sacrifices, as are their families.
 
 
Moreover, the matter of Baghdad's long-standing co-operation with Islamic
 
militants is critical to understanding the current battles in Iraq. Who,
 
exactly, is the enemy? Do the foreign terrorists there operate independently
 
of the Baathists? Or do the attacks reflect an ongoing relationship, dating
 
back to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, in which the Baathists worked with and
 
hid behind Islamic militants? And what is the role of the Syrian Baath? It
 
is striking that nowhere in these Iraqi documents can one find the least
 
suggestion that Iraqi intelligence had any qualms about working with the
 
Islamic militants.
 
 
President Bush made a necessary and courageous decision for war with Iraq.
 
He inherited from the Clinton administration a fatally flawed explanation
 
for terrorism: the role of states in such attacks had been supplanted by
 
shadowy networks, above all Al Qaeda. This view was articulated and
 
maintained for nearly the entirety of Clinton's eight years in office. As so
 
many people accepted, endorsed, and promulgated it, it has generated
 
ferocious opposition to the notion that Saddam was involved in terrorism.
 
Yet unless the White House itself takes a much bolder lead in presenting the
 
ever-clearer picture of Iraq's ties with terrorists, the arguments regarding
 
this war will remain hopelessly distorted.
 
 
Ms.Mylroie is a member of the Committee on the Present Danger and the author
 
of "Bush vs.the Beltway: The Inside Battle Over War in Iraq" (HarperCollins,
 
2004). | 
			 
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