October 12, 2003

More on Iraq-Terror Links

Stephen Hayes of The Weekly Standard is still on the case of possible links between Saddam's Iraq and Islamic terrorism. But he says very few other journalists are asking similar questions. Hayes adds that the ongoing political battle between the White House and the CIA has made the administration reluctant to broadcast the links that they already have:

American soldiers have come across other interesting documents in Baghdad. A recent stash yielded new information about Abdul Rahman Yasin, one of the plotters of the 1993 World Trade Center attack. For nearly a decade, Yasin has been on the FBI's "Most Wanted" list in connection with his role in that bombing. And for nearly as long, American officials have known that he was in Iraq.

Documents uncovered recently tell us that Yasin was harbored by the former Iraqi regime. That bears repeating. The man who burned his leg mixing the chemicals for the 1993 World Trade Center truck bomb has been living in Iraq and received a monthly stipend from Saddam Hussein. Cheney referred to Yasin--though not by name--in his appearance on "Meet the Press" last month, and the vice president has mentioned him in several recent speeches, most recently in a feisty talk on October 10 at the Heritage Foundation. But the Bush administration has otherwise been reluctant to provide details of the links between Iraq and al Qaeda. That is not, officials from across the administration insist, because there are serious questions about the connections. Rather, the White House is nervous that publicly discussing the links could trigger another set of leaks, most of them presumed to come from the CIA, attempting to discredit the new information. Those are battles the White House doesn't want to fight.

UPDATE 10/21: Deroy Murdock has a useful summary of documented links between Saddam's Iraq and Islamic terror.

Posted by dan at October 12, 2003 02:02 AM
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