http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticleNew.asp?xfile=data/theworld/2007/February/theworld_February869.xml&section=theworld&col=

US sees growing threats from Al Qaeda, Iran
(AFP)

28 February 2007


WASHINGTON - The United States faces growing threats on multiple fronts
with Al Qaeda still the top danger, while Iran is on the rise and on
course to produce nuclear weapons early in the next decade, US
intelligence chiefs said on Tuesday.

Their survey of global threats also found Iraq in a “precarious”
condition and the Taliban gaining strength in Afghanistan despite
suffering heavy combat losses in 2006.

Some assessments such as those on Iraq had previously been aired in
separate intelligence estimates, but taken together they formed a blunt
appraisal of mounting threats faced by the United States on an array of
fronts.

“Terrorism remains the preeminent threat to the homeland, to our
security interests globally, and to our allies. And Al Qaeda continues
to be the terrorist organization that poses the greatest threat,” said
retired admiral Michael McConnell, the new director of national
intelligence.

McConnell said core elements of Al Qaeda’s senior leadership are
”resilient” and continue to plot mass casualty attacks against the
United States and other targets.

“Indeed, Al Qaeda, along with other terrorist groups, continues to seek
chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear weapons or materials,”
he told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

McConnell confirmed that Al Qaeda is reestablishing training camps in
Pakistan in tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan. US officials
said small groups of operatives are being trained at the compounds for
attacks in the west.

“To the best of our knowledge the senior leadership, number one and
number two, are there,” he said referring to Al Qaeda leader Osama bin
Laden and his lieutenant Ayman al-Zawahiri.

While not comparable to Al Qaeda’s network of training camps in
Afghanistan before the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States,
McConnell said “it’s something we’re very worried about and very
concerned about.”

Vice President Dick Cheney, who met this week with Pakistani President
Pervez Musharraf in Islamabad, made the case “that we have to be more
aggressive in going after Al Qaeda in Pakistan,” he said.

“The balancing act, of course, is the president’s standing in that
country with an election coming up this fall,” he said, referring to
Musharraf.

McConnell said a major Al Qaeda attack would most likely come from
Pakistan, but he said elements of the network in Iraq, Syria and Europe
“also are planning.”

McConnell also expressed worry about Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite
group backed by Iran, which he said had grown in confidence since last
summer’s fighting against Israeli forces.

In a statement that accompanied his testimony, the intelligence chief
said Iran seeks to develop nuclear weapons and is more interested in
dragging out negotiations over its atomic program than reaching an
acceptable diplomatic solution.

“This is a very dangerous situation as a nuclear Iran could prompt
destabilizing countermoves by other states in this volatile region,” he
said.

“While our information is incomplete, we estimate that Iran could
produce a nuclear weapon by early to mid next decade,” he said.

Rising oil income and perceived successes of its surrogates Hamas and
Hezbollah has extended Iran’s influence in the Middle East, disturbing
Arab states, he said.

Iran is using ballistic missiles and naval power to project power in the
Gulf, he said.

“It seeks a capacity to disrupt the operations and reinforcement of US
forces based in the region — potentially intimidating regional allies
into withholding support for US policy — and raising the political,
financial, and human costs to the US and our allies of our presence in
Iraq,” it said.

Iranian influence in neighbouring Iraq has increased ”significantly” and
it is “probable” — but not proven — that senior Iranian leaders are
aware that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard’s Quds have been arming and
training Iraqi extremists, he said.

McConnell said Iran regards its ability to conduct terrorist operations
as a key element of its national security strategy, and that Hezbollah
plays a central role in it.

Though mainly focused on Lebanon, he said Hezbollah has made
”contingency plans to conduct attacks against US interests in the event
it feels its survival — or that of Iran — is threatened.”

The spy chiefs singled out North Korea, which tested a nuclear bomb in
October, and Iran as the two states of greatest concern.

North Korea, meanwhile, is technically capable of building a long-range
missile that can hit the United States despite a test failure last year,
said Lieutenant General Michael Maples, Defense Intelligence Agency
director.

Asked how long before North Korea would have a missile capable of
reaching the United States, he said, “I would probably estimate it’s not
a matter of years.”

+++




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