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US report says Iraq fuels terror US report says Iraq fuels terror
(about 2 hours later)
The New York Times newspaper has published what it says are the findings of a classified US intelligence paper on the effects of the Iraq war.The New York Times newspaper has published what it says are the findings of a classified US intelligence paper on the effects of the Iraq war.
The document reportedly blames the conflict for increasing the threat of terrorism and helping fuel Islamic radicalism worldwide.The document reportedly blames the conflict for increasing the threat of terrorism and helping fuel Islamic radicalism worldwide.
Such a conclusion is at odds with the White House's persistent claim that going to war was the right thing to do. Such a conclusion is at odds with the White House's persistent claim that going to war has made the world safer.
The paper has not seen the report, but spoke to people familiar with it.The paper has not seen the report, but spoke to people familiar with it.
Changing al-Qaeda Comprehensive study
The BBC's Andre Vornic in New York says the National Intelligence Estimate, as the document is known, is all the more significant for reflecting the views of no fewer than 16 US spy agencies. The BBC's defence correspondent Rob Watson says this is not the first time the US intelligence community has said that the war in Iraq has made the problem of Islamist extremism worse.
According to the New York Times, it says the Iraq war has triggered more, not less, terrorism, and helped spread jihadist ideology. Indeed it had warned that might happen even before the US-led invasion.
It also reportedly concludes that al-Qaeda has now mutated into a global franchise of semi-autonomous cells. Many have been inspired by al-Qaeda chief Osama Bin LadenBut, our correspondent says, this latest finding, known as a National Intelligence Estimate, is the most comprehensive report yet, based on the considered analysis of all 16 of America's intelligence agencies.
The estimate is the first US assessment of international terrorism since the Iraq war began. According to the New York Times, which has spoken to officials who have either read it, or been involved in drafting it, the report says the invasion and occupation of Iraq has spawned a new generation of Islamic radicalism that has spread across the globe.
The New York Times has spoken to officials who have either read it, or been involved in drafting it. It also warns that Islamic militants who have fought in Iraq could foment radicalism and violence when they return to their home countries, much as returning Jihadis did after the war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan in the 1980s.
If what they say is true, our correspondent says, the document appears to undermine US President George W Bush's insistence that for all the flaws of the Iraq war, the world is now a safer place. Al-Qaeda threat
It reportedly concludes that, while al-Qaeda may have been weakened since the 11 September 2001 attacks, the radical Islamic movement worldwide has strengthened with the formation of new groups and cells who are inspired by Osama Bin Laden, but not under his direct control.
The report will make uncomfortable reading at the White House, our correspondent says. In a series of recent speeches, President George W Bush has been portraying the war in Iraq as the central front in the war on terrorism.
This report implies while that may be true, that it is a front of America's own making.
In the past, Mr Bush has dismissed such reasoning by arguing that Islamic militants had hated the US long before it invaded Iraq, or even Afghanistan for that matter.