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Some U.S. Officials Fear Iran Is Helping Al Qaeda
By Josh Meyer, Los Angeles Times
March 21, 2006
U.S. intelligence
officials, already focused on Iran's
potential for building nuclear weapons, are
struggling to solve a more immediate mystery:
the murky relationship between the new Tehran
leadership and the contingent of Al Qaeda
leaders residing in the country.
Some
officials, citing evidence from highly
classified satellite feeds and electronic
eavesdropping, believe the Iranian regime is
playing host to much of Al Qaeda's remaining
brain trust and allowing the senior operatives
freedom to communicate and help plan the
terrorist network's operations.
And they
suggest that recently elected President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad may be forging an alliance with Al
Qaeda operatives as a way to expand Iran's
influence or, at a minimum, that he is looking
the other way as Al Qaeda leaders in his
country collaborate with their counterparts
elsewhere.
"Iran is becoming more and
more radicalized and more willing to turn a
blind eye to the Al Qaeda presence there," a
U.S. counter-terrorism official
said.
The accusations from U.S.
officials about Iranian nuclear ambitions and
ties to Al Qaeda echo charges that Bush
administration figures made about Iraq in the
run-up to the U.S.-led invasion three years
ago.
Those charges about Iraq have been
discredited. And in the case of Iran, some
intelligence officials and analysts are
unconvinced that Al Qaeda operatives are being
allowed to plot terrorist acts. If anything,
they suggest, the escalating tensions between
Shiite and Sunni Muslims in Iraq would
logically cause Iran's Shiite government to
crack down on Al Qaeda, whose Sunni leadership
has denounced Shiites as infidels.
A
U.S. intelligence official said he did not see
any relaxation in Iran's restrictions on Al
Qaeda members.
"I'm not getting the
sense that these people are free to roam, free
to plot," the official said.
Still, the
official acknowledged that the relationship
between Tehran and Al Qaeda officials within
Iran was largely unknown to U.S. and allied
intelligence, especially since Ahmadinejad's
election last summer.
To some U.S.
intelligence officials, what worries them most
is what they don't know.
"I don't need
to exaggerate the difficulty in determining
what these people are up to at any given
moment," the intelligence official
said.
The U.S. counter-terrorism
official was more blunt. "We don't have any
intelligence going on in Iran. No people on the
ground," he said. "It blows me away the lack of
intelligence that's out there."
U.S.,
European and Arab intelligence officials spoke
on condition of anonymity because they were not
authorized to discuss the issues
publicly.
Ties between Iran and Al Qaeda
were highlighted by the Sept. 11 commission,
which disclosed a wealth of details about such
connections in its final report. The commission
said Iran and Al Qaeda had worked together
sporadically throughout the 1990s, trading
secrets, including some related to making
explosives.
Iranian representatives to
the United Nations did not return repeated
phone calls seeking comment.
In
November, the State Department's third-ranking
official, Undersecretary R. Nicholas Burns,
said the U.S. believed "that some Al Qaeda
members and those from like-minded extremist
groups continue to use Iran as a safe haven and
as a hub to facilitate their
operations."
A year ago, Iranian
delegates to a global counter-terrorism
conference circulated a document describing
Iran as "a major victim of terrorism." The
document blamed links between drug trafficking
and terrorism for "thousands of security
problems," especially along Iran's eastern
border with Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Al
Qaeda operatives and family members have lived
in Iran for years, many since late 2001, when
they fled the U.S.-led bombing of Afghanistan.
Many other Al Qaeda figures fled to Pakistan --
a U.S. ally -- and are believed to be there
still.
Four months ago, Iran declared
that no Al Qaeda members remained in the
country, but U.S. officials reject the claim.
At other times, Iranian officials said that Al
Qaeda members were kept under house arrest and
their activities monitored.
In Tehran,
analysts said American officials were
misreading Iran's intentions. The fact that the
government has not heeded U.S. demands to turn
over Al Qaeda suspects should come as no
surprise given the state of relations between
the two countries, said Nasser Hadian, a
political analyst at Tehran
University.
"They won't. Why should
they" without receiving something in return? he
said.
Some of the suspects have been
indicted in the United States in connection
with terrorist attacks, including the 1998
bombings of two U.S. embassies in East Africa,
but Iran has refused to extradite
them.
Among them is Saif Adel, believed
to be one of the highest-ranking members of Al
Qaeda, behind Osama bin Laden and Ayman
Zawahiri. Whatever restrictions might be placed
on the network's activities within Iran, Adel
-- who has a $5-million U.S. bounty on his head
-- was able last year to post a lengthy
dispatch about Al Qaeda activities in Iran and
Iraq that was widely circulated on the
Internet. U.S. intelligence officials consider
the posting authentic.
In the dispatch,
Adel said he had used hide-outs in Iran to plot
with Abu Musab Zarqawi to make Iraq the new
battleground in the group's war against the
United States. Iran had detained many of
Zarqawi's men, Adel wrote, but they ultimately
slipped into Iraq and began attacking U.S.
forces.
U.S. officials say intelligence
suggests that Al Qaeda operatives have engaged
in at least some terrorist planning from Iran,
including Adel's alleged orchestration of
suicide bombings in Saudi Arabia in May 2003
and the masterminding of several attacks in
Europe.
