HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
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AP. 30 April 2002. Atta Didn't Meet With Iraqi Intelligence Agent as
Once Alleged.

WASHINGTON -- U.S. investigators no longer believe suicide hijacker
Mohammed Atta met with an Iraqi intelligence agent in Europe last year,
eliminating the only known link between Saddam Hussein's government and
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

American and Czech officials had believed the meetings between Atta, the
alleged ringleader of the 19 hijackers, and Ahmad Khalil Ibrahim Samir
Al-Ani, an Iraqi diplomat widely believed to be an intelligence agent,
took place in Prague in April 2001.

Some observers said the meetings suggested Iraq's complicity in the
Sept. 11 attacks - providing the United States with a reason to attack
Saddam.

The Iraqi government denied the meetings ever occurred, and charged the
reports were fabricated to justify making Iraq a target in the U.S.-led
war on terror.

U.S. officials said the content of the alleged meetings was never
definitively laid out.

Some Czech officials said Atta had contacted Al-Ani, who was later
expelled from the Czech Republic, to discuss an attack on the Prague
building that serves as the headquarters for U.S.-funded Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty.

But Czech authorities have since retracted their statements to the U.S.
government, saying that no such meetings took place.

Atta is now believed to have been in the United States during the time
he was supposed to have been meeting with Al-Ani, said a U.S. official,
speaking on the condition of anonymity.

As recently as December, however, Czech and U.S. authorities said they
believed the meetings took place. But Czech media questioned the claim,
and President Vaclav Havel acknowledged the meetings may not have
occurred.

In addition to being chief among the 19 hijackers, Mohammed Atta also
led an al-Qaida cell based in Hamburg, Germany, which included two other
hijackers and several more alleged co-conspirators who have not been
captured.

U.S. officials have established numerous ties between the hijackers and
al-Qaida, but none to Iraq's government - and not for a lack of trying.

Similar efforts to tie bin Laden to Hussein have yielded few ties.

Officials say while opposing the United States is a common goal, bin
Laden's motivations are religious, while Hussein's are secular.


. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews

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