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- <text id=93TT2140>
- <title>
- Aug. 30, 1993: Is Sudan Terrorism's New Best Friend?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 30, 1993 Dave Letterman
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SUDAN, Page 30
- Is Sudan Terrorism's New Best Friend?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The U.S. thinks so, and has outlawed the Islamic state for harboring
- and training fundamentalist militants
- </p>
- <p>By MARGUERITE MICHAELS--With reporting by Ron Ben-Yishai/Jerusalem, William Mader/London
- and Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The connections are tantalizing. Libya shuts down some of its
- terrorist camps, and elements of the radical Palestinian Abu
- Nidal organization surface in Sudan. Lebanon's Hizballah and
- the Palestinian Islamic movement Hamas set up offices in Khartoum.
- Iranian President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani visits Khartoum,
- and Iranian Revolutionary Guard personnel soon arrive to train
- the fundamentalist people's militias set up by Sudan's Islamic
- regime. Rumors abound of Syrians, Palestinians and Iranians
- infiltrating schools in northern Sudan to recruit students for
- terrorist training camps in eastern Sudan. Sheik Omar Abdel
- Rahman, spiritual leader of the Egypt-based Islamic Group, some
- of whose members are charged with bombing the World Trade Center,
- obtained his U.S. visa in Khartoum.
- </p>
- <p> For the past four years, Western intelligence agencies have
- suspected Sudan of playing a major role in promoting Islamic
- terror around the world. But there still hasn't been any real
- proof offered: no reputable eyewitnesses, no photographs, no
- documents. Nevertheless, the U.S. last week put its official
- stamp on the proposition, adding the country to its short list
- of pariah states sponsoring terrorism. The State Department
- declared that "evidence currently available" showed that Sudan
- allows its territory to be used as a sanctuary and training
- ground for all manner of Muslim fundamentalist and radical organizations.
- The announcement followed news reports that linked two Sudanese
- diplomats in New York City to the aborted plot to bomb the U.N.,
- although that connection was not cited as a reason for putting
- Sudan on the terrorist list. Said State Department spokesman
- Mike McCurry: "There is a repeated pattern of behavior here...that we have raised directly with Sudan over...many
- months, and to this day they have been unwilling to address
- the problem in a way that we consider satisfactory."
- </p>
- <p> The addition of Sudan to a list that includes Libya, Iraq, Iran,
- Syria, North Korea and Cuba was ostensibly the culmination of
- a review that began under the Bush Administration. But U.S.
- officials may have also timed the announcement to send a signal
- of support to Egypt, whose secular government is under assault
- by fundamentalists. For months President Hosni Mubarak has been
- publicly accusing neighboring Sudan of backing his enemies.
- "The Sudanese deny it," says Mubarak, "but the camps are there.
- They are farms. They take people not only from Egypt but also
- from Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, and even from
- Uganda. They act as if they are workers on these farms. But
- under this umbrella they teach them about explosives and about
- firearms."
- </p>
- <p> Sudan claims that these ``farms" are simply camps for its Popular
- Defense Forces, Islamic militias that fight along with the Sudanese
- armed forces. But the presence of Iranians associated with Tehran's
- fearsome Revolutionary Guard has convinced Western intelligence
- agents that far more insidious activities are going on. This
- is the first time that Persian Shi`ite Iran has allied itself
- with an Arab Sunni Muslim government, but both regimes share
- a passionate disdain for neighboring secular states. Now that
- Libya and Syria are attempting to curry favor in the West by
- cutting their support for terrorist groups, says Philip Robins,
- Middle East expert at London's Royal Institute of International
- Affairs, "Sudan is the best ally Iran has got."
- </p>
- <p> Officials are uncertain whether Sudan is mainly playing host
- to foreign terrorists or actively exporting its own operatives
- and agitators. In the U.S. prosecutors are investigating the
- role Sudanese diplomats--officially or on their own--might
- have played in the U.N. plot. ABC News reported that employees
- of the Sudanese mission to the U.N. had been taped discussing
- the thwarted bombing, but U.S. investigators have yet to confirm
- any solid link suggesting that the Khartoum government sanctioned
- the conspiracy. The State Department's 1992 report "Patterns
- of Global Terrorism," published last April, concedes that "there
- is no evidence that the government of Sudan conducted or sponsored
- a specific terrorist attack in the past year."
- </p>
- <p> Iran's interest in Sudan began after a fundamentalist-backed
- coup brought General Omar Hassan Bashir to power in 1989. Bashir
- immediately declared Sudan an Islamic state. Iran's President
- paid a call at the end of 1991, accompanied by his Defense and
- Intelligence ministers and the commander of the Revolutionary
- Guard. Reportedly, Iran agreed to provide Sudan with oil and
- technical aid in exchange for Sudanese livestock and wheat and
- promised to send Iranian Revolutionary Guards to train Sudanese
- Popular Defense Forces. U.S. officials say the Guards also offered
- instruction in subversion and guerrilla warfare for would-be
- terrorists. Tehran then sent Majid Kamal, the man who helped
- the Lebanese Shi`ites organize Hizballah, as its ambassador
- to Sudan.
- </p>
- <p> Sudan has long enjoyed a reputation throughout the Islamic world
- for hospitality. Any Muslim is allowed to enter the country
- without a visa, no questions asked. Israeli intelligence sources
- say large numbers of fundamentalist Muslims who fought alongside
- the Afghans in their war against the Soviet-backed government
- in Kabul ended up in Sudan. Arab countries who had happily shipped
- off their extremists to Afghanistan were leery of taking them
- back. Egypt passed a law allowing the execution of any Egyptian
- who had undergone military training abroad.
- </p>
- <p> British diplomats believe Sudan has also taken in many non-Iranian
- fundamentalists that Syria kicked out of Lebanon during the
- Gulf War. According to the British, most of these men are organized
- into combat units of company size serving at their own high-security
- camps. Others are trained as agitators and sent abroad. Still
- others, who might not number more than 100, are terrorists.
- The British sources say they are kept in five camps around Khartoum,
- equipped and financed mainly by Iran, though Palestinian groups
- also channel funds, weapons and orders to their own adherents.
- The annual budget for these groups is estimated to be $20 million,
- and they are supplied with arms ranging from sophisticated explosives
- to jeeps and trucks. The State Department says it also has information
- that Sudan has helped militant elements in Somalia, including
- General Mohammed Farrah Aidid.
- </p>
- <p> Sudan's presence on the terrorist list makes little difference
- to Khartoum. Trade with the U.S. is now banned, but it was always
- modest. The designation formally denies Sudan all U.S. foreign
- assistance, except for about $71 million in humanitarian relief
- for southern Sudan's homeless and hungry people. In reality,
- economic and military aid has already been suspended. "The real
- thrust of this decision," says the State Department's McCurry,
- "will be to isolate Sudan from the community of civilized nations."
- That may only push Khartoum deeper into Tehran's embrace.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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