232 21 17MB
English Pages 336 [344] Year 2000
MARIN COUNTY FREE LIBRARY
3 1111 01886 1292
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— USA
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^3 world has changed since
1990.
i
$38.00
he cold war
has ended, the Soviet Union has disappeared,
new
governments have taken power in Washington and around the globe. But one familiar, dreaded face still looms over the international landscape that of
—
Saddam Hussein. At the end of the Gulf War,
the White
House was
num-
confident that the Iraqi dictator's days were
bered. His army had been routed, his country had
been bombed back into a preindustrial age, his subjects were in bloody revolt, his borders were sealed. It seemed impossible that he could survive such disasters. World leaders waited confidently for the downfall of the pariah of Baghdad.
Almost a decade This
the
is
first
later,
they are
still
waiting.
in-depth account of what went
wrong. Drawing on the authors' firsthand experiences
on the ground inside Iraq (often under fire) and their ranging from members interviews with key players
—
of Saddam's
own
family to senior officials of the
CIA
what happened when the smoke of the Gulf War. Leaders battlefields the cleared from of the uprising that almost toppled the dictator
Out of the Ashes
tells
describe the desperate mission they undertook to plead for American help and how they were turned away.
We
learn of Saddam's secret plan to fool and
corrupt the
scheme
UN
initially
officials explain
opposition
weapons inspectors and how the went awry. Senior U.S. intelligence
what they
really
thought of the Iraqi
movement they helped
to create.
An
agent
on the CIA bombs in Baghdad. While U.S. officials grappled with the ongoing payroll recounts his exploits planting
crisis
;em^5.j
of Saddam's survival, the Iraqi leader himself
presided over a regime dominated by his own terrifying family Here is die full story of that family "animals," as one former intimate describes them and
its
vicious feuds, including the downfall of the
man who once and
stood at Saddam's right hand.
This tale of high drama, labyrinthine intrigue, fatal blunders has been played out amid one of
the greatest
man-made
inn of
tragedies of our times. At the
outset, U.S. leaders resolved that "Iran'
{continued on back flap)
i
pay the
d
J.
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3/^^
Civic Center New Books 956. 7044 Cockburn Cockburn, Andrew Out of the ashes the resurrection of Saddam * Hussein 31111018861292 :
DATE DUE 4 1999
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Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2010
http://www.archive.org/details/outofashesresurrOOcock
Out of the Ashes
Also by Andrew Cockburn: The Threat: Inside the Soviet Military Machine Dangerous Liaison: The
U.S. -Israeli
Covert Connection
(with Leslie Cockburn)
One
Point Safe: The Leaking Russian Nuclear Arsenal (with Leslie Cockburn)
Also by Patrick Cockburn: Getting Russia Wrong: The
End of Kremlinology
Out of the Ashes The Resurrection df Saddam Hussein
Andrew Cockburn and Patrick Cockburn
¥i.a.rperCo\\msPHhlishers
OUT OF THE ASHES. Copyright © 1999 by Andrew and Patrick Cockbum. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations
embodied
in critical articles
HarperCollins PuWishers,
and reviews. For information address 10 East 53rd Street, New York, NY
Inc.,
10022.
HarperCoUins books may be purchased sales
Department, HarperCollins Publishers,
New York, NY FIR.ST
for educational, business, or
promotional use. For information please write: Special Markets 10022.
EDITION
Designed by Kris Tobaissen
Map by
Paul J. Pugliese
ISBN 0-06-019266-6 99 00 01 02 03
/RRD
10
9876 5 4321
Inc.,
10 East 53rd Street,
For Chloe, Henry,
Olivia, Alexander,
and Charlie
Contents Acknowledgments 1.
2.
xiii
Saddam AT THE Abyss ''We Have
3
Saddam Hussein Still Here"
31
3.
The Origins of Saddam Hussein
58
4.
Saddam Fights for His Long Arm
86
5.
"Iraqis
Will Pay the Price"
114
6.
Uday and the Royal Family
140
7.
Intrigue in the Mountains
164
8.
Deaths
191
9.
"Bring
in
the Family
Me the Head of Saddam
Hussein"
211
10.
Saddam Moves North
231
11.
Uday Takes A Hit
251
12.
Endgame
263
Postscript
287
Notes
291
Index
311
Acknowledgments
This
book has been made possible by the
kindnesses of many people over the years
and
insights, advice,
we have covered
Iraq.
To name them all would be impossible and, in the case of some, unwise. We must however extend special thanks to our editor Terry Karten for her patience, loyalty, and unwavering eye for a redundancy
as well as to
her indefatigable
agent, Elizabeth Kaplan,
was there
Megan Barrett. Our when we needed her. Faith
assistant,
Rubenstein performed invaluable service on the research
front.
Out of the Ashes
ONE
Saddam
Fifty
Abyss
at the
miles from the capital, returning Iraqi soldiers could already
see the black cloud over the blazing al-Dohra
edge of Baghdad.
It
its
refinery
on the
was early March 1991, and these exhausted
men were the remnants of the huge army sent after
oil
to
occupy Kuwait
conquest by Saddam Hussein the previous year. Now,
routed by the United States and
they were in the
its allies,
last stages
of a three-hundred-mile flight from the battlefields.
They were
—anything
on wheels.
crowded
into taxis, trucks, battered buses
One group
clung desperately to a car transporter.
Soon they were six
inside the city only to find
weeks before, the low-lying
had been a from the
rich
modem
city,
Iraqi capital
on the banks of the
third-largest oil reserves in the world.
and communications
utterly changed. Just
modem
Expressways and over-
hotels,
centers. Lavishly
government build-
equipped hospitals gave
the citizens medical care as good as could be found in
United
States.
Even the poor were used
Then, beginning
and
missiles
at
Tigris
built with the billions of dollars flowing
passes sped traffic past gleaming ings,
it
Europe or the
to eating chicken
once a
3:00 A.M. on January 17, precisely targeted
had thrust Baghdad and
abruptly back into the third world.
its
day.
bombs
3.5 million inhabitants
OUT DF THE ASHES There was no power because knocked out huddled
in darkness.
more prosperous
power
the
all
stations
had been
bombing. The people of the
city
The stench of decaying meat hung over
the
in the first days of
districts as steaks in carefully
stocked freezers
slowly rotted. In the hospitals, doctors trained in the finest medical
schools in
Europe operated by
flashlight.
Like any advanced society, Iraq had been
Water came from the wide
electricity.
the
and
efficient
brought a
systems in the world.
muddy brown
through
pumps
at
city
one
an up-to-date sewage system,
and every day 15 million gallons of untreated
hit,
sewage poured into the cars
a jury-rigged system
the treatment plants had been silent since the power
generators had been
Few
Now
liquid spluttering out of the taps for just
hour a day. Oil billions had given the but the
dependent on
pumped and purified by what had been one of the most mod-
city,
em
totally
Tigris River that flows
moved
Tigris.
along the
streets
and tree-lined avenues
because the gas stations had long since exhausted their supplies and al-Dohra, along with
other Iraqi refineries, had been smashed in
all
the bombing. In the sparse exliausts of some vehicles, a
on the black market
at a
traffic, black smoke poured from the symptom of watered-down gas available
hundred times the prewar price.
Familiar landmarks lay in ruins, like the handsome Jumhuriya
Bridge across the Tigris in the city center,
now
little
ers
by aUied
trisected
bombs. Surviving bridges had old sacking draped over the
sides
saplings tied to the railings, a vain effort to deceive the
and
laser-targeting systems of the
authority,
shells, their insides
first
of
glance seemingly
gutted by high explosives.
The phones had stopped working when two hit the
comput-
enemy weapons. Symbols
the Ministry of Justice, at
like
untouched, were empty
and
laser-guided
bombs had
communications center across from the Mansour Melia Hotel
and melted the
satellite
dishes on the roof, isolating Iraqis from the
outside world and each other.
The of
air
was
full
tires set alight
restaurants
of smoke from the burning refinery and from piles
during the war to confuse allied warplanes. The
on Sadoun Street were shuttered and empty, replaced by
curbside cooking
fires
fueled by branches torn from trees by the
bombs. Over everything there hung the yellow haze of a winter
fog.
SADDAM
AT THE ABYSS
Somewhere beneath the gloom was the man who had caused the President Saddam Hussein, his tlioughts and actions, even his
disaster,
whereabouts
dramatic days, a mystery to his people and to the
in those
outside world. Physically,
of
crisis
he had changed since the war had begun. In the months
between
his invasion
of Kuwait on August
2,
1990, and the
of the United States-led counterattack in January 1991, the Iraqi
start
leader had played to a global audience. Sleek in the beautiful
created by his Armenian
tailor,
Saddam had sat in his
silk suits
palaces declaim-
ing to visiting statesmen and journalists on the justice of that invasion,
defying the international coahtion that was building up
its
forces to
oust him.
Now the president of Iraq moved the run. Like the rest of the high stay out of the
underground command bunkers
against the Iranians in the 1980s.
would did
about his capital
He had known
carefully target these places
penetrate the thickest concrete.
still
he was sleeping
man on
careful to
built for the
that the
in a different
The bombing had
—and
stopped,
house every few nights,
ing mainly in the middle-class al-Tafiya district of the
war
Americans
and that their bombs could
—
but
like a
command, he had been
city,
stay-
quiet
because many of its inhabitants had fled Baghdad.
Once upon a time, Saddam had sought to confuse potential assassins about his movements by deploying whole fleets of identical Mercedeses, choosing the convoy he
would use only at the
last
minute and
dispatching the others in different directions as a distraction. These
days
Saddam drove only
by a
single
rank.
The few
figure.
war.
bodyguard
in cheap, inconspicuous cars,
—a colonel who himself wore no and intimates he
trusted aides
He had
lost as
accompanied
much
as forty
pounds
visited
insignia of
saw a shrunken
in the first
month of the
Now the olive-green uniform of his ruhng Baath Party hung ever
more loosely on him.
"I don't
know what God wiU bring tomorrow," he
remarked despairingly to one of his intelligence OfficiaUy, his
defeat of his
in denial, issuing statements that the
army in Kuwait had been
pation of that that Iraq
government was
little
would
oil-rich
try again.
camped on the lower
floors
chiefs.
a liistoric victory, that the occu-
kingdom had been
justified,
The few remaining
even hinting
foreign journalists
of the al-Rashid Hotel (the elevators had
OUT OF THE ASHES long since stopped running) found Ministry of Information censors still
routinely changing the phrase "defeat of the Iraqi
army
in the
south" to read "the fate of the Iraqi army in the south" even as Iraqi generals were meekly accepting conditions laid
down by the victorious
allies.
To
tlie
few trusted aides permitted
exhibited a greater sense of
reality.
in his presence, the dictator
One
of these was a stocky forty-
four-year-old general, the chief of military intelligence, Wafiq
many
Samarrai, who, Hke
otlier
ranking servants of the regime,
sported a mustache trimmed in the style of his leader
ued
He had made
during the bitter eight-year war with Iran. Saddam
his reputation
his professional
al-
judgment and had been
visiting his
val-
emergency
headquarters almost every day since the Americans had started bombing Baghdad. (Anticipating that
uated his prewar
bombs.)
On
command
it
post days before
it
was duly crushed by
the day after the allied armies began to sweep, almost un-
opposed, through Kuwait, Saddam fession of error "In
"nobody
would be a target, al-Samarrai evac-
two hundred
made a rare though roundabout conyears,"
he remarked
to al-Samarrai,
will realize that this
was a wrong estimate about what would
Saddam
Hussein's great gamble in August 1990,
happen." "This" had been that
he could surprise the world by seizing the
Kuwait on
his
little oil
southern border and get away with
failed, just as his
it.
bet a decade earlier that he could invade his neigh-
bor Iran, then in postrevolutionary chaos, had landed him eight-year stalemate. least ultimately
emirate of
The gamble had
The war
against Ayatollah
in a
bloody
Khomeini had
at
garnered him a partial victory, a de facto alliance with
the United States, and the strongest military forces in the Persian Gulf.
But the Iran-Iraq war had
also cost the lives of
hundreds of
thousands of Iraqis and, more important for Saddam, had saddled
him with $80 refill his
billion in debts.
coffers
Kuwait had been a wager that he could
and secure a whip hand over the world s most impor-
tant oil-producing region, but
he had not expected the consequences
of losing to be so terrible.
The seemed
invasion of Kuwait
had been
his idea alone.
At
first
it
a brilliant success. Saddam's elite divisions had overrun the
country in hours, sending the Kuwaiti royal family fleeing over their
SADDAM
AT THE ABYSS
southern border into Saudi Arabia. The United States and the rest of the world had been caught entirely off guard. As his Republican
Guards had massed on the Kuwaiti border the consensus of opinion that
he would
among
the end of July 1990,
at
those watching his moves had been
worst merely seize part of the northern Kuwaiti
at
Prime Minister Tariq Aziz told an interviewer that sion
had indeed been the
eschewed
this cautious
Saddam has
often
this
hmited inva-
original plan. At the last minute,
approach and went
been prone
all
oil
Deputy
field and possibly two disputed offshore islands. Later,
Saddam
the way.
to sudden, unpredictable gambits.
At a high-level meeting in September 1979, soon after he seized total
power
in Iraq,
he even delivered a brief homily on the
"What
tactics as a political principle.
stalled president tics is
when you
utility
of such
politics?" the recently in-
is
asked rhetorically in his slightly
shrill voice.
"Poh-
say you are going to do one thing while intending to
do another. Then you do neither what you said or what you intended." That way, he suggested, no one could predict what you
were going
to do.
Along with
this taste for
element of fatalism
sudden
rolls
in the Iraqi leader.
of the dice, there was a strong
He
once told King Hussein of
Jordan that ever since his narrow escape after trying and assassinate Iraqi president
that every extra
Abd
day of life was a
have died then," he declared. power. senior
by a
failing to
al-Karim Qassim in 1959, he had gift
He
from God.
