Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image

Terrorism.com | April 5, 2013

Scroll to top

Top

Posts Byadmin - 9/856 - Terrorism.com

Iraq rejects al-Qaeda links

January 30, 2003 |

Iraq has categorically rejected United States allegations that it has links to Osama Bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network. In his State of the Union address on Tuesday, US President George W Bush said Iraq had links to terrorist groups, including al-Qaeda, and might supply weapons of mass destruction to militants. UK Prime Minister Tony Blair echoed Mr Bush’s comments in parliament on Wednesday, but said the connection between Iraq and al-Qaeda was unclear. As the war of words continued, the UN Security Council met behind closed door in New York to discuss Monday’s report from chief weapons inspectors. As the Council was meeting, Iraq’s Ambassador to the UN, Mohammad al-Douri, said Baghdad would co-operate “pro-actively” with weapons inspectors. Full Story

Iraq sheltering al-Qaeda says UK

January 30, 2003 |

There is evidence al-Qaeda “operatives” are being sheltered in Iraq, UK Prime Minister Tony Blair’s spokesman has said. It is the first time that the British Government has explicitly linked al-Qaeda and the Iraqi regime, which flatly denied the claim. Last week the prime minister said that there were some links between al-Qaeda and people in Iraq, but stressed that there was no evidence of a link between al-Qaeda and the Iraqi regime. But on Wednesday his spokesman said there was evidence al-Qaeda operatives were sheltering in Iraq, adding that the nature of the regime meant they could not do so unless Saddam Hussein was willing to have them. Later, when pressed in the House of Commons Mr Blair did not go as far as his spokesman, but said: “We do know of links between al-Qaeda and Iraq – we cannot be sure of the exact extent of those links.” Full Story

Sharon to meet Mubarak, but Arafat's offer of talks rejected

January 30, 2003 |

In a surprise move, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak called Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and congratulated him on his election victory. A year ago, Mubarak declared he could not work with Sharon; the two have not met since Sharon took office. Sharon told U.S. President George W. Bush that he would continue to work towards implementing their joint diplomatic plan, but rebuffed an offer for talks with Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat. According to the Prime Minister’s Office, Mubarak called Sharon Wednesday morning and invited him for talks as soon as he established a new government. The two “discussed the need to continue the peace process in the Middle East,” an official statement said. Full Story

Arafat ready to meet Sharon, for negotiations; Hamas, al-Jihad for escalation of resistance

January 30, 2003 |

The Palestinian President Yasser Arafat has announced he wishes to meet with the Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon immediately and to return back to the negotiations in order to end the conflict. Meantime, Hamas and the Islamic Jihad movements and the People’s Front for the Liberation of Palestine called for escalating resistance operations against the Israeli occupation. In an interview with the Israeli TV on whether he will sit with Sharon after his winning the elections in Israel, Arafat said that the Palestinians are persistent to return back to the table of negotiations as soon as possible. Arafat added that he is ready for “general truce.” Full Story

Kurds brace for gas attacks

January 30, 2003 |

Authorities in northern Iraq’s Kurdish-run enclave say they’re certain Saddam Hussein will target them with chemical weapons if the United States attacks Iraq. But they are delaying a public education campaign because they are afraid it will create panic. The Iraqi dictator is believed to have used chemical agents against the Kurds at least 11 times during the late 1980s as he sought to put down a rebellion by guerrillas fighting for a separate state. In the most notorious attack, Iraqi aircraft pounded this town with conventional bombs, then unleashed VX nerve gas and mustard gas on its 45,000 residents. Today, statues and museum exhibits throughout the Switzerland-size Kurdish region, known as Kurdistan, honor the 6,800 people killed in the 1988 incident. The March 16 anniversary date, a holiday here, is known as Martyrs Day. Full Story

Kurdish Demonstrators Back War Against Hussein but Want Gas Masks

January 30, 2003 |

A small group of Kurds gathered outside a United Nations compound here today, voicing support for a war to remove President Saddam Hussein from power but demanding international help to protect Kurdish civilians from chemical or biological attacks. The demonstration, which included several survivors of previous chemical attacks by the Iraqi military, was modest in size and subdued in tone. The protesters simply stood quietly outside the compound, in a cold rain, holding photographs of their injured and their dead. But the undercurrent of support for war stood in relief to larger and more strident demonstrations occurring in nations around the world. “We want to change the Iraqi regime,” said Dr. Fayaq Muhammad Golpi, a surgeon and head of the Anti-Chemical Weapons Society of Kurdistan, the nonprofit group that organized the event. “If this change is peaceful, it would be better than if there was war. But the change is necessary, even if this means fighting.” Full Story

Europeans Warn of Terror Attacks in Event of War in Iraq

January 30, 2003 |

European investigators have evidence that over the past six months, Islamic militants have been recruiting hundreds of fellow Muslims to carry out attacks in the event of a war against Iraq, according to French and other European antiterrorism experts. A French expert, who requested anonymity, said one threat to Europe came from radical groups who have links with Chechnya and have learned how to make chemical weapons, either at training camps in Afghanistan or while serving in the Soviet Army. He said Chechnya was now a kind of “neo-Afghanistan,” a new training ground and staging area for anti-Western terrorists. What was just a working thesis a few months ago, he said, has been validated by new information about intense recruiting, training and a focus on chemical weapons. In both Spain and Britain, the police reported finding chemical protection suits during raids last week in Barcelona and London. Full Story

Bush: new al-Qaida link to Iraq

January 30, 2003 |

President Bush served notice yesterday that he would not wait for international support before taking on Iraq, promising the course of the US “does not depend on the decisions of others”. In his annual state of the union address, the president set out the case against Iraq, saying there was no evidence Saddam Hussein had destroyed his weapons of mass destruction and emphasising the threat he could pass them on to terrorists. He called on the UN security council to convene on February 5 where his secretary of state, Colin Powell, will present the US case. He said that US intelligence had discovered extensive links between Iraq and terrorist organisations including al-Qaida. Full Story

UK alleges al-Qaeda links with Baghdad

January 30, 2003 |

The UK on Wednesday went further than it had ever done before in alleging ties between al-Qaeda and Iraq, although it remained more circumspect than President George W. Bush on the nature of the ties. Tony Blair, the prime minister, told a hostile House of Commons, the lower house of parliament: “We do know of links between al-Qaeda and Iraq. We cannot be sure of the exact extent of those links.” A Foreign Office statement added: “We believe there have been and are al-Qaeda operatives in the part of Iraq controlled by Baghdad. It is difficult to imagine that they have been there without the knowledge and acquiescence of the Iraqi regime.” Full Story

Bush Enlarges Case for War by Linking Iraq With Terrorists

January 30, 2003 |

President Bush, enlarging the case for going to war with Iraq soon, said tonight that there was intelligence showing that Iraq was helping and protecting terrorists. He warned that Saddam Hussein could distribute weapons of mass destruction to terrorists who could use them against the United States. Iraq’s alleged terrorist connection is just one reason Mr. Bush cited for preparing for war. He also said Iraq could threaten the Persian Gulf region if it developed weapons of mass destruction, and he assailed its record on human rights. To that end, he pointed to the example of North Korea, which is already suspected of having nuclear weapons and is, Mr. Bush said, “an oppressive regime” that rules by fear and starvation. The allegation that Iraq is conspiring with terrorists seemed tailored to address the question of why it is important to act now. Full Story