Time Magazie
W O R L D
Saddam's Syrian Stash
Investigators think they've found some of Hussein's loot. Is the money
funding terrorist attacks
By ADAM ZAGORIN
Saturday, Oct. 11, 2003

Since the fall of Baghdad in April, American officials have scoured the
globe in search of Saddam Hussein's legendary fortune. Now they think they
have found a big chunk. According to a U.S. estimate, as much as $3 billion
in Iraqi assets is sitting in Syrian government- controlled banks, a senior
U.S. official tells Time, and Washington is anxious to determine that the
money is not funding violence against Americans in Iraq, or being drawn down
by regime officials and supporters.

For months the U.S. has quietly insisted that Damascus give up the funds.
Secretary of State Colin Powell met with Syrian President Bashar Assad in
May and made that unpublicized demand. Top Syrian officials have been given
the names of at least two suspect banks and provided with account numbers.

Syria's private response-that unspecified accounts were being frozen-was
judged woefully inadequate. Publicly, Syria denies there is any Iraqi money
in the country. But just over two weeks ago, the U.S. sent two American
financial experts and two representatives of the Iraqi Central Bank to Syria
to comb through records. U.S. officials now assert that Damascus has given
them only "limited cooperation."

In the run-up to the war, Syria was among Iraq's principal trading partners,
buying more than $1 billion worth of cheap oil annually in violation of U.N.
sanctions. Since the war, U.S.-Syrian relations have deteriorated sharply. A
congressional bill, which President Bush has signaled he won't veto, accuses
Syria of sponsoring terrorism, seeking weapons of mass destruction and
occupying Lebanon. It was approved by a House committee last week, three
days after Israel attacked an alleged Palestinian terrorist camp outside
Damascus-an act Bush, notably, did not condemn. Syria may also be courting
economic isolation: its banks could face Bush-imposed sanctions under the
Patriot Act, which would effectively bar them from world capital markets.
Warns the senior official: "We have made it plain that if access to records
and cooperation continue to be restricted, we reserve the right to impose
economic counter-measures."

>From the Oct. 20, 2003 issue of TIME magazine

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