http://tennessean.com/nation-world/archives/03/06/34908297.shtml?Element_ID=
34908297
(With thanks to Stuart Jacobsen)

NB:  As will be recalled, Sec State Powell, in his Feb 5 address to the UN
Security Council stated, " From the late 1990s until 2001, the Iraqi embassy
in Pakistan played the role of liason to the al Qaeda organization."

The Tennessean
Wednesday, 06/25/03
Document links Saddam, bin Laden
By GILBERT S. MERRITT
For The Tennessean

Federal appellate Judge Gilbert S. Merritt of Nashville is in Iraq as one of
13 experts selected by the U.S. Justice Department to help rebuild Iraq's
judicial system.

Merritt, 67, has made trips to Russia and India to work with their judicial
systems. He has been sending periodic reports to The Tennessean about his
experiences in Iraq and filed this dispatch recently:

Through an unusual set of circumstances, I have been given documentary
evidence of the names and positions of the 600 closest people in Iraq to
Saddam Hussein, as well as his ongoing relationship with Osama bin Laden.

I am looking at the document as I write this story from my hotel room
overlooking the Tigris River in Baghdad.

One of the lawyers with whom I have been working for the past five weeks had
come to me and asked me whether a list of the 600 people closest to Saddam
Hussein would be of any value now to the Americans.

I said, yes, of course. He said that the list contained not only the names
of the 55 ''deck of cards'' players who have already been revealed, but also
550 others.

When I began questioning him about the list, how he obtained it and what
else it showed, he asked would it be of interest to the Americans to know
that Saddam had an ongoing relationship with Osama bin Laden.

I said yes, the Americans have, so far as I am aware, have never been able
to prove that relationship, but the president and others have said that they
believe it exists. He said, ''Well, judge, there is no doubt it exists, and
I will bring you the proof tomorrow.''

So today he brought me the proof, and there is no doubt in my mind that he
is right.

The document shows that an Iraqi intelligence officer, Abid Al-Karim Muhamed
Aswod, assigned to the Iraq embassy in Pakistan, is ''responsible for the
coordination of activities with the Osama bin Laden group.''

The document shows that it was written over the signature of Uday Saddam
Hussein, the son of Saddam Hussein. The story of how the document came about
is as follows.

Saddam gave Uday authority to control all press and media outlets in Iraq.
Uday was the publisher of the Babylon Daily Political Newspaper.

On the front page of the paper's four-page edition for Nov. 14, 2002, there
was a picture of Osama bin Laden speaking, next to which was a picture of
Saddam and his ''Revolutionary Council,'' together with stories about
Israeli tanks attacking a group of Palestinians.

On the back page was a story headlined ''List of Honor.'' In a box below the
headline was ''A list of men we publish for the public.'' The lead sentence
refers to a list of ''regime persons'' with their names and positions.

The list has 600 names and titles in three columns. It contains, for
example, the names of the important officials who are members of Saddam's
family, such as Uday, and then other high officials, including the 55
American ''deck of cards'' Iraqi officials, some of whom have been
apprehended.

Halfway down the middle column is written: ''Abid Al-Karim Muhamed Aswod,
intelligence officer responsible for the coordination of activities with the
Osama bin Laden group at the Iraqi embassy in Pakistan.'' (For more about
the list, see accompanying article on this page.)

The lawyer who brought the newspaper to me, Samir, and another lawyer with
whom I have been working, Zuhair, translated the Arabic words and described
what had happened in Baghdad the day it was published.

Samir bought his paper at a newsstand at around 8 a.m. Within two hours, the
Iraqi intelligence officers were going by every newsstand in Baghdad and
confiscating the papers. They also went to the home of every person who they
were told received a paper that day and confiscated it.

The other lawyer, Zuhair, who was the counsel for the Arab League in
Baghdad, did not receive delivery of his paper that day. He called his
vendor, who told him that there would be no paper that day, a singular
occurrence he could not explain.

For the next 10 days, the paper was not published at all. Samir's newspaper
was not confiscated and he retained it because it contained this interesting
''Honor Roll of 600'' of the people closest to the regime.

The only explanation for this strange set of events, according to the Iraqi
lawyers, is that Uday, an impulsive and somewhat unbalanced individual,
decided to publish this honor roll at a time when the regime was under
worldwide verbal attack in the press, especially by us. It would, he
thought, make them more loyal and supportive of the regime.

His father was furious, knowing that it revealed information about his
supporters that should remain secret.

For example, at the same time this was published, Saddam was denying that he
had any relationship with Osama. Therefore Saddam had all the papers
confiscated, and he ordered that publication of the paper be stopped for 10
days.

That is the story of the ''Honor Roll of 600,'' and why I believe that
President Bush was right when he alleged that Saddam was in cahoots with
Osama and was coordinating activities with him.

It does not prove that they engaged together in any particular act of terror
against the United States.

But it seems to me to be strong proof that the two were in contact and
conspiring to perform terrorist acts.

Up until this time, I have been skeptical about these claims. Now I have
changed my mind. There is, however, one big problem remaining: They are both
still at large and the combined forces of the free world have been unable to
find them.

Until we find and capture them, they will remain a threat - Saddam with the
remnants of his army and supporters in combination with the worldwide
terrorist organization of Osama bin Laden.



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