WASHINGTON,
Sept 10 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Top U.S. officials have
dropped efforts to link the government of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network or other extremist organizations,
the Washington Post reported Tuesday.
And
in coming days, U.S. President George W. Bush will, instead, present
"extensive" new evidence that Saddam Hussein is preparing to
deploy weapons of mass destruction, reports The New York Daily News.
Despite
a redoubled effort, the Central Intelligence Agency has been unable to
find hard evidence linking the Iraqi leader to global terrorists, the
Post said, quoting senior intelligence officials and outside experts
with knowledge of discussions within the U.S. government.
Intelligence
analysts have concluded that there is not enough evidence linking the
Iraqi leader to al-Qaeda members who have taken refuge in northern Iraq,
the newspaper said.
Neither
is there enough evidence to confirm an alleged April 2001 meeting in
Prague between an Iraqi intelligence agent and Mohamed Atta, one of the
suspected September 11 hijackers.
"It's
a thin reed," a senior intelligence official told the Post,
describing the information on both cases.
However,
the stress upon Saddam Hussein’s links to al-Qaeda will not be
completely dropped, just placed on hold.
"At
some point we will certainly make the case concerning Iraq and its links
to terrorism," a senior administration official said Monday.
"We still have to develop it more."
In
his speech Thursday, September 12, to the United Nations, U.S. President
George W. Bush is expected to stress Iraq's alleged efforts to develop
nuclear, biological and chemical weapons - rather than any links to
terrorism - as justification for a possible military attack against
Baghdad, according to the Post.
"This
is his best opportunity to address the international community on this
threat," an official said. "He will take full advantage of
it."
"There's
a vast volume of evidence on a multitude of fronts," an
administration official told the Daily News. "It runs the gamut of
all his weapons of mass destruction, and the new activity since 1998 has
been extensive."
Iraq
is doing "a whole lot more" than just seeking aluminum rods to
enhance the weapons-grade uranium needed to build nuclear weapons,
officials told the paper.
The
White House plans to show Congress some of the evidence, which includes
satellite photos of several sites in Iraq. The newspaper said it was
unclear how much information could be shared with Congress without
compromising intelligence sources.
"If
you brief 535 members of Congress, ... you're likely to have a leak in
very short order," Vice President Dick Cheney said in an interview
broadcast during "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer" on Monday.
"We
are certainly going to share a good deal of information with selected
members of Congress," he said.
The
last time Iraq planned an attack against a U.S. target was in April
1993, when agents failed in their attempt to murder former president
George Bush - the current president's father - during a visit to Kuwait,
CIA sources told the Post.
The
then president Bill Clinton ordered a cruise missile attack on Iraqi
intelligence headquarters in Baghdad in retaliation.