http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/JB07Df02.html
Pakistan taken to task over al-Qaeda
By Jim Lobe 

WASHINGTON - With key improvements in the security situation in Iraq during
2007, al-Qaeda - and particularly its central leadership based in border
regions of Pakistan - continues to pose the most significant threats to the
United States, both at home and abroad, according to the Director of
National Intelligence, retired Admiral J Michael McConnell. 

And while the group has suffered major setbacks, particularly in Iraq,
during the past year, it has successfully maintained its unity and is
improving its ability to attack the United States itself, in part by
identifying, training and positioning westerners capable of carrying out
such an attack, according to McConnell, who presented the intelligence
community's "annual threat


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assessment" before the Senate Intelligence Committee in Washington on
Tuesday. 

"While increased security measures at home and abroad have caused al-Qaeda
to view the West, especially the US, as a harder target," he told lawmakers,
"we have seen an influx of new Western recruits into the tribal areas [in
Pakistan] since mid-2006." 

Al-Qaeda and its affiliates, among the most active and dangerous of which is
the al-Qaeda in the Lands of the Islamic Maghreb, remain the most
significant threat. However, US intelligence agencies remain concerned about
the alleged weapons of mass destruction programs of both Iran and North
Korea and Washington's vulnerability to attacks by both states, non-state or
criminal actors on its information infrastructure. 

McConnell's 45-page written testimony also expressed concerns about global
energy security, including the possibility of "a major oil supply
disruption" and its impact on the global economy; and the increased risk of
social and political instability in developing countries resulting from the
"double impact of high energy and food prices". 

The increased cost of both fuel and food, according to McConnell has already
"outstripped global aid budgets and adversely impacted the ability of donor
countries and organizations to provide food aid", he noted, adding that
recent public protests from Mexico to Morocco could portend broader
disruptions. 

McConnell, who appeared with the directors of Washington's most important
intelligence agencies, including the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), also
said the intelligence community was worried that major oil exporters, both
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and non-OPEC members,
including Venezuela and Russia, will use their "windfall profits" to pursue
political goals harmful to US interests. 

In Tuesday's testimony, CIA director retired General Michael Hayden
acknowledged publicly for the first time that the controversial
interrogation technique known as "waterboarding" - which human rights groups
have denounced as torture - had been used against three senior al-Qaeda
leaders while they were being held secretly in 2002 and 2003. 

His confirmation prompted a call by Human Rights Watch late Tuesday for a
criminal investigation by the Department of Justice. Waterboarding, in which
the prisoner is made to believe he is drowning, has been prosecuted by US
courts as torture since the Spanish-American War 110 years ago. 

The annual threat assessment, of which McConnell's testimony represents the
unclassified version, is designed to provide an overview to lawmakers of the
most important risks to US national security. 

McConnell reiterated the main finding of a National Intelligence Estimate
(NIE) from last July that al-Qaeda has "regenerated its core operational
capabilities needed to conduct attacks in the homeland", primarily through
its retention of a safe haven in Pakistan's border areas which serve as a
"staging area" for attacks in support of the Taliban in Afghanistan "as well
as a location for training new terrorist operatives, for attacks in
Pakistan, the Middle East, Africa, Europe and the United States". 
On Afghanistan, McConnell insisted that NATO, US and Afghan army forces had
scored tactical victories over the Taliban, but that the security situation
in the southern part of the country has deteriorated, while Taliban forces
have expanded operations into previously peaceful forces in the west and
around Kabul. 

On Pakistan, a growing concern of US policymakers, McConnell warned that
"radical elements have the potential to undermine the country's
cohesiveness" and that December's assassination of former prime minister
Benazir Bhutto could embolden Pashtun militants, many of whom are linked to
the Taliban. 

On Iran, McConnell stuck closely to the findings of last December's NIE
which asserted "with high confidence" that Tehran halted its nuclear weapons
design and weapons development activities in the fall of 2003, even while it
maintained other programs, including ballistic-missile development and
uranium enrichment that could be used for a nuclear weapons program. 

Hopes for regime change in Iran and North Korea were unlikely to be
realized, at least in the near term, according to McConnell. 

Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and Iran's various conservative factions,
despite growing infighting in the run-up to this year's parliamentary
elections, "are expected to maintain control over a politically stable, if
economically troubled Iranian state". Record high oil export earnings have
placed Iran "on its soundest financial footing since the revolution". 

As for North Korea, "The regime appears stable, but persistent economic
privation and natural disasters ... and uncertainty about succession
arrangements create the potential for domestic unrest with unpredictable
consequences." 

Elsewhere, he said, "Russian national power - from trade and energy, to
diplomatic instruments and military and intelligence capabilities - are on a
path to grow over the next four years." 

On Latin America, he said "gradual consolidation of democracy remained the
dominant trend over the last year ... but a small group of radical populist
governments continues to project a competing vision that appeals to many of
the region's poor." 

He cited Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua, and "more tentatively", Ecuador as
governments pursuing agendas that weakened democratic institutions. On Cuba,
he said the political situation is "likely to remain stable at least in the
initial months following Fidel Castro's death and do not expect to see overt
signs of major cleavage in the ruling elite ..." 

As for Africa, he said the situation in the oil-producing Niger Delta "poses
a direct threat to US strategic interests in the region. He said Nigeria's
"overall political stability remains fragile". Ethiopia and Eritrea, he
noted, appear to be preparing for a new war, while the Ethiopian-backed
government in neighboring Somalia "is incapable of administering [the
country]" and probably would flee Mogadishu or collapse if the Ethiopians
withdrew. 

Meanwhile, "The crisis in Sudan's Darfur region shows few signs of
resolution, even if the planned UN peacekeeping force of 26,000 is fully
deployed." 


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