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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
1996 APRIL: PATTERNS OF GLOBAL TERRORISM, 1995
Office of the Secretary
Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism, Philip C. Wilcox, Jr.
OVERVIEW OF STATE-SPONSORED TERRORISM
CONTENTS
The United States and its allies continue to focus on raising the costs
for governments that support, tolerate, and engage in international
terrorism. It is widely recognized that state support for terrorist
groups enhances their capabilities and makes law enforcement efforts to
counter terrorism more difficult. To pressure states to stop such
support, US law imposes trade and other restrictions on countries
determined by the Secretary of State to have repeatedly provided support
for acts of international terrorism by supporting, training, supplying,
or providing safehaven to known terrorists. The United States currently
lists Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Sudan, and Syria as state
supporters of terrorism. The list is sent annually to Congress, although
countries can be added or removed at any time circumstances warrant.
Cuba no longer is able to actively support armed struggle in Latin
America or other parts of the world because of severe ongoing economic
problems. While there was no direct evidence of its sponsorship of
terrorist acts in 1995, the Cuban Government continued to provide
safehaven for several international terrorists. Cuba has not renounced
political support for groups that engage in international terrorism.
Iran continued in 1995 to be the world's most active supporter of
international terrorism. Although Tehran tried to project a moderate
image in the West, it continued to assassinate dissidents abroad and
maintained its support and financing of groups that pose a threat to US
citizens. Iranian authorities reaffirmed the validity of the death
sentence imposed on British author Salman Rushdie, although some Iranian
officials claimed that the Government of Iran would not implement the
fatwa. No specific acts of terrorism attributed to the Iranian-backed
Lebanese Hizballah in 1995 were on the scale of the July 1994 bombing of
a Jewish cultural center in Buenos Aires, which is believed to have been
perpetrated by Hizballah. Hizballah continued attempts to undermine the
Middle East peace process and oppose Western interests throughout the
Middle East. Iran also supports other radical organizations that commit
terrorism in opposition to the peace process, including HAMAS, the
Palestine Islamic Jihad (PIJ), and the Popular Front for the Liberation
of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC). It also provides safehaven to
the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), a terrorist group fighting for an
independent Kurdish state that carried out numerous terrorist acts in
1995 against Turkish interests.
During 1995 several acts of political violence in northern Iraq matched
Baghdad's pattern of using terrorism against the local population and
regime defectors. These included a bombing attack on the Iraqi National
Congress and the poisoning of a number of regime defectors. Iraq
continues to provide a safehaven for various terrorist groups.
Libya continued for another year its defiance of the demands of UN
Security Council Resolutions adopted in response to its involvement in
the bombings of Pan Am flight 103 (1988) and UTA flight 772 (1989).
These resolutions demand that Libya turn over for trial the two
intelligence agents indicted for the PA 103 bombing, cooperate with US,
UK, and French authorities in investigating the Pan Am and UTA bombings,
pay compensation to victims, and cease all support for terrorism.
Instead, Libya continued to foster disingenuous "compromises" aimed at
diluting or evading the resolutions. It also continued hosting terrorist
groups like the Abu Nidal organization (ANO). Further, an investigation
into the murder of PIJ leader Fathi Shaqaqi in Malta in October 1995
revealed that he had long been a Libyan client. Tripoli also continued
to harass and intimidate the Libyan exile community; it is believed to
be responsible for the abduction of US resident Mansur Kikhia in
December 1993 and was blamed by Libyan exiles for the murder of a Libyan
oppositionist in London in November 1995. The Libyan charge in London
was expelled in 1995 for threatening and surveilling Libyan exiles in
the United Kingdom.
North Korea (the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, or DPRK) is not
known to have sponsored any terrorist acts since 1987. Since 1993 the
DPRK has made several efforts to reiterate a stated position of
opposition to all forms of international terrorism. The DPRK Government
since 1970 has provided safehaven to several members of the Japanese
Communist League-Red Army Faction, who participated in an aircraft
hijacking in 1970.
