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Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20051104/wl_mi...raqnigeruranium

Rome says Iraq-Niger dossier faked by sacked agent Fri Nov 4, 5:53 AM ET



Italy's military intelligence chief has denied his agency played any role in the fabrication or passing to the United States of a forged dossier claiming Iraq had bought uranium from Niger, telling a parliamentary committee it was written by a sacked former employee.

"The SISMI had no role in the fabrication of the dossier on the sale of Niger uranium to Saddam Hussein's regime," General Nicolo Pollari told a parliamentary committee, according to a Corriere della Sera report Friday.

"On the contrary, from the start we shared the confusion of other intelligence agencies about the dossier, until we declared it was not credible," Pollari told the committee hearing on Thursday evening.

The special session of the intelligence committee was called after the opposition-supporting daily La Repubblica claimed last week that the Niger dossier had been fabricated by Italian intelligence agents.

The claim that Iraq had purchased uranium from Niger to realise its nuclear ambitions was one of Washington's main arguments for invading Iraq in March 2003.

"The dossier was passed to the United States via a journalist for the Panorama weekly, who left it at the US embassy in Rome, and it was delivered to the French intelligence services by Rocco Martino," Pollari said.

Martino was dismissed from the SISMI and forged the dossier with the help of staff from the Niger embassy in Rome, according to Pollari.

La Repubblica had alleged that the SISMI, and in particular its director Pollari, had circulated the dossier knowing it to be fake to boost US President George W. Bush's claim that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction and to justify military intervention in Iraq.

The intelligence chief also pointed out that in his evidence to the same committee in late 2002, he had said it would take "a minimum of five years for Iraq to develop a potential nuclear weapon".

Pollari was accompanied at the hearing by Gianni Letta, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's right-hand man and the most senior politician in charge of the Italian intelligence services.




Copyright © 2005 Agence France Presse. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AFP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Agence France Presse.


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Snuffysmith
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1627510,00.html

Italy 'warned Saddam intelligence was bogus'

John Hooper in Rome
Friday November 4, 2005
The Guardian


Italian intelligence warned the United States about bogus information on Saddam Hussein's nuclear ambitions at about the time President Bush cited them as a crucial reason for invading Iraq, an Italian parliamentarian said yesterday.
Massimo Brutti of the opposition Left Democrats made his claim to reporters after listening to evidence from Italy's chief spymaster, General Nicolo Pollari, in the latest episode to undermine the motivations for the Iraq war.

The Italian government of Silvio Berlusconi was and remains a key ally of the Bush administration. Italian intelligence has been linked to a dossier alleged to have been forged by an Italian that purported to show that Iraq had been seeking to buy uranium from Niger to make nuclear weapons.

In his State of the Union address in January 2003 President Bush repeated a similar claim to bolster his case for war. "At about the same as the State of the Union address," Senator Brutti told reporters after listening to Gen Pollari's evidence, the Italian intelligence services "said that the dossier didn't correspond to the truth".

Gen Pollari was testifying to parliament's intelligence oversight committee about the alleged involvement in the dossier of the Sismi secret services that he leads.

Asked about Mr Brutti's claim at a press conference later, the chairman of the committee, Enzo Bianco, initially confirmed it but then said he was unable to comment for reasons of national security.

Senator Brutti and other members of the committee said Gen Pollari had vigorously denied any involvement with the forgery or distribution of the bogus documents. He said Italy had shared intelligence about alleged Iraqi attempts to acquire uranium since the 1990s. But he added: "Intelligence was always accompanied by reservations."

At the time he cited the claims President Bush said the intelligence originated not with Italy but with Britain. Yesterday's closed-door session lasted for almost five hours. It was called after an Italian newspaper suggested Sismi had allowed the forged papers to be given to the US because it was keen to back the case for war.

However a rightwing member of the committee, Maurizio Gasparri, said Gen Pollari had insisted the "behaviour of Sismi had been absolutely consistent and correct in this affair". He said the forged dossier "was never endorsed by Sismi".

However, the hearing left questions unanswered. Mr Berlusconi's government has denied allegations in La Repubblica that it brought pressure to bear on Gen Pollari, and it has defended calls for his resignation. In an interview published yesterday, Mr Berlusconi denied his government had passed on documents relating to Niger to the US.
Snuffysmith
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1627510,00.html

Italy 'warned Saddam intelligence was bogus'

John Hooper in Rome
Friday November 4, 2005
The Guardian


Italian intelligence warned the United States about bogus information on Saddam Hussein's nuclear ambitions at about the time President Bush cited them as a crucial reason for invading Iraq, an Italian parliamentarian said yesterday.
Massimo Brutti of the opposition Left Democrats made his claim to reporters after listening to evidence from Italy's chief spymaster, General Nicolo Pollari, in the latest episode to undermine the motivations for the Iraq war.

The Italian government of Silvio Berlusconi was and remains a key ally of the Bush administration. Italian intelligence has been linked to a dossier alleged to have been forged by an Italian that purported to show that Iraq had been seeking to buy uranium from Niger to make nuclear weapons.

In his State of the Union address in January 2003 President Bush repeated a similar claim to bolster his case for war. "At about the same as the State of the Union address," Senator Brutti told reporters after listening to Gen Pollari's evidence, the Italian intelligence services "said that the dossier didn't correspond to the truth".

Gen Pollari was testifying to parliament's intelligence oversight committee about the alleged involvement in the dossier of the Sismi secret services that he leads.

Asked about Mr Brutti's claim at a press conference later, the chairman of the committee, Enzo Bianco, initially confirmed it but then said he was unable to comment for reasons of national security.

Senator Brutti and other members of the committee said Gen Pollari had vigorously denied any involvement with the forgery or distribution of the bogus documents. He said Italy had shared intelligence about alleged Iraqi attempts to acquire uranium since the 1990s. But he added: "Intelligence was always accompanied by reservations."

At the time he cited the claims President Bush said the intelligence originated not with Italy but with Britain. Yesterday's closed-door session lasted for almost five hours. It was called after an Italian newspaper suggested Sismi had allowed the forged papers to be given to the US because it was keen to back the case for war.

However a rightwing member of the committee, Maurizio Gasparri, said Gen Pollari had insisted the "behaviour of Sismi had been absolutely consistent and correct in this affair". He said the forged dossier "was never endorsed by Sismi".

However, the hearing left questions unanswered. Mr Berlusconi's government has denied allegations in La Repubblica that it brought pressure to bear on Gen Pollari, and it has defended calls for his resignation. In an interview published yesterday, Mr Berlusconi denied his government had passed on documents relating to Niger to the US.
Snuffysmith
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/iraq/story/...1635053,00.html

Iraq war has exposed us to terror at home, says Meyer

Ewen MacAskill and Julian Glover
Saturday November 5, 2005
The Guardian


Britain's former ambassador to Washington, Sir Christopher Meyer, delivers a damaging critique of Tony Blair's approach to the war in Iraq in an interview in the Guardian today.
Sir Christopher, who had a ringside seat in the decision-making that led to the war, unfavourably contrasts Mr Blair with the boldness and attention to detail of Margaret Thatcher. He says Lady Thatcher took pride in knowing more detail than her officials. "That is why it was terrifying to be summoned into her presence because if you did not know your stuff, she would expose you. There was never that danger with Tony Blair."

He takes issue with the prime minister's claim that the war has not exposed Britain to terrorist attacks: "There is plenty of evidence around at the moment that home-grown terrorism was partly radicalised and fuelled by what is going on in Iraq. There is no way we can credibly get up and say it has nothing to do with it. Don't tell me that being in Iraq has got nothing to do with it. Of course it does."
Sir Christopher gave the interview to mark the publication of DC Confidential, the first account by an insider of the decision-making that led to war, to be serialised in the Guardian from Monday.

