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Saddam supported at least two al-Qaeda groups: Pentagon
Hot Air ^ | March 14, 2008 | by Ed Morrissey

Posted on 03/14/2008 6:51:58 AM PDT by jdm

Earlier this week, the Pentagon announced that an investigation into over 600,000 documents captured at the end of the invasion of Iraq showed no operational links to al-Qaeda — or at least, that’s how the media reported it. After a strange few days in which the Pentagon delayed the report, it finally hit the internet last night — and it’s clear that the analysis done by the media was superficial at best. If no operational “smoking gun” could be found, the report still shows that Saddam Hussein had plenty of ties to all sorts of terrorist groups, including radical Islamist jihadis.

For instance, how about their support for The Army of Muhammad, a known al-Qaeda subsidiary operating in Bahrain? On pages 34-35 of the report, we find communications between their Bahrain agent and IIS headquarters confirming Army of Mohammad’s loyalty to Osama bin Laden. What is the response from Baghdad?

The agent reports (Extract 25) that The Army of Muhammad is working with Osama bin Laden. …

A later memorandum from the same collection to the Director of the IIS reports that the Army of Muhammad is endeavoring to receive assistance [from Iraq] to implement its objectives, and that the local IIS station has been told to deal with them in accordance with priorities previously established. The IIS agent goes on to inform the Director that “this organization is an offshoot of bin Laden, but that their objectives are similar but with different names that can be a way of camouflaging the organization.”

AoM had ambitious plans — including attacks on American interests. On page 35, the Iraqis list their aims as attacking Jewish and American interests anywhere in the world, attacking American embassies, disrupting American oil supplies and tankers, and attacking the American military bases in the Middle East. The Iraqi support for AoM may not be an operational link, but it’s certainly a financial link that goes right to Osama bin Laden. The Iraqis certainly understood that much, and hoped to keep it quiet.

Nor was that Saddam’s only support for an AQ subsidiary. Saddam put money into Egypt’s Islamic Jihad. The IJ opposes the Hosni Mubarak regime for a number of reasons, but primarily because of Egypt’s shaky diplomatic relations with Israel. One leader of IJ that Westerners can easily name was Ayman al-Zawahiri, who became Osama’s chief deputy and primary mouthpiece to the world.

Even when working separately, the report notes that Saddam and Osama worked to develop the same terrorist pool from which they would draw support and operational agents. Put simply, Saddam’s more secular aims and Osama’s drive for an Islamic Caliphate worked in tandem to increase the threat of terrorism. Saddam endeavored to create a “business model” for terrorism, especially when it could assist in his own pan-Arab vision. He funded and trained terrorists of all stripes in Iraq, from secular Arab Marxists to radical jihadists (page 41-42).

The media also skipped over the conclusion of the study, which begins thusly:

One question remains regarding Iraq’s terrorism capability: Is there anything in the captured archives to indicate that Saddam had the will to use his terrorist capabilities directly against United States? Judging from examples of Saddam’s statements (Extract 34) before the 1991 Gulf War with the United tates, the answer is yes.

In the years between the two Gulf Wars, UN sanctions reduced Saddam’s ability to shape regional and world events, steadily draining his military, economic, and military powers. The rise of Islamist fundamentalism in the region gave Saddam the opportunity to make terrorism, one of the few tools remaining in Saddam’s “coercion” toolbox, not only cost effective but a formal instrument of state power. Saddam nurtured this capability with an infrastructure supporting (1) his own particular brand of state terrorism against internal and external threats, (2) the state sponsorship of suicide operations, and (3) organizational relationships and “outreach programs” for terrorist groups. Evidence that was uncovered and analyzed attests to the existence of a terrorist capability and a willingness to use it until the day Saddam was forced to flee Baghdad by Coalition forces.

