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Wednesday, June 30, 2004


Saddam and al Qaeda Connected

Read this excerpt of an interview between Tom Brokaw and Iraqi Prime Minister Allawi and tell me that Mr. Brokaw isn't trying to spin the interview to his personal liberal views (via OTB).

On Tuesday, NBC's Tom Brokaw spoke with new Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, who still believes that Saddam was connected to al-Qaida.

Brokaw: As long as the United States military remains a conspicuous presence in your country working hand in glove with the new Iraqi government, won't you always be seen really as an instrument of the U.S. military and therefore of America?

Allawi: Iraq, as everybody knows, is the front state now -- as the main theater to oppose and fight terrorism. And, with the help of international community and with the help of the region and with the help of the Iraqi people, we are going to win. We are going to prevail.

Brokaw: I know that you and others like you are grateful for the liberation of Iraq. But can't you understand why many Americans feel that so many young men and women have died here for purposes other than protecting the United States?

Allawi: We know that this is an extension to what has happened in New York. And -- the war have been taken out to Iraq by the same terrorists. Saddam was a potential friend and partner and natural ally of terrorism.

Brokaw: Prime minister, I'm surprised that you would make the connection between 9/11 and the war in Iraq. The 9/11 commission in America says there is no evidence of a collaborative relationship between Saddam Hussein and those terrorists of al-Qaida.

Allawi: No. I believe very strongly that Saddam had relations with al-Qaida. And these relations started in Sudan. We know Saddam had relationships with a lot of terrorists and international terrorism. Now, whether he is directly connected to the September -- atrocities or not, I can't -- vouch for this. But definitely I know he has connections with extremism and terrorists.

Among the others who will be tried with Saddam Hussein are his old deputy prime minister Tariq Aziz and the man known as "Chemical Ali," Ali Hassan al Majid.


Maybe I'm a bit cynical, but I have to question which side Tom Brokaw is on when he accuses the new Iraqi Prime Minister of being nothing more than a tool of the American government. That sounds suspiciously like what our enemies are saying.

Not that Tom doesn't have a right to criticize the mission in Iraq, it just seems rather preemptive of him to start denigrating Iraq's new government before its even off the ground.

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