Unusually for a diplomat, his account is revealing about a host of cabinet ministers who passed through the Washington embassy, such as John Prescott and Jack Straw, and exposes the vanities of advisers such as Lord Levy, Mr Blair's Middle East envoy.

But the part of the book which will attract the most attention concerns Mr Blair and his dealings with George Bush in the run-up to war. He portrays the PM as a man of moral and philosophical certitude but not overly interested in the nitty-gritty of policy. In the interview, he says it would be wrong to see Mr Blair as "an empty vessel". He adds: "By God, in British politics, when on top of his game, his speeches are incredible."

Sir Christopher, who supported the war, sat in on the crucial meetings between Mr Blair and Mr Bush, reading transcripts of their private phone calls and regularly meeting figures such as Dick Cheney, the vice-president, and Donald Rumsfeld, the defence secretary.

He reveals that the Foreign Office, which raised doubts about the wisdom of the war, had been even more marginalised by Downing Street than had until now been realised. He said he dealt almost exclusively with Downing Street in the 18 months before the war and could recall few, if any, phone calls with the Foreign Office in that time.

Sir Christopher said he had reflected hard on his time in Washington and its influence on the Iraq war. Although he supported the war and still feels it was right in principle, he now believes that much could have been done differently.
Snuffysmith
http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=1280575

al-Qaida in Iraq Threaten Diplomatsal-Qaida in Iraq Threatens to Attack Foreign Missions in Iraq

BAGHDAD, Iraq Nov 4, 2005 — Sunni-led insurgents killed six Iraqi police at a checkpoint Friday and fired a mortar round that struck a home outside the capital, killing a child, as Shiites began celebrating a major Muslim holiday. Al-Qaida in Iraq threatened more attacks on diplomats here.

Also Friday, the U.S. military said it had killed five senior al-Qaida in Iraq figures during an airstrike last Saturday in Husaybah near the Syrian border. The five, including at least one North African, were responsible for bombings against U.S. and Iraqi forces, the announcement said.

Friday's worst attack by insurgents occurred at an Iraqi police checkpoint in Buhriz, 35 miles north of Baghdad.

The insurgents fired mortar rounds, then arrived in eight cars and opened fire, a police officer said. At least six policemen were killed and 10 wounded in the ensuing gunbattle, and it was not immediately known if any militants were hurt, the officer said, speaking on condition of anonymity out of concern for his own safety.

On the outskirts of Baghdad, near the U.S.-run Abu Ghraib detention center, insurgents fired a mortar round that missed an American base but hit a village home, killing a child and wounding the mother and another child, said police 1st Lt. Ahmed Ali.

Suspected insurgents also shot and killed Tarijk Hasan, a former colonel in the Iraqi air force, as he drove through Baghdad on Thursday, said police Capt. Talib Thamir.

Late Thursday, a U.S. soldier also died near Talil, 170 miles southeast of Baghdad, the military said. The death, apparently of non-hostile causes, brought to at least 2,038 the number of U.S. military service members who have died since the Iraq conflict began in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

The al-Qaida threat to foreign diplomats was contained in a statement posted on an Islamic Web site. It was posted one day after the country's most feared terror group announced it had condemned two Moroccan embassy employees to death.

"We are renewing our threat to those so-called diplomatic missions who have insisted on staying in Baghdad and have not yet realized the repercussions of such a challenge to the will of the mujahedeen," the Friday statement said.

Last July, al-Qaida in Iraq kidnapped and killed two Algerian and one Egyptian diplomat in an apparent campaign to prevent Arab and Islamic countries from strengthening ties to the U.S.-backed Iraqi government. Senior envoys from Pakistan and Bahrain also escaped kidnap attempts. More than 40 diplomatic missions are currently in Iraq.

The latest al-Qaida statement appeared as majority Shiites began the three-day religious holiday of Eid al-Fitr, which ends a month of fasting during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

Most of Iraq's minority Sunni Arabs began to celebrate Eid on Thursday based on their different interpretation of the lunar calendar. In war-torn cities such as Baghdad, Sunnis marked the holiday by dressing up, taking their children to local amusement parks, and serving lavish meals to friends and relatives at their homes.

Shiites did the same thing on Friday.

In Sadr City, a large Shiite area of Baghdad, crowds of children lined up for rides at small local amusement parks. But security by police and local militias remained tight, given all the insurgent attacks that occur in the capital, including suicide car bombs, drive-by shootings and roadside bombs.

"We cannot fully enjoy Eid because of all the explosions we hear," said Karar al-Aboudi, 25, the owner of a stall near one park. "We have no reason to celebrate under occupation and terrorism. We pray to God that in the next Eid, our country will be stable and free."

In a speech marking Eid in another part of Baghdad, a top Shiite leader urged voters to support his coalition in Iraq's Dec. 15 parliamentary election.

Abdel-Aziz al-Hakim, head of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution of Iraq, told a crowd gathered at his party headquarters that the aim of his candidates is "to protect all Iraqis, not only Shiites but also minority Sunnis and Kurds."

Two major religious parties SCIRI and Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari's Dawa Party form Iraq's top Shiite alliance. Both parties have been criticized for their close ties to Iran.

When Iraq elected its current interim parliament on Jan. 30, many Sunnis boycotted the vote, and the Shiite alliance won the biggest share of seats. But many Sunnis are expected to vote in the Dec. 15 ballot for a new parliament, one that will remain in power for four years.
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Snuffysmith
As Youth Riots Spread Across France, Muslim Groups Attempt to Intervene

By Molly Moore

SEVRAN, France, Nov. 4 -- By dusk Friday, the streets of Sevran were deserted. Inside high-rise apartments and stone cottages here on the outskirts of Paris, residents waited for the explosions and sirens to begin.

"Last night I thought I was in Baghdad, not somewhere in France," said Nabila Chaibi, a 22-year-old sales clerk, her angular face swathed in a white head scarf. Her eyes displayed the fatigue of a sleepless night.

Sevran is at the epicenter of violence that has convulsed many of the poor immigrant areas in Paris's northern suburbs for nine days. After the sun set Friday night, the violence resumed, with youths setting fire to two buildings, including a bakery, and 10 cars in the northern community of Val d'Oise, police reported.

Night after night, youths armed with rocks, sticks and gasoline bombs have confronted police and set cars, businesses, government buildings and schools on fire. Police officers said Friday that approximately 1,260 vehicles had been torched in the Paris area in the past week, including 23 buses parked in a depot near Versailles.

The worst unrest in France in recent years has paralyzed the government, setting senior officials bickering over how to curb the violence. President Jacques Chirac has not publicly addressed the country other than to issue a statement through his spokesman appealing for calm.

The attacks have underscored anger and frustration among immigrants and their French-born children who inhabit the country's largest and poorest slum areas. A large percentage of this population is Muslim, and Islamic neighborhood groups have been trying to dissuade young people from taking part in the rioting.

Thursday night into Friday morning, the violence spread to other parts of France for the first time. Attacks and fires were reported in Normandy on the northwest coast, Dijon in the central Burgundy region and Provence in the far south.

The attacks were triggered when two Muslim teenagers were electrocuted last week after they leapt into a power substation in an attempt to evade a police who had set up an identity checkpoint. Several dozen policemen and assailants have since been injured in street fighting, but no further deaths have been reported.

