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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: LindyBill who wrote (14555)10/30/2003 10:41:54 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793717
 
U.S. Officials See Hussein's Hand in Attacks on Americans in Iraq

October 31, 2003
By DOUGLAS JEHL

[Note: Hummmmmmmmm...maybe the daisycutters are coming again...or would it be drones...? Trick or Treat, Saddam baby...]

ASHINGTON, Oct. 30 — Saddam Hussein may be playing a significant role in coordinating and directing attacks by his loyalists against American forces in Iraq, senior American officials said Thursday.

The officials cited recent intelligence reports indicating that Mr. Hussein is acting as a catalyst or even a leader in the armed opposition, probably from a base of operations near Tikrit, his hometown and stronghold. A leadership role by Mr. Hussein would go far beyond anything previously acknowledged by the Bush administration, which has sought in its public remarks to portray the former Iraqi leader as being on the run and irrelevant.

Officials acknowledged that the reports of a significant role by Mr. Hussein could not be corroborated, and one senior official cautioned that recent intelligence reports contained conflicting assessments.

Nonetheless, three senior officials described reports of a larger role by Mr. Hussein as credible, and a Defense Department official said the information had given a fresh sense of urgency to the American-led manhunt for the former Iraqi leader.

"There are some accounts that say he is somehow instigating or fomenting some of the resistance," a second American official said of the intelligence reports.

Mr. Hussein is believed to have met with Izzat Ibrahim, an Iraqi general who was officially the second highest ranking member of the Iraqi government at the time of the invasion, and who is described by American officials as playing a significant role in the insurgency.

General Ibrahim, who is No. 6 on the American most-wanted list, has been described by some Defense Department officials as having recently been in contact with members of Ansar al-Islam, a militant group that had been based in northern Iraq before the American-led invasion and which is linked to the terrorist organization Al Qaeda.

Such contacts would be the clearest evidence to date of coordination between forces loyal to Mr. Hussein and members of the extremist group in the campaign against American forces in Iraq. But one senior American official said Thursday that while General Ibrahim was clearly playing a role in coordinating attacks by those loyal to Mr. Hussein, it was much less clear whether he had been in contact with Ansar al-Islam.

For more than six months, Bush administration officials have been saying they believe Mr. Hussein is spending nearly all of his time trying to evade detection by the American-led forces. During his time in hiding, Mr. Hussein has issued at least five audio recordings that have served as calls to arms. But American officials have sought to discount the idea that he is playing anything more than a symbolic role in inspiring opposition to the American occupation.

But over the last month or two, the senior American officials said, there have been increasing signs that his role may well be more significant. Two officials said there were indications that, in addition to meeting with subordinates to discuss the armed opposition, Mr. Hussein may be playing a role in bringing together different factions of loyalists involved in the attacks.

Some of the meetings may have been conducted in moving cars to avoid detection by United States forces, one American official said.

"Everyone has always recognized that it's important to get Saddam," the Defense Department official said. "But with these continued reports that Saddam may be behind some of the attacks, or coordinating them or leading them, there's now a military reason as well."

Sunni Muslim Iraqis loyal to Mr. Hussein are thought to make up the overwhelming majority of the forces arrayed against the American occupation. In recent weeks the insurgents have attacked United States forces two dozen or more times times a day, whether by direct fire, mortar shells, roadside explosives or other means. More American soldiers have been killed in attacks in Iraq since May 1, when President Bush declared an end to major combat, than during the six weeks of fighting that followed the invasion.

Condoleezza Rice, the national security adviser, asked Thursday night on "The Charlie Rose Show" whether Mr. Hussein was coordinating attacks in Iraq, said: "It's a little hard to tell. Once in a while there are rumors that he is somehow involved in coordinating attacks. He is spending a lot of time trying to protect himself. I wonder to the degree that he is able to coordinate, given that he is saving his own skin."

A senior Congressional official said that the growing Iraqi resentment against the American occupation may be becoming a more important factor than any role played by Mr. Hussein, because "people are not fighting for Saddam; they are fighting against the Americans, and against the occupation."

Several hundred American commandos and intelligence officers have been involved in the search for Mr. Hussein and his confederates, mostly focusing on the region near Tikrit. Mr. Hussein's sons Uday and Qusay were tracked down and killed this summer in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul. From a list of 55 Iraqis most wanted by the United States in the immediate aftermath of the invasion, Mr. Hussein and 11 others remain at large.

It was not until June, more than two months after Mr. Hussein was toppled, that Bush administration officials began to acknowledge that he had almost certainly survived the invasion and two American attempts to kill him during that conflict. In early summer, the Central Intelligence Agency confirmed that an audiotape broadcast on Arabic-language television stations almost certainly included the voice of Mr. Hussein, and since then American officials have acknowledged that he is still alive and in Iraq.

On July 2, Mr. Bush declared that Mr. Hussein was "no longer a threat to the United States, because we removed him." In more recent remarks, including those at a fund-raising event on Oct. 8, Mr. Bush has been proclaiming that Mr. Hussein is "no more," because he is no longer in power.

