Saddam's Ties to Al Qaeda
The Weekly Standard's piece on Saddam's Terror Training Camps makes it pretty official:
The question now is, will leading republicans capitalize on this easy to access data, or will they remain mum on the subject, continuing to allow the squealing leftists to have the last word, day in and day out.
Count on Talk Radio and the Blogosphere to shout it out, but we can't really count on the squishy majority in Congress.
THE FORMER IRAQI REGIME OF Saddam Hussein trained thousands of radical Islamic terrorists from the region at camps in Iraq over the four years immediately preceding the U.S. invasion, according to documents and photographs recovered by the U.S. military in postwar Iraq. The existence and character of these documents has been confirmed to THE WEEKLY STANDARD by eleven U.S. government officials.The entire piece is required reading.
The secret training took place primarily at three camps--in Samarra, Ramadi, and Salman Pak--and was directed by elite Iraqi military units. Interviews by U.S. government interrogators with Iraqi regime officials and military leaders corroborate the documentary evidence. Many of the fighters were drawn from terrorist groups in northern Africa with close ties to al Qaeda, chief among them Algeria's GSPC and the Sudanese Islamic Army. Some 2,000 terrorists were trained at these Iraqi camps each year from 1999 to 2002, putting the total number at or above 8,000. Intelligence officials believe that some of these terrorists returned to Iraq and are responsible for attacks against Americans and Iraqis. According to three officials with knowledge of the intelligence on Iraqi training camps, White House and National Security Council officials were briefed on these findings in May 2005; senior Defense Department officials subsequently received the same briefing.
The photographs and documents on Iraqi training camps come from a collection of some 2 million "exploitable items" captured in postwar Iraq and Afghanistan. They include handwritten notes, typed documents, audiotapes, videotapes, compact discs, floppy discs, and computer hard drives. Taken together, this collection could give U.S. intelligence officials and policymakers an inside look at the activities of the former Iraqi regime in the months and years before the Iraq war.
The question now is, will leading republicans capitalize on this easy to access data, or will they remain mum on the subject, continuing to allow the squealing leftists to have the last word, day in and day out.
Count on Talk Radio and the Blogosphere to shout it out, but we can't really count on the squishy majority in Congress.
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