From: mart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: Re: U.S. considers post-Afghan targets

HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

" America's devastating bombing campaign in Afghanistan
had already persuaded many nations that have supported
terrorism to change their ways."
U.S. Deputy Secretary
of Defense Paul Wolfowitz

.....Except the U.S itself, of course.
mart


----- Original Message -----
From: Steve Wagner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2002 8:13 AM
Subject: U.S. considers post-Afghan targets
 HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
 ---------------------------
 
 from
 http://www.japantoday.com/
 __________
 
 U.S. considers post-Afghan targets
 
 Tuesday, January 8, 2002 at 17:30 JST
 
 WASHINGTON - In the next phase of Washington's war on terrorism, the
 United States could focus on keeping terrorists out of places like
 Somalia, Yemen, Indonesia and the Philippines, U.S. Deputy Secretary
 of Defense Paul Wolfowitz said in an interview published on Tuesday.
 
  Wolfowitz told the New York Times the Pentagon is now working with
 friendly countries like the Philippines that would welcome U.S. help.
 But he said the Pentagon is also looking hard at possible terror
 bases in Somalia and Yemen, which are not equipped to root out
 terrorists on their own.
 
   Wolfowitz told the newspaper that the Pentagon had not ruled out
 military action against any country, including Iraq.
 
   He said that America's devastating bombing campaign in Afghanistan
 had already persuaded many nations that have supported terrorism to
 change their ways.
 
   "I'd say almost everywhere one has seen progress," he said. "A lot of
 that progress is motivated by the sense of American seriousness and
 the fear of getting on the wrong side of us."
 
   Iraq, however, has shown no signs of opposing terrorism, Wolfowitz
 told the newspaper, saying that while President Saddam Hussein "is
 keeping his head down these days, that should not leave the
 impression that he doesn't continue to do a bunch of things that
 concern us."
 
   Wolfowitz also told the Times that Somalia, perhaps more than any
 other place, fitted the bill of a lawless state that draws terrorists
 like a magnet.
 
   "Obviously Somalia comes up as a possible candidate for Al Qaeda
 people to flee to precisely because the government is weak or
 nonexistent," Wolfowitz said. But the newspaper said he acknowledged
 that U.S. options were limited in Somalia, where, he said, "by
 definition you don't have a government you can work with."
 
   On the subject of Yemen, Wolfowitz said that country also has pockets
 or regions of lawlessness, outside the control of the central
 government. "There are very significant back regions of Yemen," he
 said. "That's a case of an ungoverned piece of a country." The U.S
 has already put pressure on Yemen to crack down on suspected al Qaeda
 cells in the country.
 
   But Wolfowitz said in the interview that the Pentagon's main focus
 remains on Afghanistan, which he said was "at least as treacherous
 and dangerous now as it was a month or two ago."
 
   "One of the most difficult things in the next few months is going to
 be establishing which of our allies of convenience in the early
 stages of this war can become real allies over the longer term, and
 which ones are going to be major troublemakers, and which ones are
 going to just switch sides," Wolfowitz said in the interview.
 
   He told the paper that Hamid Karzai, Afghanistan's interim leader, so
 far has proven to be an impressive man. "Whether he's up to the
 formidable job he has is a different question, Wolfowitz said.
 
 (Reuters News)

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