Still, some of the violence has been devastating. On Wednesday night, youths firebombed a bus here with the passengers inside. As the last passenger, a 56-year-old woman, descended the steps on crutches, an assailant splashed her with gasoline and another threw a flaming rag at her, according to residents and police reports. The driver put out the flames and rushed her to a hospital, where she was diagnosed with second- and third-degree burns.

"The last two nights, there was panic everywhere," said Bekkay Merzak, a leader of the Islamic organization in Sevran. "People didn't know what was happening outside their own buildings. When they left a car out, they didn't know what they would find in the morning."

The French government has deployed 1,300 riot police in the streets of troubled communities. It has dispatched firefighters from around the Paris region to relieve their suburban counterparts, exhausted from the nightly demands of chasing hundreds of blazes.

Some politicians and police unions have urged the government to declare a state of emergency or impose curfews on the communities that have been hit hardest.

The riots have not touched popular tourist sites in Paris. But the road and rail line that many foreign visitors use to travel between the city and Charles de Gaulle International Airport slice through the most troubled districts.

Two trains connecting Paris and the airport were attacked Thursday, prompting engineers to run only one in five trains on Friday, rail officials said. The U.S. Embassy warned travelers Friday against taking trains to the airport, calling conditions in the troubled areas "extremely violent."

Almost every exit sign off the A1 highway to the airport identifies a town that has been the scene of nightly attacks.

Just off the highway, in Aulnay-sous-Bois, a businessman in a gray suit on Friday picked through the rubble of a Renault car dealership that is now a blackened hulk, its shattered showroom windows exposing the charred frames of latest-model automobiles.

The next exit pointed to Le Blanc-Mesnil, where 17-year-old Geraldine Marie-Reine stood gazing at the ruins of the community gymnasium where she played as a child. "It's a public place," said Marie-Reine, who was born in the West Indies. "It belongs to everybody."

She said some of the youths who burned the building were former classmates who had also played there as children. "I know them," she said. "Seeing it destroyed by other youths hurts."

She narrowed her eyes at two teenage boys who sauntered past. She nodded, silently mouthing the French word for "them."

Nearer the airport, black smoke mixed with low-hanging gray clouds as firefighters battled a blaze set 13 hours earlier at a warehouse filled with paint, flooring and wall materials.

In Sevran, about halfway between Paris and the airport, Muslim leaders have been meeting inside a former supermarket that is now the Grand Mosque of Sevran. There, they are plotting a strategy to curb the violence in a town of 47,000 people where a large percentage of the population is Muslim.

Bekkay Merzak, secretary general of the Sevran Muslim Cultural Association, said he feared the rioting was damaging the image of Muslims generally. The rampaging youths are "harming Islam and themselves," Merzak said. "They don't know their own religion."

Each day, Merzak dispatches a cadre of young volunteers door to door to plead the association's case: Young people, stay away from the violence; parents, keep your children in the house at night.

"I talk about how our religion condemns these acts," said Amin Benabderradname, 25, who had a thick black beard and wore an embroidered white cap on his shaved head. During his rounds on Wednesday, he said, he encountered several teenagers filling two large sacks with rocks for the coming night. Benabderradname said he persuaded them to surrender their weapons to him.

Many youths in Sevran and elsewhere have pursued a dangerous nightly game of hide-and-seek with police officers and firefighters. Police said the attackers' tactics began shifting Thursday night, with fewer incidents of large gangs confronting police and more incidents of small, fast-moving teams setting fires.

Sevran residents said the attackers would ignite one car, and then, before firefighters could douse the flames, move on to torch another vehicle several streets away. Their mobility leaves remnants of destruction scattered throughout the city.

Muslim leaders who have been talking with young rioters say that many are driven by anger at the government over the neglect of the housing projects, where unemployment and crime are rampant. A statement by Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy that rioters were "scum" particularly incensed many of them.

They are also frustrated at job and social discrimination against the neighborhoods' residents, many of whom were born in France to immigrant parents.

While many residents share the indignation of the young people, they are expressing increasing anger at what the rioters are doing. Many of the burned-out cars and businesses are owned by local people. The loss of government facilities lowers the quality of life.

"Fed up!" read the headline in Friday's suburban editions of the newspaper Le Parisien. Religious, business, civic and government leaders in several of the hardest-hit towns, including Sevran, are planning demonstrations this weekend to protest the violence and appeal to the youths to stop.


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Snuffysmith
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/americas/11/...mmit/index.html

Americas summit protest turns violent
Anger in streets over Bush, economic policies as leaders gather

MAR DEL PLATA, Argentina (CNN) -- Protesters set one building on fire Friday and threw objects at police in the streets of this resort city as the leaders of 34 nations began the fourth Summit of the Americas.

Small bands of demonstrators threw Molotov cocktails, set bonfires in the streets with items looted from stores, burned U.S. flags and set a bank ablaze.

Argentine police responded with tear gas to disperse the demonstrators, who did not breach the security cordon set up around the hotel where the summit was taking place.

The protest was not visible from the summit site, about a mile away. (Watch as protesters set a building on fire -- 1:25)

Local media reported at least 20 injuries, but that number has not been independently confirmed.

The demonstrators retreated after about an hour, and two hours later there was an eerie calm on the streets just before sundown, CNN Producer Alec Mirian said.

Earlier in the day, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez led thousands of protesters in a rally against President Bush's policies.

Chavez, who U.S. leaders have said is a source of instability in the hemisphere, condemned what he called U.S. imperialism while demonstrators opposed to the Iraq war and U.S.-led trade policies called Bush a "fascist" and a "terrorist."

Argentine soccer legend Diego Maradona also participated in the protest, wearing a T-shirt accusing Bush of war crimes. (Watch video of the protest -- :28)

Chavez, a left-leaning populist, routinely denounces Bush as "Mr. Danger" and refers to the United States as "the Empire."

Bush was expected to see Chavez at the summit later in the day. At a brief news conference, Bush said he would be "polite."

He also said he viewed his participation in the summit as an "opportunity to positively affirm our belief in democracy and human rights and human dignity."

Bush said he was gratified by his meetings with leaders of several Central American countries, which he described as "young democracies" eager to implement a free trade agreement.

Bush's first meeting Friday was with leaders of nations that joined the Central American Free Trade Agreement. CAFTA was narrowly approved by Congress in July after an intense push by the White House. (Full story)

No comment on leak scandal
Bush began his day with praise for Argentine President Nestor Kirchner and, at a joint news conference, made an apparent reference to his unpopularity in the region.

"It's not easy to host all these countries -- particularly not easy to host, perhaps, me. But thank you for doing it," Bush said to Kirchner.

The Argentine president, speaking through a translator, said the two had "a very important meeting" and were "quite candid" in discussions on numerous issues "related to our bilateral relations."

Neither leader took questions at a brief media appearance together.

Later, speaking alone with reporters, Bush deflected questions about political problems at home. It was the first time he had taken questions since the indictment of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Vice President Cheney's former top aide.(Watch: Bush leaves, troubles follow -- 2:27)

Bush said he would not talk about the indictment, or the future of his chief political adviser, Karl Rove. (Full story)

Economics on the agenda
One of the top economic issues for Friday's host nation involves the International Monetary Fund.

Argentina is seeking a new IMF loan agreement like the one that helped the country out of a major economic crisis in 2002. Argentine leaders have complained that they're not getting the kind of deal they need now.

"The president was quite firm in his belief that the IMF ought to have a different attitude toward Argentina," Bush said.

He did not express support for Argentina's position, instead sticking by previous assertions that he would leave that between Argentina and the IMF.