Sudan came into sharper focus in 1995 as a center of international
terrorist activities. By year's end it was at odds with many of its
neighbors. Uganda and Eritrea had severed diplomatic relations with
Khartoum because of its support of armed opposition groups in those
countries. Ethiopia and Egypt accused Sudan of complicity in one of the
year's highest profile terrorist crimes, the unsuccessful attempt to
assassinate Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Addis Ababa on 26 June,
attributed to the Egyptian al-Gama'at al-Islamiyya (Islamic Group or
IG). Surviving assailants captured by Ethiopian police incriminated the
Sudanese Government, which is dominated by the National Islamic Front
(NIF), in planning the crime and training the assailants. Three
conspirators are believed to be in Sudan. When Khartoum refused to
cooperate in apprehending them, the Organization for African Unity (OAU)
called for Sudan to hand over the suspects. In addition, Sudan continues
to harbor Usama Bin Ladin, a major financier of terrorism, and members
of some of the world's most violent groups like the IG, ANO, Lebanese
Hizballah and HAMAS. Khartoum is a major transit point and base for a
number of terrorist groups.
There is no evidence that Syrian officials have been directly involved
in planning or executing terrorist attacks since 1986. Nevertheless,
Syria continues to provide safehaven and support - inside Syria and in
areas of Lebanon under Syrian control - for terrorist groups such as Ahmad
Jibril's PFLP-GC, HAMAS, Palestine Islamic Jihad (PIJ), the Japanese Red
Army, and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). Syria has permitted
Iranian resupply of Hizballah via Damascus but continues to restrain the
international activities of some of these groups.
Cuba no longer actively supports armed struggle in Latin America and
other parts of the world. In earlier years, the Castro regime provided
significant levels of military training, weapons, funding, and guidance
to leftist extremists worldwide. Havana's focus now is to forestall an
economic collapse; the government actively continued to seek the
upgrading of diplomatic and trade relations with other nations.
Cuba is not known to have sponsored any international terrorist
incidents in 1995. Havana, however, provided safehaven to several
terrorists in Cuba during the year. A number of Basque Fatherland and
Liberty (ETA) terrorists, who sought sanctuary in Cuba several years
ago, still live on the island. Members of a few Latin American terrorist
organizations and US fugitives also reside in Cuba.
Iran remains the premier state sponsor of international terrorism and is
deeply involved in the planning and execution of terrorist acts both by
its own agents and by surrogate groups. This year Tehran escalated its
assassination campaign against dissidents living abroad; there were
seven confirmed Iranian murders of dissidents in 1995, compared with
four in 1994. Iranian antidissident operations concentrated on the
regime's main opposition group, the Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK), and the
Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI).
Leaders of Iranian dissident groups are the most frequent victims of
Iranian intelligence and terrorist operations. In 1995 most
antidissident attacks were conducted in Iraq, in contrast to prior
years' worldwide operations. Attacks on Iranian dissidents in Iraq
during the year included the shooting deaths on 17 May of two MEK
members in Baghdad, the murder on 5 June of two members of the Iranian
Kurdish "Toilers" Party (Komelah) in Sulaymaniyah, and the killing of
three MEK members in Baghdad on 10 July. The shooting death in Paris on
17 September of Hashem Abdollahi, son of the chief witness in the trial
of 1994 that convicted two Iranians for murdering former Iranian Prime
Minister Bakhtiar in 1991, may have been an antidissident attack.
Sendar Hosseini, a suspect in the 1994 murder of dissident Osman
Muhammed Amini in Copenhagen, Denmark, was arrested by Italian police in
Bibione, Italy.
Iran provides arms, training, and money to Lebanese Hizballah and
several Palestinian extremist groups that use terrorism to oppose the
Middle East peace process. Tehran, which is against any compromise with
or recognition of Israel, continued in 1995 to encourage Hizballah,
HAMAS, the PIJ, the PFLP-GC, and other Palestinian rejectionist groups
to form a coordinated front to resist Israel and the peace process
through violence and terrorism.
Hizballah, Iran's closest client, remains the leading suspect in the
July 1994 bombing of the Argentine-Israel Mutual Association (AMIA) in
Buenos Aires that killed at least 96 persons. This operation was
virtually identical to the one conducted in March 1992 against the
Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires, for which Hizballah claimed
responsibility.
