Excerpts from today's 9/11 Commission hearing
(Commissioner John Lehman questioning former Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright)

LEHMAN: Did you know about Abdel Rahman Yasin and his fleeing to Baghdad and
his support and cooperation with Saddam's intelligence service? Did you see
any significance in that?  He being, of course, one of the main plotters of
the '93 bombing.

ALBRIGHT: I can't say that I remember that.

LEHMAN: Just on that theme, the fact that Abu Nidal and Abu Abbas were there
along with Yasin, would this have been a reason to begin to look a bit at
what the Iraqi secret service was doing with Al Qaida, with or without
Saddam's knowledge?

ALBRIGHT: Again, my sense of all of this was that there were shadowy
connections among a variety of groups. But in terms of this kind of
specificity, frankly, that was not something that as secretary of state I
would have been looking into.  . . .

LEHMAN: The reports at the time and subsequently have appeared in various
places that the evidence involved with the pharmaceutical plant not only
involved Al Qaida and specifically Osama, but also the Iraqi -- various
programs within the Iraqi government, let us say. Did you see any
significance in that as something to worry about, perhaps the Iraqis'
involvement with Osama might be a bit more than it might appear?

ALBRIGHT: I did not make the connection. But let me just say this, is that
if you look at the record, I was as hawkish on Saddam Hussein as anybody,
made more statements and took more actions, whether I was ambassador at the
United Nations or secretary of state, in terms of trying to contain Saddam
Hussein and make sure that he proceeded in terms of trying to live up to or
fulfill the Security Council resolutions.

ALBRIGHT: And so, I did not or do not remember making a link between what
was happening in Sudan and the Iraqis. I don't know, Tom, whether you have
anything.

PICKERING: Mr. Secretary, I also participated in the meetings leading up to
that decision. There were two pieces of evidence only that I was aware of
that I thought were very, very important and that helped, I believe, to
crystallize the decision. One was the report we had following chemical
analysis of the actual sample of a precursor to VX nerve gas that did not
occur in nature. It was very unique and was not used for any other known
purpose. And the other was the connection that the secretary just talked to
you about of the plant with investments of activities of Osama bin Laden in
Sudan. As you know, he spent time in Sudan prior to the attack on the plant.
And I was not aware of any Iraqi connection until after the attack.

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