Bush said Kirchner has made "wise decisions" that helped Argentina's economy change "in quite dramatic fashions." He added that Kirchner's economic track record makes it possible for him to "take his case to the IMF with a much stronger hand."

Chavez leads rally
"Peoples of the Americas are rising once again, saying no to imperialism, saying no to fascism, saying no to intervention -- and saying no to death," Chavez yelled to the cheering crowd of demonstrators.

Carrying anti-U.S. signs and large images of regional figures such as Marxist rebel Che Guevara, thousands of protesters began their march on the streets and then moved into Mundialista Stadium, where Chavez led the rally.

Among the other ways Chavez has chosen to tweak Washington's nose is by embracing Cuban President Fidel Castro, who was not invited to the summit because the communist leader is not recognized as an elected head of state.

U.S. officials downplayed any Bush-Chavez subplot at the proceedings.

"This summit is not about Hugo Chavez," U.S. national security adviser Stephen Hadley told reporters Wednesday. "We've had some long-standing concerns about the policy for his government. This is not news."

Early in the day, thousands of protesters had welcomed a train bringing a group of fellow demonstrators from Buenos Aires -- including Bolivian presidential hopeful Evo Morales.

Chanting "Fascist Bush! You are the terrorist!" the protesters massed along the sides of the train, trying to shake hands with those inside. (Full story)

The violent protests were not limited to Argentina. Associated Press photographers took images showing police battling demonstrators in Uruguay on Friday.

Controversy over free trade
Bush wants to create a free trade zone throughout the Americas, from Canada to Argentina. He has argued that all nations involved will benefit economically.

But leaders of several nations reject the notion, saying the United States would take advantage of smaller nations. Chavez is one of the most prominent critics.

"We bury the free trade agreement today here," Chavez said at the rally.

Bush will also make stops in Brazil on Saturday and Panama on Sunday.

CNN's Dana Bash, Alec Mirian and Lucia Newman contributed to this report.

Copyright 2005 CNN. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press contributed to this report.
Snuffysmith
Al Qaeda`s Afghanistan Jailbreak

From DEBKA-Net-Weekly Oct. 21

November 2, 2005, 2:34 PM (GMT+02:00)


Four al Qaeda prisoners who got away


To subscribe to DEBKA-Net-Weekly click HERE .

To this day no one can explain how four senior al Qaeda operatives were able to break out of the top-security American jail in the Afghan Bagram air base near Kabul on July 10; how they breached its defenses, cut across the giant base peopled by 12,000 US troops, slipped through checkpoints and security screenings and exited the base undetected.

There can be no doubt that the fugitives received outside help – whether in the form of inside intelligence or Afghans employed on the base.

This week, on Tuesday, October 18, the four escapees surfaced in a videotape aired by the Dubai-based Arab language satellite TV channel Al Arabiya. Its editing was of superior quality compared with the tapes that usually coming out of Afghanistan.

In one section, Mahmoud al-Kahtani, a Saudi, instructs a group of fighters and shows them a map of the jail from which the four escaped. He explained that Sunday was chosen for the jailbreak because then non-believers have the day off.

Abdullah Hashimi, a Syrian, next explained how the four fugitives hid for four days inside the American air base surrounding the prison without being discovered. They then fled and joined the Taliban outside.

The third fugitive, Mahmoud Ahmad, an Iraqi known also as Faruq al-Iraqi, is the narrator. He was arrested in 2002 in Indonesia as the suspected link between al Qaeda and the Indonesian Jemaah Islamiya. The fourth fugitive, Muhammad Hassan, identified as a Libyan, says the least of the four but also appeared to be the group’s leader.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s counter-terror sources identify Hassan as Sheikh Hassan Qaid, a Libyan.

Before the videotape was released, he circulated a special message to all al Qaeda fighters which outlined in detail his impressions of American methods of pursuit, detention, interrogation and handling of prisoners in the US jail facilities where he was held.

According to Hassan Qaid, the Americans when they caught him subjected him to a full body search; they took not only his finger- and toe-prints, but photographed the retinas of his eyes and took hair samples from all parts of his body.

He listed the eight questions which he claimed American interrogators fired at him:

1. What terrorist attacks are planned for inside the United States?

2. What terrorist attacks are planned against American targets overseas?

3. Where are Osama bin Laden and his close aides?

4. Who are the next-generation al Qaeda commanders and where are they to be found?

5. Where are the Taliban leader Mullah Omar and his following hiding?

6. Where are Mullah Omar’s spiritual mentor, Sheikh Jalal al Edin Haqani, and his son Saraj al Edin Hagani, the Taliban’s operations chief?

7. Where does al Qaeda get its financing and who are its sources?

8. Where do al Qaeda fighters hold their weapons training exercises?

Without naming his sources, Qaid offered detailed information on additional American and Afghan detention camps in Afghanistan - with their codenames. Facilities on the lines of the Bagram prison, where he and his comrades were held, are located at the Kandahar military air base in the south. Only al Qaeda members rated by the Americans as senior are kept there, he said; the others are sent to camps managed by Afghans in the interior. Some are also shipped to prisons in Jordan, Egypt, the UAE and Morocco. Of late, the Americans had begun transferring prisoners to Indonesia.

The escaped al Qaeda captive claimed that the most important American prison in the country, where he and his comrades were held, is located at the end of the Bagram airfield’s runway. It is there that the Americans hold Arab al Qaeda prisoners. They call it the Dark Camp. Despite repeated promises to the Red Cross to shut the camp down, it remains operational.

Another American prison in Kabul is located, says the escaped al Qaeda fugitive, in the former palace of the ousted Taliban regime’s leader Mullah Omar. There is one more American jail called Presidency 2 in Kabul and another in the northern Valley of Panjshir.

Qaid’s letter to this friends ends by saying that he has collected many important pieces of information about the Americans, but he will share them only with people he trusts whom he will brief by a different form of communication.

“The knife that slaughtered the guards at Bagram and set us free is now on its way to other places,” said Hassan Qaid. This is taken to mean that further jailbreaks are in the works in Afghanistan on the lines of the escape of the four al Qaeda operatives from Bagram.

Incidentally, US officials in Kabul have never confirmed the escape of this foursome or verified the claim that prison warders were murdered.
Snuffysmith
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Riots in French immigrant communities began a second week with disorders spreading out from suburbs of Paris to areas of Dijon, Rouen and Marseille

November 4, 2005, 6:50 PM (GMT+02:00)

Riots in French immigrant communities began a second week with disorders spreading out from suburbs of Paris to areas of Dijon, Rouen and Marseille

French media report up to 600 vehicles destroyed in greater Paris, including 23 buses at a terminal near Versailles. The pattern of violence in the impoverished North African and African communities has shifted from crowds clashing with police to targeted arson attacks by rampaging youths, many against businesses and warehouses but also at least one school. Local officials lost patience with the government after prime minister Dominique de Villepan promised an “action plan for the suburbs” later this month. “All we need is one death and I think it will get out of control,” said one mayor.

The rioting began last week when two teenagers of African origin were electrocuted in a power substation in Clichy-sous-Bois while fleeing the police. A tear gas grenade against a local mosque sparked more rage in the suburb’s large Muslim community. The escalating violence raises fears of a spreading uprising by France’s six million Muslims across the country.


