LONDON,
July 16 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - As U.S. Defense Secretary
urged the military brass to stop leaks about plans to attack Iraq, a
former Iraqi weapons inspector for the UN said Tuesday that there was
no proof linking Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq with terrorist
groups, hence the U.S. threats to topple him were legally baseless.
"If
someone can make a case based on substantive fact that Saddam
Hussein's regime is in cahoots with al-Qaeda, Osama bin Laden or any
other anti-American, (allegedly) Islamic terrorist organization then
Iraq poses a threat," Scott Ritter told Sky television, reported
Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"This
case has not been made," said the former UN weapons inspector.
"If
you're going to link Saddam with terrorist organizations, there must
be hard fact and to date no hard fact has been presented," he
added.
The
United States considers the Iraqi President to be a threat to its
national security and to the world because of what it claims is his
appetite for weapons of mass destruction and his alleged links to
terrorist groups.
Ritter
said that if Washington could come up with the data showing the link
between Hussein's regime and weapons of mass destruction then he would
stop saying what he knew about the extent to which Iraq disarmed
before April 1998.
British
Prime Minister Tony Blair, for his part, claimed Tuesday that the
threat posed by Iraq's policy on weapons of mass destruction was
"growing, not diminishing."
"What
we should learn from that is that if there is a gathering threat or
danger, let us deal with it before it materializes rather than
afterwards," Blair said, referring to Sept. 11 attacks on the
U.S.
Ritter,
who headed a team investigating the Iraqi leader's alleged stockpile
of biological and chemical weapons, was to address senior British
politicians on the issue later Tuesday.
The
former U.S. marine resigned as head of the UN Special Commission in
1998 and criticized the U.S.-British air strikes on the Gulf state as
a "horrible mistake" and "bombing for bombing's
sake."
In
a separately related development, and stung by leaked reports of U.S.
planning for military action against Iraq, U.S. Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld called on U.S. military leaders in a memorandum made
public Tuesday to rein in damaging disclosures of classified
information.
Rumsfeld
circulated an unclassified CIA memorandum warning to the Pentagon
brass that unauthorized leaks tipped off al-Qaeda to U.S. intelligence
capabilities, hurting the U.S. war against terrorism, reported AFP.
"The
disclosure of classified information is damaging our country's ability
to stop terrorist acts and is putting American lives at risk," he
said in the July 12 memorandum.
"Your
leadership is needed to help stop leaks," he said. "Please
meet with your staff to discuss the seriousness of the damaging lack
of professionalism we continue to see on a daily basis," he
wrote.
The
memorandum came just two days after a New York Times report
said that U.S. military planners considered using bases in Jordan to
stage air and commando operations against Iraq in the event Washington
decided to invade.
The
Times earlier reported on a U.S. planning document that called for
a massive U.S. air, land and sea invasion of Iraq from three
directions in a campaign to topple Saddam Hussein.
In
a televised interview late Monday, Rumsfeld vented his anger at the
officials who leaked the information.
"I
would dearly like to find them," he told CNBC. "I think that
people who know who those people are would do the country a service if
they'd let me know who those people are. And I'd like to see them
behind bars."
A
hallmark of Rumsfeld's tenure as Defense Secretary is to keep a close
hold on information, a practice that led to clashes with members of
Congress and senior military officials.
The
CIA document attached to Rumsfeld's memo said al-Qaeda pays close
attention to publicly available information that will help it evade
U.S. intelligence.
"A
growing body of reporting indicates that al-Qaeda planners learned
much about our counter terrorist intelligence capabilities from U.S.
and foreign media," the document said.