Iran also gives varying degrees of assistance to an assortment of
radical Islamic and secular groups from North Africa to Central Asia.
For example, Tehran continued to offer the Kurdistan Workers' Party
(PKK) safehaven in Iran. Seeking to establish a Kurdish state in
southeastern Turkey, the PKK in 1995 launched numerous attacks in Europe
and continued its violent campaign against Turkish tourism, including
attacks on tourist spots frequented by Westerners. Tehran also provided
some support to Turkish Islamic groups that have been blamed for attacks
against Turkish secular and Jewish figures.
Iranian authorities reaffirmed the validity of the death sentence
imposed on British author Salman Rushdie, although some Iranian
officials claimed that the Government of Iran would not implement the
fatwa. Tehran, however, continued to mount a propaganda campaign against
Rushdie. In February - the sixth anniversary of the judgment - Iran's
official news agency IRNA reported that Deputy Foreign Minister Mahmoud
Vaezi "underlined the need for the implementation of the fatwa against
the author of the blasphemous book The Satanic Verses." Vaezi in May
declared that "the fatwa issued by the late Imam [Khomeini] could
neither be revoked nor changed by anybody."
Despite increasing Iranian support for extremist groups and involvement
in terrorist operations, PresidentRafsanjani continued to project
publicly a "moderate" image of Iran to Western European countries and
Japan to facilitate the expansion of its relations with them. This quest
for respectability probably explains why Iran reduced its attacks in
Europe last year; Tehran wants to ensure access to Western capital and
markets.
Iran continued to view the United States as its principal foreign
adversary, supporting groups such as Hizballah that pose a threat to US
citizens. Because of Tehran's and Hizballah's deep antipathy toward the
United States, US missions and personnel abroad continue to be at risk.
During 1995 several acts of political violence in northern Iraq matched
Baghdad's pattern of using terrorism against the local population and
regime defectors. Although Iraq's terrorist infrastructure has not
recovered from the blows it suffered during the Gulf war, Baghdad has
taken measures to restore its terrorist options.
Iraq remains far from compliance with UN resolutions that require it to
cease internal repression and support for terrorism. Iraqi-sponsored
terrorism has been commonplace in northern Iraq, where the regime is
responsible for more than 100 attacks on UN and relief agency personnel
and aid convoys over the past several years. In 1995 there were a number
of acts of political violence for which Baghdad is a suspect. For
example, a blast on 9 November at the security office in Kurdish-
controlled northern Iraq of the opposition Iraqi National Congress (INC)
killed at least 25 persons. The INC has been targeted before by the
regime in Baghdad.
Early in the year, a number of Iraqi oppositionists in northern Iraq
were poisoned by thallium. At least one survived and was treated in a
British hospital. The British Government confirmed that he was a victim
of a regime assassination attempt.
In October, the British Government expelled an officer of the Iraqi
Interests Section in London for engaging in "activities incompatible
with his diplomatic status." The London-based Iraqi opposition reported
that the official concerned was an employee of the Iraqi intelligence
services who was responsible for targeting Iraqi exiles for attack.
On 20 January a US District Court in California awarded $1.5 million to
Dr. Sargon Dadesho, an Iraqi oppositionist living in the United States
who had brought suit against the Iraqi regime. The court concluded that
the Iraqi Government was involved in a 1990 plot to assassinate Dadesho.
This is the only time such a judgment on Iraq's terrorist activities has
been reached in a US court. In other court action, a Kuwaiti appeals
court on 20 March confirmed the death sentences against two Iraqis
convicted of involvement in the plot in 1993 to assassinate President
George Bush, while converting to prison terms the death sentences meted
out to four others by a lower court.
Iraq continues to provide haven and training facilities for several
terrorist clients. Abu Abbas' Palestine Liberation Front (PLF) maintains
its headquarters in Baghdad. The Abu Nidal organization (ANO) continues
to have an office in Baghdad. The Arab Liberation Front (ALF),
headquartered in Baghdad, continues to receive funding from Saddam's
regime. Iraq also continues to host the former head of the now-defunct
15 May organization, Abu Ibrahim, who masterminded several bombings of
US aircraft. A terrorist group opposed to the current Iranian regime,
the Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK), still is based in Iraq and has carried out
several violent attacks in Iran from bases in Iraq.
