The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Spy Agencies Say Iraq War Worsens Terrorism Threat
By Mark Mazzetti
The New York Times
© September 24, 2006
A stark assessment of
terrorism trends by American intelligence agencies
has found that the American invasion and occupation
of Iraq has helped spawn a new generation of
Islamic radicalism and that the overall
terrorist threat has grown since the Sept.
11 attacks.
The classified National Intelligence Estimate
attributes a more direct role to the Iraq war
in fueling radicalism than that presented either
in recent White House documents or in a report
released Wednesday by the House Intelligence
Committee, according to several officials in
Washington involved in preparing the assessment
or who have read the final document.
The intelligence estimate, completed in April,
is the first formal appraisal of global terrorism
by United States intelligence agencies since the
Iraq war began, and represents a consensus view
of the 16 disparate spy services inside government.
Titled “Trends in Global Terrorism: Implications
for the United States,’’ it asserts that Islamic
radicalism, rather than being in retreat, has
metastasized and spread across the globe.
An opening section of the report, “Indicators
of the Spread of the Global Jihadist Movement,”
cites the Iraq war as a reason for the diffusion
of jihad ideology.
The report “says that the Iraq war has made the
overall terrorism problem worse,” said one
American intelligence official.
More than a dozen United States government
officials and outside experts were interviewed
for this article, and all spoke only on condition
of anonymity because they were discussing a
classified intelligence document. The officials
included employees of several government agencies,
and both supporters and critics of the Bush
administration. All of those interviewed had
either seen the final version of the document
or participated in the creation of earlier
drafts. These officials discussed some of the
document’s general conclusions but not details,
which remain highly classified.
Officials with knowledge of the intelligence
estimate said it avoided specific judgments about
the likelihood that terrorists would once again
strike on United States soil. The relationship
between the Iraq war and terrorism, and the
question of whether the United States is safer,
have been subjects of persistent debate since
the war began in 2003.
National Intelligence Estimates are the most
authoritative documents that the intelligence
community produces on a specific national security
issue, and are approved by John D. Negroponte,
director of national intelligence. Their conclusions
are based on analysis of raw intelligence collected
by all of the spy agencies.
Analysts began working on the estimate in 2004,
but it was not finalized until this year. Part
of the reason was that some government officials
were unhappy with the structure and focus of
earlier versions of the document, according to
officials involved in the discussion.
Previous drafts described actions by the United
States government that were determined to have
stoked the jihad movement, like the indefinite
detention of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay and the
Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal, and some policy
makers argued that the intelligence estimate should
be more focused on specific steps to mitigate the
terror threat. It is unclear whether the final
draft of the intelligence estimate criticizes
individual policies of the United States, but
intelligence officials involved in preparing the
document said its conclusions were not softened or
massaged for political purposes.
Frederick Jones, a White House spokesman, said
the White House “played no role in drafting or
reviewing the judgments expressed in the National
Intelligence Estimate on terrorism.” The estimate’s
judgments confirm some predictions of a National
Intelligence Council report completed in January
2003, two months before the Iraq invasion. That
report stated that the approaching war had the
potential to increase support for political Islam
worldwide and could increase support for some
terrorist objectives.
Documents released by the White House timed to
coincide with the fifth anniversary of the Sept.
11 attacks emphasized the successes that the
United States had made in dismantling the top
tier of Al Qaeda.
“Since the Sept. 11 attacks, America and its
allies are safer, but we are not yet safe,”
concludes one, a report titled “9/11 Five Years
Later: Success and Challenges.” “We have done much
to degrade Al Qaeda and its affiliates and to
undercut the perceived legitimacy of terrorism.”
That document makes only passing mention of the
impact the Iraq war has had on the global jihad
movement. “The ongoing fight for freedom in Iraq
has been twisted by terrorist propaganda as a
rallying cry,” it states.
The report mentions the possibility that Islamic
militants who fought in Iraq could return to their
home countries, “exacerbating domestic conflicts or
fomenting radical ideologies.”
On Wednesday, the Republican-controlled House
Intelligence Committee released a more ominous
report about the terrorist threat. That assessment,
based entirely on unclassified documents, details
a growing jihad movement and says, “Al Qaeda
leaders wait patiently for the right opportunity
to attack.”
The new National Intelligence Estimate was
overseen by David B. Low, the national intelligence
officer for transnational threats, who commissioned
it in 2004 after he took up his post at the National
Intelligence Council. Mr. Low declined to be
interviewed for this article.
The estimate concludes that the radical Islamic
movement has expanded from a core of Qaeda
operatives and affiliated groups to include
a new class of “self-generating” cells inspired
by Al Qaeda’s leadership but without any direct
connection to Osama bin Laden or his top lieutenants.
It also examines how the Internet has helped
spread jihadist ideology, and how cyberspace
has become a haven for terrorist operatives
who no longer have geographical refuges in
countries like Afghanistan.
In early 2005, the National Intelligence
Council released a study concluding that
Iraq had become the primary training ground
for the next generation of terrorists, and that
veterans of the Iraq war might ultimately
overtake Al Qaeda’s current leadership in the
constellation of the global jihad leadership.
But the new intelligence estimate is the first
report since the war began to present a
comprehensive picture about the trends in
global terrorism.
In recent months, some senior American
intelligence officials have offered glimpses
into the estimate’s conclusions in public
speeches.
“New jihadist networks and cells, sometimes
united by little more than their anti-Western
agendas, are increasingly likely to emerge,”
said Gen. Michael V. Hayden, during a speech
in San Antonio in April, the month that the new
estimate was completed. “If this trend continues,
threats to the U.S. at home and abroad will become
more diverse and that could lead to increasing
attacks worldwide,” said the general, who was
then Mr. Negroponte’s top deputy and is now
director of the Central Intelligence Agency.
For more than two years, there has been tension
between the Bush administration and American spy
agencies over the violence in Iraq and the
prospects for a stable democracy in the country.
Some intelligence officials have said the White
House has consistently presented a more optimistic
picture of the situation in Iraq than justified by
intelligence reports from the field.
Spy agencies usually produce several national
intelligence estimates each year on a variety
of subjects. The most controversial of these in
recent years was an October 2002 document
assessing Iraq’s illicit weapons programs.
Several government investigations have discredited
that report, and the intelligence community is
overhauling how it analyzes data, largely as a
result of those investigations.
The broad judgments of the new intelligence
estimate are consistent with assessments of
global terrorist threats by American allies and
independent terrorism experts.
The panel investigating the London terrorist
bombings of July 2005 reported in May that the
leaders of Britain’s domestic and international
intelligence services, MI5 and MI6, “emphasized
to the committee the growing scale of the Islamist
terrorist threat.”
More recently, the Council on Global Terrorism,
an independent research group of respected
terrorism experts, assigned a grade of “D+”
to United States efforts over the past five
years to combat Islamic extremism. The council
concluded that “there is every sign that
radicalization in the Muslim world is spreading
rather than shrinking.”
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