"I
felt
consider myself to
acknowledged only one greater
On a visit to Kuwait after his conquest, he talked to thirty of his commanders.
A tape of the meeting, later smuggled out of Iraq
dissident, records
him describing the
sianic mission. "This decision to invade
invasion as part of his mes-
Kuwait we received almost
ready-made from God," he says. "Our role is simply to carry it out." The audience response was limited to shouts of "God is great." If Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz, Saddam s perennial voice to the outside world, to the leader late
March
is
to
be believed, he did
at least try to
point out
what the consequences of the invasion might be. In
1991, Aziz
cian Zeid Rifai, for the
met with an old first
friend, the Jordanian politi-
time since the invasion of Kuwait. "What
did you people think you were doing?" asked Rifai. "Didn't you realize
what would happen
if
you seized Kuwait?"
OUT OF THE ASHES "The leadership made some mistakes," mumbled a slightly crestfallen Aziz, a dangerous enough admission to anyone but an old
They both knew who
friend.
"Well,
why didn't you
"I did,"
"the leadership" was.
and
try
him out of it?"
talk
Aziz explained. Just before the Iraqi army crossed the bor-
Saddam had finally revealed the full dimensions of the plan to members of his cabinet, who were unaware that the limited incursion
der,
originally
rect
way
planned had been
taking. "I said. terattack.
chose an indi-
drastically enlarged. Aziz
to point out to the boss that this could
The Americans may come
be a perilous under-
to Saudi Arabia
and coun-
Why don't we go all the way and take Saudi Arabia too?' " In
hoped that his master might on the hazards of the invasion plan. But Saddam took it straight,
suggesting an even bigger gamble, he reflect
gently chiding Aziz for his impetuosity.
"In that circle, the safest course
is
always to be ten percent
more
hawkish than the chief," says one veteran Russian diplomat long
sta-
tioned in Baghdad. "You stay out of trouble that way."
There was no one
left to
was on the verge of defeat generals had secured
they had
soon
as
U.S.
Navy
stand up to Saddam. In 1986,
in
its
war with
some leeway in
Iran, the professional
in
1989
won a narrow victory with the active help of the Persian Gulf, Saddam got rid of them. Some were Adnan
Khairallah Tulfah,
cousin but widely liked and respected in the army, died
in a helicopter crash during a sandstorm. It
violence of Iraqi politics that everybody in
dam had
army
finally
in the
first
Iraq
directing military operations. As
executed, others retired. Defense Minister
Saddam's
when
is
a
measure of the
Baghdad assumed that Sad-
arranged for the helicopter to be sabotaged, though the
storm was violent enough to blow the roof off the headquarters of military intelligence.
Queried by a foreign interviewer about
the mihtary during the Iran-Iraq war,
his
purges of
Saddam was less than reassuring:
"Only two divisional commanders and the head of a mechanized unit have been executed. That's quite normal
in war."
Once installed in Kuwait, Saddam utterly failed to appreciate the game he had started, and continued to overplay his hand. At the end of August, he met Yasser Arafat, the Palestinian leader, and Abu lyad, Arafat's chief lieutenant,
attempt to mediate. "If
I
make
who were
in
Baghdad
a peace proposal,"
in a vain
Saddam
told the
SADDAM Palestinians, "then I'm the If the others
AT THE ABYSS
one who
propose one, then
But President George Bush,
had
in Saudi Arabia,
and
less
will
have to make concessions.
can obtain concessions."
I
steadily building
up
military strength
Saddam
reason to compromise.
less
wholly underestimated the strength of the coalition that was about to
he appealed to Arab and Muslim
attack him. Just before the war, darity by,
among
soli-
other measures, redesigning the Iraqi flag to include
the Islamic rallying cry "Allah Akbar"
—"God
is
great." Iraq did enjoy
popular sympathy in the Arab world, but no powerful friends. Saddam
had invaded Kuwait old
had gone
ally,
at the
moment
very
into terminal decline.
that the Soviet Union, Iraq's
He had
failed to
understand
the military superiority of the American-led alliance, entertaining the fantasy that
from the
if
air
there was fighting, his troops could withstand
and could
heavy casualties on any
inflict
In the secret meeting with his
assault.
the war, he told
them
The
be
in vain.
.
.
.
seems
truth
tle
to
was done
to
pilots
Little
time. If you
do
this, their
[bomb-
meeting between Tariq Aziz and Sec-
five
days before the war.
prepare ordinary Iraqis for war.
Even
When
then, ht-
allied planes
on the morning of January 17, their were astonished to discover that there was no blackout and
that the Iraqi capital istries
ground
have dawned on Saddam that war was
James Baker
approached Baghdad
allied
Kuwait before
On the ground the battle wiU be another story."
inevitable only after a fruitless
retary of State
in
that during aUied air raids they should "stay
motionless underground just a ing] will
commanders
bombing
were
Some
at 2:58
was
"fit
up
Las Vegas." Government min-
like
floodlit.
of the population
still
trusted their leader to avoid war.
Trainers at the racetrack in Mansour, a fashionable district
eign embassies in the center of Baghdad, were
horses on the afternoon before the delusions as to what war would
first
still
bombast about "the mother of Pro-government
of for-
bomb attacks. No one had any
mean if it did come. Despite Saddam's all
battles," the feeling in the streets
was resigned, with few expectations other than the defeat.
full
walking race-
ralfies in
inevitability of
Baghdad just before the war started
consisted entirely of schoolchildren assembled by officials of the rul-
ing Baath Party.
The
largest public
meeting
in the city in the days
before the bombing turned out to be a gathering of pigeon-racing
DUTDFTHEASHES
ID
Nor were the
enthusiasts.
There was
war.
on
little
Iraqis ill-informed
about the approaching
Iraqi radio or television, but people spent
hours listening to foreign radio stations in Arabic, switching from the
BBC to Monte Carlo to Voice of America.
"Our main hobby
is
listen-
ing to die radio," one Iraqi told us at the time. In the days before the
many as 1 million out of 3.5 million people in Baghdad They feared that if Iraq fired a Scud with a chemical or warhead at Tel Aviv, Israel would respond with a nuclear
bombing, left
the
as
city.
biological strike.
At the
start
of the bombing, an old
cafe near Nasr Square explained
edged
story.
He
man drinking tea in a dilapidated
what he thought, using a double-
repeated the old Koranic
tale
how once
of
Abyssinians brought elephants to conquer Mecca. At
first
"the
the bedouin
warriors were dismayed by the strange beast, but
God
sent birds to
Mecca who dropped
killed
them." Sad-
dam
stones
on the elephants and
himself had recently told the same
story,
adding
just learned the significant fact that the elephant
tliat
he had only
was the syinbol of
President Bush's Republican Party. But unlike the Iraqi leader, the old
man
told the story with exaggerated gestures, to the
from the others the message birds, Iraq
in the cafe.
seemed
clear:
last
dissident
had no hope against the aUied elephants.
The mood among the
sound of giggles
word was expressed, but Unless God could come up with magical Not a
the soldiers was scarcely
days of peace,
talked to soldiers.
They were,
conversations were
"Where
Saddam
full
more
optimistic. In
visited the trenches in
plainly, terrified
by
Kuwait and
his presence.
The
of agonizing pauses.
are you from?" he asked one.
"Sulaimaniya, in Kurdistan."
"How are
the people in Sulaimaniya?"
"They support you."
A
general
who
later fled to exile in
England explained
to us that
the low morale in the army in Kuwait at the start of the fighting was
not because of superior allied weapons.
weapons.
"We knew
all
about these
We were all circulated with a newsletter about such devel-
opments." They simply thought they had been led into an insane enterprise.
maneuver."
"We
didn't expect a war.
We thought it was
all
a poUtical
SADDAM If
AT THE ABYSS
Saddam was aware of his
He was under no
subjects' views,
illusion that
a family
little
attention.
they actually liked him. Long before,
soon after the 1968 coup that had put
dam had spoken witli
he paid
his Baatli Party in
power, Sad-
who had come to complain that one of "Do not tliink you will get revenge,"
tliem had been unjustly executed.
he had said then.
"If you ever
have the chance, by the time you get to
us there will not be a sliver of flesh there would be too
many
left
on our bodies."
He meant that
others waiting in line to tear
him and
his
associates apart.
Since that time, his host
and
Saddam had ehminated
potential rivals while
all
of secret police and intelligence agencies visited immediate
terrible
punishment on anyone manifesting, the moment they
were detected, the shghtest
signs of political discontent.
from Ouija ("the crooked one"), a
He came
typical Iraqi village of flat-roofed
brick houses, just outside the decayed textile town of Tikrit, perched
on the bank of the
Tigris a
hundred miles north of Baghdad. Even
before Saddam, the Tikritis were official
known for their violence. A British World War spoke of "their
writing soon after the First
ancient reputation for savagery and brutality."
town
to the ground.
who were in turn members formed expected
little
Saddams
He favored razing the
family belonged to the Bejat clan,
linked to the tribes in and around Tikrit. Their
the core of Saddam's regime and consequently
mercy
if
he
Tikritis like the
fell.
Saddam
belonged to the Sunni branch of Islam. Sunnis, who the center and north of the country, total Iraqi population,
army and the
live
family
mostly in
make up only 20 percent of the
but they dominated the upper ranks of the
administration, as they
had since the days when Iraq
was part of the Ottoman Empire.
The
majority of Iraqis were Shia Muslims, like the Iranians across
the eastern border Concentrated in Baghdad and on the great plain of
soudiem Iraq
Arabia, they provided
seldom allowed to
that stretches
much of the
all
the
rank and
rise to positions
way file
to
flat
Kuwait and Saudi
for the
army but were
of influence in any Iraqi regime.
Since the Baathists had seized control of Iraq, the power of both the political parties
they supported and the traditional Shia
had been whittled away.
If tlie Shia
side the government,
was
it
showed
loyalty to
tribal sheiklis
any figures out-
to tlieir reUgious leaders.
Saddam had
aUTQFTHEASHES
12 instituted a
thorough purge of such figures in the early stages of
confrontation witli Iran.
The Kurds
in the
problem than the saw themselves
The
had remained
survivors
his
quiet.
mountainous north had always been more of a
Non-Arab Sunni MusHms, the Kurds of Iraq a separate community and had resented rule
Shia.
as
from Baghdad even
in the days
when
the British held sway there. In
the early 1970s, backed by the United States and the shah of Iran,
they had launched a fierce insurgency that was defeated only
when
they were betrayed by their foreign friends. During the Iranian war of the 1980s, some of their leaders had again risen in rebellion and
Saddam had
retaliated
by showering poison gas on Kurdish
and by ordering a program of mass executions that two hundred thousand Kurds. In addition Iraqi leader
cities
civilians
many as
to this holocaust, the
had wiped four thousand Kurdish
herding their inhabitants into
killed as
villages off the
map,
and refugee camps under the
ever-suspicious eyes of his secret police. In the
months of crisis
that
followed Saddam's invasion of Kuwait, the principal Kurdish leaders,
Massoud Barzani and
Jalal Talabani,
seemed
to have learned
their lesson, pledging loyalty to the Iraqi leader in his confrontation
with the
allies.
Prior to the invasion of Kuwait
and the threat
to world oil supplies,
Saddams murderous regime evoked few complaints in the outside world. Even when he took to gassing his Kurdish subjects, governments
in
Washington, London, and other Western capitals stayed
mute, grateful that he was fighting the Islamic Republic of Iran. strictly
enforced
rule, laid
A
down after a meeting between Jalal Talabani
and a mid-level State Department
official in
1988 had drawn an angry
protest from Baghdad, forbade any U.S. government
official
meeting with any of the exiled Iraqi opposition groups. In 1991,
from as the
United States and other members of the coalition began bombing Iraqi cities, there dictator.
The
was no move
universal assumption abroad
efficient police state,
in a
to rouse the people of Iraq against their
where even
was that
spilling coffee
in
such a viciously
on the leaders picture
newspaper could bring swift punishment, there was no prospect of
any challenge to the regime from below.
Then, on February
15, a full
month
into the war. President
Bush suddenly spoke direcdy to ordinary
Iraqis.
Twice that
George
day, at the
SADDAM White House and
AT THE ABYSS
at a missile plant in
carefully phrased call for revolt, calling
13
Massachusetts, he repeated a
on "the
and the
Iraqi military
own hands and force Saddam Hussein, the dictator, to step aside." The appeal had been conceived of Iraqi people to take matters into their
as
an incitement to the Iraqi military to stage a coup, and the "Iraqi
people" had been included only as an afterthought, but the effects
were
far-reaching.
The
president s unequivocal words were broadcast
on every international channel heard the
call. It
planes were
seemed
to
that reached Iraq,
them
and miUions of Iraqis
at wiU,
Saddam s enemy, whose had asked them to join his
largely
by Shia and Kurdish con-
that Bush,
bombing the country
invincible coalition.
The army scripts,
in Kuwait,
manned
was already unwilling
realized that the "political
to die for
maneuver" had
Saddam. Once they had failed,
they had begun to
vote with their feet. Captain Azad Shirwan, an intelligence officer
with a tank brigade stationed on the front lines in Kuwait, remembers that by the time the allied ground offensive started on February 24, most of the positions
men in his unit had disappeared.
were mostly defended by
had deserted."
diers
officers,
When Saddam
"In our brigade,
because the private
sol-
suddenly ordered a general
withdrawal from Kuwait the day after the allied ground offensive began, the disintegration became
The disappearance of the
who
total.
Iraqi troops
bemused the
allied generals,
had, in any case, vastly exaggerated the strength of their enemy.
"What
really
amazes
me
is
the lack of bodies," exclaimed General
Charles Homer, the U.S. Air Force commander. "There weren't a of dead people around.
I
think a lot of Iraqis just
left." Later,
government deliberately avoided quantifying the enemy dead that a fact,
ties
huge number would serve
as useful
low.
