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Iraq Conflict Feeds International
Terror Threat -CIA
Washington -
Islamic militants waging a deadly insurgency against U.S.-led
forces in Iraq pose an emerging international terrorism threat, CIA
Director Porter Goss said on Wednesday.
In his first public appearance as
U.S. spymaster, Goss described Iraqi insurgents, including al Qaeda
ally Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, as part of a Sunni militant movement
inspired by Osama bin Laden and intent on attacking Americans.
"The Iraq conflict, while not a cause
of extremism, has become a cause for extremists," Goss told the Senate
Select Committee on Intelligence.
"Those jihadists who survive will
leave Iraq experienced in and focused on acts of urban terrorism. They
represent a potential pool of contacts to build transnational
terrorist cells, groups and networks in Saudi Arabia, Jordan and other
countries," he said.
President Bush, who portrays U.S.-led
actions in Iraq as the leading edge of democratic reform in the Middle
East, cited Iraqi backing for international terrorism as a reason for
the 2003 invasion.
But a top level U.S. inquiry found
last year that there had in fact been no collaboration between al
Qaeda and Iraq under President Saddam Hussein.
Bush critics say the invasion was a
distraction from the global war against terrorism declared after the
Sept. 11, 2001 attacks by al Qaeda on the United States and has
stirred up a violent response in Iraq that inflamed further terrorism.
"These sentences indicate Goss is
very much listening to what his analysts are saying, and not
necessarily to what the White House wants to hear," said Kenneth
Katzman, terrorism analyst for the Congressional Research Service.
"Zarqawi has sought to bring about
the final victory of Islam over the West, and he hopes to establish a
safe haven in Iraq from which his group could operate against
'infidel' Western nations and 'apostate' Muslim governments," Goss
said.
Presenting the CIA's annual "threat
assessment," Goss also said insurgents achieved some of their goals in
the Jan. 30 Iraqi elections by keeping Sunni Arab voter turnout low.
A long-time intelligence officer and
former chairman of the House of Representatives intelligence
committee, Goss took over the CIA last year with a mandate to reform
the premier U.S. spy agency after huge lapses in the run-up to the
Sept. 11 attacks and the 2003 Iraq invasion.
His predecessor, George Tenet,
resigned amid widespread criticism over flawed intelligence about the
threat from Iraq that critics say was exaggerated to meet a political
agenda.
Goss told the lawmakers that U.S.
authorities and their allies had dealt "serious blows" to the al Qaeda
network.
"Despite these successes, however,
the terrorist threat to the U.S. in the homeland and abroad endures,"
he said in an assessment that differed little from last year's report.
Goss was one of several top officials
to appear before the Senate committee, which is scrutinizing U.S.
intelligence on Iran, North Korea and other hot spots in hopes of
avoiding mistakes committed before the war on Iraq.
FBI Director Robert Mueller testified
al Qaeda remained intent on attacking the United States, likely by
using low-tech methods of the kind employed in 2001 when terrorists
killed about 3,000 people after hijacking airliners with box-cutters.
Goss said al Qaeda or another group
would likely try to eclipse the Sept. 11 attacks by using nuclear,
chemical or biological weapons that authorities say could be stolen or
purchased from nations such as North Korea.
Officials also warned that North
Korea, which declared last week that it had nuclear arms, could soon
be ready to test a new long-range nuclear-capable missile which could
hit targets across North America.
Private analysts doubt North Korea
could pose a direct threat to the U.S. mainland any time soon.--
Reuters
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