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Operation Enduring Freedom curbed al-Qaeda’s WMD program | |
2004-01-27 | |
An al-Qaida program to develop chemical and biological weapons was in the early "conceptual stages" when it was cut short by the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan, U.S. and Malaysian security officials told the Associated Press. The information on the state of Osama bin Laden’s weapons plan came from interrogations of terrorist suspects captured in Southeast Asia and from clues gathered in the Afghan battlefield. The project was being developed in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar. Officials believe the program was being run by Yazid Sufaat, a former Malaysian army captain and U.S.-trained biochemist, under the direction of Riduan Isamuddin, or Hambali, an Indonesian accused of heading al-Qaida’s operations in Southeast Asia. Both men are suspected members of Jemaah Islamiyah, an al-Qaida-linked Islamic extremist group. Yazid was arrested in December 2001 as he returned to Malaysia from Afghanistan. Hambali was arrested last August in Thailand and is in U.S. custody at an undisclosed location. While clues that al-Qaida was trying to develop chemical and biological weapons were found in Afghanistan after the U.S. military victory in 2001, Hambali’s arrest opened a new vein of intelligence. Interrogators have been trying to match up details of the project gleaned separately from Yazid and Hambali. As the investigation continues, Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is considering whether to renew an order keeping Yazid in prison. The order expires Friday.
By mid-2001, Yazid was in Kandahar, and working on a program "to equip al-Qaida with the capability to launch a chemical attack," a Malaysian official said. Yazid - who police say is trained in counterinterrogation techniques and is "cooperative only in areas that he chooses to" - has been evasive about chemical or biological weapons he was working on. The Pentagon said in early 2002 that U.S. forces had found traces of anthrax at a suspected al-Qaida biological weapons site in Kandahar, along with some equipment needed to convert the bacteria into a weapon. Other samples found at the site tested positive for the poison ricin. Yazid has told Malaysian authorities the program was in its "conceptual stages" when it was abandoned when the U.S.-led attack on the Taliban started in October 2001, an official said. Hambali has given U.S. interrogators some information on the weapons program but not much detail, and Yazid is believed to know more specifics. This has led to new U.S. interest in Yazid. In the past, Malaysia has refused to consider extraditing Yazid to the United States. But FBI agents were allowed to question Yazid in November 2002, nearly a year before Hambali’s arrest. | |
Posted by:Dan Darling |
#1 "Hambali’s arrest opened a new vein of intelligence" bleeding them dry, so to speak? |
Posted by: Frank G 2004-1-27 12:20:26 PM |