"We
for fear
propaganda for Saddam. In
the available evidence suggests that the
was extraordinarily
lot
the U.S.
number
of Iraqi casual-
didn't lose a single officer over the
rank of brigadier," says General al-Samarrai, who, as head of military intelligence,
was
Casualties
in a position to know.
among
the lower ranks were also
village, Tulaiha, just off the
150
men were
called
up
Hamzi, the mukhtar, or
light.
In one small
main road between Baghdad and Kut,
to the
army during the Gulf War. Hassan none of them
village leader, insisted that
DUTOFTHEASHES
14-
was
wounded. The only
killed or
casualties
were two men captured.
This compared with thirty dead and eleven prisoners from Tulaiha
during the Iran-Iraq war While Iraq
lost
2,100 tanks in Kuwait, U.S.
damage-assessment teams found that only 10 percent had been destroyed in battle. The rest had been abandoned. In the soldiers
few days of February, hundreds of thousands of angry
last
were streaming out of Kuwait, bitter at Saddam Hussein for war they could not win. Hard on the heels of the disap-
starting a
pearing enemy, the aUied armies swept through Kuwait and across the border into Iraq
Saddam thought they might be coming
itself.
for him. In the final days of the war,
gence headquarters with
his
he turned up
powerful and
Abed Hamid Mahmoud. "Abed Hamid to Baghdad,"
The general right
he said
by cahing a
sinister private secretary.
thinks the allies are
coming
General al-Samarrai. "What do you think?"
to
disagreed.
at military intelU-
On
February 28, George Bush proved him
cease-fire; the allied onslaught halted in
its
tracks.
Though his Kuwaiti adventure had turned into a colossal disaster, Saddam now thought the crisis had ended. "After the cease-fire, he thought everything was finished," explains al-Samarrai. fact, just
was, in
beginning.
When he revolt.
ters in
It
first
heard the news that Iraqis themselves had risen
General al-Samarrai was
at
in
the emergency headquar-
which he had spent the war, unmolested by the American
bombers. The tidings came
phone call from Basra, far to the An army general, Hamid Shakar, had been driving to Baghdad with one bodyguard when unknown rebels had attacked and killed him near a paper mill thirty miles in a
south and near the Kuwaiti border.
north of Basra. al-Samarrai contacted Saddam, headquarters.
He had just
who rushed to the when the phone
arrived, visibly worried,
rang again. al-Samarrai picked
it
up and recognized the voice of
General Nizar Khazraji, the commander of the entire southwest of the country, with his headquarters in Nassariyah, two hundred miles
from Baghdad.
"The rebels are trying
to attack us," Khazraji shouted.
Baghdad of the seriousness of his
situation,
To convince
he held up the phone,
say-
SADDAM ing,
AT THE ABYSS
"Don't you hear the sound of the bullets?"
15
The connection was
poor and al-Samarrai could hear nothing over the crackling. The
commander pleaded for a hehcopter to rescue him. Saddam, who was still sitting in my headquarters, what was
besieged
"I told
happening
Nassariya and he ordered a helicopter to rescue
in
Khazraji," says al-Samarrai.
ing
fast.
But the army in the south was disintegrat-
Shia conscripts were turning on any representative of Sadofficers.
The commander of the
Iraqi helicopter force said that nothing could
be done: "We don't have
dam's government, including senior
any helicopters
besieged headquarters was it
Soon afterward
in the area." lost.
Later
all
contact with the
Saddam and
al-Samarrai heard
had been stormed by the rebels and Khazraji severely wounded.
Fanned by the rage of the revolt spread with the
soldiers streaming out of Kuwait, the
speed of a whirlwind through the
towns of the south. Saddam was
"We were
cities
and
now staring into the face of disaster. mad adventure, when
anxious to withdraw, to end the
Saddam announced withdrawal within twenty-four hours
—though
without any formal agreement to ensure the safety of the retreating forces,"
the
one
allies to
Guard
officer
recounted
wipe us
out:
later.
He had
"We understood
that
he wanted
already withdrawn the Republican
We had to desert our tanks and vehicles to avoid We walked a hundred kilometers toward the Iraqi ter-
to safety.
aerial attacks. ritories,
hungry,
first little
town
thirsty,
and exhausted." Finally they arrived
inside their
own
border. "In Zubair
put an end to Saddam and his regime.
We
at the
we decided
shot at his posters.
to
Hun-
dreds of retreating soldiers came to the city and joined the revolt; by the afternoon, there were thousands of us. Civilians supported us
and demonstrations
started.
We
attacked the party building and the
security services headquarters."
At 3:00 A.M. on the
first
of March, the storm reached Basra, the
ancient, sprawling city at the junction of the Tigris rivers
where
in
and Euphrates
happier days vacationers from teetotal Kuwait had
thronged the hotels and nightclubs in search of a bottle of Johnnie
Walker Black Label.
A single tank gunner expressed his
anger
at
the
debacle by firing a round through a portrait of Saddam Hussein, one of the tens of thousands of such pictures that gazed out on every street
throughout the country. The soldiers around him applauded
QUTaFTHEASHES
16 spontaneous
his
Within hours, the iron control of Saddam and
act.
the Baath Party had been violently cast aside. For the milHons of Iraqis
who had suddenly found
silence,
The
it
was the that
first
ing Hospital,
him
"intifada"
Dr
uprising.
Walid al-Rawi, the administrator of Basra Teach-
knew about
the uprising was
when
a policeman visited
were
starting in small towns and villages band of fifty rebels came to the hospiand took away three patients who were security men, one of whom
to say that incidents
around Basra. "Later that tal
their voices after years of terrified
—the
day, a
diey shot on the hospital grounds." As in
Baath Party
tlie
were die
offices
cities
first
elsewhere in the south,
come under
to
attack.
Mohammed Kassim, the manager of the Basra Tower Hotel, later told us that on the
"They asked
first
if
day of the uprising, armed
them no and they went
recalled. "I told
nearby Sheraton was compliant.
men came
to his hotel.
there were any Baathists staying, or any alcohol," he
They
less persuasive,
away."
The manager of the
or perhaps the rebels were less
set fire to die top stories of die hotel,
burning nine-
teen rooms.
Rampaging dirough the
BATA
Beneath the office,
city,
the rebels
made
a chilling discovery.
shoe company premises opposite the mayors
they found a secret underground prison.
Some
of the hundreds
of prisoners had been shut off from the world so long diat they
shouted
"Down
with al-Bakr" as they were released and led into the
open air. They believed that the president of Iraq was san al-Bakr,
who had been
replaced by
Within days, the intifada had spread to the holy Najaf,
Ahmed Hasin 1979.
cities
and Kufa, the heartland of the Shia reUgious
which 55 percent of
men the
the
still
Saddam Hussein
his sons,
Iraqis belong. Thirteen
of Kerbala, tradition to
hundred years before,
Shia regarded as the Prophet's true heirs.
Imam
Ali
and
Hussein and Abbas, had been martyred here, and their
shrines are the focus of adulation from the 130 million devotees of
the Shia faith around the world. In Najaf, where for a thousand years pilgrims had flocked to the great shrine, city,
its
die allied
golden
dome
bombing had
rising
above die low brick houses of the
killed thirty-five people.
Thirteen
mem-
bers of the al-Habubi family had been crushed by a stick of bombs that
had missed a nearby
electricity substation
and had turned
their
house
SADDAM
AT THE
ABYSS
into a gray concrete sandwich, the floors collapsing
rebels said such horrors only underlined the
protect
its
people from
air attack.
Yusuf al-Hakim, on February
By
IV on each other The
government s
inability to
At the funeral of a religious notable,
14, the
crowd chanted
against
Saddam.
the time the angry rabble of military deserters started straggling
into the city in the
first
two days o£ March, the governments authority
was already fragile. Brigadier
Ali, a
professional officer, was
crowd.
Bom
arrived
home on March
among
the returning
he and many other deserters from the
in Najaf,
Kuwait. "The streets were
city
2 after being "chased like rats" out of full
of deserters. All structure in the army
lost. Everybody was their own boss. News was spreading that someone had shot at Saddam s portrait in Basra." The next day, Ali heard there was to be a demonstration in Imam Ali Square, four hundred yards from the great shrine at the center of the city. "At first there were about a hundred people, many of them army officers from Najaf who had deserted. The security forces were well informed and were there as well. The demonstrators started shouting: 'Saddam, keep your hands off. The people of Najaf don't want you.' The security men opened fire, further infuriating the demonstrators. Only a few of them were armed, but they threw themselves on
was
the
detested but hitherto invulnerable
officials.
Catching one
important local Baath Party functionary, they hacked him to death with knives.
Now more
people had flooded into the area, drawn by
the sound of the shooting. As the security
men continued to
fire,
the
demonstrators ran into the warren of alleys and small shops
between the square and the
shrine.
The
security forces dashed after
them, but the gunfire echoed and reverberated off the walls of the
to their headquarters. It
became confused, lost heart, and retreated had been no more than twenty minutes or
half an hour since the
first
ancient market and they
shouts denouncing Saddam, and the
crowd of teenagers and young men the center of the
city.
in their twenties
now controlled
Their morale soared.
In a few hours, the newly confident crowd took over the shrine of
Imam AH
itself,
a golden
rounded by rooms for
mosque
at
the center of a courtyard sur-
pilgrims. Unlike the rest of Najaf, the shrine
aUTDFTHEASHES
ia
had power from a generator and the demonstrators commandeered loudspeakers, normally used to
people — simple slogans "Seek out the criminals" — and urge a
its
on the security
to prayer, to broadcast
call
In the evening, the insurgents fought their way into the
used
final attack
forces.
as a local headquarters
Iraqi secret police services,
by the
and
Amn
al-Khass,
killed eight or nine
girls'
school
one of the many
people there. They
were increasingly well armed, having seized submachine guns piled
stock-
in schools to arm people in case the allies The headquarters of the Quds division of the
by the government
landed from the
air.
Republican Guard was just outside the
had been sent
to the front
city,
but
all its
combat brigades
and the only garrison consisted of some
when officers among commandeered 82-millimeter mortars and used them to bombard the Baath Party headquarters. "Abdel Amir Jaithoum, my administrative personnel. These did not resist rebels
tlie
old headmaster, was killed there," recalls Brigadier Ali without regret.
"So too was Najim Mizhir,
who
who was
the only Baath leader in the city
came from Najaf and was quite Uked, diough he shot a demonstrator." Other Baath Party members fled for their lives through the city's immense cemeteries, filled with the graves of devout Shia from around the world. By early morning on March 4, the rebels ruled actually
Najaf; within a day, they also held Kerbala, Kufa,
and the entire mid-
dle Euphrates area.
As Saddam's rule collapsed across southern
by a fresh
crisis at his rear.
Kurds had
also risen.
News
Iraq,
he was
arrived from the north that the
Unlike the spontaneous and leaderless fury of intifada,
assailed
tlie
southern
the Kurdish revolt was planned. While publicly refusing to
take advantage of Saddam's confrontation with the international coalition, the
Kurdish leaders had begun planting the seeds of an insurrec-
tion well before the
end of the
boyish-faced tribal chief who (the
KDP)
war.
Massoud
Barzani, the small and
headed the Kurdistan Democratic Party
led by his father years before, had forged an alliance with
the other principal commander, Jalal Talabani, the barrel-chested and garrulous leader of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (the PUK). controlled guerrilla forces,
turbanned Peshmerga whose
They
fathers
and
grandfathers had fought mountain campaigns for half a century
SADDAM
AT THE
against regimes in Baghdad. Before
ABYSS
and during the war, agents
patched by Barzani and Talabani had secretly Kurdish mihtia force recniited by Saddam,
moment when them
for
their
to strike.
infiltrated the Jash, a
in preparation for the
enemy might be weakened enough by
As
in the
dis-
the
country of the Shia, George Bush's
allies
call to
the Iraqi people had resonated with the Kurds, and they had tentatively
scheduled the
The
explosion
surprise.
tried to
start
of their revolt for the middle of March.
came sooner than
On March
5, in
that,
catching the leadership by
the small mountain town of Rania, police
round up some of the army deserters who had arrived home
from the debacle
The
in Kuwait.
local Jash, already
suborned by
agents of the underground resistance, reacted by seizing control of the
town. Within hours the revolt had spread across the sharp crags and winding, narrow canyons of the Kurdish mountains to Sulaimaniya, the provincial capital close to the Iranian border. Here, after two days
of hard fighting, the rebels captured the stone fortress that served as the long-dreaded Central Security Headquarters, potent symbol and
instrument of the regime. Behind the imposing front entrance, decorated with a giant all-seeing metal eye, they found a medieval warren
of torture chambers, equipped with metal hooks, piano wire, and other devices, and smeared with blood. In
some rooms, the insurgents
discovered freshly strangled women and children. In one, a human ear
some of the prisoners had been sealed in underground cells for more than a decade. The outraged crowd fell on the four hundred Baath Party members, intelligence officers, and secret police agents who had holed up in the security headquarters when the revolt began, and massacred them all. The careful plans of the leadership were swept away as the north-
was nailed to the
em
intifada
the plains.
wall.
As
in Basra,
swept across the
cities
Two weeks after the
first
of the mountains and
outbreak of rebellion in Rania, the
Kurdish Peshmerga guerrillas captured the only a few hours' drive from Baghdad. all
down onto
vital oil
center of Kirkuk,
"One second of this day is worth Massoud Barzani. Every-
the wealth in the world," cried an exultant
where people celebrated the man they regarded
as their ultimate
inspiration with the honorific tide "Haji." "Haji Bush," they cried to
the few Western correspondents
Kurdistan at the end of March.
who made
their
way
into liberated
OUT OF THE ASHES
2D
Saddam had now lost control of fourteen of Iraq's eighteen provinces. Baghdad itself remained quiet, but government officials were already showing a readiness to desert the sinking ship. Rumors spread that Saddam had fled the country. In Washington and London, alhed
relaxed in the comforting assumption that no
officials
leader could survive such disasters.
