DOHA, Qatar (AP) — A man believed to be Osama bin Laden calls on all Muslims
to support Iraq in any future war with the United States, urging Iraqis to stage
suicide attacks and lure American troops into bloody urban battles to inflict
``big casualties.''
He also suggests Saddam Hussein is an infidel, but says Muslims should back him
nonetheless in the war against ``the Crusaders.''
'Bin Laden' Tape Urges Support for Iraq
AP
DOHA, Qatar (AP) — A man
believed to be Osama bin Laden calls on all Muslims to support Iraq in any
future war with the United States, urging Iraqis to stage suicide attacks
and lure American troops into bloody urban battles to inflict ``big
casualties.''
He also suggests Saddam Hussein is an infidel, but says Muslims should
back him nonetheless in the war against ``the Crusaders.''
U.S. officials said they believe the voice on the tape is that of the
elusive bin Laden. Secretary of State Colin Powell said the comments,
broadcast on Tuesday, bolstered U.S. allegations that Iraq is harboring
al-Qaida operatives.
The raspy voice was broadcast by the Al-Jazeera satellite television
station on the first day of the major Islamic holiday Eid al-Adha as
millions of Muslim pilgrims were performing the hajj, or pilgrimage to the
holy city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia.
``We stress the importance of martyrdom operations (suicide attacks)
against the enemy, these attacks that have scared Americans and Israelis
like never before,'' the man identified as bin Laden said.
There was no immediate comment from the Iraqi government, which has
repeatedly denied links to al-Qaida. The tape has not been reported on
Iraqi media and most Iraqis do not have satellite dishes.
Some U.S. analysts wondered at bin Laden's motives for issuing a statement
supporting Iraq, given many countries' skepticism of U.S. allegations of
Iraqi-al-Qaida links. Others worried the recording would inflame Muslims
against U.S. troops in the Persian Gulf region.
The tape was broadcast as U.S. officials were warning of imminent terror
attacks in the United States or in the Persian Gulf, where more than
113,000 U.S. troops are massing for a possible attack on Iraq.
On the tape, the speaker urged Iraqis to profit from the lessons learned
by al-Qaida fighters in the war against the Americans and their allies in
Afghanistan.
He said the strategy of digging camouflaged trenches was especially
effective against U.S. bombing in Tora Bora in December 2001. Bin Laden is
believed to have escaped death or capture despite intense American bombing
of the stronghold in eastern Afghanistan.
``We advise about the importance of drawing the enemy into long, close and
exhausting fighting, taking advantage of camouflaged positions in plains,
farms, mountains and cities,'' he said.
The speaker urged the Iraqis to draw the Americans into urban combat,
saying ``the thing that the enemy fears the most is to fight a city war''
because the United States is afraid of suffering ``big casualties.''
``We stress the importance of martyrdom operations (suicide attacks)
against the enemy, these attacks that have scared Americans and Israelis
like never before,'' the man identified as bin Laden said.
U.S. military planners fear Saddam might ring Baghdad with his best troops
of the elite Republican Guard and draw U.S. forces into bloody street
fighting where they could not use their high-tech weapons for fear of
causing massive civilian casualties.
The speaker also told Iraqis not to worry about American smart bombs and
laser-guided weapons because ``they work on only the clear, obvious
targets.''
Some Middle East experts have questioned ties between bin Laden's Islamic
extremists and Saddam's government, which nominally adheres to a
Pan-Arabic socialistic doctrine called Baathism.
In the tape, the speaker said Iraq was governed by socialist infidels,
including Saddam. But he said that it was acceptable for Muslims to fight
on behalf of Iraqi ``socialists'' because ``in these circumstances'' their
interests ``intersect in fighting against the Crusaders,'' or Christians.
U.S. counterterrorism officials in Washington said the audio message was
probably a real recording of bin Laden, and that a technical analysis was
planned to authenticate it.
Yasser Thabet, a broadcast editor at Al-Jazeera, said the station received
the tape by the same channels as previous bin Laden statements, but he did
not give details.
In Washington, CIA Director George J. Tenet said intelligence information
suggests al-Qaida may launch attacks as early as this week in both the
United States and on the Arabian peninsula.
``The intelligence is not idle chatter on the part of terrorists and their
associates,'' Tenet told Congress. ``It is the most specific we have
seen.''
Tenet said the information suggests the attack may involve a ``dirty
bomb'' — a weapon that spreads radioactive material over a wide area —
or chemical or poison weapons.
``This nexus between terrorists and states that are developing weapons of
mass destruction can no longer be looked away from and ignored,'' Powell
told a Senate committee Tuesday.
On the tape, the speaker urged other Muslims not to cooperate with the
United States in a showdown against Iraq. He criticized Arab governments
that support U.N. efforts to rid Iraq of alleged weapons of mass
destruction.
``Anyone who helps America, from the Iraqi hypocrites (opposition) or Arab
rulers ... whoever fights with them or offers them bases or administrative
assistance, or any kind of support or help, even if only with words, to
kill Muslims in Iraq, should know that he is an apostate,'' the speaker
said.
The speaker also called on Muslims to rise up and ``break free from the
slavery of these tyrannic and apostate regimes, which are enslaved by
America.'' He singled out Jordan, Morocco, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia
and Yemen.
In remarks to the U.N. Security Council on Wednesday, Powell accused Iraq
of harboring al-Qaida fugitive Abu Musaab Zarqawi, who has been linked to
the murder of a U.S. diplomat in Jordan and poison plots in a half-dozen
European countries.
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