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Diplomacy: Powell Admits No Hard Proof in Linking Iraq to Al Qaeda

January 9, 2004
  By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS
WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 - Secretary of State Colin L. Powell
conceded Thursday that despite his assertions to the United
Nations last year, he had no "smoking gun" proof of a link
between the government of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
and terrorists of Al Qaeda.
"I have not seen smoking-gun, concrete evidence about the
connection," Mr. Powell said, in response to a question at
a news conference. "But I think the possibility of such
connections did exist, and it was prudent to consider them
at the time that we did."
Mr. Powell's remarks on Thursday were a stark admission
that there is no definitive evidence to back up
administration statements and insinuations that Saddam
Hussein had ties to Al Qaeda, the acknowledged authors of
the Sept. 11 attacks. Although President Bush finally
acknowledged in September that there was no known
connection between Mr. Hussein and the attacks, the
impression of a link in the public mind has become widely
accepted - and something administration officials have done
little to discourage.
Mr. Powell offered a vigorous defense of his Feb. 5
presentation before the Security Council, in which he
voiced the administration's most detailed case to date for
war with Iraq. After studying intelligence data, he said
that a "sinister nexus" existed "between Iraq and the Al
Qaeda terrorist network, a nexus that combines classic
terrorist organizations and modern methods of murder."
Without any additional qualifiers, Mr. Powell continued,
"Iraq today harbors a deadly terrorist network, headed by
Abu Musaab al-Zarqawi, an associate and collaborator of
Osama bin Laden and his Al Qaeda lieutenants."
He added, "Iraqi officials deny accusations of ties with Al
Qaeda. These denials are simply not credible."
On Thursday, Mr. Powell dismissed second-guessing and said
that Mr. Bush had acted after giving Mr. Hussein 12 years
to come into compliance with the international community.
"The president decided he had to act because he believed
that whatever the size of the stockpile, whatever one might
think about it, he believed that the region was in danger,
America was in danger and he would act," he said. "And he
did act."
In a rare, wide-ranging meeting with reporters, Mr. Powell
voiced some optimism on several other issues that have
bedeviled the administration, including North Korea and
Sudan, while expressing dismay about the Middle East and
Haiti.
But mostly, the secretary, appearing vigorous and in good
spirits three weeks after undergoing surgery for prostate
cancer, defended his justification for the war in Iraq. He
said he had been fully aware that "the whole world would be
watching," as he painstakingly made the case that the
government of Saddam Hussein presented an imminent threat
to the United States and its interests.
The immediacy of the danger was at the core of debates in
the United Nations over how to proceed against Mr. Hussein.
A report released Thursday by the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, a nonpartisan Washington research
center, concluded that Iraq's weapons programs constituted
a long-term threat that should not have been ignored. But
it also said the programs did not "pose an immediate threat
to the United States, to the region or to global security."
Mr. Powell's United Nations presentation - complete with
audiotapes and satellite photographs - asserted that
"leaving Saddam Hussein in possession of weapons of mass
destruction for a few more months or years is not an
option." The secretary said he had spent time with experts
at the Central Intelligence Agency studying reports.
"Anything that we did not feel was solid and multisourced,
we did not use in that speech," he said Thursday.
He said that Mr. Hussein had used prohibited weapons in the
past - including nerve gas attacks against Iran and Iraqi
Kurds - and said that even if there were no actual weapons
at hand, there was every indication he would reconstitute
them once the international community lost interest.
"In terms of intention, he always had it," Mr. Powell said.
"What he was waiting to do is see if he could break the
will of the international community, get rid of any
potential future inspections, and get back to his
intentions, which were to have weapons of mass
destruction."
The administration has quietly withdrawn a 400-member team
of American weapons inspectors who were charged with
finding chemical or biological weapons stockpiles or
laboratories, officials said this week. The team was part
of the 1,400-member Iraq Survey Group, which has not turned
up such weapons or active programs, the officials said.
The Carnegie report challenged the possibility that Mr.
Hussein could have destroyed the weapons, hidden them or
shipped them out of the country. Officials had alleged that
Iraq held amounts so huge - hundreds of tons of chemical
and biological weapons, dozens of Scud missiles - that such
moves would have been detected by the United States, the
report said.
The Washington Post this week reported that Iraq had
apparently preserved its ability to produce missiles,
biological agents and other illicit weapons through the
decade-long period of international sanctions after the
Persian Gulf war, but that their development had apparently
been limited to the planning stage.
On North Korea, he said he had received "encouraging
signals" from his Asian counterparts that the North might
be close to agreeing to another round of six-party talks.
But he said the administration would not yield on its
insistence that the North first state its willingness to
bring its nuclear program to a verifiable end.
Mr. Powell was equally hopeful about a peace agreement to
end a grueling civil war in Sudan. "The key here is that
after 20 years of most terrible war, Sudanese leaders have
come together and are just one or two steps short of having
a comprehensive peace agreement," he said.
On the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, he said the United
States and the three other nations promoting peace talks
had expected more movement ending hostilities and
establishing a Palestinian state. "They are as disturbed as
I am that we haven't seen the kind of progress that we had
hoped for," he said.
Turning to Haiti, where a decade ago Mr. Powell took part
in a delegation that sought to persuade plotters in a
military coup to step down, he voiced frustration at the
failure of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to reach
agreement with his political foes. Violence has flared in
recent days as anti-Aristide protesters demanded an end to
a political deadlock that has paralyzed the government. The
country's Catholic Bishops Conference has tried to broker a
new agreement.
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/09/politics/09POWE.html?ex=1074691454&ei=1&en=8643d711f59be90f
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