Terror Analysis Fuels
By
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published:
September 27, 2006
Filed at 8:51 a.m. ET
WASHINGTON (AP) -- White
House release of a previously secret intelligence assessment depicting a
growing terrorist threat gives both political parties new ammunition in the
election-season fight over the
For Republicans, the document --
excerpts of which were declassified under orders from President Bush on Tuesday
-- provides more evidence that
For Democrats, the report furthers
their argument that the 2003
''The American people
deserve the full story, not those parts of it that the Bush administration
selects,'' said Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.
But Rep. Peter Hoekstra,
R-Mich., chairman of the House Intelligence Committee,
warned that releasing more of the intelligence assessment could aid terrorists.
''We are very cautious and very restrained about the kind of information we
want to give al-Qaida,'' Hoekstra said in a C-SPAN
interview Wednesday.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, in
In the bleak National
Intelligence Estimate, the government's top analysts concluded
''We also assess that
the global jihadist movement -- which includes al-Qaida, affiliated and independent terrorist groups, and
emerging networks and cells -- is spreading and adapting to counterterrorism
efforts,'' concluded the estimate, compiled by leading analysts across 16
A separate high-level
assessment focused solely on
An intelligence
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature
of the process, said National Intelligence Director John Negroponte told
lawmakers in writing only one month ago that he ordered a new
The broad assessment on
global terror trends, completed in April, escalated an election-year battle
over which party is the best steward of national security.
At a news conference
Tuesday, Bush said critics who believe the
But Sen. Joe Biden,
the top Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, said Wednesday that Bush
has allowed
''On Election Day, that
morning, if there's still the carnage in the streets of
Sen. Jay Rockefeller of
''There is no question
that many of our policies have inflamed our enemies' hatred toward the
In the declassified
excerpts on terrorism, the intelligence community found:
-- The increased role of
Iraqis in managing the operations of al-Qaida in
-- While
-- The underlying
factors fueling the spread of the extremist Muslim movement outweigh its
vulnerabilities. These factors are entrenched grievances and a slow pace of
reform in home countries, rising anti-U.S. sentiment and the
-- Groups ''of all
stripes'' will increasingly use the Internet to communicate, train, recruit and
obtain support.
The report's few
positive notes were couched in conditional terms, depending on successful
completion of difficult tasks ahead for the
National intelligence
estimates are compilations of the best thinking of