The end of 1995 marked the fourth year of the Libyan regime's refusal to
comply with the demands of UN Security Council Resolution 731. This
measure was adopted following the indictments in November 1991 of two
Libyan intelligence agents for the bombing in 1988 of Pan Am Flight 103.
UNSCR 731 endorsed US, British, and French demands that Libya turn over
the two Libyan bombing suspects for trial in the United States or the
United Kingdom, pay compensation to the victims, cooperate with US, UK,
and French authorities in the investigations into the Pan Am 103 and UTA
flight 772 bombings, and cease all support for terrorism.
UN Security Council Resolution 748 was adopted in April 1992 as a result
of Libya's refusal to comply with UNSCR 731. UNSCR 748 imposed sanctions
that embargoed Libya's civil aviation and military procurement efforts
and required all states to reduce Libya's diplomatic presence. UNSCR 883
adopted in November 1993, imposed additional sanctions against Libya for
its continued refusal to comply with UNSC demands. UNSCR 883 included a
limited assets freeze and oil technology ban, and it also strengthened
existing sanctions.
By the end of 1995, the Libyan regime had yet to comply in full with the
UNSC demands. Although British authorities were satisfied that Libya had
provided sufficient information on its past sponsorship of the
Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA), Tripoli had failed to meet any
of the other UNSC demands. Most significantly, it still refused to turn
over for trial in the United States or the United Kingdom the two Libyan
agents indicted for the Pan Am 103 bombing.
Throughout 1995, the Libyan regime continued to support groups violently
opposed to the Middle East peace process, some of which engage in acts
of international terrorism. After the murder of Palestine Islamic Jihad
(PIJ) leader Fathi Shaqaqi in Malta in October 1995, it was revealed
that Libya had frequently facilitated his travel. Libya also continued
to sponsor meetings of the Palestinian rejectionist groups in Tripoli.
Despite the ongoing sanctions against Libya for its sponsorship of
terrorism, Tripoli continued to harass and intimidate the Libyan
expatriate dissident community in 1995. Libya is widely believed to be
responsible for the abduction in 1993 and continued detention of
prominent Libyan dissident and human rights activist Mansur Kikhia. In
November 1995 a Libyan dissident resident in London was brutally
murdered; the Libyan expatriate community accused Tripoli of involvement
in his death. British authorities continued to investigate the case as
the year ended. They also expelled the Libyan charge in London for
engaging in "activities incompatible with his diplomatic status." The
charge was accused of being involved in intimidation and surveillance of
Libyan dissidents in the United Kingdom.
The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK or North Korea) is not
known to have sponsored any international terrorist attacks since 1987,
when it conducted the midflight bombing of a KAL airliner, killing all
115 persons aboard. A North Korean spokesman in November stated that the
DPRK opposed "all kinds of terrorism" and "any assistance to it." North
Korea, however, continued to provide political sanctuary to members of
the Japanese Communist League-Red Army Faction who hijacked a Japanese
Airlines flight to North Korea in 1970.
Sudan continued to serve as a refuge, nexus, and training hub in 1995
for a number of international terrorist organizations, primarily of
Middle Eastern origin. The Sudanese Government, which is dominated by
the National Islamic Front (NIF), also condoned many of the activities
of Iran and the Khartoum-based Usama Bin Ladin, a private financier of
terrorism. Khartoum permitted the funneling of assistance to terrorist
and radical Islamist groups operating in and transiting Sudan.
Since Sudan was placed on the US Government's official list of State
Sponsors of Terrorism in August 1993, the Sudanese Government has
continued to harbor members of some of the world's most violent
organizations: the Abu Nidal organization (ANO), Lebanese Hizballah, the
Palestine Islamic Jihad (PIJ), Egypt's al-Gama'at al-Islamiyya (Islamic
Group or IG), and the Islamic Resistance Movement (HAMAS). The NIF also
supports Islamic and non-Islamic opposition groups in Uganda, Tunisia,
Kenya, Ethiopia, and Eritrea.
