By KATHERINE SHRADER
(AP) Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell speaks at the DNI
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Al-Qaida is using its growing strength in Pakistan
and Iraq to plot attacks on U.S. soil, heightening the terror threat
facing the United States over the next few years, intelligence agencies
concluded in a report unveiled Tuesday.
At the same time, the intelligence analysts worry that international
cooperation against terrorism will be hard to sustain as memories of
Sept. 11 fade and nations' views diverge on what the real threat is.
In the National Intelligence Estimate prepared for President Bush and
other top policymakers, analysts laid out a range of dangers - from
al-Qaida to Lebanese Hezbollah to non-Muslim radical groups - that pose
a "persistent and evolving threat" to the country over the next three
years.
The findings focused most heavily on Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida
network, which was judged to remain the most serious threat to the
United States. The group's affiliate in Iraq, which has not yet posed a
direct threat to U.S. soil, could do just that, the report concluded.
Al-Qaida in Iraq threatened to attack the United States in a Web
statement last September.
National Intelligence Council Chairman Thomas Fingar warned that the
group's operatives in Iraq are getting portable, firsthand experience
in covert communications, smuggling, improvised explosive devices,
understanding U.S. military tactics and more.
The Iraqi affiliate also helps al-Qaida more broadly as it tries to
energize Sunni Muslim extremists around the globe, raise resources and
recruit and indoctrinate operatives - "including for homeland attacks,"
according to a declassified summary of the report's main findings.
In addition, analysts stressed the importance of al-Qaida's
increasingly comfortable hideout in Pakistan that has resulted from a
hands-off accord between Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and
tribal leaders along the Afghan border. That 10-month-old deal, which
has unraveled in recent days, gave al-Qaida new opportunities to set up
compounds for terror training, improve its international communications
with associates and bolster its operations.
The assessment shows how the threat has changed.
Just two years ago, the intelligence agencies considered al-Qaida's
various "franchises" decentralized offshoots, with bin Laden mostly
providing ideological direction.
Fingar said his experts believe bin Laden and his top deputy are hiding
in Pakistan. "There is no question that the ungoverned character of the
space is a major factor in the Taliban's and al-Qaida's and other
extremist groups' ability to hide - hide in plain sight," he said.
National Intelligence Estimates are the most authoritative written
judgments of the 16 spy agencies across the breadth of the U.S.
government. These documents reflect the consensus long-term thinking of
top intelligence analysts.
Tuesday's publicly disclosed judgments are part of a more expansive,
still-classified document, approved by the heads of all 16 intelligence
agencies on June 21.
Analysts - who concluded the U.S. now faces a "heightened threat
environment" - painted an increasingly familiar picture of al-Qaida: A
group focused on high-profile attacks against political, economic and
infrastructure targets, while striving to cause mass casualties and
dramatic destruction.
FBI Deputy Director John Pistole said the bureau does not know of any
al-Qaida cells in the United States, although his agents continue
investigating such questions. The estimate said international
counterterrorism efforts since 2001 have hampered al-Qaida's ability to
attack the United States again, while also convincing terror groups
that U.S. soil is a tougher target.
Charles Allen, the Department of Homeland Security's top intelligence
official, said the department isn't changing the nation's threat level,
which remains at yellow, or "elevated" - the middle of a five-point
scale. Airlines remain one step higher, at orange.
Even as authorities warn of dangers in the U.S., analysts concluded the
threat is more severe in Europe. The problem could touch the United
States directly, Fingar noted, because of the ease of travel between
Europe and here.
The White House sought to downplay the report's worries about the
future of international counterterrorism cooperation. Bush's homeland
security adviser, Frances Fragos Townsend, said the administration
isn't concerned about being abandoned by allies. Cooperation is
"actually as strong as it's ever been," she said.
The Bush administration also brushed off critics who say the
administration released the intelligence estimate now to help its case
as the Senate debates whether to withdraw troops from Iraq. White House
press secretary Tony Snow said critics are "engaged in a little
selective hearing ... to shape the story in their own political ways."
Meanwhile, Democrats said the report was proof that U.S. anti-terrorism
efforts are being drained by the Iraq war.
House Armed Services Committee Chairman Ike Skelton, D-Mo., called on
the U.S. to "responsibly redeploy" its troops from Iraq and turn
security over to the Iraqis. "In hindsight, we should have concentrated
our efforts on al-Qaida in Afghanistan from the beginning," he said.
Significant debate in recent weeks has focused on the genesis of the
al-Qaida threat in Iraq and the nature of its links to al-Qaida's
leaders. With the intelligence report's release, Bush sought to draw
the threat in Iraq closer to bin Laden. "These people have sworn
allegiance to the very same man who ordered the attack on September the
11th, 2001," he said.
At a briefing and in a later interview, Ted Gistaro, the national
intelligence officer for transnational threats, said al-Qaida in Iraq
did not have any active cells when the U.S. invaded in March 2003. He
said the watershed moment was when its now-deceased leader, Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, declared his allegiance to bin Laden in an October 2004
Internet message.
Beyond al-Qaida, the report also laid out three other potential terror
threats to the country:
_Lebanese Hezbollah, a Shiite Muslim extremist group, may be more
likely to consider attacking here, especially if it believes the United
States is directly threatening the group or its main sponsor, Iran.
_The number of homegrown extremists in the U.S. and its Western allies
is growing, fueled by Internet web sites and anti-American rhetoric.
_So-called "single issue" terrorist groups probably will attack here on
a smaller scale. They include white supremacists, anarchists and animal
rights groups, such as Animal Liberation Front.
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