Why being right on WMD is no consolation to Iraqi scientist labelled enemy
of America

Chief link to UN weapons inspectors held in solitary confinement for year

Jonathan Steele in Baghdad
Wednesday May 5, 2004
The Guardian

By any measure Amer al-Saadi ought to feel vindicated. The dapper
British-educated scientist who was the Iraqi government's main link to the
United Nations inspectors before the US invasion repeatedly insisted that
Iraq had destroyed its weapons of mass destruction years earlier.
David Kay, the American inspector who headed the Iraq Survey Group and was
sure he would find such weapons when he went to Iraq after the war, now
accepts Dr Saadi was right. So does Hans Blix, the chief UN inspector, who
up to a month before the war still thought Iraq might have had WMD.

Yet, astonishingly, Dr Saadi does not know of their change of mind or of the
political fallout their views have caused in western countries. He is like a
lottery winner who is the last person to be told he has hit the jackpot.

Held in solitary confinement in an American prison at Baghdad's
international airport, Dr Saadi is denied the right to read newspapers,
listen to the radio, or watch television.

"In the monthly one-page letters I am allowed to send him through the Red
Cross I cannot mention any of this news. I can only talk about family
issues," says his wife, Helma, as she sits in the couple's home less than
half a mile from US headquarters in Baghdad.

Barely three days after the statue of Saddam Hussein was pulled down by US
troops in central Baghdad Dr Saadi approached the Americans and became the
first senior Iraqi to hand himself in. It was the last time his wife saw
him.

He was sure he would soon be released, Mrs Saadi says. He was a scientist
who had never been part of Saddam's terror apparatus, or even a member of
the Ba'ath party.

Interviews

CIA interrogators have repeatedly interviewed him. Had there been any WMD to
discover Dr Saadi would have had an obvious incentive to reveal their
location once the regime had collapsed. But from the reports of the Iraq
Survey Group it can only be assumed that he has maintained his line that
they were eliminated long ago.

Dr Saadi is described officially by the Americans as an "enemy prisoner of
war". This allows them to detain him indefinitely without access to a lawyer
or visiting rights from his family until George Bush declares the war to be
over. Whether he is still held out of spite or to hide Washington's
embarrassment is not clear. He has already been in custody for more than a
year.

His CIA interrogators have finished their work and apparently feel awkward
about his continued detention.

"My handlers have appealed to higher authorities for my release but it seems
it's political and God doesn't meddle in politics," Dr Saadi wrote in one
letter.

"It would speak well for them if they admitted they were mistaken. They
would look human," Mrs Saadi says. German by birth, she and her husband have
always conversed in English. They were married in Wandsworth register office
in south London 40 years ago last October, when he was studying chemistry at
Battersea College of Technology.

 The prison letters she shares with the Guardian reflect the tenderness of a
long and successful partnership. Despite the censorship they resonate with
affection and occasional whimsical flashes of humour, as well as periods of
depression.

"Leave the brooding to me. I have time enough. Be constructive," he urged
her in one letter.

By a second cruel stroke of fate, she was in the UN headquarters last
August, seeking help for her husband, when a suicide bomber blew it up.
Twenty-two people died, including the woman she was talking to when the
upper floor caved in. Mrs Saadi was unconscious for 48 hours and awoke in a
US military hospital.

The couple's children have lived most of their lives in Germany. "We didn't
want them to develop under the regime. He never saw his children grow up. It
breaks my heart," Mrs Saadi says. She spent 20 years bringing them up in
Hamburg and making only short visits to Baghdad. Dr Saadi was not allowed to
go abroad except on official business. The regime urged him to divorce her
but he refused.

In prison under US custody he is not even allowed pen and paper, except to
compose his one-page Red Cross letter. He does crosswords by filling in the
blanks in his head. His wife sent him a computerised chess set but was not
allowed to provide replacement batteries when the first ones ran out. He has
been teaching himself German. "If it were not for impressing the
grandchildren, I wouldn't bother," he wrote last year.

Last month he joked about Paul Bremer, the top US official in Iraq. "Bremer
I found out from the German lessons I am giving myself is a man from Bremen!
Yet another German!"

Dr Saadi is kept in his cell all day except for an hour of exercise in a
supervised area. His wife was able to send him running shoes.

Conditions

In October he wrote that his conditions had slightly improved: "The awfully
sagging bed has now a wooden board, and a plastic chair is provided instead
of the back-breaking sitting on the floor on the very low bed which rolls
you towards the centre with your bottom nearly touching the floor."

With a British PhD in physical chemistry Dr Saadi is essentially a rocket
scientist. Now 66, he was awarded a scholarship from the defence ministry
under the Iraqi monarchy to study in Britain, which meant he had to commit
himself to work for the military later.

During the war with Iran, when Saddam's Iraq was being armed and helped by
the west, he organised a team of scientists who developed a ground-to-ground
missile with a range of 400 miles, capable of reaching Tehran. This prompted
the Iranian regime to agree to a peace deal.

In 1994 he retired with the rank of lieutenant general but was appointed the
next year as a scientific adviser to the presidency. He regularly met the UN
weapons inspectors and when they resumed their work in November 2002 he was
the government's main liaison man.

He became a well-known figure on TV, wearing a suit rather than uniform and
speaking fluent English at press conferences. His wife insists he was never
close to Saddam and last met him in 1995.

In his presentation to the security council in February last year the US
secretary of state, Colin Powell, attacked Dr Saadi. He described his job as
being "not to cooperate, it is to deceive; not to disarm, but to undermine
the inspectors; not to support them, but to frustrate them and to make sure
they learn nothing".

Dr Saadi rejected the charges and hit back, describing Mr Powell's speech as
a "typical American show, full of stunts and special effects".

Mr Powell admitted recently that key parts of his presentation were wrong.

Dr Saadi's younger brother, Radwan, has worked in Iraq's oil ministry for 30
years and was reinstated by the US as head of its finance department. He
tries to be hopeful. "The Americans are taking it case by case. There are
various agencies who all have to approve anyone's release. Some detainees
were released very early who were closer to the regime than Amer. It's like
dealing with a black hole."

Dr Saadi is number 32 on Washington's most wanted list, and the seven of
diamonds on the notorious deck of cards. Ironically, he now spends a lot of
time with cards, playing patience in his lonely cell.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1209574,00.html

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