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No Link Between Saddam and Al Qaeda

No Link Between Saddam and Al Qaeda
Expert Guest Post by Larry Johnson of No
Quarter

Gee whiz. Big surprise yesterday regarding Saddam and Al Qaeda. According to
Warren Strobel of
McClatchy
:

An exhaustive review of more than 600,000 Iraqi documents that were captured
after the 2003 U.S. invasion has found no evidence that Saddam Hussein’s
regime had any operational links with Osama bin Laden’s al Qaida terrorist
network.

The Pentagon-sponsored study, scheduled for release later this week, did confirm
that Saddam’s regime provided some support to other terrorist groups,
particularly in the Middle East, U.S. officials told McClatchy. However, his
security services were directed primarily against Iraqi exiles, Shiite Muslims,
Kurds and others he considered enemies of his regime.

Not surprisingly the Pentagon reportedly has now decided not to release this
report. Well, on the substance of this we did not need a Pentagon study. The
data was very clear back in 2003 before we invaded Iraq. How do I know? Well,
take a look at what I wrote five years ago:


[The following was written in January 2003 and was shared with Ambassador
L. Paul Bremer, who told me it didn't matter what Saddam did or didn't
do, we were going to war.]

The course of action the United States pursues against Iraq in the coming
months holds profound implications for the war on terrorism. As the Bush Administration
marshals U.S. military forces in the Persian Gulf region and prepares to invade
Iraq, it has devoted little attention to Iraq’s role in the war on terrorism
other than to make unsubstantiated claims that Saddam Hussein has backed Al
Qaeda. With the end of the first Gulf War and the adoption of UN Security
Council Resolution 687, Iraq was obligated to rid itself of weapons of mass
destruction and end all support for terrorism. Inexplicably the international
community focused its attention on finding and destroying Iraq’s chemical,
biological, and nuclear weapons but ignored Baghdad’s continuing support
for terrorism.

An invasion of Iraq will topple Hussein and eliminate Baghdad’s ability
to develop or use weapons of mass destruction for the foreseeable future,
but it will do little to destroy the infrastructure of radical Islamic terrorism
responsible for the 9-11 attacks. In fact there is a serious risk
that a U.S. led war against Iraq may crystallize the diffused anger in the
Arab and Muslim world—a heretofore unattained goal of bin Laden and
his followers—and persuade more Muslim youths to take up the terrorist
banner against America and her citizens.

CLARIFYING IRAQ’S TERRORIST RECORD:

There is no doubt that Iraq is a state sponsor of terrorism—i.e., a
country that provides financial support, safe haven, training, or weapons
and explosives to groups or individuals that carry out terrorist attacks.
From 1991 thru 2001 there were 4143 international terrorist attacks throughout
the world. Saddam Hussein and his regime were implicated in at least 73 of
these incidents, which accounted for fewer that two hundred fatalities. According
to Central Intelligence Agency data, there is no credible evidence implicating
Iraq in any mass casualty terrorist attacks since 1991. As reported in Patterns
of Global Terrorism 2000, Saddam Hussein’s regime “has not attempted
an anti-Western terrorist attack since its failed plot to assassinate former
President Bush in 1993. However, Iraq continued to aggressively target and
attack anti-regime opponents and UN personnel working in Iraq.”

During the Gulf War (1990-1991) Iraq made a concerted but futile effort to
launch terrorist attacks against the U.S. led coalition. Saddam Hussein dispatched
at least 40 two-man terrorist teams around the world. Most of these teams
were apprehended or deterred. The few that reached their targets were incompetent
or deterred by security measures. One team, for example, attempted to bomb
the US Cultural Center in Manila on 19 January 1991, but the device prematurely
detonated. The blast killed one of the Iraqi agents and badly injured the
other. In Indonesia a team left a bomb in a flower box outside the US Ambassador’s
residence in Jakarta. It was discovered by a gardener and rendered safe. The
perpetrators escaped undetected. In another case an informant alerted Bangkok
police to four terrorists plotting to attack U.S. airline offices.

Within months of signing off Security Council Resolution 687 Iraq launched
attacks against Kurds, relief workers, and regime opponents operating in Northern
Iraq. Starting with the 1992 PATTERNS OF GLOBAL TERRORISM and continuing thru
2001, the U.S. Government annually admitted that Iraq was violating the terrorism
provisions of 687. But no punitive actions were taken or proposed. With the
United States unwilling to hold the Hussein regime accountable for violating
the prohibitions pertaining to international terrorism, there should be little
surprise that the Iraqis as well as other Middle Eastern governments assumed
that Iraq had tacit approval to punish anti-regime dissidents and help anti-Iranian
terrorists.

