Exclusive: Saddam
Possessed WMD, Had Extensive Terror Ties By Scott Wheeler CNSNews.com Staff
Writer October 04, 2004(CNSNews.com) - Iraqi
intelligence documents, confiscated by U.S. forces and obtained by
CNSNews.com , show numerous efforts by Saddam Hussein's regime
to work with some of the world's most notorious terror
organizations, including al Qaeda, to target Americans. They
demonstrate that Saddam's government possessed mustard gas and
anthrax, both considered weapons of mass destruction, in the summer
of 2000, during the period in which United Nations weapons
inspectors were not present in Iraq. And the papers show that Iraq
trained dozens of terrorists inside its borders. One of the
Iraqi memos contains an order from Saddam for his intelligence
service to support terrorist attacks against Americans in Somalia.
The memo was written nine months before U.S. Army Rangers were
ambushed in Mogadishu by forces loyal to a warlord with alleged ties
to al Qaeda. Other memos provide a list of terrorist groups
with whom Iraq had relationships and considered available for terror
operations against the United States. Among the
organizations mentioned are those affiliated with Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi and Ayman al-Zawahiri, two of the world's most wanted
terrorists. Zarqawi is believed responsible for the kidnapping and
beheading of several American civilians in Iraq and claimed
responsibility for a series of deadly bombings in Iraq Sept. 30.
Al-Zawahiri is the top lieutenant of al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden,
allegedly helped plan the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist strikes on the
U.S., and is believed to be the voice on an audio tape broadcast by
Al-Jazeera television Oct. 1, calling for attacks on U.S. and
British interests everywhere.The source of the
documents A senior government official who is not a
political appointee provided CNSNews.com with copies of the
42 pages of Iraqi Intelligence Service documents. The originals,
some of which were hand-written and others typed, are in Arabic.
CNSNews.com had the papers translated into English by two
individuals separately and independent of each other. There
are no hand-writing samples to which the documents can be compared
for forensic analysis and authentication. However, three other
experts - a former weapons inspector with the United Nations Special
Commission (UNSCOM), a retired CIA counter-terrorism official with
vast experience dealing with Iraq, and a former advisor to
then-presidential candidate Bill Clinton on Iraq - were asked to
analyze the documents. All said they comport with the format, style
and content of other Iraqi documents from that era known to be
genuine. Laurie Mylroie, who authored the book, "Study of
Revenge: Saddam Hussein's Unfinished War against America," and
advised Clinton on Iraq during the 1992 presidential campaign, told
CNSNews.com that the papers represent "the most complete set
of documents relating Iraq to terrorism, including Islamic
terrorism" against the U.S. Mylroie has long maintained that
Iraq was a state sponsor of terrorism against the United States. The
documents obtained by CNSNews.com , she said, include
"correspondence back and forth between Saddam's office and Iraqi
Mukhabarat (intelligence agency). They make sense. This is what one
would think Saddam was doing at the time." Bruce Tefft, a
retired CIA official who specialized in counter-terrorism and had
extensive experience dealing with Iraq, said that "based on
available, unclassified and open source information, the details in
these documents are accurate ..." The former UNSCOM inspector
zeroed in on the signatures on the documents and "the names of some
of the people who sign off on these things. "This is fairly
typical of that time era. [The Iraqis] were meticulous record
keepers," added the former U.N. official, who spoke with
CNSNews.com on the condition of anonymity. The senior
government official, who furnished the documents to
CNSNews.com , said the papers answer "whether or not Iraq was
a state sponsor of Islamic terrorism against the United States. It
also answers whether or not Iraq had an ongoing biological warfare
project continuing through the period when the UNSCOM inspections
ended."Presidential campaign focused on
Iraq The presidential campaign is currently dominated by
debate over whether Saddam procured weapons of mass destruction
and/or whether his government sponsored terrorism aimed at Americans
before the U.S. invaded Iraq last year. Democratic nominee Sen. John
Kerry has repeatedly rejected that possibility and criticized
President Bush for needlessly invading Iraq. "[Bush's] two
main rationales - weapons of mass destruction and the al
Qaeda/September 11 (2001) connection - have been proved false ... by
the president's own weapons inspectors ... and by the 9/11
Commission," Kerry told an audience at New York University on Sept.
