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To: LindyBill who wrote (19718)12/14/2003 2:39:36 AM
From: KLP  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793623
 
LB, you are right.. IF this is true, it will blow all the naysayers out of the water. Terrorist behind September 11 strike was trained by Saddam

This is huge news, if true. Why doesn't our media have it?



To: LindyBill who wrote (19718)12/14/2003 2:45:23 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793623
 
"It is enough to make the Statue of Liberty weep,"



Kennedy lambasts Bush
Senator tells Austin group the war in Iraq is wrong

By Dick Stanley

AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

Saturday, December 13, 2003

U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy on Friday excoriated President Bush for "squandering" the good will of America's European allies after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and invading Iraq, a move that Kennedy contended is only "breeding more terrorists" to attack the country.

"It is enough to make the Statue of Liberty weep," the Massachusetts Democrat said in a speech to the annual fund-raising dinner for the Texas Civil Rights Project.

Several speakers at the event at the Four Seasons Hotel in downtown Austin drew rousing applause from the hundreds in attendance when they said they wished they could wave a magic wand and make Kennedy president instead of Bush.

Kennedy is "the statesman of the century . . . in these very difficult times," said former Texas Democratic Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes.

The Texas Civil Rights Project is a group of lawyers who pursue civil rights cases around the state. University of Texas constitutional lawyer Michael Tiger hailed the group's director, Jim Harrington, for taking cases that "are a finger in the eye of power and privilege."

Harrington thanked Kennedy for "your very many years of heroic leadership," and said the senator was continuing the civil rights legacy of his assassinated brothers, President John Kennedy and former U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy.

But Sen. Kennedy, who Barnes noted has been in the U.S. Senate since 1962, contended that the work of such groups as the Texas Civil Rights Project was necessary because of "a quiet erosion . . . taking place" in the progress of civil rights in America.

He spoke of the Latino poor's continued lack of equal access to health care, and he said the judiciary has denied Congress' intent in passing laws to give the disabled equal opportunities. He also citedthe existence of a large and growing work force of undocumented immigrants who labor at low wages without equal opportunity.

He said it was also "time for Congress to do its part" in expanding the rights of gay and lesbian Americans.

"We must be vigilant, not compliant," Kennedy said. "The struggle for civil rights is never, never in vain. All of us must go all out. Failure is not an option."

dstanley@statesman.com; 445-3629









Find this article at:
statesman.com



To: LindyBill who wrote (19718)12/14/2003 4:39:24 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793623
 
Since that hand written document briefly mentions two
highly contested issues, ET AL, it seems a bit fishy to me.
TWT - The Telegraph News now has an updated article on it
now.....

Does this link Saddam to 9/11?
(Filed: 14/12/2003)
<font size=4>
A document discovered by Iraq's interim government details a meeting between the man behind the September 11 attacks and Abu Nidal, the Palestinian terrorist, at his Baghdad training camp. Con Coughlin reports.

For anyone attempting to find evidence to justify the war in Iraq, the discovery of a document that directly links Mohammed Atta, the al-Qaeda mastermind of the September 11 attacks, with the Baghdad training camp of Abu Nidal, the infamous Palestinian terrorist, <font size=5>appears almost too good to be true.<font size=3>

Ever since four hijacked civilian jets devastated the United States' eastern seaboard on September 11, 2001, there have been any number of reports circulating Western intelligence agencies suggesting that Saddam Hussein's Iraq had close links to al-Qaeda.

Most of the claims relate to meetings between al-Qaeda and Iraqi intelligence to discuss co-operation on matters such as funding, training and equipment.
<font size=4>
Prior to the discovery of the document published today by the Telegraph, the most controversial report related to the suggestion that Atta had met Ahmed Khalil Ibrahim Samir al-Ani, a senior Iraqi intelligence officer, in Prague in April 2001.
<font size=3>
But while both President Bush and Tony Blair have dropped numerous hints that they believe there was a significant level of co-operation between Saddam and al-Qaeda, their respective intelligence agencies have actively sought to downplay the significance of the relationship, especially the suggestion that Saddam was in any way involved in the September 11 attacks.

To this end America's Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), with the backing of Britain's MI6, have poured scorn on Atta's Prague meeting.

However, the tantalising detail provided in the intelligence document uncovered by Iraq's interim government suggests that Atta's involvement with Iraqi intelligence may well have been far deeper than has hitherto been acknowledged.
<font size=4>
Written in the neat, precise hand of Tahir Jalil Habbush al-Tikriti, the former head of the Iraqi Intelligence Service (IIS) and one of the few named in the US government's pack of cards of most-wanted Iraqis not to have been apprehended, the personal memo to Saddam is signed by Habbush in distinctive green ink.<font size=3>

Headed simply "Intelligence Items", and dated July 1, 2001, it is addressed: "To the President of the Ba'ath Revolution Party and President of the Republic, may God protect you."

The first paragraph states that "Mohammed Atta, an Egyptian national, came with Abu Ammer (an Arabic nom-de-guerre - his real identity is unknown) and we hosted him in Abu Nidal's house at al-Dora under our direct supervision.

"We arranged a work programme for him for three days with a team dedicated to working with him . . . He displayed extraordinary effort and showed a firm commitment to lead the team which will be responsible for attacking the targets that we have agreed to destroy."