Iraq has directed most of its support for terrorism to groups that have attacked
Iran and Israel. The United States Government accuses Iraq of providing sanctuary
and/or assistance to six groups:
• Arab Liberation Front
• Palestine Liberation Front (PLF & Abu Abbas)
• Abu Nidal (ANO)
• 15 May (Abu Ibrahim)
• The Kurdish Worker’s Party (PKK)
• Mujahedin-e-Khalq

The Arab Liberation Front (ALF) is part of the PLO. The ALF, like the other
factions of the Palestine Liberation Organization, left Lebanon in a US-brokered
deal after Israel’s 1982 invasion of Lebanon. Many ALF combatants ended
up in Baghdad. Although the ALF continues to funnel money to Palestinians
who carry out terrorist attacks against Israel, State Department has not identified
this group with any significant terrorist attack in any issue of PATTERNS
OF GLOBAL TERRORISM since 1990.

The Palestine Liberation Front (PLF) split with the PFLP-GC in the mid-1970s.
It subsequently split again, according to the U.S. State Department, into
pro-PLO, pro-Syrian, and pro-Libyan factions. The pro-PLO faction, led by
Muhammad Abbas (Abu Abbas), established a presence in Baghdad. Abbas’s
group was responsible for the October 1985 hijacking of the Achille Lauro
cruise ship. The PLF also launched a failed 1990 seaborne raid against Israel.
This group continues to focus its wrath on Israel. During 2002 Israel recovered
documents and arrested PLF members who testified that had received military
training for terrorist operations in Iraq.

Abu Nidal Organization (ANO) was one of the most active and deadly terrorist
groups in the 1970s and 1980s. Its leader, Sabri Al-Banna masterminded attacks
that included the December 1985 Rome and Vienna airport massacres, the September
1986 hijacking of Pan Am Flight 73, and the July 1988 assault on the City
of Poros day-excursion ship. During the 1990s ANO dramatically scaled back
its activities and was implicated in only two terrorist attacks, with the
last one occurring in 1995. Al-Banna disappeared from public view after seeking
refuge in Baghdad in 1998, but resurfaced in August 2002 with the news that
he shot himself several times in a successful “suicide” attempt
while resisting Iraqi agents who were trying to arrest him.

The 15 May Organization, led by Muhammad al-Umari (aka Abu Ibrahim), was
formed in 1979 and disbanded in the mid-1980s. 15 May was implicated in the
1981 bombings of El Al’s Rome and Istanbul, the August 1982 bombing
of a Pan Am flight enroute from Tokyo to Honolulu, and attacks against the
Israeli Embassies in Athens and Vienna. It has not been linked to terrorist
attacks since 1984. Abu Ibrahim reportedly still lives in Iraq.

The Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) has received sanctuary in Iraq but the bulk
of its support came from Syria and Greece. Since the arrest of its leader
Abdullah Ocalan in 1999 in the car of the Greek Ambassador to Kenya, the PKK
has scaled back its terrorist activities in Turkey and Europe.

Not surprisingly, Iran, the longstanding enemy of Baghdad, remains a primary
target of Iraqi-backed terrorism. The Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK)
aka The National Liberation Army of Iran has received significant support
from Saddam Hussein since it was expelled from Iran in 1979. Of all the terrorist
groups with sanctuary in Iraq, the MEK has been among the most active and
the most deadly. According to the U.S. State Department, the MEK killed 70
high-ranking Iranian officials in a series of bombings in 1981. In April 1992
the MEK attacked Iranian Embassies in 13 different countries. Iraq provided
direct support to MEK operatives in 1999 who assassinated several high-ranking
Iranian Government officials, including Brigadier General Ali Sayyad Shirazi,
Deputy Chief of Iran’s Joint Staff, who was killed in Tehran on 10 April.

Israel has been the other major target of Iraqi terrorism. Iraq’s funding
and training of members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General
Command (PFLP-GC) and the PLF now is beyond dispute. Documents seized by Israel
in raids against Palestinian Authority offices in the West Bank during 2002
detail Iraq’s funding of Palestinian terrorism. Israeli officials provided
CBS 60 Minutes correspondent Leslie Stahl documents in September showing that
Saddam’s closest deputy, Vice President Taha Yasin Ramadan, personally
signed checks made out to Palestinian terrorist leaders who had organized
suicide-bombing attacks. Kenneth Timmerman reported in a recent article in
Insight Magazine that:

captured documents included ledgers of “martyrs” who have carried
out suicide operations against Israel, showing how much and when each was
paid and the number of the check. It included internal memoranda, computer
disks, hard drives, videotapes and bank statements.

IRAQ, AL QAEDA AND ISLAMIC EXTREMISTS

In response to the Bush Administration’s stepped up efforts to confront
Saddam over his continuing efforts to acquire weapons of mass destruction, Iraq
apparently has opened contacts with elements of Al Qaeda. Unlike Iran, who has
a longstanding strategic relationship with Bin Laden and his terrorist network,
Iraq’s ties are more recent and more tenuous. Nonetheless Iraq’s
apparent willingness to share knowledge about chemical and biological weapons
with Al Qaeda operatives may enable Bin Laden to acquire the capability that
has so far eluded him.