In Baghdad on Oct. 8, Lt. Gen. Ricardo S. Sanchez, the top American commander in Iraq, said of Mr. Hussein "that he's hiding and running away constantly from the relentless hunt that we are on to find him, capture him, kill him." But in comments little-noticed at the time, General Sanchez went on to say: "Could he be a part of the attacks? He could."

nytimes.com



To: LindyBill who wrote (14555)10/30/2003 11:36:52 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793717
 
Breaking: Al-Qaida Hallmarks Seen in Recent Baghdad Bombings, U.S. Official Says
By Curt Anderson

Oct 30, 2003
Associated Press Writer

[Note: Interesting...this appears to be a companion piece to go along with the one I just posted...somethings up...]

WASHINGTON (AP) - The suicide bombers who struck Baghdad this week used thousands of pounds of plastic explosives and diversionary tactics that are hallmarks of al-Qaida, a senior U.S. counterterrorism official said Thursday.
The way the attacks were carried out has made American investigators believe they could be seeing a change in tactics by those attempting to drive U.S. forces out of Iraq, the official told The Associated Press in an interview.

"We're looking at that as the start of something that may be forewarning of future events," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The New York Times reported on its Web site Thursday night that U.S. officials belief Saddam Hussein himself may be playing a significant role in coordinating and directing attacks by his loyalists.

The Times, citing unidentified senior officials, said recent intelligence reports have portrayed Saddam as a catalyst or even a leader in the armed opposition, probably from a base of operations near his hometown of Tikrit. The reports have not been corroborated, one official told the newspaper.

In a speech Thursday night, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, said attacks are practically inevitable as long as Saddam remains on the loose.

"The fact that he's alive is unhelpful," Rumsfeld told the conservative think tank Empower America. "We do need to catch him and I think we will."

Before Monday, bombers in Iraq had largely used relatively crude devices cobbled together from old Soviet-era munitions. "People went out and got anything they could find," the official said.

But each of the vehicles used in the latest attacks, which targeted the International Red Cross headquarters and four Iraqi police stations, was packed with 1,000 pounds of plastic explosives, the official said. A fifth bomber was prevented by police from detonating his device and was taken into custody.

The four successful bombings, timed within 45 minutes of each other on the first day of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, killed 40 people in the deadliest single attack since U.S. forces took over the city.

In at least three of the attacks, witnesses said a vehicle was used to distract or confuse perimeter guards to allow the bomber's vehicle to slip through. Al-Qaida attackers used lead vehicles to overcome security and get explosives-laden vehicles into guarded compounds housing Westerners in the May 12 bombings in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Those bombings killed 35 people, including nine attackers.

But other, outside experts cautioned that al-Qaida tactics could easily be mimicked by other terrorist groups.

"The problem is, these are the hallmarks of a lot of people," said Anthony Cordesman, a national security expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "The weapons are there, and people are gaining the experience."

The issue of who is behind the escalating attacks in Iraq is proving to be one of the most difficult and puzzling for American officials.

President Bush said in a news conference this week that both Saddam loyalists and foreign fighters might be behind the attacks.

At the Pentagon, Rumsfeld told reporters Thursday it was not yet clear whether this week's spiraling violence is part of a larger new offensive by insurgents or just a short-term surge.

"It's hard to put it in perspective while it's still going on," Rumsfeld said.

Plastic explosives have previously been found among the munitions believed left over from Saddam's rule. Coalition forces have seized large caches of weapons, including blocks of plastic explosives last week in a government building in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit. A raid last month in Tikrit uncovered 1,000 pounds of plastic explosives.

The FBI has traced the particular explosives used in Monday's attacks to a manufacturer outside of Iraq, the counterterrorism official said.

The official said American investigators believe Iraq is becoming a magnet and proving ground for Islamic militants around the world. The United States has evidence that hundreds of militants have entered Iraq to battle Americans, much as they did a quarter-century ago to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan.

Rumsfeld said as many as 400 foreign fighters have been captured in Iraq, most of them from Syria and Lebanon.

The FBI says it is making progress toward solving some of the Iraq attacks, with assistance from the CIA and Defense Department. But the investigations are being hampered by a lack of intelligence information in Iraq and by the sheer level of violence, which requires agents to be accompanied by U.S. soldiers when they leave their protected compound at Baghdad airport.

If suspects are identified, U.S. officials will probably monitor them to try to identify their associates and contacts and to prevent future bombings. Evidence also is being gathered that could be used in a criminal trial, possibly in Iraq and possibly in the United States in cases where Americans were killed.

AP-ES-10-30-03 2243EST

This story can be found at: ap.tbo.com



To: LindyBill who wrote (14555)10/31/2003 1:31:16 AM
From: Dayuhan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793717
 

Since they are all Arabs, it trumps the Nationality problem.

In theory, maybe. I have serious doubts about how far it would go in practice.

Before anybody considers it further, it might be a good idea to take some quick surveys to see how Iraqis feel about it.