Iraq terror group says it makes its own rockets
Insurgents usually believed to use arms from Saddam's depots, Iran, Syria
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CAIRO, Egypt - A voice purported to be of the leader of an al-Qaida-linked group in Iraq claimed in an audiotape posted on the Internet Tuesday that the group had begun manufacturing its own rockets.
The voice, said to be that of Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, leader of the Islamic State of Iraq, was in an audiotape posted on an Islamic Web site routinely used by militant Islamic groups. The authenticity of the tape could not immediately be verified.
The rockets, called al-Quds-1, or Jerusalem-1, “have moved into the phase of military production with an advanced degree of range and accuracy,” he said.
The claim that the group was making rockets would be virtually impossible to verify and al-Baghdadi did not elaborate further on the nature of the new weapon.
The arms manufacturing capabilities of insurgent groups fighting U.S. and Iraqi forces since 2003 are believed to be very limited, with them relying almost entirely on weapons looted from Saddam Hussein’s massive depots in the lawless days and weeks that followed the collapse of his regime.
Weapons are also believed to be smuggled from across the Syrian and Iranian borders.
Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis had been employed in Saddam’s huge arms industry, making artillery shells, rifles, land mines, mortars and missiles. The military factories have been abandoned or looted but some of the workers are thought to have joined the insurgency or offered their expertise in the fight against U.S. forces and their Iraqi allies.
Insurgent groups in Iraq have been using a range of Soviet-era rockets like Katyusha and shoulder-fired ground-to-air Sam-7 missiles. The ground-to-ground Katyushas have not been used with great accuracy and anything that the insurgents could make locally was not likely to be an improvement.
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