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Powells Al Qaeda-Baghdad link falls apart
By Peter Symonds
14 February 2003
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A key element of US Secretary of State Colin Powells
address to the UN Security Council last week was his claim that
a sinister nexus existed between Baghdad and the Al
Qaeda network. The crude attempt to link Saddam Hussein to Osama
bin Laden and his terrorist attacks was aimed at shifting public
opinion in the US and internationally, which is increasingly opposed
to the Bush administrations war plans.
In the space of just over a week, however, the argument has
proven as hollow as all the other pretexts manufactured by Washington
to justify a war of aggression against Iraq. All of Powells
so-called evidence has either been strongly questioned by other
intelligence agencies and experts or shown to be completely false.
Powells entire case rested upon the activities of a Jordanian-born
Palestinian, Abu Musab Al Zarqawi, 36, who fought in Afghanistan
as part of the CIA-sponsored Mujaheddin against the Soviet-backed
regime in the 1980s. According to Powell, Zarqawi is now linked
to Al Qaeda, and, after fleeing from Afghanistan following the
fall of the Taliban regime, established a terrorist network in
Iraq.
To back the allegations, Powell made two main claims. The first
was that Zarqawi helped establish a poison and explosive
training camp centre in a small enclave in the Kurdish areas
of northern Iraq controlled by an Islamic fundamentalist militia
known as Ansar al-Islam. Powell provided an aerial photograph
of the camp and gave its location as Khurmal.
It is well known that this area is outside the control of Saddam
Hussein and the Iraqi army which have been fighting the various
Kurdish militias for decades. To make a link, Powell claimed the
existence of an agent of Baghdad at the most senior levels
of Ansar al-Islam... who offered safe haven to Al Qaeda.
Some members of the Zarqawi network allegedly took up the offer.
Powells concoction began to unravel as soon as it was
made public. The location of the camp proved to be incorrect.
As it turned out, Khurmal was not even under the control of the
Ansar al-Islam group. The buildings in the photograph are located
at Sargat. Such an elementary factual error from a man who has
at his disposal all the sophisticated resources of a vast intelligence
network, immediately placed a question mark over the other facts.
Further doubts were raised by Mullah Krekar, the leader of
Ansar al-Islam who lives in exile in Norway. He issued a public
statement denying any connection to Al Qaeda and reiterating his
groups political hostility to Hussein. I have never
met Zarqawi. I have just read about him in Newsweek magazine.
Powell has made many mistakes in his speech. He said that our
group is connected to Al Qaeda, but we are not. I have evidence
that shows the Americans are not telling the truth, and I am willing
to show it to them, he told the Boston Globe.
Last Saturday the Ansar al-Islam group opened the poison
factory to a group of Western journalists who found nothing
remotely resembling a chemical factory or military training facility.
The group was first taken to neighbouring Khurmal to show them
the camp was not there, and then to Sargat. As Associated Press
reporter Borzou Daragahi explained, there was no mistaking the
camps distinctive polygon-shaped fencing and nearby
hills.
The New York Times reported: They found a wholly
unimpressive placea small and largely undeveloped cluster
of buildings that appeared to lack substantial industrial capacity.
For example, the structures did not have plumbing and had only
the limited electricity supplied by a generator. Roughly half
the buildings in the compound appeared to have recently been civilian
homes, and one contained the sandals of a small child. The remaining
buildings were in military or political use, serving as fighters
barracks or as a television and radio station for the Islamic
party.
A senior US State Department official made an attempt at damage
control. He told the New York Times that no matter what
the rough conditions at Sarget, Powells characterisation
was correct. A poison factory is a term of art, and doesnt
necessarily mean that people are pumping out thousands of gallons
a year, he said. He declared that intelligence experts had
watched the compound carefully over time and had corroborating
evidence. But he offered no explanation as to why the journalists
found absolutely nothingno chemicals, no equipment, not
even a supply of running water.
Last Friday, the Brussels-based International Crisis Group
(ICG) released a detailed paper undercutting both the significance
of the Ansar al-Islam group and Powells claims of its links
to Al Qaeda and Baghdad. The paper entitled Radical Islam
in Iraqi Kurdistan: the Mouse that roared? concluded that
the Bush administrations focus on Anwar al-Islam had catapulted
the small extremist group to a significance that does not appear
warranted by the known facts.
Ansar al-Islam was formed less than two years ago as a breakaway
from the larger Islamic fundamentalist group, the Islamic Movement
in Iraqi Kurdistan, and has been engaged in fighting the secular
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)part of the US-sponsored
Iraqi opposition. The ICG noted the PUK had for its own political
purposes sought to emphasise the groups putative terrorist
connections, making detained Ansar followers available to foreign
journalists and shepherding CIA agents and members of the US special
forces up the mountain slopes to observe Ansar positions.
But as the report explained: No independent sources have
ever been presented to corroborate the link between Ansar and
Al Qaeda. According to some Ansar defectors, members of
the groups leadership have previously visited Al Qaeda camps
in Afghanistan. But, as the ICG noted, that does not automatically
translate into supervision over or direction of Ansar al-Islams
activities by bin Ladens network. Ansar leader Krekar
has stressed that his group views itself as a part of the
Kurdish national movement rather than a component of Al
Qaedas international terrorist activities.
