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The report, released this week by the Institute for Defense Analyses, says it found no "smoking gun" linking Iraq operationally to Al Qaeda. But it does say Saddam collaborated with known Al Qaeda affiliates and a wider constellation of Islamist terror groups.That's a nice spin on things -- that there was "no smoking gun" -- which allows the folks who insist there were operational links between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda to continue claiming so despite all the evidence to the contrary. Just wait a little longer and we'll find those WMDs too! Gang, there was no operational relationship whatsoever between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda. But let's move onto these ties with terror groups:
A long time skeptic of the connection between al Qaeda and Iraq and a former CIA senior Iraq analyst, Judith Yaphe yesterday said, "I think the report indicates that Saddam was willing to work with almost any group be it nationalist or Islamic, that was willing to work for his objectives. But in the long term he did not trust many of the Islamist groups, especially those linked to Saudi Arabia or Iran." She added, "He really did want to get anti-American operations going. The fact that they had little success shows in part their incompetence and unwilling surrogates."And there you have it. That paragraph and quote pretty much sums up the reality, removed from the reckless pre-war exaggerations of Hayes and also from any rhetoric on the extreme left that might like to imagine Saddam Hussein should have been left alone in Baghdad where he wasn't harming anyone and had no interest in funding or otherwise supporting terror groups.
This is an incredibly
This is an incredibly complex report and deserves a close read. Apparently it comes down to what one needs before dubbing transfer of money, safehaven, training and weapons a link but the report mentions those things. Maybe Saddam truly was infiltrating to spy and undermine but either way that activity should be of concern to Americans, no?
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