<< The cyanide salt was in either one or several small bricks, and U.S.
officials said they believe it was to have been used in an attack on U.S. or
allied interests. >>

U.S. Forces in Iraq Find Some Cyanide
February 7, 2004
By JOHN J. LUMPKIN, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - U.S. forces in Iraq found seven pounds of cyanide during a raid
late last month on a Baghdad house believed connected to an al-Qaida
operative, U.S. officials said.

The cyanide salt was in either one or several small bricks, and U.S.
officials said they believe it was to have been used in an attack on U.S. or
allied interests. Cyanide is extremely toxic and can be used as a chemical
weapon, although it was unclear if the cyanide was in a form that could be
used that way easily.

The raid took place on Jan. 23, a defense official said, speaking on
condition of anonymity. It was unclear if anyone was captured in the raid.
Parts for making bombs also were found in the house, the defense official
said.

The house was inhabited by a suspected subordinate of Abu Musab Zarqawi,
U.S. officials said. Zarqawi is a Jordanian whom CIA officials have
described as a senior associate of Osama bin Laden.

Zarqawi is believed to have tried to direct al-Qaida operations inside Iraq,
although it is unknown if he is in the country now.

He also is connected with Ansar al-Islam, an Islamic extremist group from
northern Iraq. He and his followers are believed to have sought cyanide and
other chemical weapons for use in attacks in the past, American officials
say.

U.S. officials say they have mounting evidence to suggest Zarqawi has had a
hand in multiple attacks in Iraq, including those on a mosque in Najaf, the
U.N. headquarters in Baghdad and Italy's paramilitary police station in
Nasiriyah.

Another alleged al-Qaida member, Hassan Ghul, detained this year while
trying to enter northern Iraq, is believed to have met with Zarqawi to plan
attacks against U.S. and coalition forces, said another U.S. official
speaking on condition of anonymity.

Now in U.S. custody, Ghul is believed to be cooperating with interrogators.
He is known as a facilitator who can move people and money around and is the
highest-ranking member of al-Qaida to have been arrested in Iraq.

The U.S. official said Ghul also is thought to have worked closely with
Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, who officials say masterminded the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks.

The official said attacks in Iraq for which Zarqawi is a suspect include a
truck bomb in August that hit U.N. headquarters in Baghdad, killing 23
people; a car bomb that exploded outside a mosque in Shiite Muslim holy city
of Najaf and killed more than 85; and a suicide truck bombing in November
that devastated Italy's paramilitary police headquarters in southern city of
Nasiriyah, killing more than 30.
___
Associated Press writer Katherine Pfleger contributed to this report.

Reply via email to