20. The Senate Intelligence Committee's probe of the 9/11
intelligence failures also could not produce any definitive links
between Saddam's government and 9/11. And United Nations as well as
U.S. weapons inspectors in Iraq have been unable to find the
biological and chemical weapons Saddam was suspected of
possessing. But the documents obtained by CNSNews.com
shed new light on the controversy. They detail the Iraqi
regime's purchase of five kilograms of mustard gas on Aug. 21, 2000 and three vials of malignant pustule , another term for anthrax, on
Sept. 6, 2000. The purchase order for the mustard gas includes gas
masks, filters and rubber gloves. The order for the anthrax includes
sterilization and decontamination equipment. (See Saddam's Possession of Mustard Gas ) The
documents show that Iraqi intelligence received the mustard gas and
anthrax from "Saddam's company," which Tefft said was probably a
reference to Saddam General Establishment, "a complex of factories
involved with, amongst other things, precision optics, missile, and
artillery fabrication." "Sa'ad's general company" is listed
on the Iraqi documents as the supplier of the sterilization and
decontamination equipment that accompanied the anthrax vials. Tefft
believes this is a reference to the Salah Al-Din State
Establishment, also involved in missile construction. (See Saddam's Possession of Anthrax ) The
Jaber Ibn Hayan General Company is listed as the supplier of the
safety equipment that accompanied the mustard gas order. Tefft
described the company as "a 'turn-key' project built by Romania,
designed to produce protective CW (conventional warfare) and BW
(biological warfare) equipment (gas masks and protective clothing)."
"Iraq had an ongoing biological warfare project continuing
through the period when the UNSCOM inspections ended," the senior
government official and source of the documents said. "This should
cause us to redouble our efforts to find the Iraqi weapons of mass
destruction programs." 'Hunt the Americans' The
first of the 42 pages of Iraqi documents is dated Jan. 18, 1993,
approximately two years after American troops defeated Saddam's army
in the first Persian Gulf War. The memo includes Saddam's directive
that "the party should move to hunt the Americans who are on Arabian land,
especially in Somalia, by using Arabian elements ..." On
Oct. 3, 1993, less than nine months after that Iraqi memo was
written, American soldiers were ambushed in Mogadishu, Somalia by
forces loyal to Somali warlord Mohammed Farah Aidid, an alleged
associate of Osama bin Laden. Eighteen Americans were killed and 84
wounded during a 17-hour firefight that followed the ambush in which
Aidid's followers used civilians as decoys. (See Saddam's Connections to al Qaeda ) An
11-page Iraqi memo, dated Jan. 25, 1993, lists Palestinian, Sudanese
and Asian terrorist organizations and the relationships Iraq had
with each of them. Of particular importance, Tefft said, are the
relationships Iraq had already developed or was in the process of
developing with groups and individuals affiliated with al Qaeda,
such as Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and Ayman al-Zawahiri. The U.S.
currently is offering rewards of up to $25 million for each man's
capture. The documents describe Al-Jehad wa'l Tajdeed as "a secret Palestinian
organization" founded after the first Persian Gulf War that
"believes in armed struggle against U.S. and western interests." The
leaders of the group, according to the Iraqi memo, were stationed in
Jordan in 1993, and when one of those leaders visited Iraq in
November 1992, he "showed the readiness of his organization to
execute operations against U.S. interests at any time." (See More Saddam Connections to al
Qaeda ) Tefft believes the Tajdeed group likely included
al-Zarqawi, whom Teft described as "our current terrorist nemesis"
in Iraq, "a Palestinian on a Jordanian passport who was with al
Qaeda and bin Laden in Afghanistan prior to this period
(1993)." Tajdeed, which means Islamic Renewal, currently "has
a website that posts Zarqawi's speeches, messages, claims of
assassinations and beheading videos," Tefft told CNSNews.com .
