Forward from mart.

U.S. Money Keeps Sudan Extremists Alive

Of course this story from May 2004 must be nonsense. Surely 
the U.S. wouldn't be pulling off *another* "Kosovo" and be sponsoring 
terrorists, in order to create a situation where the U.S would then 
have an excuse to intervene, occupy the country and grab Sudan's 
oil resources.......would they???

mart

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----- Original Message ----- 
From: Jim Yarker  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
Sent: Saturday, September 18, 2004 4:03 PM
Subject: Wayne Madsen: U.S. Money Keeps 
Sudan Extremists Alive


[interesting rendition of events as a squeeze play operated by 
Washington in concert with �War on Terror� recruit Chad.  A 
*very* well armed �ragtag� rebel force, operating from rear 
bases in a neighbouring U.S. client state, produces an explosion 
of violence in a non-aligned, resource-rich state on Washington�s
 shit list, with predictable humanitarian sequelae. Enter the humanitarian chorus of 
the West�s Latte Left, who wonder indignantly and volubly why Washington and London 
are just �standing idly by� and doing nothing to �aid� the affected population, to 
intervene more �forcefully� against the designated g�nocidaires etc.  This gang was 
nowhere to be found when the ethnic Tutsi units of the Washington-funded and -trained 
Ugandan armed forces invaded Rwanda in October of 1990, beginning a 4-yr quest to 
impose minority �migr� rule in Kigali at a cost of 100s of 1000s of Rwandan lives, 
mostly from the majority Hutu.  But they were quick to set up shop *after* the 
invasion to monitor the human rights practices of the government suffering aggression 
and the depopulation of its countryside by �rebel� terror.  Sound familiar? This is 
the kind of organized and well-funded moral indignation which requires State 
Department clearance.   Interesting variation on the Rwanda theme here: Whereas the 
�ragtag� �grassroots� rebels fighting to conquer power in Rwanda were largely 
anglophone and their leadership trained in the U.S., and were operating in a country 
where English had no historical or social base whatsoever, the �grassroots� �ragtag� 
rebels in this case are francophones, operating in historically anglophone Sudan. -jy] 
 

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http://www.newsinsider.org/madsta/bush_funding_al_qaeda_minions.html 


Letters from the Empire 

Bush Funding al-Qaeda Minions 

US Money Keeps Sudan Extremists Alive 

By W. Madsen 
03 May 2004 


While the Bush administration is evangelistically pursuing its global 'war on 
terrorism', military armaments and training it provides to the Chadian military are 
being used to keep groups liked to al-Qaeda alive in the Sudan. Why is the US 
administration turning the blind eye to the ongoing genocide in Sudan's Darfur region, 
perpetrated largely by al-Qaeda front groups using US military equipment? News Insider 
columnist Wayne Madsen investigates. 


Former Chadian ambassador to the United States Ahmat H. Soubiane delivered a 
blistering attack on Chad's President Idriss Deby, a new member of the Bush 
administration's 'global war on terrorism' at a seminar sponsored by the Council on 
Foreign Relations in Washington last month. Questioning Deby's plans to amend the 
Chadian constitution so he can become President for life, Soubiane, in an open letter 
to the people of Chad, urged the ruling party in Chad to oppose Deby's plans. Deby 
reacted to Soubiane's letter by recalling him as ambassador to the United States in 
February, however, Soubiane remains in Washington under de facto political asylum. 


With the commencement (one year ahead of schedule) of the pumping of oil in October 
2003 from Chad through the new Chad-Cameron pipeline, a project backed by a consortium 
consisting of Exxon Mobil, Chevron Texaco, Petronas of Malaysia, Halliburton, and the 
World Bank, Deby is adopting the policy of oil cronyism of Equatorial Guinea's 
dictator Teodoro Obiang. Although Deby is from the north of Chad, tradition is that 
the prime minister is from the south and vice versa. However, in June 2003, Deby 
appointed his inexperienced nephew as Prime Minister and in January 2004 appointed his 
brother-in-law to head Chad's Central African Bank and, by default, president of the 
9-member Chadian Revenue Management Oversight Committee, which oversees how the oil 
revenues, which are deposited in an escrow account in a London bank, are spent. Deby's 
family are members of the northern Zaghawa tribe, which represents one percent of 
Chad's population. Soubiane fears that Chad will become another Rwanda or Burundi, 
where a small minority ethnic group rules with an iron fist over the majority. 