Uganda severed diplomatic relations with Sudan in April, citing the
inappropriate activities of representatives of the Sudanese Embassy in
Kampala. The Government of Uganda said it found these activities
threatening to its security.
Both Ethiopia and Egypt accused Sudan's security services of providing
direct assistance to the IG for the attempt on the life of Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak in Addis Ababa on 26 June. Three surviving
assailants captured by Ethiopian police provided incriminating
information about Sudan's role. Sudanese help to the IG included
supplying travel documents and weapons and harboring key planners of the
operation.
Despite a private plea by the Ethiopian Government, the Sudanese regime
did not act on Ethiopia's request for the extradition of three Egyptian
suspects involved in the Mubarak assassination attempt, claiming it was
unable to locate them. Those being sought included the operation's
mastermind - resident in Khartoum - his assistant, and a surviving member of
the assassination team. (After the attack misfired, this last individual
fled from Addis Ababa to Sudan on Sudan Airlines using a Sudanese
passport.) In rare actions against a member state, the Organization of
African Unity (OAU) on 11 September and again on 19 December called on
Sudan to extradite the three IG suspects believed to have been involved
in the assassination attempt and to stop aiding terrorism.
In an apparent attempt at damage control not long after the
assassination attempt, President Bashir removed the head of Sudan's
security services and proclaimed a new visa policy requiring Arab
foreigners to obtain visas to enter Sudan. The policy did not apply to
citizens from three state sponsors of terrorism - Iraq, Libya, and Syria -
however, because of bilateral agreements.
Khartoum also permitted Usama Bin Ladin, a denaturalized Saudi citizen
with mujahedin contacts, to use Sudan as a shelter for his radical
Muslim followers and to finance and train militant groups. Bin Ladin,
who lives in Khartoum and owns numerous business enterprises in Sudan,
has been linked to numerous terrorist organizations. He directs funding
and other logistic support through his companies to a number of
extremist causes.
A Sudanese national, who pleaded guilty in February 1995 to various
charges of complicity in the New York City bomb plots foiled by the
Federal Bureau Investigation, alleged that a member of the Sudanese UN
Mission had offered to facilitate access to the UN building in pursuance
of the bombing plot. The Sudanese official also is said to have had full
knowledge of other bombing targets.
Sudan's support to terrorist organizations has included paramilitary
training, indoctrination, money, travel documentation, safe passage, and
refuge in Sudan. Most of the organizations present in Sudan maintain
offices or other types of representation. They use Sudan as a base to
organize some of their operations and to support compatriots elsewhere.
Sudan also serves as a secure transit point and meeting place for
several Iranian-backed terrorist groups.
There is no evidence that Syrian officials have been directly involved
in planning or executing terrorist attacks since 1986. Damascus
continues to negotiate seriously to achieve a peace accord with Israel
and has taken some steps to restrain the international activities of
these groups. Syria continues to use its influence to moderate Hizballah
and Palestinian rejectionist groups when tension and violence in
southern Lebanon escalate. It has, however, allowed Iran to resupply
Hizballah via Damascus.
At the same time, Syria provides safehaven and support for several
groups that engage in international terrorism. Spokesmen for some of
these groups, particularly Palestinian rejectionists, continue to claim
responsibility for attacks in Israel and the occupied
territories/Palestinian autonomous areas. Several radical terrorist
groups maintain training camps or other facilities on Syrian territory
and in Syrian-controlled areas of Lebanon, such as Ahmad Jibril's
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC),
which has its headquarters near Damascus. Syria grants basing privileges
or refuge to a wide variety of groups engaged in terrorism. These
include HAMAS, the PFLP-GC, the Palestine Islamic Jihad (PIJ), and the
Japanese Red Army (JRA).
The terrorist group Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) continues to train in
the Al Biqa' (Bekaa Valley), and its leader, Abdullah Ocalan, resides at
least part-time in Syria. The PKK in 1995 conducted - with limited
success - a violent campaign against Turkish tourist spots frequented by
foreigners, as well as other terrorist violence in Europe. Syrian
safehaven for PKK operations was vigorously protested by Turkey and is
the subject of discussions between Syria and Turkey.
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