"The apparent linkages are too close to be accidental" and might "be
one of the first operational contacts between an al Qaeda group and
Iraq," he added. Tefft said the documents, all of which the
Iraqi Intelligence Service labeled "Top secret, personal and urgent"
show several links between Saddam's government and terror groups
dedicated not only to targeting America but also U.S. allies like
Egypt and Israel. The same 11-page memo refers to the
"re-opening of the relationship" with Al-Jehad al-Islamy , which is described as "the
most violent in Egypt," responsible for the 1981 assassination of
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. The documents go on to describe a
Dec. 14, 1990 meeting between Iraqi intelligence officials and a
representative of Al-Jehad al-Islamy, that ended in an agreement "to
move against [the] Egyptian regime by doing martyr operations on
conditions that we should secure the finance, training and
equipments." (See More Saddam Connections to al
Qaeda ) Al-Zawahiri was one of the leaders of Jehad
al-Islamy, which is also known as the Egyptian Islamic Group, and
participated in the assassination of Sadat, Tefft said. "Iraq's
contact with the Egyptian Islamic Group is another operational
contact between Iraq and al Qaeda," he added. One of the
Asian groups listed on the Iraqi intelligence memo is J.U.I. , also known as the Islamic Clerks Society.
The group is currently led by Mawlana Fadhel al-Rahman, whom Tefft
said is "an al Qaeda member and co-signed Osama bin Laden's 1998
fatwa (religious ruling) to kill Americans." The Iraqi memo from
1993 states that J.U.I.'s secretary general "has a good relationship
with our system since 1981 and he is ready for any mission." Tefft
said the memo shows "another direct Iraq link to an al Qaeda group."
Iraq had also maintained a relationship with the Afghani Islamist party since 1989, according to
the memo. The "relationship was improved and became directly between
the leader, Hekmatyar and Iraq," it states, referring to Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar, an Afghani warlord who fought against the Soviet Union
and current al Qaeda ally, according to Tefft. Last year,
American authorities in Afghanistan ranked Hekmatyar third on their
most wanted list, behind only bin Laden and former Taliban leader
Mullah Omar. Hekmatyar represents "another Iraqi link to an al Qaeda
group," Tefft said. (See More Saddam Connections to al Qaeda )
The Iraqi intelligence documents also refer to terrorist
groups previously believed to have had links with Saddam Hussein.
They include the Palestine Liberation Front , a group dedicated to
attacking Israel, and according to the Iraqi memo, one with "an
office in Baghdad." The Abu Nidal group, suspected by the CIA of having
acted as surrogates for Iraqi terrorist attacks, is also
mentioned. "The movement believes in political violence and
assassinations," the 1993 Iraqi memo states in reference to the Abu
Nidal organization. "We have relationships with them since 1973.
Currently, they have a representative in the country. Monthly helps
are given to them -- 20 thousand dinars - in addition to other
supports," the memo explains. (See Saddam's Connections to Palestinian Terror
Groups ) Iraq not only built and maintained relationships
with terrorist groups, the documents show it appears to have trained
terrorists as well. Ninety-two individuals from various Middle
Eastern countries are listed on the papers. Many are
described as having "finished the course at M14," a reference to an
Iraqi intelligence agency, and to having "participated in Umm
El-Ma'arek," the Iraqi response to the U.S. invasion in 1991. The
author of the list notes that approximately half of the individuals
"all got trained inside the 'martyr act camp' that belonged to our
directorate." The former UNSCOM weapons inspector who was
asked to analyze the documents believes it's clear that the Iraqis
"were training people there in assassination and suicide bombing
techniques ... including non-Iraqis."Bush administration
likely unaware of documents' existence The senior
government official and source of the Iraqi intelligence memos,
explained that the reason the documents have not been made public
before now is that the government has "thousands and thousands of
documents waiting to be translated. "It is unlikely they
even know this exists," the source added. The government
official also explained that the motivation for leaking the
documents, "is strictly national security and helping with the war
on terrorism by focusing this country's attention on facts and away
from political posturing. "This is too important to let it
get caught up in the political process," the source told
CNSNews.com . To protect against the Iraqi intelligence
documents being altered or misrepresented elsewhere on the Internet,
CNSNews.com has decided
to publish only the first of
the 42 pages in Arabic, along with the English translation.
Portions of some of the other memos in translated form are also
being published to accompany this report. Credentialed journalists
and counter-terrorism experts seeking to view the 42 pages of Arabic
documents or to challenge their authenticity may make arrangements
to do so at CNSNews.com headquarters in Alexandria,
Va.E-mail a news
tip to Scott Wheeler. Send a Letter to the Editor about
this article.
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