20th
January 2009
An
al Qaeda affiliate in Algeria closed a base earlier this
month after an experiment with unconventional weapons
went awry, a senior U.S. intelligence official said
Monday.
The
official, who spoke on the condition he not be named
because of the sensitive nature of the issue, said he
could not confirm press reports that the accident killed
at least 40 al Qaeda operatives, but he said the mishap
led the militant group to shut down a base in the
mountains of Tizi Ouzou province in eastern Algeria.
He said authorities in the first week of January
intercepted an urgent communication between the
leadership of al Qaeda in the Land of the Maghreb (AQIM)
and al Qaeda's leadership in the tribal region of
Pakistan on the border with Afghanistan. The
communication suggested that an area sealed to prevent
leakage of a biological or chemical substance had been
breached, according to the official.
"We don't know if this is biological or chemical," the
official said.
The story was first reported by the British tabloid the
Sun, which said the al Qaeda operatives died after being
infected with a strain of bubonic plague, the disease
that killed a third of Europe's population in the 14th
century. But the intelligence official dismissed that
claim.
AQIM, according to U.S. intelligence estimates,
maintains about a dozen bases in Algeria, where the
group has waged a terrorist campaign against government
forces and civilians. In 2006, the group claimed
responsibility for an attack on foreign contractors. In
2007, the group said it bombed U.N. headquarters in
Algiers, an attack that killed 41 people.
Al Qaeda is believed by U.S. and Western experts to have
been pursuing biological weapons since at least the late
1990s. A 2005 report on unconventional weapons drafted
by a commission led by former Sen. Charles Robb,
Virginia Democrat, and federal appeals court Judge
Laurence Silberman concluded that al Qaeda's biological
weapons program "was extensive, well organized and
operated two years before the Sept. 11" terror attacks
in the U.S.
Another report from the Commission on the Prevention of
Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation, released in
December, warned that "terrorists are more likely to be
able to obtain and use a biological weapon than a
nuclear weapon."
British authorities in January 2003 arrested seven men
they accused of producing a poison from castor beans
known as ricin. British officials said one of the
suspects had visited an al Qaeda training camp. In the
investigation into the case, British authorities found
an undated al Qaeda manual on assassinations with a
recipe for making the poison.
The late leader of al Qaeda in Iraq, Abu Musab Zarqawi,
was suspected of developing ricin in northern Iraq.
Then-Secretary of State Colin L. Powell referred to the
poison in his presentation to the U.N. Security Council
in February 2003 that sought to lay the groundwork for
the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Roger Cressey, a former senior counterterrorism official
at the National Security Council under Presidents Bill
Clinton and George W. Bush, told The Washington Times
that al Qaeda has had an interest in acquiring a poisons
capability since the late 1990s.
"This is something that al Qaeda still aspires to do,
and the infrastructure to develop it does not have to be
that sophisticated," he said.
Mr. Cressey added that he also is concerned about al
Qaeda in the Land of the Maghreb, which refers to the
North African countries of Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia.
"Al Qaeda in the Maghreb is probably the most
operationally capable affiliate in the organization
right now," he said.