There is nothing in the document that provides any clue to the identity of the "targets", although Iraqi officials say it is a coded reference to the September 11 attacks.
<font size=4>
The second item contains a report of how Iraqi intelligence, helped by "a small team from the al-Qaeda organisation", arranged for an (unspecified) shipment from Niger to reach Baghdad by way of Libya and Syria.
<font size=3>
Iraqi officials believe this is a reference to the controversial shipments of uranium ore Iraq acquired from Niger to aid Saddam in his efforts to develop an atom bomb, although there is no explicit reference in the document to this.

Habbush writes that the successful completion of the shipment was "the fruit of your excellent secret meeting with Bashir al-Asad (the Syrian president) on the Iraqi-Syrian border", and concludes: "May God protect you and save you to all Arab nations."
<font size=4>
While it is almost impossible to ascertain whether or not the document is legitimate or a clever fake, Iraqi officials working for the interim government are convinced of its authenticity, even though they decline to reveal where and how they obtained it. "It is not important how we found it," said a senior Iraqi security official. "The important thing is that we did find it and the information it contains."<font size=3>

A leading member of Iraq's governing council, who asked not to be named, said he was convinced of the document's authenticity.

"There are people who are working with us who used to work with Habbush who are convinced that it is his handwriting and signature. We are uncovering evidence all the time of Saddam's dealings with al-Qaeda, and this document shows the extent of the old regime's involvement with the international terrorist network."
<font size=4>
This is the second document published by this newspaper that appears to highlight Saddam's links with al-Qaeda. Earlier this year the Telegraph published details of another Iraqi intelligence document that indicated Saddam's regime was attempting to set up a meeting with Osama bin Laden, the al-Qaeda leader, who was then based in Sudan.
<font size=3>
Intelligence experts point out that a memo such as that written by Habbush would of necessity be vague and short. "Trained intelligence officers hate putting anything down in writing," said one former CIA officer. "You never know where it might turn up."

Certainly the memo's detail concerning Mohammed Atta and Abu Nidal fits in with the known movements of the two terrorists in the summer of 2001. Abu Nidal, the renegade Palestinian terrorist responsible for a wave of outrages in the 1980s, such as the 1985 bomb attacks on Rome and Vienna airports, was based in Baghdad, under Saddam's personal protection, for most of his career.

Having briefly relocated to Libya, Abu Nidal returned to Baghdad at some point in early 2001. At the time it was assumed that Saddam had lured the Palestinian terrorist back to help the Iraqi leader plan a number of terrorist attacks aimed at destabilising American plans to remove him.

In particular, Saddam wanted Abu Nidal to revive his network of "sleeper cells" in Europe and the Middle East to carry out a new wave of attacks. During 2001 Abu Nidal lived in a number of houses in the Baghdad area, including a spacious home in the al-Dora district where he is reported to have met Atta.

The relationship between Abu Nidal and Saddam, however, quickly turned sour, mainly because - as the Telegraph reported at the time - the ageing Palestinian leader was reluctant to accede to Saddam's request to train al-Qaeda fighters in sophisticated terrorist techniques.

Abu Nidal was murdered in August 2001, although the Iraqis tried to claim that he had committed suicide. Habbush appeared at a hastily arranged press conference in Baghdad in an attempt to persuade the sceptical Arab media that Abu Nidal had taken his own life after Iraqi investigators had uncovered a plot to assassinate Saddam.

Although Western intelligence agencies have attempted to trace Atta's movements in the months preceding September 11, there remain several periods during which his precise whereabouts are unknown. <font size=4>Having moved to Florida from Hamburg in 2000, Atta is known to have made at least two trips from the US to Europe in 2001.
<font size=3>
In early January he flew to Madrid for a few days. His next confirmed trip was to Zurich in early July. In between, American investigators have concluded from a detailed examination of Atta's credit cards and phone records, that he spent most of the spring and early summer of 2001 in Florida, interspersed by occasional domestic trips. The only confirmed sighting of Atta during this period, however, was on April 26 when he was pulled over for a traffic violation in Florida.

This traffic offence, taken with other evidence collated by FBI agents, is one of the reasons that CIA officials have discounted the report that Atta met an Iraqi intelligence officer in Prague earlier in the month (the Czech authorities claim Atta was in Prague on April 8). Yesterday the New York Times reported that Ani, who was taken into US custody last July, had told American interrogators that he had not met Atta in Prague.

"The Prague meeting does not appear very convincing," said Lorenzo Vidino, a terrorism analyst at The Investigative Project, a non-profit organisation that investigates international terrorism, in Washington. "But even if that meeting did not take place you have to remember that Atta used a large number of aliases when he travelled. It is not inconceivable that Atta slipped out of the US undetected sometime in the first half of 2001."

The US Congressional report into the September 11 attacks states that Atta used 16 to 17 known aliases, although American intelligence experts concede that there may have been others.

It is entirely conceivable, then, that Atta secretly made his way to Baghdad to undertake training with Abu Nidal a few months before the September 11 attacks. But as long as Saddam and his senior intelligence operatives remain at large, it is impossible to assess just how much they knew about, and were involved in, the planning and execution of the September 11 atrocities.

•Con Coughlin is the author of Saddam: The Secret Life (Macmillan)

telegraph.co.uk