From: "mart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: [pttp] Kabul 's fall is no mark of U.S. success.


From: Irina Malenko [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, November 18, 2001 6:24 AM
Subject: Irish Times -Kabuls fall is no mark of U.S. success.

The Irish Times
Wednesday, November 14, 2001
Kabul's fall is no mark of US success
by Vincent Browne

The "success" in replacing the Taliban with the
Northern Alliance in Kabul, even if followed by the
capture of Osama bin Laden and his al Queda
associates, almost certainly will make no difference
to the security threat to the US and the West from
terrorism. It may do the reverse.

The scale of the threat to America and its allies is
documented again and again in a multitude of reports
from official US commissions and organisations over
the last few years. These reports describe the nature
of the terrorist organisations that pose these threats
- the absence of hierarchical structures, the loose
connections between them, the spread of these
organisations throughout the world and within America,
the lessening of reliance on state sponsors, and the
danger that one or more of these groups may acquire
nuclear or biological weapons. They also emphasise the
vulnerability of the US to attack from these
organisations.

In Countering the Changing Threat of International
Terrorism, a report by the National Commission on
Terrorism, published in June of last year, the
following observation is made: "If al Queda and Osama
bin Laden were to disappear tomorrow, the United
States would still have potential terrorist threats
from a growing number of groups opposed to perceived
American hegemony."
The same report stated: "Because groups based on
ideological or religious motives may lack a specific
political or nationalistic agenda, they have less need
for a hierarchical structure". It says these groups
"operate in the United States as well as abroad. Their
funding and logistical networks cross borders, are
less dependent on state sponsors and are harder to
disrupt with economic sanctions. Their objectives are
more deadly (than terrorist groups of a decade or two
ago)".
The US Commission on National Security, co-chaired by
former US senator and presidential candidate, Gary
Hart, stated in a report published on February 15th of
this year: "Attacks on American citizens on American
soil, possibly causing heavy casualties, are likely
over the next quarter century. These attacks may
involve weapons of mass destruction and weapons of
mass disruption."

A report in January of this year on the US Department
of Energy's non-proliferation programmes with Russia,
chaired by former US senator Howard Baker, and former
presidential counsellor, Lloyd Cutler, is the most
alarming. It says the old Soviet Union had a nuclear
arsenal of 40,000 weapons, over a thousand metric tons
of nuclear materials, vast quantities of chemical and
biological materials and thousands of missiles. The
quantity of remaining highly enriched uranium (HEU) is
enough to make more than 4,000 additional nuclear
weapons.

The US and Russian governments engaged in what is
known as the "contract of the century" to destroy a
great deal of this material and to bring the remainder
under secure control. But a great proportion remains
in insecure conditions. Worse, those "guarding" this
material are given a strong incentive to give some of
it to terrorists because of inadequate pay - often no
pay at all for months on end - and chaotic military
control arrangements. The report records a number of
scarifying episodes:

In late 1998, conspirators at a Ministry of Autonomic
Energy facility in Chelyabinsk were caught attempting
to steal fissile material of a quantity just short of
that needed for one nuclear device.

In early 1998, the mayor of Krasnoyarsk-45, a closed
nuclear city that stores enough HEU for hundreds of
nuclear weapons, wrote to the governor of Krasnoyarsk
warning that a social explosion in the city was
unavoidable unless urgent action was taken to pay
nuclear scientists and other workers, who had been
unpaid for several months.

In December 1998, an employee of Russia's premier
nuclear weapons laboratory in Sarov was arrested for
espionage and charged with attempting to sell
documents on nuclear weapons designs to agents of Iraq
and Afghanistan for $3 million.

Former US Senator Sam Nunn, who is co-chair of the
Nuclear Threat Initiative, told the US Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations on September 5th this
year: "I am convinced the threat of a biological
weapons attack on the Untied States in as urgent as it
is real." He pointed out that the former Soviet Union
engaged in a massive programme of biological weapons
manufacture, at one time employing 870,000 scientists.
They manufactured 22 tons of smallpox, a tiny fraction
of which, if unleashed on the United States, would
have devastating effects.

A report by the advisory panel to assess domestic
response to capabilities for terrorism involving
weapons of mass destruction, says: "The United States
has no coherent, functional national strategy for
combating terrorism."

Aside from a single sentence in the Gary Hart report,
there is no attempt in any of these documents to
decipher why terrorists might want to attack America
and what America might do to address the reasons for
the hostility. This seems all the more surprising
given the scale of the threat and the vulnerability of
America to terrorist attack.

And the reasons appear straightforward: the presence
of American troops in the Muslim holy land of Saudi
Arabia; the historic injustice perpetrated on the
Palestinian people, an injustice reinforced daily with
the might of American arms; the sanctions on Iraq and
the frequent bombings of that country; and above all,
the perception that America is at war with the Islamic
world. That perception will have been reinforced
hugely by the bombardment of Afghanistan.
Even after the fall of Kabul, America seems more vulnerable.

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