U.S. ruling out Iraq as attack sponsor in bid for coalition
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SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM
Thursday, September 13, 2001
U.S. intelligence sources in the Middle East say the White House has ruled out focusing blame on Iraq as the sponsor of the kamikaze attacks in New York and Washington and has instead given priority to assembling an international coalition against terrorism.
The United States has launched a painstaking search in the
Middle East for the sponsors of the attacks in which thousands of Americans died, Middle East Newsline reported.
A key aim in the U.S. intelligence-gathering effort is to form links
between various Islamic factions. The sources said the Pentagon and the CIA
are convinced that the hijackers killed in their suicide crashes were either
linked to an Islamic terrorist network or sent by a government that was
concealed behind an organization front.
Israeli intelligence officials briefed the Cabinet of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon on late Tuesday, hours after the catastrophe in New York and Washington and were quoted as telling the Cabinet that a Middle East government was probably the sponsor of the attack. The most likely sponsor for such an attack, they said, is Iraq.
"We're talking about an operation that was extremely well-planned and
compartmentalized," a U.S. defense source in the region said. "Such a case
could take years to complete and we simply don't have that amount of time."
U.S. officials said the White House has already reached several
conclusions regarding the sponsor of the attacks. They said the
administration has for now determined that neither Iraq nor any other country was
behind the hijackings. Instead, the administration has fingered Bin Laden
for the attacks, in which President George Bush was a target.
U.S. intelligence officers around the Middle East were ordered to
contact all of their sources for any leads that might shed light on a
regional link to the suicide jet crashes. They were also ordered to review
open-source material in the Arabic, Farsi and Urdu media that could
provide a hint as to the plans to hijack U.S. airliners and crash them into
major population centers.
"The way we see it, there's something out there in the open-source that
we've missed," a U.S. intelligence source said. "We're trying to go back and
put the pieces together."
The sources said the U.S. effort depends on the cooperation of
governments in the region. They said they expect the effort to proceed
slowly.
U.S. officials said Egypt and Jordan are being recruited for an
international coalition against terrorism. They said U.S. Secretary of State
Colin Powell called his counterparts in Amman and Cairo to discuss such an
alliance.
FBI agents have already identified at least 50 Arab infiltrators who
were allegedly involved in the hijackings and crashes. The FBI has also
identified two Arab students in a Florida flight school, Mohamed Atta and
Marwan Al Shehhi, as allegedly being involved in the suicide crashes. The
two entered the U.S. from Germany claiming to be Afghan students.
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