As far as Baghdad is concerned, even the PUK has denied any
link between Ansar and the Hussein regime. PUK officials,
who stand most to gain from an Ansar-Baghdad collusion that might
trigger US intervention on the PUKs behalf, have stated
that there is no evidence of such a link. Barham Salih, for example,
has said so repeatedly, emphasising that the Iraqi Arabs fighting
with Jund/Ansar are quite clearly anti-regime, the ICG noted,
adding: Recent press reports suggest that some CIA officials
also find the evidence for such a link less than convincing and
have questioned its existence.
The Baghdad terrorist cell
The second prong to Powells case was the claim that Zarqawi
had received medical treatment in Baghdad in May 2002 and used
the two months of his recuperation to set up an extensive terrorist
networkall with the sanction of the Hussein regime. According
to Powell, the Zarqawi cell, linked to Al Qaeda, continues to
operate from Baghdad, was responsible for the murder of US official
Lawrence Foley in Jordan last October, and coordinates the operations
of a network involving at least 116 operatives in the Middle East,
Europe and elsewhere, some of whom have been recently arrested.
Like the poison factory in Khurmal/Sarget, the Baghdad terrorist
cell appears to be pure invention. Every aspect of Powells
story has now been questioned by intelligence agencies and specialists.
Even CIA director George Tenet, who appeared this week before
a US senate committee, admitted that Zarqawi was not under
the control of Hussein and that his network was independent
of Al Qaeda. Although Tenet twice told the committee that Zarqawi
was currently in Baghdad, US intelligence officials later told
the Washington Post that they did not know where he was.
A senior German intelligence official raised doubts about the
existence of any connection between Zarqawi and Baghdad. He told
the New York Times: We have been investigating Mr
Zarqawi for some time. We need to examine the evidence that Powell
has drawn from, and it is possible that he knows things that we
dont. But as of yet we have seen no indication of a direct
link between Zarqawi and Baghdad.
Magnus Ranstorp, a terrorism expert at the University of St
Andrews in Scotland, questioned the ability of the CIA to so rapidly
trace the links between Baghdad and the arrest of terrorist suspects
in Europe. It takes a long time to backtrack the chain of
evidence from all these different arrestsnot only being
able to link them together in Europe but also to link them all
the way to Iraq. It seems awfully quick to be able to draw solid
lines between this large group and find evidence that leads all
the way back to Zarqawi, he said.
Drawing on British intelligence sources, the Guardian
commented: [W]ell-placed officials in Whitehall insisted
there was no solid evidence of any link between Zarqawi and the
recent spate of arrests of suspect terrorists in western Europe,
let alone a link with Al Qaeda. Though they said that Zarqawi
was certainly an important figure, and had some knowledge of chemical
warfare, sources with access to intelligence say they were not
aware he had even visited northeastern Iraq. He had been travelling
around the Middle East but was not in Iraq, a well
placed source insisted.
A further damning refutation came from French intelligence.
In a diagram allegedly illustrating the extent of the Zarqawi
network in Europe, Powell included the photos of two Islamic militantsMerouane
Benhamed and Menad Benchellaliwho were arrested last year
in Paris. However, French intelligence sources told Agence France
Presse that the men they had detained had never been linked to
Zarqawi and were considered to be part of a Chechen terrorist
network.
At no point did the DST (French anti-terrorist and counter-espionage
services), which organised these arrests, establish the slightest
link between these two men and al Zarqawi, the sources said.
Al Zarqawis name never once appeared in our different
investigations into the Chechen link and its operational
members active in Europe. We do not understand how the Americansthrough
Colin Powells wordswere able to arrive at such conclusions
about al Zarqawis so-called ties with both Iraq and with
the Chechen link operatives whom we arrested in France
last year.
Various analysts and intelligence officials have continued
to emphasise the political incompatibility of the secular Baathist
regime in Baghdad and the Islamic fundamentalism of Osama bin
Laden. A top secret British intelligence staff report dated January
12, which was leaked last week to the BBC radio, cautiously concluded:
While there have been contacts between Al Qaeda and the
regime in the past, it is assessed that any fledgling relationship
foundered due to mistrust and incompatible ideology. Though training
of some AQ [Al Qaeda] members in Iraq may have continued, we believe
that bin Laden views the Baath as an apostate regime. His
aim of restoration of an Islamic caliphate, whose capital was
Baghdad, is in ideological conflict with present-day Iraq.
The reports conclusions underscore the tendentious character
of the latest attempts by the Bush administration to latch onto
this weeks audiotape, purportedly made by Osama bin Laden,
as proof of a link between Baghdad and Al Qaeda. In fact, the
tape, even if genuine, proves nothing of the sort. Bin Laden calls
on his followers to defend Iraq from US attack, despite
the infidel regime in Baghdad not because of
it.
A week after his UN address, nothing is left of Powells
case. There is no poison factory or European terrorist network
linked to Baghdad. And the terrorist mastermind, who is alleged
to have set up the factory and the network, is not in Iraq, is
independent of Al Qaeda and is not under the
control of Saddam Hussein. The Bush administration has done
what Powell repeatedly accuses Iraq of: it has manufactured a
web of lies.
See Also:
Britain: Blair government caught out
in plagiarism and lies over latest Iraq dossier
[10 February 2003]
TV documentary: US lied about Gulf War
missile hits
[7 February 2003]
Powell's UN speech triggers countdown
to war against Iraq
[6 February 2003]
Bushs claims on Iraqi weaponslies
in pursuit of war
[1 February 2003]
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