The
had taken the
uprisings
They were wrong.
Saddam
rest of the world, as well as
Hussein, completely by surprise. Years before, during the IranIraq war, his exiled opponents had miscalculated the strength of the Iraqi patriotism that
he was able to
enlist
on
his side after Iranian
forces entered Iraq in 1982. In the crisis after the invasion of
Kuwait, exiles
made
the opposite mistake, underestimating popular
anger against Saddam Hussein.
When
rebellion swept through
southern Iraq, the opposition had no organization in the ble of directing events. In the sixty-six miles
from Baghdad, a rebel
tanks under his to
Baghdad
is
town of
officer
command and leading them
capa-
proposed taking the to the capital.
six
"The way
open," he cried, but his fellow deserters preferred to
concentrate on lynching local Baath at the
anarchy. "At
we were
first
teacher, about these
first
officials.
In Najaf and else-
overthrow of the regime was followed by
where, euphoria
lights
cities
Hillah, for example, only
a
little
crazy," recalls
Hameed,
a school-
"We believed even the traffic we wrecked them." Three
days in Najaf.
represented Saddam Hussein, so
days after the
mob
drove out Saddam s forces, there were
still
dead
bodies lying in the streets.
There was only one man tual nature.
The
in the city with authority, albeit of a spiri-
ninety-one-year-old
Grand Ayatollah Abu al-Qassim
al-Khoie was the most universally respected cleric in
He was
the grand Marja, the Shia equivalent of pope.
western Iran,
like
many
Khomeini himself had and taught
of Shia Iraq.
Bom in
north-
other clerics from outside Iraq (Ayatollah
lived there for sixteen years)
in Najaf. Unlike
at the
he had long
lived
Khomeini, al-Khoie was opposed to the
Shia clergy taking power themselves.
gathered around him
all
To the students and
Green Mosque
disciples
in the great shrine
he had
always preached that involvement in politics corrupted religion.
SADDAM
AT THE ABYSS
On March 6, the frail but venerated grand ayatollah issued afatwa, a religious decree, telling the people: "You are obligated to protect
people s property, and honor, likewise, are the property of all."
all
public institutions, for they
He urged the burial of bodies, though without
success.
The mood
Najaf was euphoric but confused. "Nobody
in
what was going on, but
tliey
knew that
the city was in our hands," says
Sayid Majid al-Khoie, the second son of the grand ayatollah. after the rebels took the city
and wrote said
in his diary
he
knew
visited the shrine of
what the people were
one man, "the Western armies are
in
The
Imam
saying. "Iraq
is
night
Hussein
finished,"
Basra and Samawa" (on the
Euphrates). Others were saying, "Kerbala and Najaf are in our hands.
Let us go on to Baghdad." People eagerly repeated the rumor that
Saddam had left Iraq. That same day, army officers, encouraged by the a committee, but they could not
who had
led the
first
ayatollah,
formed
impose discipHne on the young
men
now ruled the
They
demonstrations and
streets.
could not even take advantage of events that seemed to play into their hands.
The commander of the battalion spearheading the government
counterattack on Kerbala shot his chief security officer in the head and
changed
"But the committee could not keep his unit together,"
sides.
laments one of
its
members. "We had
their dishdashes [civilian robes]
to tell the
men
to
change into
and go home."
In towns along the Euphrates close to the Iranian border, some-
one did
lay claim to leadership.
Mohammed
scion of a revered Shia religious family, side in the
war of the 1980s. Now, from
der from Basra, he
commanded
the
had a
Baqir al-Hakim, the rallied to the Iranian
town
just across the bor-
Supreme Council
for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), and soon, on walls in Basra and in towns, like
Amara, close
to the border, posters of
al-Hakim and
the late Iranian leader Ayatollah Khomeini himself began to appear.
Announcements in al-Hakim s name claimed full authority over the rebellion: "No action outside this context is allowed; all parties working from Iranian
no party
is
territories
should also obey al-Haldm s orders;
allowed to recruit volunteers; no ideas except the rightful
Islamic ones should be disseminated."
Nothing was more
likely to isolate the rebels.
The prospect of an
OUT DFTHE ASHES
22
Islamic revolution frightened large
numbers of
Muslims, Kurds, Christians, secular
Iraqis,
the Baath Party.
Nor were be
identified with Iran
Iraqi opposition leaders
were quick
it
its allies
for
tlie
his
Iraqi secular opposition.
he had planted
own Mukhabarat Saad
"The Badr Brigade
They swear by the Koran
evi-
[secret Jabr, a [a
Iranian military unit recruited from exiled Iraqis] never came.
talked to the Iranians.
be
Saddam Hussein
police] to the south with pictures of Khomeinei," insists
veteran of
likely to
and militant Islam that some
to believe that
dence of Iranian involvement. "He sent
such as Sunni
and anyone associated with
the United States and
reassured by such slogans. So convenient was for the uprising to
Iraqis,
pro-
We
that they didn't send
the pictures."
This denial
is
echoed by an Islamic
Iraqi exile in Iran
itself,
who
exclaims bitterly at the behavior of the Iranians in 1991. "They
They only let a few people cross the border to help, and they would not let them bring arms. They certainly did not put up posters they were terrified of the American reaction." Whether or not Saddam put up fake posters, encouraged the uprising and then betrayed
it.
—
he certainly made a crafty
effort to publicize the pro-Iranian
element
by releasing eleven members of the al-Hakim family, known for their alliance to the Tehran regime, in the middle of the crisis. They had been imprisoned in secret for a decade and the outside world had believed them long dead. Wiser heads among the insurgents in the soutli knew that everyin the uprising
well
thing
depended on the Americans.
commander
in chief.
A
fatal
miscalculation by the U.S.
General Nornian Schwarzkopf, had allowed the
bulk of Saddam s most loyal and proficient military units, the Republi-
can Guards, to escape an
George Bush called
allied
encirclement twenty- four hours before
his cease-fire.
Unlike the bulk of the Iraqi army,
the Republican Guards were not conscript cannon fodder. Schwarz-
kopfs failure to intercept the guards was to have profound conse-
quences for Iraq. CarefuUy recruited, well paid, and lavishly equipped,
most of them had stayed together while the
rest
of the army in the
south disintegrated. They would be a fonnidable force against the enthusiastic but chaotic insurgency that
had seized control of southern
Iraq.
"The biggest reason
for the intifada
is
that they [the rebels] thought
SADDAM
AT THE ABYSS
23
the Americans would support them," says Sayid Majid. "They
they couldn't beat
Saddam on
control of die cities
and
their
that the
knew
own. They thought they could get
Americans would stop the army from
intervening."
On March
9,
Hussein Kamel, Saddams cousin and son-in-law,
began the counterattack on Kerbala, the other great sixty miles
He
from Najaf.
allied offensive
rebel officers
went there
to
grip
almost
on the columns of fire.
American
"We had
city,
intact.
Brigadier Ali and other
to help the resistance, but as the Republican
around the holy city and terrified civilians fled
nearby villages, he realized diat
the roads out of the
Iraqi
it
was the beginning of the end.
On
army helicopter crews poured kerosene
fleeing refugees
aircraft circled
and then
set
it
alight with tracer
high overhead.
the message that the Americans would support us,"
lamented the brigadier
as
he relived
his
escape back to Najaf from
Kerbala in a quiet North London office seven years with
of Shia Islam,
used Republican Guard units that had
escaped the
Guard tightened its
city
my own
later.
"But
I
saw
eyes the American planes flying over the helicopters.
We were expecting them to help; now we could see them witnessing our demise between Najaf and Kerbala. They were taking pictures
and they knew exactly what was happening." Back
in Najaf,
and the other
which
itself
was about to come under
officers consulted
attack, Ali
with Ayatollah al-Khoie. The vener-
able Shiite religious leader endorsed the notion that they should go
south and contact the us,
allies.
what were they going
to
"Find out what were their ideas about
do?"
He
agreed that Sayid Majid should
go with them.
As
Ali
and the
little
group drove through the towns and
anarchic southern Iraq, their car was besieged by crowds
villages
of
who had
heard that a son of al-Khoie had come among them. People clamored for arms.
The Americans, they said, had stopped the
rebels in the river
town of Nassariyah taking desperately needed guns and ammunition from the army barracks. In other places, U.S. army units were blowing
up captured weapons stores or taking them away. Above all, the rebels wanted communications equipment. Although they had captured almost aU of southern Iraq, the successful rebels in individual
were barely in touch with each
other.
cities
UT OF THE ASHES Outside Nassariyah, they met their
first
Americans. They were
sol-
diers
manning M-1 Abrams tanks and Bradley armored personnel car-
riers,
part of the
huge force
that
had swept around Kuwait and deep
into Iraq in the lightning allied offensive at the Iraqis explained to the
they were there.
It
end of February. The
American commander who they were and why
was not a warm reception. The U.S.
officer
away for ten minutes and then returned with the curious claim was out of touch with cer like Ah, this
his headquarters.
seemed highly
went
that
he
To a professional military offiThe American curtly sug-
unHkely.
gested that they try and find the French forces, eighty miles to the west. Bitterly disappointed at this disinterest, the Iraqis
the French.
went in search of
When they eventually found them on March 11, their luck
appeared to change. The Lieutenant colonel in charge questioned
them
in detail
through an Algerian interpreter and then said he would
command. He seemed well aware of the significance of the al-Khoie name. Four hours later, he came to report that General Schwarzkopf himself would meet them at Safwan in two get in touch with the allied
Safwan was two hundred miles away, too dangerous for a drive
days.
across country strewn with Iraqi
government units. Could they not use
one of the helicopters they could see constantly taking base? asked the
little
delegation. At
first
off
the French told
from the
them
that a
helicopter would be available. For three nights they waited with grow-
ing frustration at Samawa, continually being told that the meeting with
Schwarzkopf would be delayed. Majid
recalls that in conversation the
French told them: "The Americans are worried about the
They asked who brought Khomeini's that
I
passed through. father.
pictures into Iraq.
had seen no pictures of Khomeini I
said that people
Grand Ayatollah
al-Khoie, for
in
any of the
I
Iranians.
explained
cities I
were mistaking pictures of
had
my
Khomeini because both were old
men with white beards and turbans." Finally the answer
came from the Americans. "We were told they
had canceled the meeting helicopter." Majid
in
knew then
Safwan and that they would not send a that the revolt
was doomed.
Saddam knew it already. Twelve miles or so north of Baghdad, a compound at al-Rashedia houses the headquarters of the signals intelligence agency that monitored all electronic commu-
heavily guarded
SADDAM on
nications, including calls first
week of the intifada,
ABYSS
AT THE
satellite
25
phones. Sometime during the
military intelligence chief Wafiq al-Samarrai
was handed a transcript of two radio conversations that
had
posts.
just
in
southern Iraq
been intercepted by one of the al-Rashedia
listening
Following the procedure for especially urgent intelligence, a
copy had already been rushed directly to Saddam.
The intercepted conversations were between two Islamic rebels somewhere near Nassariyah. As recalled by al-Samarrai, they went as follows:
"We went
to ask the
Americans for their support," reported
one of tlie speakers. "They told
us,
'We are not going
to support
because you are from the al-Sayed group [that would be
you
Mohammed
al-Hakim].'"
"Ask them again, go back and ask once more."
The
reply soon came. "They say,
'We are not going
you because you are Shia and are collaborating with
The American
to support
Iran.'
had condemned
terror over Iranian intervention
the uprising. If the Iraqi leader had indeed organized the distribution of
Khomeini s
ceeded
brilhantly. In
he might be saved
portrait in the insurgent towns, his ruse
any event,
after
it
was a turning
point.
had suc-
Saddam knew
all.
message," says al-Samarrai, "the position of the
"After this
regime immediately became more confident.
Now
[Saddam] began
to attack the intifada."
The
first city
to
fall
was Basra,
control. In the flatlands of the five
hundred
miles,
mere week outside Saddam s plain,
which stretches
from the Kurdish mountains to the Gulf, the
mechanized forces of the round the
after a
Mesopotamian
Iraqi
rebels. Iraqi tanks
army could always outflank and
from the
Fifty-first
Mechanized
sur-
Division,
one of the few units apart from the Republican Guard that escaped mutiny after the Kuwait debacle, quickly captured die main road overlooking the sprawling working-class slums of North Basra.
The low
brick houses provided
gun bul-
lets.
The
station,
little
protection against heavy machine
tanks fired shells into centers of resistance Like the local
which burned
to the ground. "I
than one thousand dead," said
Dr
would say there were more
al-Rawi
six
weeks
hundred death certificates. You could see dogs eating bodies in the streets." eral Hospital issued six
fire
later.
It
"Basra Gen-
was a bad time.
OUT OF THE ASHES On the
mid-Euphrates
Guard tanks
lican
plain, the fighting
led by Hussein
east of Kerbcila, but they circled
south.
or
was even
Kamel were
behind the
city,
first
Repub-
fiercer.
held
cutting
it
at
al-Aoun,
off from the
To deny the rebels cover for ambushes, the army chopped down
bumgd palm
those fighting inside the
tance went on until atically
blew up
By March
groves beside the roads. city,
March
12, says
one of
"Kerbala was finished, although
sixteentli." Artillery
resis-
and tank guns system-
shops and small workshops between die shrines of
tlie
al-Abbas and al-Hussein, which stand four hundred yards apart. rocket-propelled grenade hit the blue-and-yellow
of the outer
tiles
One
porch of the shrine of al-Abbas, the warrior-martyr of Shia Islam.
memorial of the uprising carefully preserved by the rest
room
from the
for pilgrims in the al-Abbas shrine,
ceiling.
to bloodstains
Here, government
on the
floor,
Iraqi troops
where
officials later
A
a noose
was a
hung
explained, pointing
the rebels hanged or hacked to death Baath
Party members.