So we have Saddam supporting at least two AQ subsidiaries, one of which had open aspirations to attack American interests, and evidence from these captured materials that Saddam planned to use his terrorist capabilities to conduct war on the United States. Perhaps in the world of the mainstream media the big news from this would be “no smoking gun” connection to an actual attack, but for the rest of us, it shows that Saddam needed to go — and the sooner, the better. (via the Weekly Standard)

Update and Bump: Several points need to be made more clear. First, it’s pretty apparent that the vast bulk of the reporting on this paper has come from leaks within the Pentagon, and not from a read of the paper itself. Stephen Hayes more generously attributes it to a shortsighted focus on the executive summary, but even that makes clear that Saddam used Islamist radical terrorist groups to his advantage, and that state support of terrorism grew so large as to require an expansion of government bureaucracy to manage it. Anyone who reads the executive summary would be compelled to look for the support within the body of the document.

Furthermore, one has to remember the purpose and structure of al-Qaeda. It is not a top-down hierarchical organization like the PLO. Rather, it serves as a framework for a web of affiliated terrorist organizations, both for funding and for inspiration. AQ’s leadership structure maintains communications and coordination with these groups, which often merge with and split into other organizations. The report itself tries to remind readers of this, and sees Saddam and Osama as using essentially the same network for the same ends, when their interests overlap. That’s why Iraq’s IIS winds up funding the Army of Mohammad and the Egyptian Islamic Jihad — both of which are authentically AQ, and in the case of AoM, Iraq funded it specifically because of its goals of attacking American interests.

Reader Sam Pender points out that Egyptian Islamic Jihad actually has more significance than most in the AQ network. EIJ at one time provided the lion’s share of AQ’s leadership, including Ayman al-Zawahiri, and certainly that was true in the period between 1991 and 2003. Saddam’s support for EIJ shows a more direct connection to AQ leadership than anyone had predicted before the capture of the documents on which this report is based.

Update: The FBI’s Deputy Director for counterterrorism testified before Congress about the connection between AQ and EIJ on December 18, 2001:

Although Al-Qaeda functions independently of other terrorist organizations, it also functions through some of the terrorist organizations that operate under its umbrella or with its support, including: the Al-Jihad, the Al-Gamma Al-Islamiyya (Islamic Group - led by Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and later by Ahmed Refai Taha, a/k/a “Abu Yasser al Masri,”), Egyptian Islamic Jihad, and a number of jihad groups in other countries, including the Sudan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Somalia, Eritrea, Djibouti, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bosnia, Croatia, Albania, Algeria, Tunisia, Lebanon, the Philippines, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan, the Kashmiri region of India, and the Chechen region of Russia. Al-Qaeda also maintained cells and personnel in a number of countries to facilitate its activities, including in Kenya, Tanzania, the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States. By banding together, Al-Qaeda proposed to work together against the perceived common enemies in the West - particularly the United States which Al-Qaeda regards as an “infidel” state which provides essential support for other “infidel” governments.

Saddam Hussein provided funding for EIJ for the same reasons. And when one starts to consider the differences between Afghanistan’s Taliban after 9/11 and Saddam, the gaps narrows considerably. The Taliban gave AQ shelter while probably not realizing the extent to which it made them a target; Saddam funded their main leadership source and at least one of their subsidiaries in order to help them succeed in their mission against the US. That’s at least arguably an act of war, attempting to use terrorists as a proxy to fight it — and it very clearly fell within the post-9/11 Bush doctrine.

Update: Eli Lake at the New York Sun gets the story correct: “Report Details Saddam’s Terrorist Ties”. I guess this means he actually read the report.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: alqaeda; alqaedaandiraq; dod; links; pentagon; saddam; zawahiri
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1 posted on 03/14/2008 6:52:01 AM PDT by jdm
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To: jdm

bump


2 posted on 03/14/2008 6:57:14 AM PDT by Texican72
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To: jdm

3 posted on 03/14/2008 6:58:03 AM PDT by sono (The Future Ain't What It Used To Be - Yogi Berra)
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To: jdm

Why does the NY times even bother with a Pentagon Report? They are going to print their opinion anyway, regardless of the facts.


4 posted on 03/14/2008 6:59:35 AM PDT by Republic of Texas (Socialism Always Fails)
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To: jdm

Good find.

It is a shame it will go unnoticed.


5 posted on 03/14/2008 7:01:30 AM PDT by KC Burke (Men of intemperate minds can never be free...their passions forge their fetters.)
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To: jdm
and it’s clear that the analysis done by the media was superficial at best.

Isn't that the norm?