The Bush Administration is particularly worried about Iraqi ties to Al Qaeda
operative, Abu Musab Zarqawi, who reportedly received medical treatment in Iraq
and is linked to a Taliban-style Islamic group in Northern Iraq that is battling
Kurds. While this evidence is limited, it does suggest Iraq is willing to help
a movement that it would otherwise oppose on ideological grounds. Nonetheless,
it is important to understand that Iraqi entreaties to Al Qaeda, are most likely
intended as a tactic to bolster Iraq’s ability to fight off a U.S. invasion
rather than a deep-seated theological and ideological commitment to the terrorist
agenda of Bin Laden.

The Islamic extremists who attacked the United States on 9-11 are guided by
the ephemeral goal of the caliphate—a worldwide Islamic government. Driven
by a deeply held belief that a restoration of Islamic ideas and practices will
usher in a new reign of peace, Bin Laden and his cohorts have proselytized with
mixed results. Although many newborns in Muslim countries reportedly have been
named Osama, his calls for Muslims to rise up and attack US citizens and facilities
have gone largely unheeded.

If we decide to invade Iraq we must be prepared for the contingency that our
attack will inspire young Muslims to pursue jihad against the West in general
and the United States in particular. Just as the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
rallied many Muslims, especially young adults to the cause of jihad, a U.S.
attack may enable Islamic extremists to attract new followers. The lesson of
the Soviet defeat in Afghanistan, however, is not a simple matter of angry Muslims
rising up to fight infidels. External support from the United States and other
governments, particularly Pakistan, played critical roles in providing jihadists
with the money, organization, intelligence, and materiel that transformed them
into an effective fighting force.

CONCLUSION

If war is averted and weapons inspectors remain in Iraq the United Nations
must still deal with the issue of Iraqi support for terrorism. Unlike the seemingly
impossible task of searching for weapons of mass destruction, reining in Iraqi
support for terrorism is feasible. Compliance with UN Resolution 687 should
include the following steps:
• The arrest of terrorists Abu Abbas and Abu Ibrahim.
• The closure of all offices and support companies linked to the PLF,
ALF, ANO, PKK, MEK, PFLP-GC, and 15 May.
• The expulsion from Iraq of all members of these terrorist groups.
• Confiscation of all financial resources connected with these groups
(and other terrorist groups).
• Inspection of suspected terrorist training camps.

If we go to war we must prudently prepare for expanded terrorist activity,
at least in the short term, from Islamic extremists and their sympathizers.
While we can hope that a US invasion will unleash a pent up Jeffersonian democracy
inside Iraq, odds are that the United States and its UN allies will be forced
to occupy Iraq for the foreseeable future. No occupying force, no matter how
benign or charitable, will avoid facing opposition at some point from the local
population. Add to this mix a belligerent outsider, like Iran, and the potential
for terrorist attacks against the “occupying” force increases dramatically.

Anger alone is not enough to create a force willing to pursue a terrorist campaign.
Support from other countries is critical. Eliminating terrorist training camps
in Iran and Lebanon must remain at the top of the agenda or else the infrastructure
for attacking US forces in Iraq will remain intact. Remnants of Al Qaeda, as
well as Hezbollah and Hamas, activists may find themselves receiving encouragement
and materiel support from Islamic extremists in Iran, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan
to carry out attacks against “infidel” occupiers in Iraq.

International terrorism requires safehaven, money, and training if it is to
be effective. Destroying Saddam’s ability to acquire and use weapons of
mass destruction is a separate task from destroying the infrastructure that
supports and sustains international terrorism. Doing both is not impossible
but it requires we fully understand the task before us.

About Larry Johnson: Larry C. Johnson is CEO and co-founder of BERG Associates, LLC, an international business-consulting firm with expertise combating terrorism and investigating money laundering. Mr. Johnson works with US military commands in scripting terrorism exercises, briefs on terrorist trends, and conducts undercover investigations on counterfeiting, smuggling and money laundering. Mr. Johnson, who worked previously with the Central Intelligence Agency and U.S. State Department’s Office of Counter Terrorism, is a recognized expert in the fields of terrorism, aviation security, crisis and risk management.

About Taylor Marsh

Veteran political analyst and author of "The Hillary Effect - Politics, Sexism and the Destiny of Loss," now available in print at Amazon.com, and 1 of 4 books chosen by Barnes and Noble to launch their "NOOK First" Featured Authors Selection program. Former Miss Missouri, Broadway dancer, & relationship consultant at LA Weekly, produced & wrote one woman show "Weeping for JFK."

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