In every city they captured, the soldiers immediately posted pictures of
mortar
Saddam Hussein. At the
fire
shrine of
had chipped the stones
in
its
Imam Ali in
Najaf,
where
courtyard, soldiers placed a
strangely inappropriate picture of the Iraqi leader on a chair beside
the rubble.
He
is
portrayed dressed in tweeds, walking up an alpine
slope, a scene reminiscent of
leans
down
to pick a
In recaptured
The Sound of Music.
mountain
He
smiles as he
flower.
southern Iraq, government forces
cities across
exacted immediate revenge. Grand Ayatollah al-Khoie and his son
Mohammed
Taqi were taken to Baghdad where, after a night spent
in the military intelUgence headquarters, they
were summoned
two-hour meeting with an angry Saddam Hussein. As
by Mohammed, who
sat silent
dam man
had wanted
said: "I didn't
replied: "No,
let his
do the
father
later recalled talking, Sad-
think you would do something like this."
replied that he
everything.
and
you wanted
to
to control the violence.
overthrow me.
Now
in
was sent back
to a heavily
lost
to do."
Baghdad, some 102 of his
students and followers disappeared, never to be seen again. self
The old Saddam
you have
You did everything the Americans wanted you
While Grand Ayatoflah al-Khoie was
to a
guarded house
in
remained, lying on a divan, under effective house
He him-
Kufa where he
arrest.
Presented
SADDAM by the government
to foreign visitors,
"What happened
ously: is
against God."
is
happening.
I
Punishment
He
AT THE ABYSS
in
he would only say ambigu-
Najaf and other
told us,
cities is
"Nobody visits me,
have trouble with
27
so
I
not allowed and
know what
don't
my breathing." form of
for involvement in the uprising often took the
a bullet in the back of the head. But as striking as the atrocities was the casual violence witli which Baath Party leaders disposed of suspected
enemies.
The
party always has had a cult of toughness and political
machismo, which makes
on
film to
In
it
sometimes record
encourage supporters and frighten
March 1991, the party took
just
more
its
its
violent actions
enemies.
such a film of Ali Hassan
Majid, newly appointed interior minister, cousin of
known Kurds
rebels in the
between the
showed him and other party leaders hunting down and marshy lands around the town of Rumaytha,
flat
cities
of Najaf and Nassariyah in the
who was
In the film, al-Majid, as httle
mercy
and is
on
his
come back until you
if you
also briefly
to the Shia as
Iraqi helicopter pilot
"Don't
Saddam and
as "Ali Chemical" in Kurdistan for his use of gas against the in 1988. It
shows
way
his reputation
He
lacks
He
teUs an
to attack rebels holding a bridge:
Mohammed Hamza
during the uprising.
soutli.
governor of Kuwait,
he did to the Kurds.
are able to
haven't burnt them, don't
joined by
prime minister,
tell
come
me you have burnt them; back." At one
al-Zubeidi,
who
enhanced because of
and
moment he
later
his
became
toughness
slaps prisoners as they lie
on the
The
ground, saying: "Let's execute one so the others will confess." prisoners,
all
in civilian clothes, look frightened
and resigned. They
are silent, except to say softly: "Please don't do this." There crackle of machine-gun fire in the background. Al-Majid,
a
al-
who
is
the
looks
Saddam Hussein, chain-smokes as he interrogates prisOf one man he says: "Don't execute this one. He will be useus." The soldiers, from an elite unit, shout "Pimp" and "Son of
little like
oners. ful to
a whore" at another prisoner.
By March
16,
Saddam
in a broadcast speech.
felt
confident enough to address his people
He explained that he had said nothing immedi-
ately after the war, preferring to wait "until
tempers had cooled.
addition, recent painful events in the country
ing to you."
He blamed
have kept
... In
me from
talk-
the southern uprising on Iranian agents
aUT DFTHE ASHES
ZB "herds of rancorous country"
traitors, infiltrated
—while reminding
movement
his
Kurdish listeners that "every Kurdish
linked to the foreigner
and
tion to our Kurdish people,"
from inside and outside the
.
.
.
brought only
loss
and destruc-
would
that neighboring countries
own
never permit independence for Iraqi Kurds out of fear of their
Kurdish populations, a valid point.
He
obstacle to Iraq turning into another
portrayed himself as the one
Lebanon and endangering the
ruling Sunni minority.
In any case, the Kurds had far outrun what they could defend.
Massoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani had some merga" (Kurdish
guerrillas)
when
fifteen
thousand "Pesh-
they started their offensive. They
were joined by over a hundred thousand Jash militia belonging to tribes allied to Saddam, as well as the many Kurds who had deserted from the Iraqi army. But the Jash turned against Saddam primarily because they thought he was going to
dam
lose.
A few weeks later,
as Sad-
redirected toward the north the forces that had crushed the
south, this looked less certain.
The
allies
were withdrawing, Saddam
retained his grip on Baghdad, and he had retaken Basra and Kerbala.
The capture of Kirkuk, where the first in 1927,
Iraqi oil field
helped galvanize the Sunni core of the regime. They were
not prepared to cede control of this vital
months
began production
later,
Izzat
oil
region to the Kurds.
A few
Ibrahim al-Dhouri, the Iraqi vice president,
when you Kurds took Kirkuk was it possible to mobilize against you." The Kurds were faced with an insoluble mifitary problem: Two of the largest cities they had admitted to a Kurdish delegation that "only
captured, Kirkuk and Arbil,
They are
on the plain below the mountains.
sit
armed with light weapons to fight Sulaimaniya and Dohuk, the other Kurdish
indefensible by guerrillas
tanks backed by
artillery.
provincial capitals, are almost equally vulnerable. But these cities are
home
to
most of the 3 million Kurds. The Peshmerga, even
rein-
forced by the Jash, could not retreat into the mountains and deep gorges of Kurdistan and abandon their families in the
cities.
Instead,
they had to flee together. Massoud Barzani recalled later that just before the Iraqi counterattack on
March 29 he reviewed thousands of
Kurdish volunteers near Rawanduz, in the heart of Kurdistan. days
later, all
pass near
his
had disappeared.
He was
A
reduced to defending a
headquarters at Salahudin with his
few vital
own bodyguard. For
SADDAM years, a Iraqi
AT
THEABYSS
29
burned-out Iraqi tank marked the spot where they stopped an
armored column. threw flour on the retreating Kurds, giving the
Iraqi helicopters
The
impression that they were using chemical weapons.
object was to
induce panic on a population with bitter memories of Saddam's lavish use of chemicals on them only three years before;
A million
well.
By
Kurds
fled into Iran
the end of March,
south. Samarra, the last
March city
29.
town under the control of the
held by the Kurds in the north, on April
lost
too
all
and Turkey.
The Republican Guards entered 2.
all
of the
rebels, fell
Sulaimaniya, the
Saddam had
He was
on
last
survived
so short of
were old British Ammunition almost ran out. "We
that the tanks that finally retook Kerbala
Chieftains captured from Iran.
had
succeeded
Saddam Hussein had retaken
the great rebeflions, though only by a whisker.
equipment
it
two hundred and
five
miUion bullets
in Kuwait.
When we
asked the Jordanians for a few milfion, they refused," recalls Wafiq al-Samarrai.
"By the
week of the
last
intifada, the
two hundred and seventy thousand Kalashnikov
enough It
for
two days'
fighting.
had been a narrow escape, but now
mounted the immediate something of the
army was down to That was
bullets."
mood
that
threats of the allies
Saddam had
and the
sur-
uprisings,
of messianic self-confidence with which he
had invaded Kuwait eight months before returned. "Things are not so bad,"
he said
to a confidant after the tide
had turned. "In the
past,
our enemies have taken advantage of our mistakes. In future, will sit
Saddam seemed like
to believe that
the status quo of August
1,
he could now return to something
1990, the day before the invasion of
Kuwait. But his world had changed. principally Great Britain,
dam,
we
back and take advantage of the mistakes made by them."
The United
were determined
at
States
and
its allies,
the very least that Sad-
their erstwhile aUy, should never again
be
in a position to
threaten their interests in the Middle East. Prior to August 1990, he
had been
left to
deal as he wished witii his
own people even
billion-dollar oil sales financed his grandiose ambitions.
March
1991, even with the rebellions suppressed, his
shriveled.
The economic
exports as well as
afl
as multi-
At the end of
domain had
sanctions forbidding the country's vital
other normal
commerce with
Iraq
oil
had been
OUT OF THE ASHES
3a
imposed by the United Nations Security Council on August
6,
1990.
Their original purpose had been to force Iraq out of Kuwait. But, even
now that Kuwait had been liberated by the allied armies, were
still
in place. If they
were not
lifted,
standard of living of ordinary Iraqis
Nations headquarters in
New
longer be a fully independent
under these circumstances, mistakes.
his
the sanctions
Saddams income
—^would be decided
—and the at
United
York and Washington. Iraq would no state.
For Saddam Hussein
enemies would have
to
to survive
make
a lot of
TWO
"We Have Saddam Hussein
Three
months
to the
Still
Here"
day after the aUied guns
fell silent in
Kuwait,
a highly classified letter landed on the desk of Frank Anderson, a
gray-haired senior
Anderson looked
official at
at
it
CIA
headquarters in Langley, Virginia.
glumly and then scribbled
"I don't like this" in
the margin.
The
was a formal
letter
"finding," signed
by President Bush,
CIA to mount a covert operation removal of Saddam Hussein from
authorizing the ditions for the
as chief of the
Near
Operations, was the
to "create the con-
power." Anderson,
East division of the agency's Directorate of
man who would have
to carry
it
out.
He was
being asked to succeed where seven hundred thousand allied diers
had
failed
and he did not think
it
could be done.
"We
sol-
didn't
have a single mechanism or combination of mechanisms with which I
could create a plan to get rid of Saddam
CIA
officials
—
eign irritant
at that time,"
he said
faced with peremptory orders to deal with
as in
"Get
rid of
Khomeini"
—
like to
later.
some
for-
quote an aphorism
coined by a former director, Richard Helms: "Covert action
is
fre-
— OUT DF THE ASHES
32 quendy
a substitute for a policy."
Anderson was paying the price
for
the war planners' failure to think about the future of Iraq after an
aUied victory in Kuwait.
George Bush himself had been the first to express the notion that the war might have been a triumph without a victory. "To be very honest with you, that
many
I
haven't yet
of the American people feel," he said the day after his
armies ceased
fire. "I
think
we have Saddam Hussein Bush had ordered the Kuwait
wonderfully euphoric feeling
felt this
it's
still
that
I
want
an end.
to see
And now
here."
because his armies had overrun
cease-fire
headHne-friendly 100 hours with minimal casualties.
It
appeared to have been the military equivalent of a perfect game
in
in a
baseball and the
American generals were not anxious
mar the
to
record with any further fighting. In any event, the White House had
been assured
that the Republican Guard, Saddam's
accomplished troops, were trapped without the
one of the principal wartime objectives of the U.S. In
fact,
even before Bush called a
halt,
most
loyal
and
possibility of escape
mifitary
command.
the bulk of the Republican
Guard had already eluded the planned allied encirclement with relamoving out of the intended area of entrapment on February
tive ease,
27.
By March
1,
they were
sixty miles
north of Basra, therefore a delay
of twenty-four hours in announcing the cease-fire would have difference.
It
made no
was only one of many miscalculations by the U.S. war
planners. Other objectives wrongly thought to have
been achieved
included the severing of Saddam's communication links with his troops and the destruction of Iraq's nuclear, biological, and chemical
warfare programs. "Saddam Hussein
is
out of the nuclear business,"
Defense Secretary Richard Cheney had confidently asserted closed hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee
to a after
weeks of bombing. Like many other assumptions about the consequences of the Iraq campaign, embarrassingly Years
later.
this
boast was soon to be revealed as
false.
Bush would
stiU
be haunted by the recurring question:
Why had he not "gone all the way to Baghdad" and settled the Saddam problem when he had had the chance? Each time he would patiently explain that the United Nations resolutions under which he
had
launched the war authorized only the liberation of Kuwait and he
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE" could not legally have gone further. Iraqi Pfesistance would have ened.
And
anyway,
if
That was not quite the whole Gulf had forcefully pointed out allies
displaced
eventually have to
British diplomats
in a secret
American
among
especially Saudi Arabia.
as
to
all
from the
meeting before the war,
sorts of
if
problems for Anglo-
the semifeudal monarchies of the region,
No one wanted
might prove catching.
keep the Middle East Militarily,
As
Saddam and occupied Baghdad, they would hold elections for a new government before
would have led
Iraq. It
months afterward.
for
story.
pulling out. This alhes
stiff-
the Americans had gotten to Baghdad, they
would have had to occupy the place
the
33
it
It
encourage democracy
in
had been a conservative war
to
to
was, not to introduce change.
an advance on Baghdad might not have been
difficult.
General Steven Arnold, the U.S. Army's chief operations officer
in
Saudi Arabia, actually drew up a secret plan after the cease-fire entitled
"The Road
to
Baghdad," which he calculated could easily be car-
ried out with a fraction of the forces available. Arnold's officer, horrified at
commanding
such an implicit admission that the victory was
less
than complete, put the plan under lock and key. Unfortunately, neither
House had as yet any other plan for dealing with Iraq once the issue of Kuwait had been settled. According to Chas. Freeman, wartime ambassador to Saudi Arabia, this lack of forethought was deliberate. "The White House was terrified of leaks about any U.S. plans that might unhinge the huge and unwieldy coalition that George Bush had put together to support the war," he recalled later. "So officials were discouraged from writing, talking, or even thinking about what to do next." Faced with such awkward considerations, the conduct of die war had been left largely to the military, whose vision had its limitations. Before the bombing started, an air force general paid a call on Ambasthe military nor the White
sador James Aldus, a distinguished former diplomat with a wealth of
experience in Iraq.
The general explained
that
he wished to consult
the ambassador on the selection of suitable
suggested that die Pentagon might find
knowledge of years.
no
Iraqi politics
"Oh, no,
it
bombing targets. AJdns more useful to draw on his
and of Saddam,
whom
he had known
for
Mr Ambassador," said his visitor "You see, this war has
political overtones."
