That's interesting!
Sudans Islamist regime, once shunned by Washington for providing a haven for Osama bin Laden as well as for human rights abusers during decades of civil war, has become an ally in the Bush administrations war on terror.
Only months after the then United States secretary of state, Colin Powell, accused Khartoum of genocide in Darfur, Sudan has become a crucial intelligence asset to the CIA.
In the Middle East and Africa, Sudans agents have penetrated networks that would not normally be accessible to the US, a former American intelligence official told The Guardian. Sudan is credited with detaining foreign militants on their way to join anti-American fighters in Iraq. Sudanese agents have also helped the CIA to monitor Islamist organisations in Somalia.
The intelligence relationship is the strongest thread between Washington and Khartoum, the official said. Khartoum is probably the only government in the Arab League that has contributed in a major way to the protection of US forces and citizens in Iraq.
News of the growing cooperation was first reported in The Los Angeles Times. The newspaper traced the thaw in relations since 2001 to a milestone last week: the visit to Washington by Sudans intelligence chief, Salah Abdallah Gosh.
It reported that Sudans secret police had begun a crackdown on suspected Islamists, shared evidence with the FBI and allowed US personnel to interrogate al-Qaeda suspects.
In May 2003, Sudanese security forces raided a suspected terrorist training camp and deported more than a dozen, mainly Saudi, militants to Arab states that work closely with US intelligence services, the newspaper said.
Yet, a decade ago, Sudan was providing a haven to Bin Laden and other international outlaws, such as Carlos the Jackal. In 1993, the Clinton administration placed it on the State Departments list of terrorist regimes.
Subsequent approaches from Khartoum were rebuffed even as it offered its services against the emer-ging al-Qaeda network in the 1990s.
Sudan tried to hand over two guys implicated in the 1998 bombing of the US embassies in East Africa, and the response was to send cruise missiles to hit the aspirin factory in Khartoum, the official said. They offered up Bin Laden in 1995 and we said, We dont even have an indictment on him.
Officially, Washingtons position towards Sudan remains unchanged. Sudan is still considered a state sponsor of terror, a State Department spokesperson said this week. And although the recent cooperation has yielded important results, it promises to be politically explosive.
The US Christian right and human rights organisations have been strong advocates of the Sudanese rebels and are unlikely to support any softening of Washingtons stance.
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=237631&area=/insight/insight__africa/
Igloo Contains About 2,500 Rockets
May 11, 2005 9:58 am US/Eastern RICHMOND, Ky. (AP) Vapor from the deadly nerve agent sarin leaked from a stockpile of old rockets at the Blue Grass Army Depot, but officials said it posed no danger to the public.
The sarin vapor did not escape the sealed container, or igloo, where the weapons are kept. Officials were filtering the air inside the igloo Tuesday before trying to enter the structure to secure the leaky rocket.....
Explosion, Fire Leaves Thousands Without Power (VT - 5/10/05)
Worker Sent To Hospital With Injuries MANCHESTER, N.H. -- An explosion at an electrical substation cut power in parts of Manchester Tuesday and sent a utility worker to a hospital.
The explosion at the Public Service of New Hampshire Brook Street substation could be heard for blocks and resulted in a fire that shot 60 feet into the air. Firefighters doused the electrical fire with foam and had it under control within about an hour....