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Politics : Just the Facts, Ma'am: A Compendium of Liberal Fiction -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (64856)3/19/2008 1:51:06 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
More widespread media malfeasance that could harm National Security....

    If the news agencies' reporters (and others touting the
"no link" narrative) care to read the document, it is
riddled with details of documented (in official Iraqi
communications) cooperation, support and other links to
international terrorist groups, including Saddam's Fedayeen
Saddam, which ran training camps to deploy a cell of its
top 10 graduating trained terrorists to London.

Cherry-picking Intelligence: Saddam's Iraq and Terrorism

Steve Schippert
The Tank @ NRO

Permit me, please, to ask a very basic and fundamental question that must be answered:

Are we, the United States, fighting a War on Terror, or are we just fighting a War on Al-Qaeda Senior Leadership?

Answering this question would go a long way toward unspinning and unpacking what most Americans probably see as a dizzying contrast in reporting. Case in point: Consider the headlines that followed the disclosure of the latest Iraq Perspectives Project analyzing hundreds of thousands of Iraqi documents and other intelligence captured in Iraq.


ABC: Report Shows No Link Between Saddam and al Qaeda

CNN: Hussein's Iraq and al Qaeda not linked, Pentagon says

New York Times: Study Finds No Qaeda-Hussein Tie

Washington Post: Study Discounts Hussein, Al-Qaeda Link

AFP: No link between Saddam and Al-Qaeda: Pentagon study

McClatchy: Exhaustive review finds no link between Saddam and al Qaida


The headlines and the narrative dictated by the bodies of the stories hover over a single sentence in the Executive Summary, which reads:


<<< "This study found no 'smoking gun' (i.e., direct connection) between Saddam's Iraq and al Qaeda." >>>


The journalists cherry-picked a single sentence out of a 94-page report and have written multitudes of stories on it.
One can question whether some of the writers even read the report beyond that line, which appears in the second paragraph.

Now skip the news reports above and read for yourself the first few paragraphs of the new Iraq Perspectives Report's Executive Summary for proper context. You will find it interesting that the very first sentence in the report is wholly ignored. Then ask yourself the question once again: Are we fighting a War on Terror or just a War on Al-Qaeda Senior Leadership?

    The Iraqi Perspectives Project (IPP) review of captured 
Iraqi documents uncovered strong evidence that links the
regime of Saddam Hussein to regional and global terrorism.
Despite their incompatible long-term goals, many terrorist
movements and Saddam found a common enemy in the United
States. At times these organizations worked together,
trading access for capability. In the period after the 1991
Gulf War, the regime of Saddam Hussein supported a complex
and increasingly disparate mix of pan-Arab revolutionary
causes and emerging pan-Islamic radical movements. The
relationship between Iraq and forces of pan-Arab socialism
was well known and was in fact one of the defining
qualities of the Ba'ath movement.
    But the relationships between Iraq and the groups 
advocating radical pan-Islamic doctrines are much more
complex. This study found no "smoking gun" (i.e., direct
connection) between Saddam's Iraq and al Qaeda. Saddam's
interest in, and support for, non-state actors was spread
across a variety of revolutionary, liberation, nationalist,
and Islamic terrorist organizations. Some in the regime
recognized the potential high internal and external costs
of maintaining relationships with radical Islamic groups,
yet they concluded that in some cases, the benefits of
association outweighed the risks. A review of available
Iraqi documents indicated the following:
        - The Iraqi regime was involved in regional and 
international terrorist operations prior to OPERATION
IRAQI FREEDOM. The predominant targets of Iraqi state
terror operations were Iraqi citizens, both inside and
outside of Iraq.
        - On occasion, the Iraqi intelligence services directly
targeted the regime's perceived enemies, including non-
Iraqis. Non-Iraqi casualties often resulted from Iraqi
sponsorship of non-governmental terrorist groups.
        Saddam's regime often cooperated directly, albeit 
cautiously, with terrorist groups when they believed
such groups could help advance Iraq's long-term goals.
The regime carefully recorded its connections to
Palestinian terror organizations in numerous government
memos. One such example documents Iraqi financial
support to families of suicide bombers in Gaza and the
West Bank.
        - State sponsorship of terrorism became such a routine 
tool of state power that Iraq developed elaborate
bureaucratic processes to monitor progress and
accountability in the recruiting, training, and
resourcing of terrorists. Examples include the regime's
development, construction, certification, and training
for car bombs and suicide vests in 1999 and 2000.
If the news agencies' reporters (and others touting the "no link" narrative) care to read the document, it is riddled with details of documented (in official Iraqi communications) cooperation, support and other links to international terrorist groups, including Saddam's Fedayeen Saddam, which ran training camps to deploy a cell of its top 10 graduating trained terrorists to London.