OUT OF THE ASHES
34 During the war
the U.S. high
itself,
forward approach to Iraqi
politics: Kill
sen weapons were laser-guided posts, meticulously charted
has
officially
day
in
main
The cho-
Saddam s command
at
targeters. Since the
euphemisms about
centers. Nevertheless, the killing
August 1990 when
priority in the first
fired a
bombs aimed
by the
a straight-
United States
foresworn assassination as an instrument of foreign policy,
the scheme was cloaked in
and control"
command pursued
the president of Iraq.
month
air force
targeting
"command
was scheduled from the
planners wrote "Saddam" as the
bombing plan. The
air force
chief of staff was
later for publicly admitting that the Iraqi leader
was "the
focus of our efforts."
Brent Scowcroft, Bush's National Security Adviser and trusted
conceded afterward
confidant, yes,
we
targeted
all
that
"We
do
don't
assassinations, but
Saddam might have been." kill him if you possibly could?" he
the places where
"So you dehberately set out to
was asked. 'Tes, that's fair enough," replied the
In
fact,
man who had approved the hit.
the Iraqi leadership, anticipating the Americans' intentions,
knew full well that inside a bunker.
the most dangerous place to be during the war was
Most stayed
in
suburban houses
weren't huddled in a bunker," says a senior Iraqi
were well aware that there
that they
were weapons
were well known
in
Baghdad. "They
officer,
to the allies.
"because
we
We also knew
that could destroy them."
The hunt petered out after one of the places targeters thought their quarry might be turned out to be die Amariya
and over four hundred people, mostly
civilian
women and
bomb
shelter
were
children,
The generals' fixation on targets was unfortunate because, knew a great deal about Iraq buildings, communications systems, power plants, bunkers it knew very little about Iraqis. For many years there was no U.S. embassy in Baghdad and, in
incinerated.
while U.S. intelligence
—
any case, the country and world by an sein
efficient
its
—
people were screened from the outside
and ruthless regime. Even when Saddam Hus-
needed the help of U.S.
the Americans in the dark as
intelligence,
he had done
his best to
keep
much as possible about events in his ruth-
lessly efficient police state.
In the 1980s, the two countries had been de facto diplomatic relations were restored in 1984
—
in the
allies
war with
—
full
Iran,
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE" and the CIA sent a tos
liaison
team
35
to BaghdS'd to deliver satellite
and other useful intelhgence.
It
was a handsome
dam, the seasoned conspirator, was highly
gift,
pho-
but Sad-
sensitive to the perils of
such a relationship.
From 1986 Istikbarat,
head of the
on. General al-Samarrai, then deputy
mihtary intelligence, was one of only three officers per-
mitted by the dictator to meet with the CIA. Just to be on the safe side,
Saddam put
by the
al-Samarrai himself under intensive surveillance
Amn al-Khass,
the special security organization that reported
directly to the presidential palace.
"The CIA used
to
send us a
lot
Samarrai remembers. In addition, service
would routinely request used to
cans. "I sector.'
say, for
Saddam would
of information about Iran,"
when
from the Ameri-
specific intelligence
example, 'Give us information on the Basra
say:
'Don't
tell
them
like that, ask
them
us information from the nordi of Iraq to the south, because
them
it's
only Basra, they would
sometimes get
al-
preparing for an attack, his
memos on his
tell
the Iranians.'
"
if
to give
we
tell
al-Samarrai would
U.S. contacts back from his master with
cautionary notes scribbled in the margins: "Be careful, Americans are conspirators."
(Saddam's suspicions were not without merit. In 1986, during the
infamous Iran-Contra episode, the United States gave the Iranians intelligence
on the
Iraqi order of battle. Coincidentally or not, Iraq
then suffered a stunning defeat in the Fao peninsula. Late in 1989, the war with Iran won, Saddam decided that the relationship
had outlived
usefulness,
its
tioned in Baghdad. Diplomats
and expelled the CIA
who remained
Kuwait were hardly better situated to contacts with ordinary Iraqis
were
officials sta-
until the invasion of
collect information, since
all
Even maids and
tightly restricted.
chauffeurs catering to the diplomats' domestic needs tended to be foreign workers, Egyptians or Palestinians. In any case, foreigners
were subject
to suspicious scrutiny
all
contacts with
by the Mukhabarat.
After the invasion of Kuwait, the various U.S. intelligence agencies speedily accumulated a vast quantity of information from surveillance satellites
A massive CIA program to interview the forwho had helped build the bunkers, radar sites, com-
and spy planes.
eign contractors
munications
links,
and other physical infrastructure
for
Saddam's war
aUTOFTHEASHES
36
machine produced further mountains of
telltale flecks
bomb
clear indication of an Iraqi .
The most
secret
Sometimes the
as
of former American hostages nuclear plant and found
reports.
when the CIA analyzed the clothes who had been held at the Tuwaitha
methods used were ingenious,
of highly enriched uranium, a
program.
component of the
collection effort
was the small
group of agents recruited and infiltrated into Iraq. Given the consequences of being caught, these were courageous
individuals.
nication was difficult; the radios with which they
not always work
efficiently,
even to take the
risk
were very
tlie
were provided did
spies
were reluctant
of switching the devices on. "One or two of them
useful," recalls
On the
gram.
and some among
Commu-
one former CIA
other hand, the high
official
involved in the pro-
command in Riyadh
gave the
final
order to attack the Amariya shelter only after a "reliable" agent reported that
it
was being used
Astonishingly,
fruitful
a mid-level State Department
sition leader to
nationalism sitivities
thereupon forbidden
allies.
all
recognition of Kurdish
so in deference to the sen-
Secretary of State George Shultz had
further contact by any official of the U.S. gov-
ernment witli any member of the contacts" rule
for example,
received a Kurdish oppo-
Any implicit
wasanatEema to either regime,
of these two
The "no
official
hear complaints about Saddams use of poison gas
ag ainst his ju bjects in Kurdistan.
still
Iraqi opposition.
applied during the war, which was why,
an offer of timely military intelligence from the Kurdish
underground ally,
source of intelligence was off
In 1988, the Iraqi and Turkish governments had complained
limits.
when
for military purposes.
one potentially
in
northern Iraq was
spumed by the Pentagon. Eventu-
a system was improvised by which reports collected by Kurds
were radioed
phone
to their office in Iran, thence to
to another office in Detroit,
Damascus, thence by
and then faxed
to Peter Galbraith,
the sympathetic staff director of the Senate Foreign Relations mittee. "This
was not stupid
stuff,"
remembers
diem was about what happened to an allied pilot down. But they were picked up by a bored lieutenant from ligence who couldn't have been less interested."
naval intel-
On the day that the allied forces ceased fire, February 28, Kurdish leader
Jalal
Com-
"One of who had been shot
Galbraith.
1991, the
Talabani tried to enter the State Department,
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE"
37
intending to brief officials on the imminent uprising in noriJiem Iraq.
Thanks
and
to the bar
on
no
contacts,
official
dared speak with him, and he
never got beyond the department s lobby. The following
his party
day, Richard Haass, director for
Middle East
Affairs
on the National
phoned Galbraith to complain about the Senate staffers sponsorship of the unwelcome Kurds. Surely, protested Galbraith, the Kurds were allies in the fight against the Baghdad regime. Security Council
staff,
'Tou don't understand," fumed the powerful White House
"Our policy is
The word
to get rid of
"policy"
Saddam, not
was misused. In
lieu of intelligence
about the
White House was acting on the
political situation in Iraq, the
official.
his regime."
basis of
among these was a deeply ingrained belief that Saddam would inevitably be displaced by a military coup. A veteran of
assumptions. Principal
CIA
operations in Iraq explains
CIA, DIA, going to
NSA were in
fall.
it
this
way: "All the analysts in State,
agreement with the verdict that Saddam was
There wasn't a
single dissenting voice.
was, they had no hard data at
all.
was conditioned on a Western way of looking as
The only
trouble
Their whole way of thinking really at things:
A leader such
Saddam who had been defeated and humiliated would have to leave
office. Just that. Plus," sighs
analysts
"A
had ever
the former covert operator, "none of these
set foot inside Iraq.
collective mistake," agrees
official.
Not one."
one former very high-ranking CIA
"Everybody believed that he was going
to
fall.
Everybody
was wrong." Nothing
illustrates the lack
of understanding of the situation on
the ground in Iraq better than the notorious
call
by Bush that
helped incite the uprising. According to sources familiar with the
background of the speech, the
original intent
had been
message of encouragement to any potential coup plotters
send a
to in
Bagh-
dad. Accordingly, Richard Haass drafted a call for the Iraqi military
own hands" and
to "take matters into their
power.
The appeal was due
to
force
Saddam from
be delivered by the president
in the
course of a speech on February 15. Early on the morning of the appointed day, hint that he might
news pictures of peace by
firing
be prepared
to
Saddam gave
the
first
withdraw from Kuwait. Network
Iraqis enthusiastically celebrating the possibility of
guns in the
air
made
a considerable impression on the
OUT OF THE ASHES
3S White House.
It
seemed there was
a piibUc opinion in Iraq after
A few extra words were added to Bush's script. ican Association for the
Bush now referred
Advancement of Science
reflecting the Iraqi people
on
s
desire to see the
to appeal to "the Iraqi miUtary
into their
aside
.
.
.
own hands
and
—
to force
and the
sage got across, Bush repeated
As intended, the
news channels
it,
word
call for revolt
avidly
the dictator to step
make
for word, in a
sure the mes-
second address
in Massachusetts.
got wide play on the international
consumed by
The audience, however, Iraqi military and the Iraqi
Iraqis.
missed the nuanced references to "the people."
morning,
Baghdad"
war end. Then he moved
Saddam Hussein
Raytheon missile plant
in
Iraqi people to take matters
rejoin the family of nations." Just to
that day at the
later that
atmosphere
to the "celebratory
They took the American leaders words
at face value,
ing the reasonable conclusion that they were being called join the fight against
all.
Speaking to the Amer-
draw-
upon
to
Saddam.
The supreme irony is that Bush and his advisers, in trying to promote a coup, instead encouraged an uprising that may have prevented the very coup they so devoutly desired. An Iraqi source, privy to the highest levels of the military at that time, has assured us that there
was indeed a coup being planned by senior generals from
some time during the war and
after.
But the
plotters
were deterred
from taking action by the Shia uprising. As members of the ruling Sunni minority, they feared the consequences of Shia success and thought
it
more expedient,
for the time being, to rally
around Sad-
dam. What their attitude might have been had the United States signaled support for the rebellion
is
not recorded.
George Bush himself later sensed part of the wrote that
been led
"I
he
did have a strong feeUng that the Iraqi military, having
to such a crushing defeat
themselves of him.
We
by Saddam, would
were concerned
sidetrack the overthrow of rally
truth. In 1994,
rise
up and
that the uprisings
Saddam by causing the
rid
would
Iraqi military to
around him to prevent the breakup of the country. That may
have been what actually happened."
There is, however, another irony that Bush evidently fails to appreciate.
In that
the balance.
week of March 1991, Saddam's fate hung in Many ranking military commanders as well as other offifirst
crucial
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE" cials in
39
the regime were contemplating abandoning the sinking ship
and throwing
in their lot with the rebels.
risky gamble, since the
inevitably
But
this
was
still
a highly
consequences of picking the losing side would
be terminally unpleasant. For anyone making the choice,
the attitude of the Americans was crucial.
To
tip
the balance. Bush
did not have to launch his armies on the road to Baghdad; a hint of
support or even encouragement to the rebels would probably have
been enough.
Washington and the U.S. military command in
Instead,
Riyadh not only gave indications, such copters to cess,
fly,
that they
were
less
as allowing
Saddam's
heli-
than interested in the rebels' suc-
but also explicitly told rebel emissaries that there would be no
—
Saddam quickly discovered. In Baghdad and elsewhere, the waverers drew the appropriate conclusions. support
as
This adamant repudiation of the rebel cause was based on another iron-clad assumption
on die part of the Washington policy makers: a
deeply ingrained belief that
civil
disorder would inevitably sunder
Iraq. Since before the war, classified
memos had
national security bureaucracy, replete with
hurtled around the
ominous warnings of the
consequences that would follow an Iraqi breakup, up to and including, as
one Pentagon missive suggested, "the Iranian occupation of any
part of Iraqi territory
.
.
.
Iraqi disintegration
for Iranian domination of the
wiU improve prospects
Gulf and remove a
restraint
on
Syria."
Reports that portraits of Ayatollah Khomeini were being put up in erated areas did not help matters.
No one was
going to
assist
Lib-
what
appeared to be surrogates for the dreaded fundamentalist Iranians.
As a
result,
the U.S. forces in the large portion of Iraq occupied
during the ground offensive
move
at
the end of the war not only
made no
to assist the insurgents, they actually gave tacit assistance to
Saddam's forces by preventing rebels from taking desperately needed arms and ammunition in abandoned Iraqi stores. Much of these captured stocks were destroyed, but, paradoxically, the
took possession of an appreciable quantity and shipped
it
CIA
off to fun-
damentalists in Afghanistan, favored agency clients in the
civil
war
in that country.
Since the president had publicly encouraged the uprising on which
now turning their backs, the White House was embarrassed enough to draft their Saudi allies as an alibi. The Saudis, murmured
they were
— OUT OF THE ASHES
4D
background
officials in
briefings,
were adamantly opposed
to aiding
the Shia, since they were in such mortal terror of Iran. Bush himself
may even have
believed this explanation. "It was never our goal to
break up Iraq," he wrote
"Indeed,
later.
we
did not want this to hap-
pen, and most of our coalition partners (especially the Arabs)
felt
even
stronger on the issue."
