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U.S. General Visiting Ethiopia Warns That A Clear Terrorist Threat
Exists In East Africa
ISSUE 109
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Headlines

- Students Uprising Of Feb 20th Observed By SONYO
- Senior Puntland Official Defects To Somaliland,
Abdillahi Yusuf’s Regime Crumbling From within

- Hargeisa Urban Household Economy Assessment
Part X

- Dire Conditions In The Togdheer Region - Fews Net

- Nun Who Saw It All And Died With The Story

Business

- Defying Mayhem, Somali Plans Coca-Cola Venture

International News

- U.S. General Visiting Ethiopia Warns That A Clear Terrorist Threat Exists In East Africa

- Somali Was A Flight Risk In US

- Pakistani Said to Have Given Libya Uranium

- Double Agent Plan U.S. Attempt to Turn Al Qaeda Suspect Into U.S. Informant Soured by Press Leak

- Immigrants Celebrate Britishness With New Ceremony

- Reflections On Multicultural Immigration's Threat To Women

- How Fidel Castro Convinced The Former USSR To Abandon Siyad Barre In Favor Of Mengistu

Law

- Woman Asks Bush To Let Her Somali Husband Return
The call from the White House came Wednesday night

People

- Iman The Somali Model Facing Boycott

Editorial & Opinions

- KULMIYE's Leaders

- Reflections On Somaliland & Africa’s Territorial Order, Part: III

- Again Opposition Party Member Goes to Jail in Borama: How Sad!

- The Self Defeated Colonel

- The Colonel's Bluff


ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia, Feb 16, 2004 (AP) – A clear terrorist threat
still exists in East Africa, and greater military cooperation is
needed to defeat it, a top U.S. general warned on Monday during a
visit to Ethiopia.

Gen. John Abizaid, whose Central Command is responsible for
Afghanistan, Iraq and East Africa, said closer "military and
intelligence cooperation" was needed between East African governments
to prevent extremist groups like al-Qaida from gaining an "ideological
foothold" in the region.

"The threat is clear, but the threat can be deterred and can be
defeated," he told journalists in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa.
"This terrorist threat knows no boundary, and when we operate only on
a nation-state basis we will be unable to really get at the heart of
the terrorist problem which is transnational."

Abizaid pointed out Somalia -- which has had no central government
since 1990 -- as a potential trouble spot in the region.

"We know the terrorists gravitate toward ungoverned spaces, and these
are areas where they look for the opportunities to gain recruits,
establish safe-havens and move money," he said. "We certainly have
indications to believe that people associated with these groups
operate in and around areas such as Somalia."

Abizaid, who met with the Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, said
his visit aimed to assess the capabilities of the region's forces for
combating terrorism.

East Africa has already suffered four terrorist attacks, all either
claimed by or blamed on Osama bin Laden's terror network. In August
1998, car bombs destroyed U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania; in
October 2000, suicide bombers attacked the USS Cole while it was
refueling in Yemen; and in November 2002, attackers tried to shoot
down an Israeli airliner minutes before a car bomb destroyed a hotel
on Kenya's coast.

Abizaid said the military situation in Iraq was "still difficult,"
especially in the Iraqi town of Fallujah. But he added that most of
the country was stable enough for political activity to take place.
He said more time was needed to find weapons of mass destruction.
"It is clear that the hunt must continue," Abizaid said. "We all know
this is a tough and a long fight in Iraq, it won't be over tomorrow
and we intend to cooperate fully with Iraqi security institutions and
help them help themselves."

 

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