Army moles aided suicide bomber
Tony Allen-Mills, Washington, and Ali Rifat, Baghdad
 
 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-1415657,00.html
 
THE suicide bomber who killed 22 soldiers and contractors at an American
military base at Mosul last week had inside help from militant
sympathisers who infiltrated Iraqi forces being trained by the Pentagon.

The devastating attack on an American mess tent - just over a month
before elections in Iraq - has severely shaken American confidence in
local security forces who are eventually intended to replace coalition
troops in maintaining order. 

 
 
Sources close to Ansa al-Sunna, a Sunni Muslim terrorist group blamed
for the bombing, said the attack was the result of a month of planning
using information from sympathisers who had infiltrated the camp. 

"The aim was to kill as many Americans as possible," said one source.
The group wants Taliban-style religious rule in Iraq. 

The bomber is believed to have entered the camp's main gate dressed in
an Iraqi police uniform and carrying a police identity card. One of his
accomplices was on guard duty at the gate, and helped persuade the
soldiers he had come to take away air conditioning units for repair. The
bomber was said to have been waved through without further inspection. 

The apparent ability of the insurgents to strike at the heart of a
heavily guarded US military installation has provoked a new round of
soul-searching in Washington, where one prominent media figure last week
raised for the first time the previously taboo p-word - pull-out. 

"Support our Troops is a wonderful slogan," wrote Al Neuharth, founder
of USA Today, a popular daily newspaper. "But the best way to support
troops thrust by unwise commanders-in-chief into ill-advised adventures
like Vietnam and Iraq is to bring them home. Sooner rather than later." 

Even those who believe American power and prestige remains inextricably
tied to a successful outcome in Iraq have begun to find optimism
difficult. "George W Bush seems to be left with the choice between
making things worse - slowly or quickly," said James Dobbins, a former
US special envoy to Afghanistan. Thomas Friedman of The New York Times
said: "We may actually lose in Iraq." 

Opinion polls last week showed for the first time that a clear majority
of Americans now regard the war as a mistake. A Washington Post poll
found that 56% believe the conflict was "not worth fighting".
Paradoxically, 58% still support keeping American forces in Iraq until
"civil order is restored". 

The growing problem for Bush is that he may never be able to achieve a
level of civil order that would enable a dignified withdrawal. It has
emerged that Colin Powell, the outgoing US secretary of state, warned
Bush and Tony Blair last month that there were too few coalition troops
in Iraq. 

American officials confirmed a Washington Post report that Blair and
Bush have had a series of intensive discussions about troop levels over
the past few months. The issue was considered so sensitive that
transcripts of their discussions were destroyed to avoid media leaks. 

During a surprise visit to Iraq on Christmas Eve, Donald Rumsfeld, the
US defence secretary, acknowledged there were times "when it looks
bleak, when one worries how it's going to come out". But he told troops
in Mosul: "There is no doubt in my mind this is achievable."
 
 



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