6 posted on 03/14/2008 7:07:37 AM PDT by pfflier
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To: All

didn’t the administration say there were no WMD no ties to alquida....man its tough defending them when they do it to themselves.


7 posted on 03/14/2008 7:07:37 AM PDT by Liberty2007 (We are busy winning hearts and minds while our islamfascist enemy is busy cutting throats and necks.)
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To: jdm
The MSM is so hell bent on destroying this Presidents credibility even though he didn't say that Iraq had a hand in 911 just that there are links to the type of terrorist. Even the dumbest lib that reads this report could see the linkage. The people who are writing this report even try to skew the facts by claiming “it's complex”,”what you see is what you see but what you see is not really what you see”. Al-Qaeda means The Base and there are hundreds of groups that don't call themselves Al-Qaeda but are in the truest form Al-Qaeda.
8 posted on 03/14/2008 7:07:55 AM PDT by tobyhill (The media lies so much the truth is the exception)
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To: jdm

Wednesday The St. Paul Pioneer Press fairly shouted the lib line/lie “NO LINKS” on their pages. Further reading revealed that statement to be a lie even in the same limited article. Of course a lib paper like the Press would never print the whole truth. As if Hussein would grant full autonomy to any group other than his own people. And naturally people are not supposed to wonder how Hussein could have ties to terrorist groups but not Al-Qaeda. Even though research by other people (like Steve Hayes) clearly reveals he did have ties to A-Q. Just another duplicitous day in Big Lib Media.


9 posted on 03/14/2008 7:09:21 AM PDT by driftless2
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To: jdm
2 comments: Why did not the Pentagon release this information via a news conference highlighting those facts?

And why are they dragging their feet in translating and releasing all of the data in the material they capture?

Sadly, methinks something smells here in the now PC Pentagon and they are making a concentrated effort NOT to absolve W of make any case against Moozies, after all, one of their highest placed advisers (Hesham Islam) is one and he apparently has mucho influence among the top leadership at this particular (as opposed to NSA) puzzle palace.

10 posted on 03/14/2008 7:12:34 AM PDT by Conservative Vermont Vet (One of ONLY 37 Conservatives in the People's Republic of Vermont. Socialists and Progressives All)
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To: Liberty2007

We gave Saddam Hussein almost 6 months notice we were coming. There were satellite images of huge trucks leaving Irag and going into Syria, so what do you think they were sending milk and cookies?


11 posted on 03/14/2008 7:14:36 AM PDT by Kackikat
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To: jdm
I thought the 9.11 report listed around forty groups that Saddam supported? Maybe they were sub groups of these larger blanket groups.
12 posted on 03/14/2008 7:15:59 AM PDT by mnehring (The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me. - Ayn Rand)
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To: jveritas

ping


13 posted on 03/14/2008 7:16:51 AM PDT by mnehring (The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me. - Ayn Rand)
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To: jdm
Gateway Pundit has more.
14 posted on 03/14/2008 7:17:44 AM PDT by sono (The Future Ain't What It Used To Be - Yogi Berra)
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To: jdm

bttt


15 posted on 03/14/2008 7:25:38 AM PDT by ELS (Vivat Benedictus XVI!)
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To: Republic of Texas

Good question! It’s obvious that the NYT and other MSM have never even read AQ’s ‘founding documents’! It’s called ‘The Base’ for a reason. (cue eye roll)


16 posted on 03/14/2008 7:30:07 AM PDT by penelopesire ("The only CHANGE you will get with the Democrats is the CHANGE left in your pocket")
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To: sono

Thanks!


17 posted on 03/14/2008 7:32:38 AM PDT by jdm (Contrary to popular belief, the search function works just fine.)
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To: jdm

BUMP for later!


18 posted on 03/14/2008 7:32:56 AM PDT by stockpirate (Barrack “The name that cannot be said” Obamma)
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To: ELS

ping


19 posted on 03/14/2008 7:36:15 AM PDT by MSRiverdog (The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn't exist!)
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To: jdm
Barack’s first name use to be Barry but he's still the same useless idiot he's always been.
20 posted on 03/14/2008 7:43:38 AM PDT by tobyhill (The media lies so much the truth is the exception)
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