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theglobalchinese
Police arrest 78 in riots at Americas summit Xinhua
Argentine police have arrested 78 people, including four women, over Friday's riotsin this southern city where the 4th Summit of the Americas is being held, local TV reported on Saturday, citing police sources. The police already made a total of 60 arrests by Friday, the first day of the summit, the report said. A Brazilian reporter was arrested but later released and a French reporter was also arrested as he has no proper credentials,said the report. The report added that rioters smashed the glass storefronts of over 10 shops, chain stores and supermarkets and set fire to a local bank. On Friday, one day after US President George W. Bush arrived inthe coastal city to attend the summit, tens of thousands of people took to the streets to protest against American foreign policy andthe US-led war on Iraq. The demonstrations turned violent as the demonstrators threw rocks at police who fired tear gas at rioters in return. However, no major injuries have been reported so far. In addition to the riots in Mar del Plata, violent demonstrations and riots also happened across the country. In the capital Buenos Aires, at least seven people and seven policemen were injured in clashes.
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theglobalchinese
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Roving gangs of youths launched hit-and-run arson attacks in the ninth straight night of violence in poor Paris suburbs, as copycat unrest in major towns complicated the government’s search for a response. Rioters burnt almost 900 vehicles in the Paris region and large provincial cities like Strasbourg, Rennes, Toulouse and Lille, officials said, the highest total since the deaths of two youths while apparently fleeing police sparked the disturbances.
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Reconstruction Top Priority: Pakistan to postpone F-16s Purchase
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Snuffysmith
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-1859288,00.html

The Sunday Times November 06, 2005

‘Gulag’ leak from CIA men
Tony Allen-Mills


EASTERN European countries were yesterday scrambling to distance themselves from the CIA as officials in Washington searched for the source of an embarrassing leak that exposed a programme of secret jails for terrorist detainees.

Claims that the CIA has been hiding prominent Al-Qaeda members at a so-called “black site” facility in eastern Europe have prompted angry denials from Romania, Poland and Albania.

As details emerged yesterday of CIA flights to remote military airfields in northeast Poland and southeast Romania, George W Bush’s administration ordered an internal inquiry into how classified data was leaked to The Washington Post and Human Rights Watch, a New York-based group.

Senior intelligence sources blamed the leak on CIA officers unhappy at having to maintain what one former counter-terrorism official described as “secret gulags”.

The prisons are believed to hold at least 30 Al-Qaeda leaders labelled “ghost detainees” by Human Rights Watch. Many no longer have any intelligence value, but the CIA has been ordered to shield them from international scrutiny or legal proceedings.

The publication of flight logs detailing CIA movements has focused attention on a former military base at Szczytno-Szymany in Poland.

Polish officials acknowledged that a Boeing 737 carrying seven Americans landed at the base in September 2003 and took five others on board. The plane continued to the Mihail Kogalniceanu air base in Romania, then to the US base in Guantanamo, Cuba.

Poland and Romania said the plane’s stops had nothing to do with prisoner transfers. Other sources said Albania or Macedonia might have co-operated with the CIA.
Snuffysmith
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-1859222,00.html
The Sunday Times November 06, 2005

Al-Qaeda woos recruits with nuclear bomb website
Uzi Mahnaimi and Tom Walker



AN Al-Qaeda website containing detailed instructions in Arabic on how to make nuclear, “dirty” and biological bombs has attracted more than 57,000 hits and hundreds of readers’ inquiries. Terrorism experts are warning that the site could be boosting the organisation’s appeal to would-be assassins in Britain and abroad.
The manual, posted on October 6 on a forum titled Al-Firdaws, or Paradise, contains 80 pages of instructions and pictures of kitchen bomb-making techniques. It is divided into nine lessons under the overall heading The Nuclear Bomb of Jihad and the Way to Enrich Uranium, and is dedicated as a “gift to the commander of the jihad fighters, Sheikh Osama Bin Laden, for the purpose of jihad for the sake of Allah”.



As well as describing how to make a nuclear bomb from enriched uranium — impossible for the layman — the manual explains how to make simple bombs that can blow up anything from electrical generators to petrol stations.

The site encourages its readers to look for materials such as radium, which it says is an “effective alternative to uranium and available on the market”. It is unclear who the author is or where he is based: he describes himself simply as “Layth al-Islam”, or the “Lion of Islam”, belonging to a group called “the Black Flags”.

“Fight them so that Allah will punish them at your hands and will put them to shame and will give you victory over them,” he writes, quoting the Koran. “Perhaps nuclear weapons represent a technology of the 1940s. However, the Crusaders, the allies of the Satan, Allah’s curse be upon them, insist on depriving the jihad fighters of the right to have these weapons.”

The site’s appeal is evident from the enthusiasm of its correspondents. One of the most recent, Mariyam al-Jihadiyya, writes: “God bless you for this precious topic . . . fight them, through your hands God tortures them . . . and heal the hearts of the faithful people.” Beneath she includes a couple of pictures for her hero. “I love you, Osama,” she writes.

Other users complain that not all the site’s links are activated, and several urge caution. “Don’t talk about things you don’t understand,” writes one. For enthusiasts there are links to a mailing service that provides regular updates on bomb-making techniques.

Nuclear physicists were alarmed by the site. “Normally you just get generic principles, but this appears to be more like a proper instruction manual,” said John Hassard, reader in physics at Imperial College, London. “The thing about this website that is striking is that it is very particular. A lot of effort has been put into it.”

He said that while it was highly unlikely that amateur bomb-builders could get hold of fissile material, smuggling networks with access to nuclear materials from the break-up of the Soviet Union could use the information.

“It is a very real threat and one which we can’t afford to ignore,” he said. “I would say this is public enemy No 1.”

Experts on Al-Qaeda said the organisation appeared to be moving from a phase where it preached a fatwa permitting the use of weapons of mass destruction — issued two years ago — to one where it encourages its followers to produce both “dirty” bombs and smaller devices similar to those used in the London Tube attacks.

“Al-Qaeda strives to move directly from the stage of obtaining the WMD to the stage of using it,” said Matti Steinberg, an Israeli expert on the organisation. He said efforts by Al-Qaeda, whose members are Sunni Muslims, to produce a nuclear weapon also reflected its fear that Shi’ite Iran was on the brink of producing a bomb. Bin Laden wanted to “balance the efforts by Iran to obtain the first Shi’ite bomb by building the first Sunni one”.

While assessing the website’s influence on young British Muslims is difficult, terror experts believe it is an important potential recruiting tool.

Jeevan Deol, a terrorism analyst at the London School of Oriental and African Studies, said that while Al-Qaeda could not match western military capabilities and intelligence, its use of “cyberwarfare” helped redress the balance.

“They are using the web in a focused way for propaganda and recruiting,” said Deol. “Some jihadi kid in Leeds clicks on it and thinks, ‘Wow, 50,000 hits — we don’t see Osama on telly any longer but we’re big, we’re bad and extremely engaged in all these things’.”


Additional reporting: Widiane Moussa and Flora Bagenal
Snuffysmith
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politi...ticle325155.ece

The Independent & The Independent on Sunday
6 November 2005 00:33 Home > News > World > World Politics

The Niger connection
Britain insists it did not rely on forgeries for its case against Iraq. But its own 'evidence' came from the same shady Italian intelligence broker. Andrew Buncombe, John Phillips and Raymond Whitaker report
Published: 06 November 2005
A political scandal in Italy, involving allegations that Italian secret agents followed a shady intelligence operator around London as he headed for a meeting with MI6, has called into question one of Britain's last justifications for the invasion of Iraq.

Silvio Berlusconi's government has admitted that agents of Sismi, the Italian military intelligence service, tracked the movements in London of Rocco Martino, an ex-informer, in the autumn of 2001. It did not say whether the British authorities were informed, but admitted that Mr Martino was also followed by Sismi in the US, without the knowledge of the FBI.