This was not, in idea that the Saudi official
who
visited
the attitude of the Saudis at the time. "The
fact, tail
was wagging our dog
Riyadh
mid- March.
in
is
one
just bullshit," says
He had been
closely cross-
questioned by Prince Turki bin Feisel, head of Saudi intelligence,
about ways to aid the opposition (about whom the prince was woefully ignorant).
"The behavior of the
Iraqi Shia in the Iran-Iraq
war convinced the
Saudis that the Shia were not Iranian surrogates," says Ambassador
Freeman. "Washington was obsessed by that the Saudis.
I
came from. about
six
don't
After
all,
On March
26, 1991,
is
and attributed
it
to
for quite a while
not a flimsy construction."
Bush convened a meeting of his most senior
White House
to
make
a final decision on help for the
There was no public pressure
"yeUow ribbon mode,"
as
one
official
had now joined in tlie general euphoria. iron Club's
idea,
panic about the breakup of Iraq
all this
Mesopotamia has been there
thousand years. Iraq
advisers at the rebels.
know where
to
—the country was —and Bush himself
do so
in
remarked
A few days earlier, at the Grid-
chummy annual get-together of politicians and media,
the
"agony" of the president's wartime experience had been compared to that of Abraham Lincoln
by a fawning member of the
press.
At the White House meeting, a hard-and-fast decision to leave Iraq to
its
own
President
devices was approved by
Dan Quayle showed
Saddam Hussein drance.
No one
to
all.
Of those
present, only Vice
the slightest concern about allowing
go on slaughtering the insurgents without hin-
appears to have challenged the presumption that a
rebel victory would inevitably have led to Iran seizing a piece of Iraq.
Following the meeting, as Bush's spokesman announced that
"We
don't intend to involve ourselves in the internal conflict in Iraq," Brent
Scowcroft and Richard Haass boarded a plane for Riyadh to spread the
word
rebels
—a
in the field.
The
Saudis were
still
in a
mood
to help the
senior Kurdish representative was in Riyadh
when
the
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE" Americans landed. They needed to be told to get
in step
41
with policy.
In Washington, a "senior official" was briefing reporters on the
Bush believed "Saddam
fact that
will
crush the rebellions and, after
the dust settles, the Baath military establishment and other elites will
blame him
for not only the death
and destruction from the war
down
but the death and destruction from putting
the rebellion.
emerge then and install a new leadership." That was not quite the picture of White House pohcy the Saudis got from their
They
will
high-powered
Sayid Majid al-Khoie soon discovered.
visitors, as
Al-Khoie had been held under comfortable house arrest
at the
Saudi border ever since he had escaped from Iraq, the promise of
meeting with Schwarzkopf
his
still
ing, if
He was
unmet.
George Bush was asked, on the day after the
crucial
there when March 26 meet-
any rebel groups had asked the United States for help.
"Not that
I
know
of,"
the president blithely replied. "No,
believe that they have. If they have,
it
hasn't
come
to
I
don't
me."
After finally being allowed to travel to Riyadh, al-Khoie had his first
chance to meet with the Saudi intelhgence chief Prince Turld
bin Feisel on
March
30, three days after the
two emissaries had
arrived from Washington.
"Why
Al-Khoie recorded the two-hour meeting in his diary:
are
you so worried about the Shia?" he asked.
"We
can't
do anything
Americans don't want to remove Saddam. They
under
control. This
is
"The
to help you," repfied the prince.
better than
somebody we
say,
don't
'Saddam
know
is
about.
We are worried about Iran.' Twenty-four hours after al-Khoie heard that the Americans
wanted Saddam
to stay in power, Peter Galbraith
was fleeing
been touring the war-torn region and had gone
to
bed
late
before after telling a crowd of Kurdish notables that, as the
address them.
government
in a free Kurdistan,
the night
first
repre-
he was proud to
Now he was running from a vengeful Iraqi army on the
verge of retaking the
city.
An
angry red-haired Peshmerga stuck his
head through the car window. "Damn Bush," he
The 2
for his
Dohuk. The energetic Senate aide had
hfe from the Kurdish city of
sentative of the U.S.
now
million
Kurds who joined Galbraith
said.
in flight
were about
to
upset the White House's determined disengagement from Iraqi
aUT OF THE ASHES
42 affairs.
The
attracting
Shia in the south had fled in equal terror, but without
much
Kurds fared
attention or
better,
sympathy
The
in the outside world.
being easily accessible to
tlie
media army
that
speedily materialized on the Turkish border and telegenic besides.
"They look middle tures of doctors
mountain
class,"
murmured a Senate staffer watching TV pic-
and lawyers
sides. "I
in three-piece suits shivering
never realized they were
such as the columnist William
like us." Influential figures
champion of their cause since
Safire, a
the days of their betrayal by the
on the bleak
CIA in the
1970s, weighed in on their
behalf Galbraith, safely over the border, threw in his
own
bitter
and
well-informed denunciations of the whole postwar policy on Iraq.
With unseemly reluctance, the White House bent to public opinion and began to assist the Kurds. At first Bush sent food and medicine and then, on Aprfl
16,
he ordered U.S. troops
create a "safe haven" from It
Saddam s
into northern Iraq to
forces for returning refugees.
was a momentous turning point. Although Bush stressed that the
troop deployment was merely temporary, the president had now, how-
ever unwillingly, accepted a military role for the United States inside the borders of Iraq effort to resist.
itself.
Bending to force majeure, Saddam made no
Although the aUied troops were withdrawn within
three months, the Iraqi
army did not permanendy
reassert the gov-
ernment's control over Kurdistan. U.S. warplanes based just across the Turkish border,
vide Comfort"
were now assigned
at Incirhk,
to "Operation Pro-
—
protective air cover for the Kurds and a tangible
deterrent to any effort by
Saddam
to crush these rebellious subjects
once more.
Announcing the April decision
to dispatch troops into Kurdistan,
the president was defensive about his famous
now coming back
to haunt him.
"Do
I
call to
the Iraqi people,
think that the United States
should bear guilt because of suggesting that the Iraqi people take matters into their
own
hands, with the implication being given by
that the United States would be there to support
replied to
them
one aggressive questioner. "That was not
implied that." Displaying a certain to insist that the
some
militarily?"
true.
We
he
never
economy with the truth, he went on
wartime objectives had "never included the demise
and destruction of Saddam
personally."
In the argument that day over the gap between presidential
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE" rhetoric
and
realpolitik,
no one paid much attention
remark that not only would there be no normal until
"Saddam Hussein
is
the economic sanctions."
43
to Bush's casual
relations with Iraq
out of there," but that "we will continue
It
was the
single
most important statement
of the day.
The
UN resolutions authorizing die war in Iraq had served as a use-
ful justification in
not carrying on the war after the Iraqis were evicted
from Kuwait. But the economic sanctions on Iraq had been tied by the Security Council to specific ends: an unconditional withdrawal from
Kuwait, compensation for damage there, and the total elimination of
weapons of mass destruction and the
all
facilities for
Following the passage of the cease-fire resolution that the Gulf
War on
April 3, 1991, U.S. ambassador
stated explicitly that,
"Upon implementation of the
making them.
officially
Thomas
ended
Pickering
provisions dealing
with weapons of mass destruction and the compensation regime, the sanctions wiU
UN
the
be
lifted."
Now the president was offhandedly rewriting
Saddam was on
resolution.
notice that
did not matter
it
whether he observed the existing resolutions or not, he would never be allowed to export his
oil freely until
the day he died. In putting a once
wealthy country under permanent blockade. Bush was deploying a
weapon
far
more deadly than the TV-friendly smart bombs of the war. Saddam was not the direct target, a fact spelled out by
This time
deputy national security adviser Robert Gates when he gave the sanctions decision a
ited
more formal unveihng on May
7.
"Saddam
is
discred-
and cannot be redeemed. His leadership wiU never be accepted
by the world community. Therefore," declared Gates,
"Iraqis
wiU pay
the price while he remains in power. All possible sanctions will be
maintained until he
is
ered only when there
gone. is
a
.
.
.
Any easing of sanctions will be
consid-
new government."
Iraq was heading into the hundred-degree temperatures of sum-
mer.
The hospitals were beginning to
fill
up with typhoid cases and the
doctors were running out of drugs with which to treat them. In Basra,
heavUy bombed
in the
war and fought over again
in the intifada, chil-
dren splashed in pools of sewage because the sewage pumps were bro-
ken and, thanks
to the sanctions,
no spare
parts could
be imported. So
long as sanctions were in force, Iraq would remain in the third-world
misery to which
it
had suddenly been
thrust.
OUT OF THE ASHES
4-4
Sanctions had the merit, in U.S. eyes, of "containing" Saddam.
With an unrepaired economy, he would never be able
to cause the
kind of trouble across his borders that had necessitated the Gulf War.
As an additional bonus, keeping 3 million barrels of daily tion off the international markets prices, thus helping the Saudis
to
pay for the war "Saddam
event,
he
will
be reincarnated
Meanwhile, the price.
as
a floor
produc-
under world
and Kuwaitis, who were pumping hard remain an outcast," predicted Ambas-
will
sador Aldns, "unless and until
would keep
oil
oil
goes back up to $30 a barrel. In that
as
Mother Teresa."
Gates observed, the Iraqi people would be paying
To the outside world, the administration plan seemed clear: people would only rise and get rid of Saddam, then the
If the Iraqi
blockade would end.
It
was, therefore, confusing for the present
authors to be told at the time by a senior
CIA
official that
uprising was the "least likely" consequence of sanctions. In senior officials at the Pentagon,
White House,
State
a popular reality,
the
Department, and
CIA who crafted the policy had a slightly different end result in mind. It was not the people who were expected to take action, but members of the ruHng
"They
elite.
really believed that the sanctions policy
coup," says a former
who was much realize,
official
might encourage a
with the CIAs covert operations arm
involved in Iraqi matters at the time. "You have to
they understood very
little
about the way that Saddam
thought, and nothing about the 'fear factor' with those around him."
Up until now, the United States had tried to encourage a coup from the sidelines, as with Bush's wartime appeal and subsequent offliand
remarks about getting "Saddam Hussein out of there." clear plan as to
one
official
how the
parties at the Pentagon, State
had groped for answers. The Some suggested giving fuU backback at home under protective U.S. air
Department, and White House,
was
one had a
describes as a "painfully frequent" series of meetings
between the CIA and other interested
air
No
longed-for event might be achieved. In what
officials
thick with simplistic slogans.
ing to the Kurds,
now
safe
cover following Bush's reluctant intervention in northern Iraq, to
trig-
ger a "rolling coup" that would sweep progressively southward from their
mountain
eventually
fastness.
prompt some
Others argued that rigorous sanctions would public-spirited
member
of Saddam's family
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE" or bodyguard to do the deed variant
on
this
—the
45
so-called "silver bullet" solution.
A
notion propounded the prospects of a "palace coup" by
disgruntled Republican Guards or other security units.
No one was
foolish
enough
beUeve that any single idea pro-
to
now Frank Anderson was being
vided a guaranteed solution. So
tasked to try a combination of these vague schemes in the hope that
something would turn up. As the experienced covert operator understood, he did not have
The previous August,
many tools with which
do the
to
the president had signed another
fully
job.
CIA find-
ing on Iraq. Contrary to later reports, however, this was not a directive to
overthrow Saddam. "Our mission was to convince Saddam
that the holocaust
was coming unless he backed down," explains one
former CIA officer drafted for who were going to see Saddam,
"We were
the task. asking
them
finding people
to pass the
message on
of what the military had in store for him." In addition, agency operatives
helped spread propaganda in other countries
what a bad guy he
is,
which was
easy."
The
"telling
them
CIA's overriding priority,
however, before and during the war, was to service the military campaign
—interviewing foreign
contractors, analyzing satellite intelli-
gence (which led to sharp disagreements with the military on
much
or
how
little
infiltrating agents
of
Saddams
arsenal
how
had been destroyed), and
with "electronic gadgets" into the
There were indeed "clandestine" radio
enemy capital.
—"the Voice ofbroadcasting Free Iraq"—but
into
stations
Iraq from Egypt and Saudi Arabia these,
though monitored by the agency, were under the day-to-day
control of local intelligence agencies.
information about
how Saddam was
"They would put out a about to
lot
of
defections of
fall,
senior officers, that sort of thing," one former agency officer
remembers. "Eventually we had
to tell the
FBIS [Foreign Broadcast
Information Service, which monitors and translates foreign broadcasts] to stop carrying their stuff
because we'd get
White House asking about some coup under way."
The Saudi
from the
was
broadcasts were the actual handiwork of a group
called the Iraqi National
Accord (al-Wifaq), founded by two
fected veterans of Saddam's ruHng Baath Party into exile. It
calls
that the radio station said
was a group that was
who had
to figure largely,
and
disaf-
later fled
fatally, in
the
aUT DF THE ASHES
46
agency's attempts to carry out the mission, and the story of
its
lead-
ing lights serves as an instructive example of the kind of "mecha-
nisms" to which the
One
CIA would eventually turn. Omar Ali al-Tikriti, had once enjoyed a
of the founders, Salih
career in Baghdad, from supervising pubUc hangings to diplo-
stellar
matic service as ambassador to the United Nations. post in 1982 under the mistaken impression
war would cause Saddam
Iran
to
fall
tliat
He
resigned that
recent disasters in the
and that he,
as a
Sunni Baathist
from Tikrit, could be a viable replacement. Subsequently reconciled in
some
fashion with Saddam, on August
trait
company
of Saddam was wall
for die Iraqi
size,"
1990, Salih
Omar had
London office of Iraqi Freight
highly lucrative post of heading the vices Ltd., a front
2,
government. "His
remembers a fellow exile. On August
company out of business
announced himself
as a
favor with the Saudis
member
—
Salih
6,
—thus
Omar once again He soon found
of the opposition.
(who were so ignorant of Iraq
opposition leaders included
Ser-
office por-
the day the United Nations announced economic sanctions putting the freight
the
fist
of
names of men long dead) and moved
to
that their
Riyadli.
