The Unholy Seven
(At Least) of State Terror
Though state-sponsored terrorism
has declined during recent years, Washington
keeps seven nations on the watch list of those
who provide aid, comfort, and support to the
killers. They are:
Iran. Remains the most active
state sponsor of terrorism. Provided increasing
support to numerous terror groups, including
the Lebanese Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Palestine
Islamic Jihad (PIJ), which seek to undermine
the Middle East peace negotiations through
the use of terrorism. It encourages Hezbollah
and Palestinian groups to coordinate their
planning and to escalate their activities against
Israel.
Iraq. Continued to provide safe
haven and support to a variety of Palestinian
rejectionist groups, as well as bases, weapons,
and protection to the Mujahedin-e-Khalq, an
Iranian terrorist group fighting against Tehran.
Regime has not attempted an antiWestern
attack since its failed plot to assassinate
former President Bush in 1993 in Kuwait.
Syria. Still provides safe haven
and support to several terrorist groups. The
Syrian government allowed Hamas to open a new
main office in Damascus in March, although
the arrangement may be temporary while Hamas
continues to seek permission to re-establish
its headquarters in Jordan. Syria granted several
terrorist groups basing privileges or refuge
in areas of Lebanon's Bekaa Valley.
Libya. Attempting to change its
international image following its surrender
in 1999 of two Libyan suspects for trial in
the Pan Am 103 bombing. However, it still maintains
contacts with groups that use violence to oppose
Middle East peace, including the Palestine
Islamic Jihad and the Popular Front for the
Liberation of PalestineGeneral Command.
Cuba. Offers safe haven to several
notorious terrorists and US fugitives and maintained
ties to state sponsors of terror and Latin
American insurgents. Colombia's two largest
terror organizations, the Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia and the National Liberation
Army, maintained a permanent presence on the
island.
North Korea. Harbored several
hijackers of a Japan Airlines flight to North
Korea in the 1970s and maintained links to
other terrorist groups. Some evidence also
suggests Pyongyang may have sold weapons directly
or indirectly to terrorist groups, including
the Moro Islamic Liberation Front in the Philippines.
Sudan. Provider of safe haven
for members of al-Qaida, Lebanese Hezbollah,
al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya, Egyptian Islamic Jihad,
the PIJ, and Hamas. Khartoum has not handed
over to authorities three Egyptian Gama'a fugitives
linked to the assassination attempt in 1995
against Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in
Ethiopia.
Afghanistan is not on the US
list, but only because Washington doesn't recognize
it as a state or the Taliban as a government.
Even so, Afghanistan is what the State Department
calls "a primary hub" of terrorists
as well as a safe haven for Osama bin Laden,
a notorious antiWestern operator. The
US also hints at possible future inclusion
of Pakistan and Lebanon. |