THE SUDAN: A NEW HAVEN FOR TERRORISTS AND EXTREMISTS IN AFRICA? -- (BY DAVID IGNATIUS) (Extension of Remarks - February 05, 1992)

[Page: E197]

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HON. WM. S. BROOMFIELD

in the House of Representatives

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1992

[FROM THE WASHINGTON POST, JAN. 31, 1992]

(BY DAVID IGNATIUS)

Because of mounting concern about developments in Sudan, the Bush administration sent a warning to Khartoum in early December, carried by Robert G. Houdek, deputy assistant secretary of state for African affairs.

Houdek `raised our concerns about the increasing numbers of people [in Sudan] from organizations that we considered to be terrorist,' said a State Department official. In some cases, Houdek told the Sudanese, these terrorist groups `seemed to be opening offices; in some cases, training camps.'

The U.S. envoy warned Sudanese officials that if terrorist operations could be traced to groups operating from bases there, Sudan would be placed on the U.S. list of nations that sponsor terrorism, which would carry diplomatic and economic sanctions.

The Sudanese told Houdek they do not support terrorism and will not allow terrorists to operate from their territory. Houdek's final warning, according to the State Department official, was: `Be careful. These people can violate your hospitality.'

Egypt shares U.S. concerns about recent developments to its south. The Egyptian press has noted in recent months that the man who in October 1990 assassinated Rifaat Mahgoub, the speaker of the Egyptian parliament, was trained in Khartoum. And the Egyptian government was upset when the leader of the Egyptian branch of Islamic Jihad, Omar Abdel-Rahman, was given sanctuary in Khartoum about 18 months ago.

What worries U.S. and allied officials is the possibility that Sudan may take the place of other nations--such as Syria, Iraq, Libya and Lebanon--that sponsored terrorist groups in the 1980s but have appeared in recent months to be trying to mend fences with the West. This new caution reflects their calculus, following the display of U.S. firepower in the Persian Gulf War and the collapse of the Soviet Union, that open confrontation with the United States is not prudent.

Iran also has taken a more pragmatic course in its foreign and domestic policy under President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. But U.S. analysts pointed to a visit by Rafsanjani last month to Khartoum as a sign that Iran has not lost its desire to spread militant Islam outside its borders.

Tehran's new goal appears to be fusion of the two militant forces in the Arab world--Palestinian radicalism and Islamic fundamentalism. The Iranians accelerated this effort last October with a conference of militant groups in Tehran. According to a U.S. analyst, `I stressed two themes: Islamic revolution and undermining the [Middle East] peace process.

`Iran has tried in the past to export revolution,' said a U.S. official, `but Sudan is the first place where they have had a regime that's a willing supporter.' Sudanese sympathy for radical Islam stems in part from Turabi's popularity and the fact that `years of war and the downward economic spiral have radicalized the northern Muslim population,' the U.S. anti-terrorism official said.

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