Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Nation & World

It Was a Direct Hit, But Was It the Right Target?

Questions linger about a U.S. missile strike

By Kevin Whitelaw and Warren P. Strobel
Posted 8/8/99

On August 20 last year, 13 American cruise missiles slammed into a dusty pharmaceutical plant in Sudan. The strike, the White House said, was in retaliation for the bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania two weeks earlier. But many of the U.S. intelligence analysts who keep tabs on African affairs were kept out of the loop, and they were skeptical that the plant, known as El Shifa, was a chemical weapons facility connected to the alleged terrorist Osama bin Laden. That was the charge leveled by top U.S. officials at the time. Responding to government critics of the strike, the CIA invited several analysts to a presentation by the agency's scientific experts. They explained how U.S. intelligence had obtained a soil sample containing EMPTA, which is used to make VX nerve gas. The meeting turned into a disaster. "It didn't convince anyone," says an official who was present. "The iron curtain came down after that."

It's still down today. The administration's evidence against El Shifa remains secret-even to most American officials. What is known isn't encouraging. In the strike's immediate aftermath, an informal review conducted by the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research failed to turn up a single piece of evidence linking El Shifa to chemical weapons or bin Laden. The bureau was discouraged from even reporting its findings. Says one U.S. intelligence official, "To this day, I don't know" why they chose El Shifa.

Assassination plot. Unlike the mistaken bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade in May, the El Shifa bombing stems from more than an intelligence failure. A staunch anti-Sudan policy left some senior State Department and National Security Council aides inclined to believe the worst about the Islamic government in Khartoum, government officials say. There's plenty of bad news, to be sure. Sudan has been accused of repeated human-rights violations in its long-running civil war. It has been blamed for sparking a deadly famine by cutting off aid flights. It allegedly harbors terrorists.

But what about El Shifa? Some current and former U.S. officials say Washington developed a harder line against Sudan in 1995, after intelligence agencies passed along reports of a possible assassination plot against then National Security Adviser Anthony Lake. The alleged culprits were Sudanese-based terrorists. The threat was never substantiated, but around the same time, the U.S. Embassy in Khartoum was closed, virtually cutting off the flow of firsthand information from Sudan. From then on, some officials say, the anti-Sudan line in Washington got harder. U.S. policy makers dismissed many of Sudan's overtures about peace negotiations outright. And when Sudan finally signed the chemical weapons treaty in May, the United States ignored it. Joe Sala, a former Africa expert at the State Department, says this philosophy is simple: "It's Sudan, and we don't like them."

The decision to bomb El Shifa was made by fewer than a dozen top U.S. officials. This meant that experts on both Sudan and chemical weapons were not consulted about the government's evidence. Over the past year, White House officials, including National Security Adviser Sandy Berger, have backed away from their charge that El Shifa was actually producing chemicals for weapons as opposed to being a storage or transshipment point. But Clinton advisers insist they have seen no new evidence to undercut their conclusion that the plant was linked to bin Laden and the Iraqi chemical weapons program. Another factor, says one official, "tipped the scales": It could be struck with little risk of civilian casualties.

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