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By Paula WolfsonPresident Bush says al-Qaida terrorist leaders tried to turn Iraq into a launch pad for attacks on the United States. VOA's Paula Wolfson reports Mr. Bush outlined details of the plan in a speech Wednesday at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy.
President Bush speaks about the war on terror as he delivers commencement address at US Coast Guard Academy graduation ceremony in New London, Connecticut, 23 May 2007 |
In a commencement address at the Coast Guard Academy, Mr. Bush spoke1 of the link between al-Qaida leader Osama bin2 Laden3 and his followers4 in Iraq. He said newly released U.S. intelligence information shows bin Laden's intent is clear.
"He believes that if al-Qaida can drive us out, they can establish Iraq as a new terror sanctuary," he said.
The president said a number of terrorist plots have been foiled, and several of bin Laden's allies in Iraq have been captured or killed.
"Successes like these are blows to al-Qaida," he said. "They are testaments5 to the steps we have taken to strengthen our intelligence, work closely with our partners overseas and keep the pressure on the enemy."
Mr. Bush went on to stress that al-Qaida remains6 extremely dangerous, and determined7. He said Osama bin Laden sees a democratic Iraq as a threat to the group's very existence, indicating the al-Qaida chief will do everything possible to undermine the fragile Iraqi government.
"Victory in Iraq is important for Osama bin Laden. And victory in Iraq is vital for the United States of America," said Mr. Bush.
This is not the first time the Bush administration has released previously8 classified information about al-Qaida to help buttress9 its case for continued military operations.
Critics charge Mr. Bush is trying to draw attention away from the ongoing10 bloodshed in Iraq. Former Senator John Edwards, who is seeking the Democratic Party's presidential nomination11, says the president refuses to acknowledge his war policy is a failure.
Edwards told a foreign policy group in New York that Mr. Bush is ignoring the message sent by American voters last November when they elected a Democratic congressional majority.
"The president has played political brinksmanship over the war in Iraq, and he has done it over and over and over."
White House Homeland Security Advisor12 Fran Townsend defended the decision to release the new information at a time of heated debate on the president's Iraq policy. Townsend told reporters the information was released when investigators13 felt it was safe to do so, and the timing14 was not politically motivated.
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