For several years, the U.S.
counter-terrorism official said, satellite
feeds have helped officials monitor some of the
day-to-day activities and movements of Adel and
other senior Al Qaeda operatives in Iran. The
intelligence suggests that the Al Qaeda leaders
have been monitored by Iranian authorities but
could move and communicate somewhat, the
official said.
U.S. officials also said
that other senior Al Qaeda figures -- including
Zarqawi, now the group's point man in Iraq --
had moved in and out of Iran with the possible
knowledge or complicity of Iranian
officials.
The Al Qaeda members in Iran
include three of Bin Laden's sons. Some of his
wives and other relatives are suspected of
being there as well, as is Al Qaeda spokesman
Sulaiman abu Ghaith, U.S. officials
say.
Of special concern, they said, is
the number of Al Qaeda operatives in Iran who
are of Egyptian descent and loyal to Zawahiri,
the Cairo-born physician who merged his
Egyptian Islamic Jihad with Al Qaeda in the
years before the Sept. 11 attacks.
Adel
is a former Egyptian police official. In
addition, U.S. officials confirmed intelligence
showing that three other Al Qaeda operatives
with Egyptian roots -- Abdallah Mohammed Rajab
Masri, also known as Abu Khayer; Abdel Aziz
Masri; and Abu Mohamed Masri -- are in Iran.
Authorities believe them to be, respectively,
the head of Al Qaeda's leadership council, a
biological weapons expert who heads the
network's effort to develop weapons of mass
destruction; and its top explosives expert and
training camp chief.
The U.S.
counter-terrorism official said the Egyptians'
presence was troubling because Tehran for more
than a decade has supported Egypt's two largest
militant groups -- Egyptian Islamic Jihad and
Gamaa al Islamiya -- in their violent campaign
to topple the Cairo government.
Though
the Sunni-Shiite divide has prompted Tehran in
the past to say it had "no affinity" with Al
Qaeda, U.S. officials believe there is a
history of cooperation between Iran and some
Sunni militant groups, including Al Qaeda. Iran
nurtures such ties, they say, to enhance its
regional influence and punish Arab political
foes through intimidation and
violence.
Bin Laden sent Adel and others
to Iran and Lebanon in the early 1990s to learn
bomb making from Iranian intelligence and
Hezbollah, the Iran-affiliated militant group,
U.S. officials say. They fear he and other
Egyptians may still have ties with Iran's
military and intelligence services.
The
Sept. 11 commission concluded that Iran had
harbored Al Qaeda operatives wanted in the U.S.
embassy bombings in East Africa and other
terrorist attacks.
It quoted one top Al
Qaeda official as saying Iran had made a
"concerted effort to strengthen relations with
Al Qaeda" after the 2000 attack on the U.S.
warship Cole in Yemen.
Imprisoned top Al
Qaeda operatives also have told U.S. officials
that Iran let Islamic militants traveling to
and from Afghanistan and Pakistan pass freely
across its borders without passport stamps --
including at least eight of the 19 future Sept.
11 hijackers, the nowdisbanded commission
said.
The panel strongly urged the Bush
administration and Congress to investigate the
ties between Iran and Al Qaeda. Recently,
commission member Timothy Roemer said in an
interview that Washington still had not
adequately addressed those ties.
U.S.
and allied intelligence agencies say that, more
recently, they have picked up indications of
closer cooperation. The intelligence includes
European wiretaps of militants discussing how
Iranian officials would help them or look the
other way.
U.S. officials fear
Ahmadinejad may be strengthening ties with Al
Qaeda with the help of Iranian intelligence and
military agencies, particularly the
Revolutionary Guards.
The intelligence
official and others noted that Ahmadinejad
himself rose through the ranks of the guards,
an elite military unit. U.S. government
officials have accused the guards of financing
and orchestrating terrorist acts in the region
by groups including Hezbollah, which is
suspected of blowing up U.S. military
facilities and embassies in the 1980s and
killing hundreds of Americans.
Rep. Brad
Sherman of Sherman Oaks, the ranking Democrat
on the House International Relations
subcommittee on terrorism and nuclear
proliferation, who receives classified
briefings on Iran, said U.S. intelligence
indicated that Tehran was engaged in some kind
of collaboration with Al Qaeda
leaders.
"The cooperation is
substantial," Sherman said. "Key operatives of
the most successful terrorist organization in
history are spending their time in the No. 1
state sponsor of terrorism.... That is of
massive concern."
U.S. officials fear
that an Iranian hard-line faction or even a
rogue official could conspire with Al Qaeda or
provide access to the country's military
arsenal.
Despite the mutual antipathy
between Sunnis and Shiites, some U.S. officials
argue that the Iranian regime and Al Qaeda
share a common enemy -- the United States --
and that both oppose the establishment of a
pro-Western democracy in Iraq.
John D.
Negroponte, the director of national
intelligence, told Congress on Feb. 2 that Iran
was engaged in a broad campaign "to disrupt the
operations and reinforcement of United States
forces based in the region, potentially
intimidating regional allies into withholding
support for United States policy toward Iran
and raising the costs of our regional presence"
for the U.S. and its allies.