Obama puts blame on al Qaeda for plane attack

HONOLULU (Reuters) – The Obama administration yesterday zeroed in on al Qaeda as the driving force behind an  attempt to bomb a US-bound airliner on Christmas and promised  again to hold accountable those involved in the failed attack.

In his weekly radio and Internet address, US President  Barack Obama said the man suspected of trying to bomb a plane  flying to Detroit on Dec. 25 appeared to have been trained by  an affiliate of the Islamic militant network.

Obama, who is on vacation in Hawaii, had called for an  immediate study of what he termed “human and systemic failures”  that allowed 23-year-old Nigerian Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab to  get on a Northwest Airlines flight from Amsterdam to Detroit  allegedly with explosives in his clothes.

“The investigation into the Christmas Day incident  continues, and we’re learning more about the suspect,” Obama  said in his address.

“It appears that he joined an affiliate of al Qaeda, and  that this group — al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula — trained  him, equipped him with those explosives and directed him to  attack that plane headed for America,” Obama said.

The president’s comments were his most explicit to date  tying the suspect with the al Qaeda group.

Michael Leiter, director of the National Counterterrorism  Center, said the botched attack proved the group was eyeing new  ways to hurt Americans.

“While this attempt ended in failure we know with absolute  certainty that Al-Qa’ida and those who support its ideology  continue to refine their methods to test our defenses and  pursue an attack on the Homeland,” he said in a statement, his  first since the incident.

Republicans have accused Obama, a Democrat, of mishandling  the incident and not doing enough to prevent attacks on the  United States.

Appearing on the defensive, Obama used much of his address  to outline his administration’s actions to keep the country  safe, including withdrawing troops from Iraq, boosting troop  levels in Afghanistan and strengthening ties with Yemen, where  the suspect spent time before the attack.

Republicans have painted Obama as weak on national security  and plan to press the issue ahead of midterm elections in  November, when they will challenge the Democrats’ control of  both houses of the U.S. Congress.

Former Vice President Dick Cheney has led that charge,  accusing Obama of pretending the United States was not at war.

Obama, without naming Cheney, responded to that criticism  directly, saying he had used the word “war” in his inaugural  address nearly a year ago.

“On that day I also made it very clear our nation is at war  against a far-reaching network of violence and hatred, and that  we will do whatever it takes to defeat them and defend our  country,” Obama said. “And make no mistake, that’s exactly what  we’ve been doing.”

The president called for an end to the political sniping  between Republicans and Democrats on the issue.

“As we go forward, let us remember this — our adversaries  are those who would attack our country, not our fellow  Americans, not each other,” he said.