WASHINGTON,
November 17 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The U.S. government has
begun to monitor thousands of Iraqis in the United States, hoping to
identify “terrorist” threats posed by sympathizers of Saddam
Hussein, the New York Times reported Sunday, November 17.
The
previously undisclosed intelligence program involves tracking Iraqi
citizens and Iraqi-Americans with dual citizenship, who are attending
American universities or working at private corporations who might pose
a risk in the event of a United States-led war against Iraq.
Some
of the targets are being electronically monitored under the authority of
national security warrants. Others are being selected for recruitment as
informants; the officials were reported as saying.
In
the event of a U.S. invasion of Iraq, officials would intensify the
program's mission through arrests and detentions of Iraqis and Iraq
sympathizers if they are believed to be planning domestic terrorist
operations, the Times wrote.
The
new intelligence effort also seeks to assess whether the regime of
Saddam Hussein has engaged in any actions -- through alliances with
Middle Eastern terrorist organizations or efforts to obtain weapons --
that could threaten American interests at home or abroad.
The
operation also seeks to trace the movement around the world of money by
the Iraqi government, and organizations sympathetic with Iraq.
Next
week federal authorities plan to begin interviewing Arab-Americans,
asking them to report suspicious activity related to Iraq, a senior
government official told the Times.
The
interviews will be voluntary, but in the past, such efforts have been
criticized by Arab-American groups. The FBI is planning to meet with
Arab-American civic leaders to explain the non-classified aspects of the
operation, officials said.
The
operation mirrors a smaller program during the 1991 Persian Gulf war,
during which the FBI and the Immigration and Naturalization Service
conducted thousands of interviews with Iraqis and other Arab-Americans
in the United States and investigated hundreds of Iraqis who had entered
the United States on visitors' visas.
The
paper reported that "no one in the administration has formally
proposed creating a domestic intelligence agency," adding that
"several officials said dismantling the F.B.I. remained an
uncertain prospect, but they said a wide range of ideas were likely to
be considered with the creation of a Homeland Security Department."
Meanwhile,
U.S. officials said Saturday that the U.S. government is working to
bolster domestic intelligence gathering in hopes of finding and
neutralizing possible sleeper terrorist cells before they have a chance
to strike.
"The
president is strongly committed to helping Director Mueller with the
reorganization of the FBI undertaken since September 11 and is confident
that the Federal Bureau of Investigation can respond" to future
threats, said an administration official, who spoke to AFP on condition
of anonymity.
He
said the reorganization was certain to result in "increasing its
intelligence capabilities."
The
reforms launched by FBI Director Robert Mueller in the aftermath of the
September 11 attacks on Washington and New York are designed to bolster
the bureau's counterterrorism component.
And,
according to law enforcement officials, the bureau's capability to
collect intelligence inside the United States are being significantly
enhanced along the way.
For
starters, the FBI got rid of its Cold War-era National Security
Division, replacing it with a Counterintelligence-Counterterrorism
Division, according to a bureau official, who also wished to remain
unidentified.
A
team of Central Intelligence Agency analysts has been permanently posted
at FBI headquarters to help share and process freshly-collected
information.
"We've
created the Office of Intelligence, the Law Enforcement Coordination
Office," said the FBI official. "In the last over a year,
there have been many changes from the organizational standpoint."
However,
the officials dismissed earlier media reports that the White House was
contemplating creating a separate government agency that would be fully
dedicated to gathering intelligence inside the United States.
The
Washington Post reported Saturday that top advisers to President
George W. Bush were eyeing setting up a U.S. counterpart to Britain's
MI5, which is allowed to collect domestic intelligence.
U.S.
homeland security adviser Tom Ridge visited London this week to study
Britain's experience and discuss future joint efforts in the war on
terror.
But
at the moment, the Bush administration is reluctant to beef up
government bureaucracy by creating yet another intelligence agency and
is focusing instead on revamping the FBI, the officials said.
The
U.S. intelligence community currently has 14 separate members, most of
which, including the CIA, are barred by law from spying on U.S. citizens