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October 14th, 2001 Posted:
1329 GMT
American
investigators probing anthrax outbreaks in Florida
and New York believe they have all the hallmarks
of a terrorist attack and have named Iraq as prime
suspect as the source of the deadly spores.
Their inquiries are adding to what US hawks say
is a growing mass of evidence that Saddam Hussein
was involved, possibly indirectly, with the 11
September hijackers.
If investigators' fears are confirmed - and sceptics
fear American hawks could be publicising the claim
to press their case for strikes against Iraq -
the pressure now building among senior Pentagon
and White House officials in Washington for an
attack may become irresistible.
Plans have been discussed among Pentagon strategists
for US air strike support for armed insurrections
against Saddam by rebel Kurds in the north and
Shia Muslims in the south with a promise of American
ground troops to protect the oilfields of Basra.
Contact has already been made with an Iraqi opposition
group based in London with a view to installing
its members as a future government in Baghdad.
Leading US intelligence sources, involved with
both the CIA and the Defence Department, said
that the 'giveaway' which suggests a state sponsor
for the anthrax cases is that the victims in Florida
were afflicted with the airborne form of the disease.
'Making anthrax, on its own, isn't so difficult,'
one senior US intelligence source said. 'But it
only begins to become effective as a biological
weapon if they can be made the right size to breathe
in. If you can't get airborne infectivity, you
can't use it as a weapon. That is extremely difficult.
There is very little leeway. Most spores are either
too big to be suspended in air, or too small to
lodge on the lining of the lungs.'
As claims about an Iraqi link grew, senior health
officials in Britain revealed they warned all
the country's GPs last week to be vigilant about
the disease. 'I think we have to be prepared to
think the unthinkable,' said the Government's
Chief Medical Officer, Dr Liam Donaldson. The
Department of Health confirmed the Government
is conducting an urgent review of Britain's ability
to cope with chemical or biological attacks.
It also emerged last night that three people
who worked in the Florida buildings at the centre
of anthrax scares are now in the UK and undergoing
tests for the disease. And in America a letter
sent from Malaysia to a Microsoft office was found
to contain traces of anthrax.
In liquid form, anthrax is useless - droplets
would fall to the ground, rather than staying
suspended in the air to be breathed by victims.
Making powder needs repeated washings in huge
centrifuges, followed by intensive drying, which
requires sealed environments. The technology would
cost millions.
US intelligence believes Iraq has the technology
and supplies of anthrax suitable for terrorist
use. 'They aren't making this stuff in caves in
Afghanistan,' the CIA source said. 'This is prima
facie evidence of the involvement of a state intelligence
agency. Maybe Iran has the capability. But it
doesn't look likely politically. That leaves Iraq.'
Scientists investigating the attacks say the
bacteria used is similar to the 'Ames strain'
of anthrax originally cultivated at Iowa State
University in the 1950s and later given to labs
throughout the world, including Iraq.
According to sources in the Bush administration,
investigators are talking to Egyptian authorities
who say members of the al-Qaida network, detained
and interrogated in Cairo, had obtained phials
of anthrax in the Czech Republic.
Last autumn Mohamed Atta is said by US intelligence
officials to have met in Prague an agent from
Iraqi intelligence called Ahmed Samir al-Ahani,
a former consul later expelled by the Czechs for
activities not compatible with his diplomatic
mission.
The Czechs are also examining the possibility
that Atta met a former director of Saddam's external
secret services, Farouk Hijazi, at a second meeting
in the spring. Hijazi is known to have met Bin
Laden.
It was confirmed yesterday that Jim Woolsey,
CIA director from 1993 to 1996, recently visited
London on behalf of the hawkish Defence Department
to 'firm up' other evidence of Iraqi involvement
in 11 September.
Some observers fear linking Saddam to the terrorist
attacks is part of an agenda being driven by US
hawks eager to broaden the war to include Iraq,
a move being resisted by the British government.
The hawks winning the ear of President Bush is
assembled around Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld,
his deputy Paul Wolfowitz, and a think tank, the
Defence Policy Advisory Board, dubbed the 'Wolfowitz
cabal'.
Their strategy to target Iraq was hammered out
at a two-day seminar in September, of which the
dovish Secretary of State Colin Powell had no
knowledge.
The result was a letter to President Bush urging
the removal of Saddam as a precondition to the
war. 'Failure to undertake such an effort,' it
said, 'will constitute a decisive surrender in
the war against terrorism'.
In a swipe at Powell's premium on coalition-building,
it continues: 'coalition building has run amok.
The point about a coalition is "can it achieve
the right purpose?" not "can you get
a lot of members?"'
Administration officials close to the group said
: 'We see this war as one against the virus of
terrorism. If you have bone marrow cancer, it's
not enough to just cut off the patient's foot.
You have to do the complete course of chemotherapy.
And if that means embarking on the next Hundred
Years' War, that's what we're doing.'
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