By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer |
WASHINGTON -
Secretary of State Colin Powell identified Osama bin Laden as a prime suspect in
the terror attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon and was promised
by the president of Pakistan information on bin Laden's operations.
When the Bush
administration is certain who sent suicidal hijackers on their horrific mission,
Powell said Thursday, "We will go after that group, that network and those that
have harbored, supported and aided that network, to rip that network
up."
And, he added
grimly, "When we are through with that network, we will continue with a global
assault against terrorism in general."
At a news
conference, Powell became the first senior Bush administration official to say
openly what many have been saying privately: that bin Laden is suspected of
engineering the attacks.
"We are looking at
those terrorist organizations who have the kind of capacity that would have been
necessary to conduct the kind of attack that we saw," Powell said.
Close to 5,000
people are unaccounted for in the coordinated attacks that knocked down the Twin
Towers of New York's World Trade Center and heavily damaged the Pentagon outside
Washington. All three buildings were rammed by hijacked jetliners.
Powell noted that
the administration was not on the record with the identity of the organization
it believed responsible and added: "When you look at the list of candidates, one
resides in the region."
Asked whether he
was referring to bin Laden, the Saudi-born exile who runs a terrorist network
from Afghanistan, Powell replied: "Yes."
After the news
conference, Powell telephoned President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan, a neighbor
of Afghanistan, to seek "a specific list of things that we think would be useful
for them to work on with us."
After they talked
for nearly 10 minutes, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said they had
had a positive conversation and Powell had received a commitment of
cooperation.
Deputy Secretary of
State Richard Armitage met separately with the Pakistani ambassador to
Washington, Maleeha Lodhi, and the South Asian country's intelligence chief,
Mahmoud Ahmed.
Armitage gave them
a list of what the United States wants from Pakistan, which includes information
on terror networks, and specifying a number of areas where Pakistan can be
helpful, a senior U.S. official said.
In Islamabad,
Musharraf pledged "unstinted cooperation in the fight against terrorism" and
said it was difficult to describe his nation's sorrow and grief at a time of
tragedy for the American people.
Bin Laden, a
one-time Saudi billionaire, has enjoyed sanctuary in neighboring Afghanistan,
most of which is controlled by the Taliban, a staunchly Muslim fundamentalist
movement.
Pakistan has close
ties with Taliban.
Powell's statements
indicated the United States could strike Afghanistan if it concludes bin Laden
was behind the attacks.
Iraq's role in
helping the terror network also is under scrutiny, a U.S. official told The
Associated Press.
Powell would not
discuss a connection to Baghdad but spoke scornfully of President Saddam Hussein
as "one of the leading terrorists on the face of the Earth."
Meanwhile, Armitage
scheduled a trip to Moscow on Wednesday for a meeting on Afghanistan and to
follow up on a Russian offer to help in the investigation.
The Soviet Union
fought a 10-year war with Muslim fundamentalists after invading Afghanistan and
setting up a puppet government in 1979. The United States opposed the Soviet
invasion and provided weapons to the insurgents through Pakistan.
The Central Asian
countries that formed the underbelly of the Soviet Union have emerged as the
battleground for an Islamic insurgency aided by Afghanistan that threatens to
destabilize the region.
Sen. Richard Lugar,
R-Ind., said "this support of Russia against terrorism will be critically
important. ... The Russians have a great deal of experience in dealing with
terrorism."
Sen. Charles
Schumer, D-N.Y., said the support of Russia, China and the Europeans would
influence "nations like Iran, Iraq and Syria that aid and abet terrorists." He
predicted Armitage's visit "will deal more with economic, diplomatic and other
kinds of sanctions."
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