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Iraq: A convenient letter from an Al Qaeda terrorist
By James Conachy
17 February 2004
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A letter has been discovered in Iraq, allegedly authored by
Jordanian-born Islamic fundamentalist Abu Musaab al-Zarqawi, appealing
to Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda for assistance in destabilising
Iraq and US efforts to create a new government.
US accusations that al-Zarqawi provides a link between Iraq
and Al Qaeda are not new. A significant portion of Colin Powells
presentation to the UN on February 5, 2003, outlining the US justifications
for a pre-emptive invasion of Iraq, was devoted to detailing the
terrorist activities that Zarqawi was carrying out in northeastern
Iraq with the encouragement and backing of Saddam Husseins
regime.
Within days of Powells accusations in the UN, everything
he had claimed about Zarqawi had been publicly questioned or rejected
as false by non-US intelligence agencies and anti-terrorism experts.
The WSWS documented this in detail at the time. (See: Powells Al Qaeda-Baghdad
link falls apart)
Since the US seized control of Iraq, no evidence has been produced
corroborating Powells assertions about Zarqawi, or indicating
that he has been carrying out anti-occupation activities since.
There is no proof he is even in the country. One Iraqi Sunni cleric,
Hareth al-Darri, bluntly responded to the publication of the letter
declaring: Zarqawi is an imaginary character.
Nevertheless, US intelligence has gone public with the claim
that the elusive Zarqawi is the author of an undated, unsigned,
17-page document written in Arabic, which one official told the
Washington Post is so rhetorical and flowery
that parts of it had been difficult to accurately translate.
The letter was made available exclusively to the New York Times
on February 8, and the paper published a front-page story the
following day. English extracts have since been posted on the
website of Washingtons Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA)
in Baghdad.
The document states that there are only a small number of foreign
Islamic militants in Iraq and that they have little support among
the Iraqi people. It declares that Iraqs Shiites have
supported the Americans, helped them and stand with them against
the mujahidin. Within a matter of months, the author
claims, the US will be able to rule Iraq relying on a bastard
government and local Iraqi police and security forces.
The letter is defeatist and demoralised about the prospects
for resistance. It refers to the Iraqi Sunni population as sleepy
and the Americans as having succeeded in splitting the regular
Sunni from the mujahidin. It despairingly declares:
There is no doubt that our field of movement is shrinking
and the grip around the throat of the mujahidin has begun
to tighten. With the spread of the [Iraqi] army and police, our
future is becoming frightening.
The author is so convinced that a US-installed regime will
be viewed as legitimate by the Iraqi population that he believes
the Islamic militants will have no pretexts for fighting
against it and will have no choice but to pack our bags
and move to another land. To prevent the formation of a
new government, the letter outlines a plan to destabilise Iraq.
It appeals for assistance in unleashing a wave of suicide bombings
to plunge the country into a sectarian war between
Shiites and Sunnis, which will create the best prospects for Al
Qaeda to win support.
The letter may have been written by Zarqawi or another individual
associated with Al Qaeda or radical Islamic fundamentalism. In
some aspects, it dovetails with the reactionary Wahhabist views
of bin Ladenparticularly its scepticism that ordinary people
will fight against oppression, advocacy of terror to force the
masses into struggle, religiously-motivated hatred of Shiite Muslims
and contempt for human life.
It is just as possible, however, that the document was concocted
by US intelligence agencies or pro-American Iraqi factions for
propaganda purposes. The portrait of Iraq given in the letterthat
the attacks on the occupation are the work of foreign terrorists
with little support among the populationis virtually identical
to that of the Bush administration. The CPA in Baghdad has wasted
no time presenting it to the American and Iraqi people as evidence
the US is bringing the situation under control.
It is not even clear where the document was found. The initial
New York Times article reported that the letter was found
on a CD seized in a raid on a known Qaeda safehouse in Baghdad
in mid-January. In a separate article, the newspapers rightwing
columnist William Safire claimed it had been found by pro-US Kurdish
militiamen on a captured courier in northern Iraq. Asked which
version was correct, military spokesman Brigadier General Paul
Kimmitt dismissively told a press conference in Baghdad: [H]ow
we found it is not as important as the fact that we have it.