According to Italian press reports, however, Mr Martino had a meeting with the Secret Intelligence Service in London. A year later, the 66-year-old, who made a living peddling information to intelligence services and journalists, was the source of forged documents purporting to show that Saddam Hussein was buying uranium for nuclear weapons from the west African state of Niger.

The documents were used by the US to make its case for war. President George Bush cited the uranium claim in his State of the Union address in January 2003. But as soon as the US passed the documents to the UN's nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, it denounced them as obvious fakes. The ensuing controversy in America has now resulted in charges against a top former White House official, Lewis "Scooter" Libby, and a continuing investigation into Karl Rove, Mr Bush's closest aide.

But while the US has admitted the uranium claim should never have been made, Tony Blair's government, which first made the allegation public in its September 2002 dossier on Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction, still insists it was supported by "separate intelligence".

Britain has always refused to disclose the nature of this information, even to the IAEA, because it was provided by a "foreign service".

In October 2001, Sismi sent its British and American counterparts a dossier on alleged Iraqi attempts to buy uranium from Niger. Whether Rocco Martino delivered it to MI6 headquarters in Vauxhall Cross, as some Italian reports claim, is not clear.

But Vincent Cannistraro, a senior former official with the CIA, told The Independent on Sunday that "some of the text of the 2001 report showed up in the later [forged] documents.

"There seems to be a common source ... it seems that the [separate] British intelligence came from the same false and discredited source."

A public row in Italy involving the head of Sismi, General Nicolo Pollari, has brought to light much information on the Niger uranium claims. Sismi has acknowledged informing other intelligence services, including the CIA, in a letter on 15 October 2001, of "evidence of intelligence" on Iraqi efforts to procure uranium from Niger.

The information came from a woman who worked at the Niger embassy in Rome, given the code name of La Signora by Sismi. She also provided Niger's cryptographic codes and other internal documents.

The CIA questioned the report, and General Pollari says he also recorded his doubts in writing at the time. But he does not appear to have told his counterparts in other countries, where La Signora was still "a reliable source".

Sismi says it was next involved in 2002, when Mr Martino began offering the fake Niger documents to anyone willing to buy them. His first client is reported to have been the French intelligence service, but in October 2002 they were given to the American embassy in Rome by Panorama, a Berlusconi-owned magazine he had approached.

What happened next is the subject of furious argument in Italy. General Pollari says he warned other countries about the forgeries, including Britain.

In spring 2003, according to his account, Mr Martino approached the British embassy in Brussels, saying an "associate" could provide information on Iraq, Niger and uranium. The British asked Sismi to identify the man from CCTV images, and the Italians asked them to string him along in order to uncover the associate. Eventually Mr Martino admitted there was no one else involved.

The Sismi chief identified Mr Martino as the source of the forged documents in a closed Italian parliamentary committee meeting last week. He described Mr Martino as a former intelligence informer who had been "kicked out of the agency". Both men have claimed that at the time he was hawking around the documents, Mr Martino was working for the French, a possible source of Britain's "separate intelligence". A senior French intelligence official declined to say whether Mr Martino had been a paid agent of France, The New York Times reported last week, but called General Pollari's assertions that France disseminated the false documents "scandalous".

General Pollari's critics in Italy claim he worked closely with American neo-conservatives to spread the Niger uranium claims to the highest levels of the US administration, bypassing the CIA. He is said to have had a meeting in Rome in December 2001 with a group of neo-cons led by Michael Ledeen, an influential hawk close to Israel and involved in the Iran-Contra scandal in the 1980s.

The same critics see Mr Martino as a useful pawn. In an Italian newspaper yesterday, he repeated that he had not forged the documents nor known them to be forged. He is unlikely tohave imagined their impact.

Revelations in Italy support the Butler inquiry's statement that British intelligence had not seen the forged documents when Mr Blair's WMD dossier was published in September 2002. But the inquiry's conclusion that Britain's "separate intelligence" was "credible" has been widely criticised.

A political scandal in Italy, involving allegations that Italian secret agents followed a shady intelligence operator around London as he headed for a meeting with MI6, has called into question one of Britain's last justifications for the invasion of Iraq.

Silvio Berlusconi's government has admitted that agents of Sismi, the Italian military intelligence service, tracked the movements in London of Rocco Martino, an ex-informer, in the autumn of 2001. It did not say whether the British authorities were informed, but admitted that Mr Martino was also followed by Sismi in the US, without the knowledge of the FBI.

According to Italian press reports, however, Mr Martino had a meeting with the Secret Intelligence Service in London. A year later, the 66-year-old, who made a living peddling information to intelligence services and journalists, was the source of forged documents purporting to show that Saddam Hussein was buying uranium for nuclear weapons from the west African state of Niger.

The documents were used by the US to make its case for war. President George Bush cited the uranium claim in his State of the Union address in January 2003. But as soon as the US passed the documents to the UN's nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, it denounced them as obvious fakes. The ensuing controversy in America has now resulted in charges against a top former White House official, Lewis "Scooter" Libby, and a continuing investigation into Karl Rove, Mr Bush's closest aide.

But while the US has admitted the uranium claim should never have been made, Tony Blair's government, which first made the allegation public in its September 2002 dossier on Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction, still insists it was supported by "separate intelligence".

Britain has always refused to disclose the nature of this information, even to the IAEA, because it was provided by a "foreign service".

In October 2001, Sismi sent its British and American counterparts a dossier on alleged Iraqi attempts to buy uranium from Niger. Whether Rocco Martino delivered it to MI6 headquarters in Vauxhall Cross, as some Italian reports claim, is not clear.

But Vincent Cannistraro, a senior former official with the CIA, told The Independent on Sunday that "some of the text of the 2001 report showed up in the later [forged] documents.

"There seems to be a common source ... it seems that the [separate] British intelligence came from the same false and discredited source."

A public row in Italy involving the head of Sismi, General Nicolo Pollari, has brought to light much information on the Niger uranium claims. Sismi has acknowledged informing other intelligence services, including the CIA, in a letter on 15 October 2001, of "evidence of intelligence" on Iraqi efforts to procure uranium from Niger.
The information came from a woman who worked at the Niger embassy in Rome, given the code name of La Signora by Sismi. She also provided Niger's cryptographic codes and other internal documents.

The CIA questioned the report, and General Pollari says he also recorded his doubts in writing at the time. But he does not appear to have told his counterparts in other countries, where La Signora was still "a reliable source".

Sismi says it was next involved in 2002, when Mr Martino began offering the fake Niger documents to anyone willing to buy them. His first client is reported to have been the French intelligence service, but in October 2002 they were given to the American embassy in Rome by Panorama, a Berlusconi-owned magazine he had approached.

What happened next is the subject of furious argument in Italy. General Pollari says he warned other countries about the forgeries, including Britain.

In spring 2003, according to his account, Mr Martino approached the British embassy in Brussels, saying an "associate" could provide information on Iraq, Niger and uranium. The British asked Sismi to identify the man from CCTV images, and the Italians asked them to string him along in order to uncover the associate. Eventually Mr Martino admitted there was no one else involved.

The Sismi chief identified Mr Martino as the source of the forged documents in a closed Italian parliamentary committee meeting last week. He described Mr Martino as a former intelligence informer who had been "kicked out of the agency". Both men have claimed that at the time he was hawking around the documents, Mr Martino was working for the French, a possible source of Britain's "separate intelligence". A senior French intelligence official declined to say whether Mr Martino had been a paid agent of France, The New York Times reported last week, but called General Pollari's assertions that France disseminated the false documents "scandalous".

