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No evidence of Iraq-Al Qaeda ties: 9/11 commission undermines
another Bush war lie
By Patrick Martin
18 June 2004
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The staff report of the 9/11 commission released June 16 further
discredits one of the main lies employed by the Bush administration
to justify its invasion and conquest of Iraq. It confirms that
there was no Iraqi role in the September 11 terrorist attacks
in New York and Washington and no collaborative relationship
between Al Qaeda and former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein.
The 12-page report summarizes evidence provided from hundreds
of documents and witnesses and represents the consensus, not only
of the commission staff, but of currently serving CIA, FBI and
other intelligence officials. While listing incidental contacts
between Iraq and Al Qaeda, particularly in the period of Osama
bin Ladens residence in the Sudan, from 1991 to 1996, the
report concluded: We have no credible evidence that Iraq
and Al Qaeda cooperated on attacks against the United States.
In testimony the same day before the panelformally known
as the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United
StatesFBI and CIA counterterrorism specialists agreed with
the reports findings that there was no evidence of cooperation
between bin Laden and Saddam Hussein, or of any Iraqi involvement
in the September 11 attacks.
This consensus flatly contradicts comments made by Bush and
Cheney on the eve of the reports release. On Monday, in
a speech to a right-wing think tank, Cheney declared that Saddam
Hussein had long-established ties to Al Qaeda. Defending
that claim on Tuesday, Bush cited the role of Abu Musab Zarqawi,
the alleged organizer of a series of bomb attacks in Iraq, who
the administration says is an Al Qaeda leader.
This charge, even if true, would prove nothing about Al Qaeda
ties with Iraq before the US occupation of the country. Zarqawi
is reportedly a Palestinian who fought with the CIA-backed Islamic
fundamentalists in Afghanistan and was severely wounded. He later
received medical treatment in Baghdad, but there is no indication
that he played any role in terrorist actions until after the US
invasion.
There is considerable doubt about all the media reports on
Zarqawiit is by no means certain that such a person even
exists, at least with the biography claimed by the US governmentand
the Bush administration has sought to build him up as a terrorist
bogeyman responsible for much of the Iraqi resistance to the US
occupation.
One 9/11 commissioner, Republican Fred Fielding, a former White
House counsel in the Reagan administration, sought to diminish
the impact of the staff report and testimony on the Bush administrations
claims of an Iraq-Al Qaeda connection. But his intervention had
the opposite effect.
He asked one witness, US Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, about
the case of Al Qaeda members who were tried for the 1998 bombings
of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, pointing to language
in the indictment that suggested an Al Qaeda relationship with
Iraq. But Fitzgerald, who supervised the prosecution of the case,
said that the reference was dropped in a superseding indictment
because investigators did not have evidence to confirm any ties
to Iraq.
Since the staff report was released Wednesday morning, US officials
have advanced other spurious claims to try to soften the blow
to the Bush administrations credibility. They have declared
that Bush and Cheney had never asserted that Iraq was directly
involved in September 11 or closely linked to Al Qaeda. Such claims
fly in the face of the historical record.
The political preparation for the war with Iraq involved the
systematic poisoning of American public opinion with three major
lies: that Iraq had close ties to the Al Qaeda terrorist organization;
that Iraq had large stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction;
and that Iraq might supply those weapons to Osama bin Laden, thus
creating the conditions for a chemical, biological or even nuclear
version of September 11.
In the crudest presentation of the case, the three lies were
amalgamated into a single, all-encompassing fabrication, linking
Saddam Hussein directly to September 11, 2001. When asked about
opinion polls showing that two-thirds of Americans believed that
Iraq was responsible for the terrorist attacks, Cheney said last
year, Its not surprising people make that connection.
Cheney was also the principal sponsor of the claim that alleged
hijack leader Mohammed Atta had met with an Iraqi intelligence
agent in Prague several months before September 11. The 9/11 commission
staff report concluded that reports of such a meeting were groundless,
citing video footage of Atta withdrawing money from a bank in
Virginia on the day he was supposedly meeting the Iraqi agent
in central Europe.
Bush himself, in his 2003 State of the Union speech, two months
before the war, declared, Imagine those 19 hijackers with
other weapons and other plans this time armed by Saddam...
It would take one vial, one canister, one crate slipped into this
country to bring a day of horror like none we have ever known.
US troops participating in the invasion were told that the
attack on Iraq was in response to the attacks on September 11.
As they awaited orders in Kuwait to cross the border into Iraq,
the soldiers were bivouacked in camps Virginia, Pennsylvania,
New York and New Jersey, so named to commemorate those who died
in the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and on United Flight 93,
which crashed in rural Pennsylvania.