Soubiane criticized recent trends of African presidents who, after their mandates end, 
"trump up reasons -civil war, threats from abroad, domestic violence- to remain in 
power," in effect, becoming presidents for life. Soubiane calls this an "African 
comedy." 


Deby has recently become a counterterrorism partner of the United States through the 
Pan Sahel Initiative, a US-European Command program to train and equip Sahel countries 
in the fight against Islamist groups allied to al-Qaeda. Soubiane said that while he 
welcomes the initiative's recent success in stopping an Algerian group that 
infiltrated into Chad from Niger, he fears that leaders like Deby are joining the Pan 
Sahel Initiative for their own personal gain. 

Chad is receiving US military aid and training under Pan Sahel. However, Soubiane 
cited Deby's involvement in the bloody and near-genocidal inter-ethnic fighting in the 
nieghboring Darfur province of Sudan, which he fears will eventually spill over into 
Chad. Soubiane said the fighting in Darfur was initiated by former members of Deby's 
Presidential Guard who hail from the province. To repay his debt, Deby is providing 
advanced weaponry, including all terrain vehicles, fuel, small arms, and anti-aircraft 
guns to the Darfur rebels who are fighting the Sudanese central government. Some of 
Chad's military equipment is being provided by the United States under the Pan Sahel 
Initiative. The Bush administration and its evangelical Christian allies have targeted 
Khartoum's Islamic government by supplying weapons to various factions opposed to it. 
Like Chad, Sudan is also sitting on top of huge oil reserves. 


US military support for Deby and his allied Sudanese rebels is resulting in nothing 
less than another African genocide, closely approaching those of Rwanda and Congo in 
death toll. The people of Darfur are dying and the Bush administration throws gasoline 
on the flames by granting military assistance to the perpetrators of genocide. 
Representatives of international Holocaust and genocide remembrance lobbies urge the 
world to recall the lessons of Europe in the 1930s and 1940s at a conference in 
Berlin, but remain silent on the ongoing genocide in Africa, much of it orchestrated 
by the "creative destruction" neo-conservatives who have infested the Bush 
administration from top to bottom. 


Soubiane warned that Deby's allies in Sudan have links to al-Qaeda who may be 
benefiting from US military aid to Deby (US forces have similarly armed and trained 
Albanian and Bosnian Muslim allies of al-Qaeda in the Balkans). The Bush 
administration also conducted high-level trans-Afghan gas pipeline negotiations with 
the Taliban just weeks prior to 9-11. 


Citing Chadian involvement in Sudan's genocide, Soubiane cited the fact that the 
mainly Zaghawa rebels in Darfur speak Arabic and French, the main languages of 
northern Chad and not Arabic and English, as do most Sudanese, and that one leader of 
the Chadian-supported rebels, a Mr. Bashir, uses the alias "bin Laden." More dots now 
connect the Bush administration to allies of al-Qaeda in Chad and Sudan. It was the 
same with the Taliban and Albanian guerrillas in the Balkans. 


Soubiane made clear that Chad is not a fertile ground for Islamist terrorism or 
extremism. This is contrary to what has been said by Bush administration officials who 
support expanding the US military presence in the country. Soubiane stressed that, 
"the Chadian people have learned through experience that Islamic and non-Islamic 
believers must co-exist -an idea that is crystallized in the popular consensus in 
support of a secular government." 


Copyright � 2003 by the News Insider and Wayne Madsen 

Wayne Madsen is a Washington, DC-based investigative journalist and syndicated 
columnist. He is author of the forthcoming book Jaded Tasks: Big Oil, Black Ops and 
Brass Plates, and co-author, with John Stanton, of America's Nightmare: The Presidency 
of George Bush II, which is available at Booksurge and Barnes & Noble.  

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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