General Pollari's critics in Italy claim he worked closely with American neo-conservatives to spread the Niger uranium claims to the highest levels of the US administration, bypassing the CIA. He is said to have had a meeting in Rome in December 2001 with a group of neo-cons led by Michael Ledeen, an influential hawk close to Israel and involved in the Iran-Contra scandal in the 1980s.

The same critics see Mr Martino as a useful pawn. In an Italian newspaper yesterday, he repeated that he had not forged the documents nor known them to be forged. He is unlikely tohave imagined their impact.

Revelations in Italy support the Butler inquiry's statement that British intelligence had not seen the forged documents when Mr Blair's WMD dossier was published in September 2002. But the inquiry's conclusion that Britain's "separate intelligence" was "credible" has been widely criticised.
Snuffysmith
Iraq offensive meets resistance
Several thousand US and Iraqi troops have met sporadic resistance during an offensive against al-Qaeda militants near Iraq's Syrian border
Some 2,500 American marines and other troops, as well as about 1,000 Iraqi government soldiers, are involved near Husayba, the US military said.

It is the first time Iraqi troops have been used on a major scale in the western Anbar province, it added.

There have been no reports of military or civilian casualties.

Air strikes

Operation Steel Curtain comes after two offensives near the Syrian border last month.

"The force is moving through the city to restore security along the border," a statement said.

"The Iraqi and US forces have encountered sporadic resistance - mostly small arms fire and improvised explosive devices - from al-Qaeda in Iraq-led insurgents throughout the city."

At least nine strikes were ordered against what the US military described as "strongpoints" which had been firing on troops.

At least 400 civilians who have fled the fighting are being sheltered in an abandoned housing estate.

Its aim is to "restore security along the Iraqi-Syrian border and destroy the al-Qaeda in Iraq terrorist network operating throughout Husayba", the US military said in its statement.


Iraqi units have included scouts tasked with identifying militant strongpoints and unexploded bombs.

The area's population is predominantly Sunni Muslim.

Sunni political parties in Baghdad have criticised the operation, saying that innocent people would be the victims, said the BBC's correspondent Jim Muir from Baghdad.

They have taken issue with a recent statement from the Iraqi defence minister, who threatened to bring down the houses of militants on their heads.

Troops, the US military added, are tasked with both finding insurgents and locating their "safe houses" ahead of the Iraqi parliamentary election on 15 December.

'Al-Qaeda route'

Steel Curtain also "marks the first large-scale employment of multiple battalion-sized units of Iraqi Army forces in combined operations" with US-led forces.

The area around Husaybah, located near the border town of Qaim and is about 320km (200 miles) west of Baghdad, is used by al-Qaeda in Iraq to smuggle in foreign fighters, money and equipment, the US military believes.


"They do not bring battalions - they bring the leadership, the financial man, the demolition expert," Marine Col Stephen Davis told AFP news agency.

Al-Qaeda in Iraq is among Iraq's most feared militant organisations, having claimed responsibility for many of the country's bloodiest bombings and beheadings.

Its commander is said to be Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

October's two big operations, Iron Fist and River Gate, were aimed at ending al-Qaeda militants' "campaign of murder and intimidation" in the province.

Last week, US warplanes destroyed a building in Husayba, killing five leaders of the militant al-Qaeda group, according to military statements.

In another development, a prominent Sunni Muslim politician has been seriously injured in a shooting in Baghdad.

Fakhri al-Qaisi, a spokesman for the Iraqi National Dialogue Council was shot several times when the car he was travelling in was ambushed in the mainly Sunni neighbourhood of Ghazaliya in the west of the city.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/midd...ast/4409332.stm

Published: 2005/11/05 21:13:44 GMT

© BBC MMV
Snuffysmith
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-1859301,00.html
The Sunday Times November 06, 2005

Spy story that has enmeshed Bush
Michael Smith


THERE was no hint in the few small pieces of intelligence that came into the MI6 headquarters at Vauxhall Cross, London, in February 1999 of what was to follow. There was certainly no indication that nearly seven years later they might rock America.

By last week, however, the fallout from that intelligence had caused a senior White House aide, Lewis “Scooter” Libby, to be indicted on charges of perjury over the naming of a CIA officer.

Speculation mounted that two of the most powerful figures in Washington — Dick Cheney, the vice-president, and Karl Rove, political adviser to President George W Bush — would also be implicated in the scandal.

This is no Watergate or Lewinsky affair. It is a relatively arcane matter reflecting the mutual contempt of the vice-president and the CIA. But because it feeds on the increasingly bitter debate about the war in Iraq, it threatens the authority of an increasingly lame-duck second-term president.

The background to the scandal lies in Saddam Hussein’s attempts to rekindle his clandestine nuclear weapons programme in the 1990s, despite the United Nations sanctions regime, and in Cheney’s determination to see the dictator fall from power.

The information that reached London in 1999 came from MI6’s French counterpart, the DGSE. It arose from a visit made by Wissam al-Zahawie, an Iraqi diplomat, to Niger, the former French colony in west Africa. According to the DGSE, he was alleged to have asked President Ibrahim Bare Mainassara of Niger to supply Baghdad with the semi- processed uranium ore known as yellowcake.

The French had a finger in every pie in their former colony and their atomic energy commission controlled its uranium mines. They knew that Niger had provided Iraq with uranium in the 1980s.

It was only two months after UN weapons inspectors had left Iraq and both MI6 and the DGSE had been expecting Saddam to test the sanctions regime. So MI6 saw the intelligence as entirely credible. There were other reports that backed it up, including intercepted Iraqi communications, but only the French intelligence was conclusive.

Crucially, MI6 also believed that Saddam would be unable to restart his nuclear weapons programme until sanctions came to an end, a view which concurred with that of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN’s nuclear watchdog.

The DGSE began an intelligence operation to block Saddam from obtaining uranium, urging its agents to find out all they could about his efforts. One of those who got involved was Rocco Martino, a former police officer who had worked for the Italian intelligence service between 1976 and 1985, when he was sacked for being a “chancer”. He tapped up contacts at the Niger embassy in Rome.

The French did not at the time pass their information to the CIA. Under the rules that govern intelligence exchange, MI6 could not do so without French permission, although it did pass on its own less conclusive evidence.

The Iraq-Niger nexus vanished from intelligence screens for two years. By the time it reappeared, global politics had been transformed by the September 11 attacks on America.

In October 2001, as Bush launched his war on terror, the CIA raised the yellowcake affair in its intelligence assessments for the first time. Its information came, however, from Italian sources, not French.

The CIA cited the Italian intelligence service as saying that Niger had agreed to send several tons of uranium to Iraq. There was little detail in the report and the State Department dismissed it as “highly suspect”.

Indeed, western intelligence officials say now that the Italians had told the Americans to treat it with caution and that there was no evidence that any uranium had changed hands.

In February 2002, however, the Italians provided more details. Niger had allegedly signed a deal in 2000 to sell Iraq 500 tons of yellowcake. This was again circulated by the CIA to top American officials.

Anxious to make the case for war against Iraq, which was under fierce debate within the administration, Cheney wanted to know more.

Unable to provide further information, the CIA asked Joseph Wilson, a former ambassador, to go to Niger to investigate. In his own words, he “spent the next eight days drinking mint tea with dozens of people” who all assured him that there was no deal to supply Iraq with yellowcake. However, they left open the possibility that Iraq had tried and failed to obtain it.

At the time his visit was not seen as significant. A number of US officials pointed out that even if there had been a deal, there was not much chance of anyone admitting it to Wilson.