The bipartisan commission was created jointly by the Bush administration
and congressional Democrats in response to the pressure of families
of the victims of September 11, and the widespread sense in the
American population as a whole that the US government has failed
to give any credible explanation of how the events of 9/11 were
possible.
It has become a vehicle through which rival sections of the
US ruling elite fight out their political differences, particularly
over the debacle in Iraq. The unanimity on the panel to shoot
down the more extravagant claims of the Bush administrationsuch
as the lies about an Iraq-Al Qaeda connectionreflects the
growing concern that the US position in Iraq has become unviable
and that some change of course is necessary.
The commission is compelled to debunk the most obvious falsehoods
about September 11 in order to have enough credibility with the
public to carry out its most essential purpose: defending the
key institutions of the US national security apparatus, including
the Pentagon, the CIA and the FBI.
Thus the same staff report that exposes the lies about an Iraq-Al
Qaeda connection covers up the actual connection between Al Qaeda
and the CIA. In the section entitled Roots of Al Qaeda,
the report describes the origins of the group among the Islamic
fundamentalists who traveled to Afghanistan in the 1980s to fight
against the Soviet occupation of the country. But while detailing
bin Ladens role in recruiting and financing for the Afghan
Arabs, the report makes no mention of the principal sponsor
of the Afghan mujaheddinthe US government and specifically
the CIA.
The 9/11 commission is not an impartial or objective investigation
into the actual causes of the September 11 attacks. That would
require an understanding of why hundreds of millions in the Moslem
countries hate the United Statesbecause American imperialism
has exploited the resources and subjugated the peoples of the
Middle East and Central Asia over the last half century. And it
would require a thorough examination of the role of successive
US governments in using and promoting Islamic fundamentalism as
an outlet for this popular anger, in order to weaken what the
US perceived as more dangerous enemies, revolutionary nationalist
and socialist tendencies.
Moreover, the commission has refused to investigate the most
important aspect of the September 11 events themselvesthe
evidence that the Bush administration had ample warning of the
attacks and could have prevented them, but chose not to in order
to obtain the pretext required for its military intervention in
Central Asia and the Middle East.
This evidence is so abundant that even the best efforts of
the commissioners cannot avoid some mention of details which belie
the official version of events, the claim that the suicide hijackers
entered the United States, undertook flight training, met and
rehearsed their operations repeatedly, then seized four US airliners
simultaneously on September 11, without any US intelligence agency
having any idea what they were doing.
Thus in one exchange during testimony June 16, commissioner
Timothy Roemer, a former Democratic congressman, referred in passing
to the fact that the CIA received information in June 2001 that
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (a top Al Qaeda leader later alleged to
be the principal organizer of the September 11 attacks) was preparing
operatives to go the United States.
A top official of the CIA Counter-Terrorism Center, testifying
undercover as Dr. K without revealing his name, said
he did not recall receiving any such information. If the testimony
of Dr. K was true, it would indicate a high-level
cover-up of Al Qaeda threats during the summer of 2001. If false,
then there is perjury and cover-up today. In either case, this
was an obvious avenue for further exploration, but Roemer simply
halted the line of questioning and no other commissioner raised
it again.
The US media is no less compromised than the 9/11 commission.
Press coverage of the commissions report and public hearing
noted the conflict between the evidence presented to the panel
and the claims of the Bush administration. But there were no banner
headlines or television news bulletins about the devastating implications
of the latest exposure of Bush lies.
The prostration of the media was summed up in the editorial
Thursday in the New York Times, headlined, The Plain
Truth, which charged Bush with selling the false Iraq-Qaeda
claim to Americans. There are two unpleasant alternatives: either
Mr. Bush knew he was not telling the truth, or he has a capacity
for politically motivated self-deception that is terrifying in
the post-9/11 world.
The Times did not, however call for resignation or impeachment
or criminal prosecution, although Bushs lies have led directly
to the deaths of tens of thousands of Iraqis and nearly one thousand
Americans. Instead, it huffed, puffed ... and demanded: Now
President Bush should apologize to the American people, who were
led to believe something different. Nothing could demonstrate
more clearly the complete impotence of American liberalism.
The only serious conclusion that can be drawn from the exposure
of yet another Bush administration big lie is that
the invasion, conquest and occupation of Iraq are a criminal enterprise,
in which an unelected government has implicated the American people.
Working people must demand the immediate withdrawal of all American
and other foreign troops from Iraq, the payment of reparations
to the people of Iraq while they work out their future free of
outside intervention, and the initiation of war crimes prosecution
of all those involved in the decision to attack a defenseless
country.
See Also:
Ex-New York Mayor Giuliani
booed at 9/11 hearing
Myth confronts reality
[22 May 2004]
What the September 11 commission
hearings revealed
[1 May 2004]
9/11 hearings ignore political,
historical issues behind terrorist attacks
[25 March 2004]
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