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  Iraqi official says Syria exporting terror   (AP)  Updated: 2005-11-14 10:45  
 Iraq's defense minister criticized Syria for letting militants train on 
Syrian soil and warned Sunday that an escalation of violence in Iraq will spill 
over into neighboring countries. 
 Saadoun al-Dulaimi's visit to Jordan follows Wednesday's triple hotel suicide 
bombings in the Jordanian capital Amman by the al-Qaida in Iraq terror group. 
Fifty-seven people died, excluding the bombers. 
 "We have more than 450 detainees who came from different Arab and Muslim 
countries to train in Syria and enter with their booby-trapped vehicles into 
Iraq to bring destruction and killings," al-Dulaimi said after meeting Jordanian 
Prime Minister Adnan Badran. 
 "Let me tell the Syrians that if the Iraqi volcano explodes, no neighboring 
capital will be saved," al-Dulaimi told The Associated Press. 
 Syria has denied that it hosts supporters of the Iraqi insurgency, but says 
it cannot maintain perfect control of its long desert border with Iraq. 
 In Cairo on Sunday, Iraqi national security advisor Mawafak al-Rubaei 
appealed for Egypt to use its weight with Arab countries "to stop exporting 
death to Iraq, especially sister Syria." 
 Al-Dulaimi demanded more anti-terror support from Damascus, which is already 
facing intense pressure from the United States to lock down its borders and stop 
extremists allied with the Jordanian-born militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the 
leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, from entering the country. 
 "Iraq is bordering several countries, Iran, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Jordan, 
but why is it only the Syrian borders that I have complained more than once 
about?" al-Dulaimi said. 
 Iraqi and U.S. forces have been trying to crush Iraq's rampant insurgency, 
led by al-Zarqawi and Saddam Hussein loyalists, for the past two years. 
 Al-Qaida in Iraq's attack in Jordan — its deadliest inside a neighboring 
Mideast country — has also raised fears that al-Zarqawi's terror campaign has 
gained enough momentum to spread throughout the region.  
  
  
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