The yellowcake made its next appearance in September 2002 in the British dossier on Iraqi weapons of mass destruction (WMD), which said that “there is intelligence that Iraq has sought significant quantities of uranium from Niger”.

Martino then re-entered the picture. In October 2002 he presented the DGSE with documents which appeared to show that Niger had signed a deal in July 2000 to supply Iraq with yellowcake — similar to the story Italian intelligence had told the CIA. The DGSE rejected the documents as fake.

Martino offered them for €15,000 to a journalist working on Panorama, the Italian magazine, who took them to the US embassy in Rome for authentication. Copies were sent to Washington. Then, a few weeks later, on November 22, the French opened up. They told the Americans about their original 1999 intelligence and said they were now certain that Iraq had tried and failed to obtain yellowcake.

Washington was receptive. When Iraq complied with a UN demand for details of its WMD programmes, the State Department accused it of omitting its “efforts to procure uranium from Niger”.

By now the yellowcake was at the top of Bush’s agenda. He wanted to mention it in his state of the union address on January 28, 2003 but it was agreed that rather than use disputed classified CIA intelligence, he should cite the British WMD dossier.

He used what have become infamous in America as “the 16 words”: “The British government has learnt that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.”

Six days later, in response to an IAEA request for evidence of Iraq’s attempts to procure uranium, the United States handed over the Martino documents. But in March, on the eve of the invasion of Iraq, the IAEA told the UN security council that the documents were fakes.

Shaken, the CIA eventually withdrew any suggestion that Iraq had sought uranium from Niger. Neither Cheney nor Wilson let go, however.

That July, in the wake of the war, Wilson wrote an angry article in The New York Times accusing the Bush administration of twisting the intelligence on Niger to exaggerate the threat from Iraq.

This prompted a campaign from within the White House to discredit both Wilson and the CIA. Journalists learnt “on double super secret background” that his wife, Valerie Plame, was one of the CIA analysts who had come up with the yellowcake intelligence in the first place.

As a result Robert Novak, a columnist on the Chicago Sun-Times, named her as “a CIA operative”.
Outing a covert CIA officer is illegal under US law and the resultant criminal investigation under a special federal prosecutor has reached right into the White House.

The DGSE, meanwhile, is standing by its original intelligence that in early 1999, Iraq tried to obtain uranium from Niger. So is MI6, despite having ditched every other contentious report that it made on Iraqi WMD.
Snuffysmith
http://fairuse.1accesshost.com/news2/nyt055.html

New York Times
November 6, 2005
Chalabi, in Tehran, Meets With Iranian President Before Traveling to U.S. Next Week
By DEXTER FILKINS
TEHRAN, Nov. 5 - Ahmad Chalabi, the former Iraqi exile who has become a deputy prime minister, met with senior Iranian leaders here on Saturday in what appeared to be an effort to distance himself from them, just days before he visits Washington.

In a series of closed meetings, Mr. Chalabi saw Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the tough-talking Iranian president; Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mattaki; and Ali Larijani, the head of the Iranian National Security Council.

Mr. Chalabi said he had spoken to the Iranians about an issue that seemed likely to endear him to the Americans: the question of Iranian interference in Iraq's domestic politics.

American and some Iraqi officials have long alleged that the Iranian government is deeply involved in Iraqi internal affairs, by directly assisting Iraqi political parties and private Shiite militias.

"The principal reason is to tell them about our concern about some of the activities in Iraq," Mr. Chalabi said of the Iranians. "We feel it is very important to address some of these issues, like border security and so on."

Mr. Chalabi said he also made clear to the Iranians that the Iraqi government would maintain close ties to the United States.

"It is important to emphasize and tell them very clearly that we working with the United States and they have come to help us liberate Iraq and that we are interested in having a decent Iraq," Mr. Chalabi said. "It is very important that they help us achieve that."

The timing of the visit, which both sides said came at the Iranians' request, suggested the possibility that Mr. Chalabi might have been asked to carry a message from the Iranians to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice at their scheduled meeting next week. Mr. Chalabi is also scheduled later to meet the Treasury secretary, John W. Snow.

Mr. Ahmadinejad, a strict Islamist elected in June, has become increasingly isolated in recent weeks.

In September, the International Atomic Energy Agency rebuked Iran for noncompliance with the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty over its insistence on developing advanced nuclear technologies. In a speech on Oct. 26, Mr. Ahmadinejad created a stir when he told a rally of Iranian students that Israel should be "wiped off the map." After those remarks, Kofi Annan, the United Nations secretary general, postponed a visit scheduled for the coming week.

But Mr. Chalabi said he had not been asked by the Iranians to mediate with the Americans. Mr. Larijani, the head of the national security council, also said his government had made no such request.

Mr. Ahmadinejad, who appeared before reporters before meeting with Mr. Chalabi on Saturday, did not speak publicly.

In an interview, Mr. Larijani reiterated his government's intention to continue developing advanced nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. The Bush administration says Iran is hiding its effort to build nuclear weapons.

"The pressure they are putting on Iran over its nuclear program, it will only result in more hatred for America," Mr. Larijani said, reiterating his government's position that it did not intend to develop nuclear weapons.

Mr. Chalabi's visit may be connected to Iraq's parliamentary elections, scheduled for Dec. 15. The events of Saturday suggested that Mr. Chalabi had embarked on a campaign to reposition himself as a secular, American-backed candidate, and, perhaps, an alternative to the Shiite alliance that currently dominates the government in Baghdad.

Earlier this month, Mr. Chalabi said he had dropped out of the Islamist-dominated Shiite coalition that dominated the Iraqi elections in January and that was strongly supported by the Iranian government.

While the exact circumstances of Mr. Chalabi's departure from the Shiite alliance is unclear, Mr. Chalabi said he no longer wanted to be part of what he described as an Islamist coalition. "My intention was to give people in Iraq who are Muslim but who do not support the Islamist parties a choice," Mr. Chalabi said.

Mr. Chalabi's move toward secular leadership appears to signal a new phase in his political maneuvering.

As an exile, he was long a favorite of the Defense Department. But after the American-led invasion, he took a harshly critical line on the efforts of foreign military forces and relations with the Bush administration soured. Last year, he aligned himself with overtly Islamist leaders, including the firebrand cleric Moktada al-Sadr. During that period, the Bush administration accused Mr. Chalabi of divulging classified information to the Iranians.

Mr. Chalabi denied that charge. The outcome of the investigation is not known.

In an interview following his meeting with Iranian leaders, Mr. Chalabi said he had secured a promise that they would not oppose him if he made a run at becoming Iraq's prime minister.

"Clearly I am not going to be a candidate for prime minister because they tell me to," Mr. Chalabi said of the Iranians. "They certainly expressed support for the idea that if the process is done locally then they would not oppose it."

It was impossible to verify that assertion, but Mr. Larijani said that Iranian leaders held Mr. Chalabi in high regard. "He is a very wise man and a very useful person for the future of Iraq," he said.

For their part, Iranian leaders asserted that they had indeed exercised a strong force in internal Iraqi politics, and they said they intended to continue to do so. Last January, after the Shiite coalition's selection of Ibrahim al-Jafaari as its choice to be prime minister, rumors swirled about Baghdad that the Iranians had intervened strongly on his behalf.

When asked about this, Mr. Larijani said the Iranians had indeed intervened strongly with Iraq's Shiite leaders, but he said the Iranians had not sided with a particular candidate.

"America should consider this power as legitimate," Mr. Larijani said of his country's role in Iraqi affairs. "They should not fight it."

Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
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