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Indications Are Saddam Was
Being Held Prisoner His Own
People Were Trying To Collect The $25 Million Reward DEBKAfile Special
Report 12-14-3
- A number of questions are raised by the incredibly
bedraggled, tired and crushed condition of this once savage, dapper and
pampered ruler who was discovered in a hole in the ground on Saturday,
December 13:
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- 1. The length and state of his hair indicated he had
not seen a barber or even had a shampoo for several weeks.
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- 2. The wild state of his beard indicated he had not
shaved for the same period
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- 3. The hole dug in the floor of a cellar in a farm
compound near Tikrit was primitive indeed - 6ft across and 8ft across
with minimal sanitary arrangements - a far cry from his opulent
palaces.
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- 4. Saddam looked beaten and hungry.
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- 5. Detained with him were two unidentified men, two
AK-47 assault guns and a pistol, none of which were used.
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- 6. The hole had only one opening. It was not only
camouflaged with mud and bricks - it was blocked. He could not have
climbed out without someone on the outside removing the covering.
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- 7. And most important, $750,000 in 100-dollar notes
were found with him - but no communications equipment of any kind,
whether cell phone or even a carrier pigeon for contacting the outside
world.
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- According to DEBKAfile analysts, these seven anomalies
point to one conclusion: Saddam Hussein was not in hiding; he was a
prisoner.
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- After his last audiotaped message was delivered and
aired over al Arabiya TV on Sunday November 16, on the occasion of
Ramadan, Saddam was seized, possibly with the connivance of his own men,
and held in that hole in Adwar for three weeks or more, which would have
accounted for his appearance and condition. Meanwhile, his captors
bargained for the $25 m prize the Americans promised for information
leading to his capture alive or dead. The negotiations were mediated by
Jalal Talabani's Kurdish PUK militia.
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- These circumstances would explain the ex-ruler's
docility - described by Lt.Gen. Ricardo Sanchez as "resignation" - in
the face of his capture by US forces. He must have regarded them as his
rescuers and would have greeted them with relief.
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- From Gen. Sanchez's evasive answers to questions on
the $25m bounty, it may be inferred that the Americans and Kurds took
advantage of the negotiations with Saddam's abductors to move in close
and capture him on their own account, for three reasons:
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- A. His capture had become a matter of national pride
for the Americans. No kudos would have been attached to his handover by
a local gang of bounty-seekers or criminals. The country would have been
swept anew with rumors that the big hero Saddam was again betrayed by
the people he trusted, just as in the war.
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- B. It was vital to catch his kidnappers unawares so as
to make sure Saddam was taken alive. They might well have killed him and
demanded the prize for his body. But they made sure he had no means of
taking his own life and may have kept him sedated.
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- C. During the weeks he is presumed to have been in
captivity, guerrilla activity declined markedly - especially in the
Sunni Triangle towns of Falluja, Ramadi and Balad - while surging
outside this flashpoint region - in Mosul in the north and Najef,
Nasseriya and Hilla in the south. It was important for the coalition to
lay hands on him before the epicenter of the violence turned back
towards Baghdad and the center of the Sunni Triangle.
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- The next thing to watch now is not just where and when
Saddam is brought to justice for countless crimes against his people and
humanity - Sanchez said his interrogation will take "as long as it takes
- but what happens to the insurgency. Will it escalate or gradually die
down?
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- An answer to this, according to DEBKAfile's
counter-terror sources, was received in Washington nine days before
Saddam reached US custody.
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- It came in the form of a disturbing piece of
intelligence that the notorious Lebanese terrorist and hostage-taker
Imad Mughniyeh, who figures on the most wanted list of 22 men published
by the FBI after 9/11, had arrived in southern Iraq and was organizing a
new anti-US terror campaign to be launched in March-April 2004, marking
the first year of the American invasion.
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- For the past 21 years, Mughniyeh has waged a war of
terror against Americans, whether on behalf of the Hizballah, the
Iranian Shiite fundamentalists, al Qaeda or for himself. The Lebanese
arch-terrorist represents for the anti-American forces in Iraq an
ultimate weapon.
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- Saddam's capture will not turn this offensive aside;
it may even bring it forward.
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- For Israel, there are lessons to be drawn from the
dramatic turn of events in Iraq:
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- First - An enemy must be pursued to the end and if
necessary taken captive. The Sharon government's conduct of an
uncertain, wavering war against the Palestinian terror chief Yasser
Arafat stands in stark contrast to the way the Americans have fought
Saddam and his cohorts in Iraq and which has brought them impressive
gains.
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- Second - Israel must join the US in bracing for the
decisive round of violence under preparation by Mughniyeh, an old common
enemy from the days of Beirut in the 1980s. Only three weeks ago,
DEBKAfile's military sources reveal, the terrorist mastermind himself
was seen in south Lebanon in surveillance of northern Israel in the
company of Iranian military officers. With this peril still to be
fought, it is meaningless for Israelis to dicker over the Geneva Accord,
unilateral steps around the Middle East road map, or even the defensive
barrier.
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- Certain Israeli pundits and even politicians,
influenced by opinion in Europe, declared frequently in recent weeks
that the Americans had no hope of capturing Saddam Hussein and were
therefore bogged down irretrievably in Iraq. The inference was that the
Americans erred in embarking on an unwinnable war in Iraq.
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- This was wide of the mark even before Saddam was
brought in. The Americans are in firm control - even though they face a
tough new adversary - and the whole purpose of the defeatist argument
heard in Israel was to persuade the Sharon government that its position
in relation to the Palestinians and Yasser Arafat is as hopeless as that
of the Americans in Iraq. Israel's only choice, according to this
argument, is to knuckle under to Palestinian demands and give them what
they want. Now that the Iraqi ruler is in American custody, they will
have to think again.
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The
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l'anarchie"
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