



A number of Saudis have been captured along with other foreign nationals seeking to attack American troops in Iraq, a U.S. official said yesterday.
Saudi officials in Washington said their government had done everything necessary to seal off the border with Iraq and that if some militants were crossing, it was because U.S. forces had failed to police the Iraqi side of the frontier.
“We have Saudi Arabian jihadists in detention in Iraq and in Baghdad,” Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage told Abu Dhabi TV in an interview.
“We’ve got a relatively few number of Saudis,” he went on, “but we have Yemenis and Sudanese, Syrians.”
He said he did not know how they got into Iraq and there was no suggestion that the Saudi government assisted them. He contrasted the attitude of the Saudis with that of Iran and Syria, whose borders he said were “particularly porous” and whose governments he accused of “not stopping fighters” from crossing into Iraq.
Mr. Armitage did not comment on the circumstances of the fighters’ detention or say how many were in U.S. custody. A State Department official who asked not to be named said: “Obviously, we’re in a situation of trying to verify identities. People may have false passports. … I’ve heard the ballpark figure of 15, and we’re pretty sure some of them are Saudis.”
A Saudi official in Washington said that if extremists were getting across the 475-mile-long border with Iraq, it was the responsibility of U.S. forces to stop them.
“We’ve done our duty on our side of the border by protecting it. … If there’s any infiltration happening, it’s because the United States as an occupying power has not done their job in protecting the border,” saidAdel Al-Jubeir, a spokesman for the Saudi Embassy.
Mr. Armitage acknowledged that the Saudis had asked the United States to do more.
“The government of Saudi Arabia has, as I recall, requested help from the American forces to try to help guard against that possibility [of infiltration] on the Iraqi side of the border,” he said.
Mr. Al-Jubeir said his government had no information about Saudi nationals in Iraq but — echoing the comments of U.S. and other officials — said that country had become a magnet for Islamic extremists from all over the world.
Mr. Al-Jubeir said the Saudis had tightened controls along the border before the war, concerned that elements of the Ba’athist regime might flee into Saudi Arabia or smuggle weapons of mass destruction out of the country.
But, he said, “Can we guarantee that no one has slipped across the border? No.”
He also said Saudi extremists might have gone to Iraq to fight the Americans, but that it was more likely they had traveled through neighboring states like Jordan.
View Entire StoryBy Peter Vincent Pry
Hardening infrastructure will be key to minimizing the threat

By Meredith Somers - The Washington Times
George W. Huguely V lied to friends about his whereabouts the night Yeardley Love was ...

By David Hood - The Washington Times
Reston-based LightSquared Inc. vowed Wednesday to continue its fight to establish a national wireless broadband ...

By Kristina Wong - The Washington Times
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta engaged in a testy back-and-forth with Rep. J. Randy Forbes over ...
Independent voices from the TWT Communities

How does our 50th state view D.C. politics?

Reflections on raising families in a holistic way -- with a focus on nutrition and alternative health.

Everyone has the divine rights as human beings because they were created in the image of God