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Another Powell Lie
Revealed: Truth Behind US 'Poison Factory' Claim Colin
Powell's terrorist factory was nothing of the kind - more a dilapidated
collection of concrete outbuildings at the foot of a grassy sloping hill.
Luke Harping reports from the terrorist camp in northern
Iraq named by Colin Powell as a centre of the al-Qaeda international
network
Sunday February 9, 2003
If Colin Powell were to visit the shabby military compound at the foot of
a large snow-covered mountain, he might be in for an unpleasant surprise.
The US Secretary of State last week confidently described the compound in
north-eastern Iraq - run by an Islamic terrorist group Ansar al-Islam - as
a 'terrorist chemicals and poisons factory.'
Yesterday, however, it emerged that the terrorist
factory was nothing of the kind - more a dilapidated collection of
concrete outbuildings at the foot of a grassy sloping hill. Behind the
barbed wire, and a courtyard strewn with broken rocket parts, are a few
empty concrete houses. There is a bakery. There is no sign of chemical
weapons anywhere - only the smell of paraffin and vegetable ghee used for
cooking.
In the kitchen, I discovered some chopped up tomatoes
but not much else. The cook had left his Kalashnikov propped neatly
against the wall.
Ansar al Islam - the Islamic group that uses the
compound identified by Powell as a military HQ to launch murderous attacks
against secular Kurdish opponents - yesterday invited me and several other
foreign journalists into their territory for the first time.
'We are just a group of Muslims trying to do our duty,'
Mohammad Hasan, spokesman for Ansar al-Islam, explained. 'We don't have
any drugs for our fighters. We don't even have any aspirin. How can we
produce any chemicals or weapons of mass destruction?' he asked.
The radical terrorist group controls a tiny mountainous
chunk of Kurdistan, the self-rule enclave of northern Iraq. Over the past
year Ansar's fighters have been at war with the Kurdish secular parties
who control the rest of the area. Every afternoon both sides mortar each
other across a dazzling landscape of mountain and shimmering green
pasture. Until last week this was an obscure and parochial conflict.
But last Wednesday Powell suggested that the 500-strong
band of Ansar fighters had links with both al-Qaeda and Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein. They were, he hinted, a global menace - and more than that
they were the elusive link between Osama bin Laden and Iraq.
This is clearly little more than cheap hyperbole.
Yesterday Hassan took the unprecedented step of inviting journalists into
what was previously forbidden territory in an almost certainly doomed
attempt to prevent an American missile strike once the war with Iraq kicks
off. Ali Bapir, a warlord in the neighbouring town of Khormal, leant us
several fighters armed with machine guns and we set off.
We drove past an Ansar checkpoint, marked with a black
flag and the Islamic militia's logo - the Koran, a sheaf of wheat and a
sword. We kept going. The landscape was littered with the ruins of
demolished houses, destroyed during Saddam's infamous Anfal campaign
against the Kurds in 1988. At the corner of the valley we passed a pink
mosque, with sandbagging on the roof. Washing hung from a courtyard. A
group of Ansar fighters - in green military fatigues - smiled and waved us
on.
Several of their comrades were in the graveyard across
the road. There were numerous fresh plots, each marked with a black flag.
After 20 minutes' drive along a twisting mountain track we arrived in
Serget - the village identified from space by American satellite as a
haven of terrorist activity.
Yesterday, however, Hassan was at pains to deny any link
with al-Qaeda. 'All we are trying to do is fulfil the prophet's goals,' he
said. 'Read the Koran and you'll understand.'
Senior officials from the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan -
the party with which Ansar is at war - insist that the Islamic guerrillas
based in the village have been experimenting with poisons. They have
smeared a crude form of cyanide on door handles. They had even tried it
out on several farm animals, including sheep and donkeys, they claim. The
guerrillas have also managed to construct a 1.5kg 'chemical' bomb designed
to explode and kill anyone within a 50-metre radius, Kurdish intelligence
sources say.
Hassan yesterday dismissed all these allegations as
'lies'. 'We don't have any chemical weapons. As you can see this is an
isolated place,' Ayub Khadir, another fighter, with a bushy pirate beard
and blue turban, said. And yet, despite the fact there appeared to be no
evidence of chemical experimentation, Ansar's complex was lavish for an
organisation that purports to be made up merely of simple Muslims.
Concealed in a concrete bunker, we discovered a sophisticated television
studio, complete with cameras, editing equipment and a scanner.
In a neighbouring room were several computers, beneath
shelves full of videotapes. A banner written in Arabic proclaims: 'Those
who believe in Islam will be rewarded.'
Until recently Ansar had its own website where the
faithful could log on to footage of Ansar guerrillas in battle. In small
concrete bunkers the fighters operated their own radio station, Radio
Jihad. The announcer had clearly been sitting on an empty box of
explosives. Hassan denied yesterday that his revolutionary group received
any funding from Baghdad or from Iran, a short hike away over the
mountains.
'If Colin Powell were to come here he would see that we
have nothing to hide,' he said. But Ansar's sources of funding remain
mysterious - and their real purpose tantalisingly unclear. 'All Ansar
fighters are from Iraq,' Hassan said. 'Iraq is one of the richest
countries in the world. Our fighters have brought their own things with
them.'
But while they appear to pose no real threat to
Washington or London, Ansar's fighters are a brutal bunch. They have so
far killed more than 800 opposition Kurdish fighters. They have shot dead
several civilians. They have even tried - last April - to assassinate the
Prime Minister of the neighbouring town of Sulamaniyah, the mild-mannered
Dr Barham Salih. The plot went wrong and two of the assassins were shot
dead. A third is in prison. 'We are fed up with them. We wish they would
go away,' one villager, who refused to be named, said.
The militia's weapons had been inherited, captured from
their enemies or bought from smugglers, Hassan said. Kurdish intelligence
sources insist that there is 'solid and tangible proof' linking Ansar both
to Iraqi intelligence agents and to al-Qaeda. They say that a group of
fighters visited Afghanistan twice before the fall of the Taliban and met
Abu Hafs, one of bin Laden's key lieutenants.
Hassan yesterday refused to say how many fighters were
holed up in the three villages and one mountain valley under Ansar's
control ('It's a military secret,' he said) and claimed - implausibly -
that none of his men were Arab volunteers come to fight jihad in Iraq.
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Another
Powell Lie Revealed:
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Powell's terrorist factory was nothing of the kind - more a dilapidated
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