In discussion with Tom Joscelyn last night, I remarked about the "no 'smoking gun'" line: "I'm not so sure there is a greater smoldering muzzle than the lovefest between the IIS and Zawahiri's IJ in the early nineties delineated in this report." Today, as Andy pointed out earlier, Tom has a short perspective on the report and the accompanying misleading media coverage over at The Weekly Standard's blog.

<<< The Iraqi Intelligence documents discussed in the report link Saddam’s regime to: the Egyptian Islamic Jihad (the “EIJ” is al Qaeda number-two Ayman al Zawahiri's group), the Islamic Group or “IG” (once headed by a key al Qaeda ideologue, Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman), the Army of Mohammed (al Qaeda's affiliate in Bahrain), the Islamic Movement of Kurdistan (a forerunner to Ansar al-Islam, al Qaeda's affiliate in Iraq), and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar (a long-time ally of Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan), among other terrorist groups. Documents cited by the report, but not discussed at length in the publicly available version (they may be in a redacted portion of the report), also detail Saddam’s ties to a sixth al Qaeda affiliate: the Abu Sayyaf group, an al Qaeda affiliate in the Philippines.

Both the EIJ and the IG were early and important core allies for Osama bin Laden as he forged the al Qaeda terror network, which comprises a number of affiliates around the world. >>>


It requires some creative narration to conclude definitively that Hussein's Iraq had "no link" to al-Qaeda considering the above, regardless of what the finite (though massive) set of documents avails.

As Steve Hayes rightly questions:

<<< And there is this line from page 42:
    "Saddam supported groups that either associated directly 
with al Qaeda (such as the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, led at
one time by bin Laden's deputy, Ayman al Zawahiri) or that
generally shared al Qaeda's stated goals and objectives."
Really? Saddam Hussein "supported" a group that merged with al Qaeda in the late 1990s, run by al Qaeda's #2, and the New York Times thinks this is not a link between Iraq and al Qaeda? How does that work? >>>

Exactly. How does that work?

Think of the paragraphs from Tom and Steve above this way:

You are a Briton returning to England a few years after the American Revolution. You are queried about your time and linkages there. Your response is, "Your Majesty, I have had communications, cooperation and ties with the colonies of Virginia, Carolina, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Maryland. But I have absolutely no links to America."

That's what "no link to al-Qaeda" requires. That's what one must believe regarding Saddam Hussein's Iraq and al-Qaeda. A rather illogical stretch to be so definitive, no?

Furthermore, why is it that Hussein's state sponsorship of international terrorism is dismissed as irrelevant because it does not overtly or directly thus far carry the stamp of Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri? Again, is it a War on Terror or just a War on AQSL?

It's as if we could all pack up and come home and relax if we could just kill those two individuals.

You know better than that.

tank.nationalreview.com
03/14 02:18 PM



To: Sully- who wrote (64856)3/19/2008 12:14:16 PM
From: Oeconomicus  Respond to of 90947
 
Missed one.

Obama Ends Bid to Become 1st Black President
by Scott Ott for ScrappleFace

(2008-03-18) — Sen. Barack Obama, D-IL, in what was billed by his campaign as a “major speech on race” in Philadelphia today shocked the Democrat party by announcing he has abandoned his bid to become the nation’s first black president.

“After a lot of prayer and conversations with my wife and Pastor Jeremiah Wright,” said Sen. Obama, “I have decided that the United States is not ready for a black chief executive. So today, I’m launching a campaign to simply become President of the United States, without regard to race.”

The son of a black, African father and a white, Kansan mother, Sen. Obama said he will formally suspend his attempt to achieve “a Civil Rights milestone”, and will put all his efforts into “making sure Democrats have a nominee who can challenge John McCain man-to-man.”

A spokesman for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign said she would petition the Democrat National Committee to “nullify all of the primary votes cast for Sen. Obama because voters thought they were doing something historic, rather than simply choosing the most qualified candidate.”

“Think about it,” the unnamed Clinton staffer said, “if Geraldine Ferraro had suddenly announced in 1984 she was running for vice president as a man, the Mondale-Ferraro ticket would have lost in a landslide.”

scrappleface.com