So dubious is the document that even the US media, which had
no qualms about disseminating the lies of the Bush administration
about weapons of mass destruction, has been reluctant
to accept the claim that it was authored by Zarqawi. Dexter Filkins
and Douglas Jehl, the New York Times journalists who broke
the story, noted that other interpretations may be possible...
including that it was written by some other insurgent, but one
who exaggerated his involvement.
Christopher Dickey of Newsweek bluntly commented on
February 13: Given the Bush administrations record
peddling bad intelligence and worse innuendo, youve got
to wonder if this letter is a total fake. How do we know the text
is genuine? How was it obtained? By whom? And when? And how do
we know its from Zarqawi? We dont. Were expected
to take the administrations word for it.
Whether the letter is genuine or not, the decision to make
it available to the press can only be described as fortuitous
for the White House.
The past three weeks have seen the Bush administration in disarray
over the admission by David Kay, head of the US inspection team,
that there is no evidence Iraq possessed weapons of mass
destructionthe main justification for the illegal
war. The most recent ABC News-Washington Post poll found
54 percent of respondents now believe the White House intentionally
exaggerated the threat from Iraq. Fifty percent no longer believe
the war was worth fighting. Some 42 percent do not believe the
president is trustworthy or honest.
In this context, the Zarqawi letter has been seized upon by
defenders of the administration to try to resuscitate one of the
other lies promoted to justify the US war on Iraqthat Husseins
regime was linked to Al Qaeda and centrally involved in the terrorist
attacks on New York and Washington on September 11, 2001.
The New York Times William Safire, for example,
an ardent advocate of the war on Iraq, declared in his February
11 column: Of the liberations three casus belli,
one was to stop mass murder, bloodier than in Kosovo; we are finding
horrific mass graves in Iraq. Another was informed suspicion that
a clear link existed between world terror and Saddam; this terrorist
plea for Qaeda reinforcements to kill Iraqi democracy is the smoking
gun proving that.
Contrary to Safires assertions, there was no more informed
suspicion within US intelligence of a link between world
terror and Iraq than there was that Iraq had WMDsSafires
third casus belli. The exact opposite was in fact the case.
Advice was repeatedly given to the Bush administration by the
CIA and other agencies that there was no evidence Husseins
secular Baathist regime had any relations with the fundamentalists
of Al Qaeda.
Safires attempt to present the letter as a smoking
gun is no evidence at all. The alleged ravings of Zarqawi
do not provide the slightest credence to claims that Al Qaeda
was in Iraq prior to the invasion or that the Baathist regime
was working with bin Laden. At the very most, it indicates that
Zarqawi and possibly Al Qaeda may now be operating in the country.
If they are, then that is the direct responsibility of the Bush
administration. Iraq has been plunged into chaos and transformed
into a battlefield for both Iraqi and other Arab militants wanting
to fight against the US. Safires aim is to use the very
quagmire the White House has created to justify the US invasion
and continued occupation of Iraq.
Joining him have been prominent administration figures. National
Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice told NewsHour on February
10: We have every reason to believe that these are principally
foreign terrorists, that these are people associated with Al Qaeda....
The people who are trying to stop that [the establishment of an
Iraqi government] are clearly worried that when Iraq becomes prosperous
and democratic and stable, that their grand designs to try and
harm civilization, to try and roll back the clock to a day when
freedom could not exist in this part of the world, theyre
clearly worried that their designs are going to be very much harmed
by an Iraq that is stable.
In Baghdad, CPA official Daniel Senor told a press conference
on February 11: Terrorism is not limited to attacks in Iraq...
There is a worldwide terror war going on right now and its
hit everywhere from New York City to Casablanca to Riyadh to Istanbul
to Bali. The next day he declared: What we have said
all along is that Iraq has become the central front in the war
on terrorism.
The American people have been lied to continuously about Washingtons
motives for its invasion of Iraq. The war on terrorism was simply
the pretext for the Bush administrations decision to invade
the country in pursuit of longstanding economic and strategic
ambitions in Iraq and the wider region. The alleged letter of
Abu Musaab al-Zarqawi is another attempt to refurbish the old
lies with a new set of falsifications.
See Also:
Chief US inspector admits
Iraq had no WMD stockpiles
[28 January 2004]
The New York Times whitewashes
Bush's lies about Iraq
[15 January 2004]
War, oligarchy and
the political lie
[7 May 2003]
Powell's Al Qaeda-Baghdad
link falls apart
[14 February 2003]
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