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CIA director: al-Qaida attack 'matter of time'

WASHINGTON -- Groups associated with al-Qaida are at the top of the list of threats to the United States, leading government intelligence officials said Wednesday, saying Iran has emerged as a top threat to American interests in the Middle East.\nDespite gains made against al-Qaida, CIA Director Porter Goss, in an unusually blunt statement before the mostly secretive Senate Intelligence Committee, said the terror group is intent on finding ways to circumvent U.S. security enhancements to attack the homeland.\n"It may be only a matter of time before al-Qaida or other groups attempt to use chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear weapons. We must focus on that," Goss said.\nFBI Director Robert Mueller said he worries about a true sleeper operative whom he contended has been in place for years to launch an attack inside the United States. \n"I remain very concerned about what we are not seeing," he said in his prepared remarks.\nMueller, Goss and other intelligence leaders provided these and other assessments at the annual briefing of threats from around the globe.\nAlso at the hearing, the head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Vice Adm. Lowell Jacoby, painted Iran as a leading threat to U.S. interests in the Middle East. In his prepared testimony, Jacoby said he believes Iran will continue its support for terrorism and aid for insurgents in Iraq.\nHe said the country's long-term goal is to expel the United States from the region, and noted that political reform movements there have lost momentum.\nGoss said Islamic extremists are exploiting the conflict in Iraq, and fighters there represent a "potential pool of contacts" to build transnational terror groups. He said the most-wanted terrorist in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, hopes to establish Iraq as a safe-haven to bring about a final victory over the West.\nGoss also said the intelligence community has yet to get to the "end of the trail" of the nuclear black market run by disgraced Pakistani scientist, A.Q. Khan. He wouldn't rule out the possibility that organizations, rather than states, could obtain nuclear, chemical or biological weapons. He called "potential Khans" a worry.\nIn the past year, the intelligence community has been faced with a series of negative reports, including the work of the Sept. 11 commission and the Senate Intelligence Committee's inquiry on the flawed Iraq intelligence.\nAnd next month, President Bush's commission to investigate the intelligence community's capabilities on weapons of mass destruction is also expected to submit its findings.\nGiven the after-the-fact investigations into the Iraq intelligence, Senate Intelligence Chairman Pat Roberts (R-Kansas) said his panel will become more proactive in how it reviews the intelligence community's strengths and weaknesses, already focusing on nuclear terrorism and Iran.\nThe hearing came as the White House continues its eight-week-long search for a new national intelligence director, a position created in last year's intelligence reorganization bill.\nDemocrats were critical Wednesday of the pace of the search, saying the administration has not shown the same urgency Congress showed in creating the position.\n"There should be another chair before us, with an accompanying name card that reads director of national intelligence," said Sen. Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, the panel's ranking Democrat.\nRoberts said it was "crucially important" to get the right person.\nThe hearing marked the first public appearance for Goss, the former House Intelligence Committee chairman, since his confirmation hearing in September.\nCritics say he's politicizing the agency by surrounding himself with Republican advisers from his years in Congress. His allies say he's promoting agency veterans to senior management positions and making changes essential to ensure the intelligence community does not repeat the kind of blunders that led up to the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks and the faulty prewar estimates of Iraq's weapons.

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