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Threat Assessment:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes">  </span>U.N. Panel Finds No Iraq-Al-Qaeda Link, But Warns of Al-Qaeda WMD AmbitionsFrom Friday, June 27, 2003 issue.

Threat Assessment:  U.N. Panel Finds No Iraq-Al-Qaeda Link, But Warns of Al-Qaeda WMD Ambitions

By Jim Wurst
Global Security Newswire

UNITED NATIONS — The chairman of the Security Council group monitoring sanctions against al-Qaeda and the Taliban said yesterday that while al-Qaeda is still able to function in many countries, the group has seen no evidence of a link between the terrorist organization and the former government Iraqi government of Saddam Hussein (see GSN, May 23, 2002).

Michael Chandler, the chairman of the monitoring group set up under Resolution 1267, told reporters, “Nothing has come to our notice, reported to us … that would indicate links between al-Qaeda and Iraq.  That doesn’t mean to say it doesn’t exist, but as far as we are concerned, the answer is no.”

This morning, Chandler issued a “clarification” on his remarks about the lack of a link between Iraq and al-Qaeda, in an apparent attempt to avoid contradicting the United States.  The report “does not address this issue and the monitoring group has reached no conclusions concerning these matters,” says a statement released to the media.  “Given the nature and intensity of the crisis surrounding Iraq ... and attention being directed to such issues by the Security Council itself, an inquiry by [the group] was considered inappropriate,” the statement says.

The United States argued in justifying the invasion of Iraq that the Hussein government and al-Qaeda were working together.  In particular, Secretary of State Colin Powell, addressing the council Feb. 5, said al-Qaeda was “operating freely in Baghdad.”  This “sinister nexus” between Iraq and al-Qaeda means terrorists “could turn to Iraq for expertise” in producing weapons of mass destruction, Powell said.

Ambassador Heraldo Munoz of Chile, the chairman of the council’s committee on al-Qaeda sanctions, said such a connection “never came to our knowledge before Powell made his statement.  We did not get any information from any state that there is a link between al-Qaeda and Iraq at that point.”

On the other hand, the terrorist group accused of masterminding the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in New York and Washington, as well as numerous other attacks around the world, is still able to function by adapting to the changing political realities, said Chandler and Munoz, who were speaking at a news conference introducing the group’s new report on the effectiveness of the sanctions.  Munoz said the report details “the success of the measures against the Taliban and al-Qaeda.  [However], our progress has yielded new ways for [them] to organize,” he said.  This is a long-term task.”

The report, covering January to May, says, “There were marked successes in the fight against the al-Qaeda network,” including the arrest of members of Osama bin Laden’s “original command team” and the “breakup of cells in a number of countries.”  However, the network “still pose[s] a significant threat to international peace and security,” according to the report, and there is evidence the network “has been able to reconstitute its levels of support” in numerous countries, including Afghanistan.

Panel Concerned About “Third Generation Al-Qaeda”

Of particular concern is the emergence of what the report calls the “third generation al-Qaeda,” terrorists who are operating independently since the al-Qaeda command was driven out of Afghanistan in late 2001.

“The image that is emerging of the network is of a new generation of Islamic fundamental extremism such that al-Qaeda can be viewed both as an organization and an ideology; a ‘Third Generation al-Qaeda,’ which is becoming self-perpetuating,” the report says.  “This makes it all the more difficult to track and disrupt elements of the newly emerging network and reinforces the need for all states with known al-Qaeda elements to clamp down hard on their activities.”

According to Chandler, “The newness of what we are saying is that we are seeing the people who want to carry out attacks and work within the ideology who … never went to Afghanistan, were never part of the element of al-Qaeda as it evolved.”

The first generation, Chandler said, were those who joined bin Laden in Afghanistan in the 1990s.  The second generation are those who joined after “the demise of the Taliban and the dispersion of al-Qaeda,” he said.  The third generation, such as the suspects in the bombings of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 17, were all locals with no ties to the al-Qaeda command, he said.

“Further success in bringing down the al-Qaeda network will require a sustained international effort, with continued and enhanced information sharing and coordination,” Chandler added.  “This is not something any one country is going to do on its own.”

The international efforts to crack down on arms trafficking in general and in strengthening national legislation on exports is having an effect on al-Qaeda, the report says.  However, al-Qaeda is “still able to acquire adequate quantities of weapons and explosives.  Al-Qaeda continues attempts to acquire WMD.”

Al-Qaeda has a “WMD Committee,” according to the report, “which is known to have approached a number of Muslim scientists … to assist the terrorist network with the creation and procurement of chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear weapons.”  However, the group says it would be difficult for al-Qaeda to build and deploy a nuclear weapon.  “Of greater concern is the possibility of al-Qaeda acquiring a WMD and/or a delivery means from ‘rogue’ elements or as a result of lax security at a nuclear weapons arsenal,” the report says.

The monitoring group suggests, “In order to reduce the chances of al-Qaeda obtaining a nuclear device, special efforts must be undertaken to insure that all countries which possess nuclear weapons maintain the strictest controls and security regimes at all times. … These regimes should be constantly subject to audit and scrutiny.”  The report says nations should “as the first line of defense against such a threat” join the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material (CPPNM), as well as other relevant treaties such as the Chemical Weapons Convention and the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention.

The effectiveness of the CCPNM is important because, the report says, “there is a much higher probability that the network will continue its efforts to develop an improvised radiological dispersion device,” in other words, a “dirty bomb.”  The availability of the necessary radioactive material is greater and the technology is easier than for a nuclear weapon, the report says.

In January, the council adopted Resolution 1455, extending the mandate of the monitoring group.  This report is the first one under the new mandate.  The sanctions involve bans on financial transactions and travel by individuals tied to the two groups and an arms embargo against them.  The individuals subject to sanctions are on a list maintained by the council.  The list “is only a small sub-set of the critical membership of the al-Qaeda network,” Chandler said.  “The list should be expanded to take in a much broader set of al-Qaeda members and associates and those who have supported them.”

Former Chechen President Added to Sanctions List

The revised list for the first time includes a Chechen — former President Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev — thus accepting the Russian claim that Chechen rebels are linked to al-Qaeda.

The report says there has been progress in freezing al-Qaeda assets and “progress has also been made in tracking down, inhibiting and incarcerating key financial intermediaries.”  On the other hand, al-Qaeda “continued to exploit loopholes or to develop new technologies to acquire, utilize and distribute funds and logistical resources.”  Those sources include the drug trade, fundraising through businesses and charities and common crime including credit card fraud and cigarette smuggling, according to the report.

The travel ban “as it now stands, is to serve as a political statement” of nations’ commitment not to grant al-Qaeda members refuge, the report says, however, “as a practical matter, few, if any, al-Qaeda members are likely to seek open entry or transit.”  No such cases have been reported to the committee.  There is also no evidence that anyone on the council’s list has attempted to breach the arms embargo, nevertheless, the groups “are still able to acquire adequate quantities of weapons and explosives where and when they need them.”

The report will be published July 11 and the council will review the work of the sanctions committee July 29, Munoz said.

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