Omar s
yeoman
partner in the Accord, lyad Alawi, had also done
service for the Baath Party, having
been a student organizer
in the
days before the revolution and later moving to London. In Great Britain,
he exercised a key function
the Iraqi Student Union in Europe.
he came
in contact
more
also of
he then used region.
By the
whom
Baghdad, since
They him a Saudi Arabia and elsewhere, which the Middle East.
direct value to Alawi personally, garnering
to great effect in various business enterprises in the late 1970s,
he had become
However, Alawi never lost his the
head of
students with
interest to
efite circles in
of connections in
fruitful array
The Arab
were of considerable
they tended to be drawn from
were
for Iraqi intelfigence as
company of intelHgence
rich.
taste for the
world of intelligence and
officers. Soft-spoken, eloquent,
suasive, always ready to hint at a
and per-
powerful connection or make a
promise, he proved adept at telling them what they wanted to hear in
language they could understand. In 1978,
proved
fatal.
By
that time, Alawi
diis
mutual affection almost
had reportedly entered
tionship with the British security services,
who would
into a rela-
naturally have
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE" been keen
to acquire a willing
and well-imormed source
4V
in the
huge
and intrigue-ridden Arab student community in London. Word of this relationship reached the attentive ears of tlie Mukliabarat in Baghdad,
who dispatched a team armed with knives and axes to Alawi s comfortable home in Kingston-upon-Thames to deal with the problem in summary him
he
as
fashion. Bursting into his
bedroom, the
finishing the job
by the
assassins
hacked
at
and were only prevented from
lay beside his sleeping wife
fortuitous appearance of his father-in-law,
who
The would-be killers ran off and the badly injured Alawi lived to make more money and pursue his conhappened
to
be staying
in the house.
nections with British intelligence and similar organizations.
By
the time the war began, Alawi had scented the interest of
Saudi intelligence and had joined forces with his fellow ex-Baathist,
Sahh Omar,
in
producing the Voice of Free Iraq. The pair soon
out, however, reportedly
fell
because of a dispute over a $40,000 check
Omar
from their Saudi paymasters.
gradually faded from sight,
although in the days of the uprising he claimed he was in close touch with senior
mount
members of
command who were
the Iraqi
ready to
a coup. Alawi retained control of the Accord, into which he
steadily recruited
—the type best suited —and was soon back London
former Baathist Sunnis
preserving the regime post
Saddam
to
in
awaiting fresh clients.
The money alhes
that allegedly fostered the split
was only a tiny fraction of the sums allocated by Prince Turk!
bin Feisel's organization, reportedly as ever, Saudi Arabia
had
until
August
Saddam s government and had tial
between the two
sent
much
at
politics
The
1990, been a staunch ally of subsidies (including substan-
weapons
one point asking
were the Iranians and the
How-
2,
contributions to the Iraqi nuclear
Kurds Muslim?" Far more expert
milfion.
its
Baghdad. The brigadier heading the Iraq desk
was famously ill-informed,
$50
as
in the
project) directly to
at
Saudi intelligence
suspiciously, "Are the
maze of
Iraqi opposition
Syrians.
Iranians' favored instrument was, of course,
Mohammed
Baqir al-Haldm and his Supreme Council (sometimes translated as
Assembly) for the Islamic Revolution itary
cans,
in Iraq,
complete with
arm, the Badr Brigade. The Iranians, no
were brooding about the
less
its
mil-
than the Ameri-
situation following their refusal to
OUT OF THE ASHES
4B help
the balance during the uprising, but there was
little
or no
prospect, as yet, for Frank Anderson and his officers to enlist
them
tip
as a
"mechanism"
after
all,
in the mission of
was universally feared
in
overthrowing Saddam. Iran,
Washington
as the
predator wait-
dismembered Iraq. on the other hand, were more accessible, having both
ing to acquire "chunks" of a
The
Syrians,
an impeccable record of vicious enmity toward the
rival Baatliist
regime
Baghdad and credentials as a member of the Gulf War coalition. Damascus hosted its own quota of exiled dissidents, former generals
in
and government
ministers,
blown across the border by unremitting
crackdowns and purges since Saddam had seized
total control in
1979
and immediately announced the discovery of a Syrian-backed against him.
Even before the war,
in late
December
plot
1990, the Syrians
had sponsored a meeting of local and visiting opposition figures who emerged with a program that called for the overthrow of Saddam and the installation of a coalition government.
The
Saddam routed from Kuwait and
following March, with
decided
intifada stiU blazing across Iraq, the Saudis
it
was time
another, grander gathering of the opposition, this time in Beirut. ever,
"Abu
derisively
Turki," as Riyadlis intelligence expert
known among
such a complicated
on
the
to have
How-
Iraqi affairs
was
Iraqi exiles, did not feel qualified to arrange
affair himself.
Since the Syrians had better con-
nections across the range of opposition groups than the Saudis, he
handed $27
million to his Syrian counterpart
and
left
him
to get
on
with the task, insisting only that some of his favorite Iraqis, such as Salih this
Omar, be invited
was
dents, pocketed
The
along.
far too large a
sum
to
Syrians, apparently concluding that
be lavished on a group of
Iraqi dissi-
most of the money and handed over the residue,
in
Syrian currency, to die Iraqis to pay for airfare and hotels. It
was the
largest gathering in the history of the Iraqi opposition.
All shades of opinion
Tehran-based
Communist
were
there,
Islamists, to the
from the ex-Baathists,
Party, as well as the Kurds.
They voted by
margin to escape from Syrian control and seek support
The Kurdish
delegation,
Western support
who had good
after their
plied the swing vote.
to the
remnants of the once-powerful Iraqi a
narrow
in the
West.
reason to be suspicious of
abandonment by the CIA
in 1975, sup-
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE"
49
For many of the delegates, these were heady times. As Laith Kubba, a civil engineer who had been living in England since he left
homeland
his
"Following the Gulf War, die whole
in 1976, recalls,
world wanted to know the Iraqi opposition." Kubba remembered well
how
different
it
had been
most of
for
"When Saddam was we suffered.
his exile.
and Great
being supplied by the United States
Britain,
There was a diriving industry forging extensions on
Iraqi passports so
we
that people could avoid being deported back to Iraq. Sometimes
had
the time
little victories, like
dam's ministers
who was
we
Thatcher government and
On
we demonstrated
London
in
into the
man
on Iraq
a
London
at a
Middle East
in charge of
U.S. State Department, a notably fatuous
Kubba introduced himself as
one of Sad-
forced him to leave by the back door"
one occasion, at a conference
Kubba bumped
against
signing a trade deal v^th the
affairs at
the
named John
Kelly.
Iraqi opposition.
"How
official
member of the
think tank,
long have you been working for the government of Iran?" said Kelly,
before turning his back.
As we have seen, the March 1988 gassing of five thousand Kurds in the city of Halabja in a single afternoon
ous silence from Western governments. job and spent a
month
was greeted by a thunder-
Kubba took
a leave from his
crisscrossing the United States.
he screened a video of the
effects of tlie attack to
interested, a lonely effort to
Over and over
anyone
who was
show the world what was going on
in
Iraq.
Unlike seasoned operators Salih still
Omar and
retained a certain hopeful naivete.
lyad Alawi,
When Saddam
Kubba invaded
Kuwait, he was on vacation in Florida. Following up on a chance introduction on a plane, he drove to Washington and secured an off-
the-record interview with a mid-level State Department (carefully avoiding the
that the
word
United States use the invasion
democracy
in Iraq.
answered the
"Who
official,
would offend our Eight months
told
later,
crisis to
advance the cause of
you we want democracy
in Iraq?"
flushed with bureaucratic machismo.
"It
Kubba was shocked.
friends the Saudis."
apparendy changed,
official
"opposition"). Earnestly, he suggested
the atmosphere at the State Department had
at least a little.
At
ready to meet with the Iraqi opposition.
last
the U.S. government was
On April
16,
Kubba was
offi-
OUT OF THE ASHES
so
daily received at the imposing building on
C
Street
by David Mack,
Mack
the deputy assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern Affairs.
read from a printed paper outlining U.S. government policy toward
Apart from ringing phrases concerning "sovereignty,
Iraq.
demogracy," Kubba
recalls
an
statement that
explicit
integrity,
"We
are not
involved in Iraqi poUtics. There will be no U.S. soldiers on Iraqi
Two
hours
later.
he had ordered U.S. troops
that
soil."
President Bush appeared on television to announce into northern Iraq.
Kubba was one of three Iraqis to meet with Mack. Sitting beside him were Latif Rashid, a brother-in-law of the Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani who had been so brusquely treated on the day the war
Ahmad
ended, and
marked
as a
Chalabi, a portly gentleman not previously
committed member of the opposition.
Chalabi had a background very different from that of his companions.
He came
from an extremely wealthy Shia banking family who
the days before the 1958
leftist
coup
that overthrew the
murdered the king had been very much that revolution, the family
moved
to
as a
al-Kabariti, later
young man
in Beirut.
—smart, but not
pedia
Lebanon, where they continued
Lebanese Shia community.
prime minister of Jordan, knew Chalabi
He remembers him
wise."
monarchy and
a part of the eUte. Following
to prosper, forming close links with the
Abdul Karim
in
From
as a "walking encyclo-
Beirut, Chalabi
went
to
MIT
and
thence to the University of Chicago, where he acquired a Ph.D. in
mathematical knot theory, before returning to the Middle East and the family business. In 1977, he
moved
Bank, which expanded rapidly in an
boom of the early and mid-eighties. in the country. Chalabi himself
Amman, who were, however,
to Jordan ill-fated
Soon,
had
it
and founded Petra
Jordanian economic
was the
third-largest
bank
friends in very high places in
of little use to him in August 1989,
when
Bank suddenly moved to take over Bank because of what were termed "questionable foreign exchange deahngs." Allegations of fraud and embezzlement soon folthe governor of Jordan's Central
Petra
lowed, and Chalabi
left
the country to go "on hoUday," although his
journey to Damascus in the trunk of a friends car suggests a more urgent
exit.
embezzling
Ultimately Chalabi would be convicted, in absentia, of at least
$60 million (then and since he has strenuously
denied the charges, which he describes
as politically motivated)
and
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE" sentenced to twenty-two years' hard fish to
labor.
51
But by then he had other
fry.
Bank
Until the Petra
crash,
Alimad Chalabi had been barely
involved in the politics of his native country beyond offering support to the relatives of certain Shia
geons.
By 1991, however,
into the
who had vanished into Saddam s dun-
that
had changed and he threw himself
burgeoning world of the Iraqi opposition with energy and
initiative.
Even before the May 1991
the CIA's radar screen as a
man
finding,
he was registering on
of whom they should take note.
According to Laith Kubba, the feefing was mutual. Not long after the meeting at the State Department, he recalls, Chalabi confided to
him
that
"The Americans paid more than
the Afghans. If there
five
hundred miUion
a sound proposal, the United States
to
is
pre-
pared to allocate substantial sums for the Iraqi opposition.
We
is
should go for that money." Chalabi's arrival
bation at Langley. ation in
The
May
An
1991
official also
on the scene did not meet with universal approofficial
who became
recalls that
involved in the Iraq oper-
Chalabi had already been recruited.
remembers Frank Anderson
declaring, "I
want
all
of the growth in this program to be not this guy."
There were good arguments against the selection of Chalabi "mechanism."
He was, as the Americans noted, new to poHtics.
others in the exile firmament, he Iraq, let alone inside.
He was
had no network of supporters outside
a Shia, always an uncomfortable notion
for tlie Americans, and, of course, there
was a wanted man
On
in
as a
Unlike
was the awkward
fact that
he
Jordan thanks to the Petra Bank scandal.
the other hand, thought the spymasters, there was
recommend him. "He had good "Also, he had an Iraqi up the Shia cause."
organizational
much
skills," recalls
to
one.
nationalist viewpoint, rather than just talking
Another of the CIA team points out that "There were advantages to the fact that
he was a businessman, not a
man, he was used
to thinking in terms of a program.
planning to print a newspaper today, and uring out
how to
get
that approach. Also, that
we might be
politician.
it
into
at
As a business-
He would
start
the same time start
fig-
Baghdad six months from now. We fiked rich, which helped explain any money
he was
giving him."
OUT OF THE ASHES
52 Paradoxically, cal following.
one
one of Chalabi s chief assets was
"He had another
official. "All
— Barzani —had power
the others
Khoie people, and so on
his lack of a poUti-
advantage, in that he was weak," says
Kurdish leader], the
[the
bases, but
by virtue of
al-
that,
they had powerful enemies within the other opposition groups.
Chalabi was not a threat to anybody.
He was
manager. So his weakness was a benefit
—but then he was weak.
Every single part of this had a cost-benefit
The CIA looked far and wide in its
acceptable as an office
analysis."
search for useful assets. Follow-
ing his depressing conversation with Prince Turld bin Feisel in Riyadh,
Sayid Majid al-Khoie had been suddenly flown to Paris under the auspices of people
who described tliemselves
as
"French lawyers." There
he found himself talking to various French and American government officials,
though he was never quite sure exacdy who they were. The
Americans identified themselves
as "State
Department," but their
chief interest was not Iraq but the U.S. hostages in Lebanon. There
was some point
to this, since Sheikli
Mohammed
Hussein Fadlallah,
the hostage takers' spiritual mentor, was a disciple in religious matters of Sayid Majid s father, the revered ayatoUah.
Though the Iraqi cleric was more concerned about the fate of his own family and friends in Najaf, he agreed to do what he could. Flying to Tehran, he met the Iranian leader Ayatollah Khamenei, who was scornful of his mercy mission, warning him that "The Americans won't help you whatever you do. Be careful with which group in
America you are dealing. Are they the CIA?" "I don't
al-Khoie,
know, but if I can save only one person
and flew on
to Beirut,
it is
worth it," replied
where Fadlallah was equally
about his sponsors: "Saddam has destroyed
all
your
cities
cynical
[meaning
Najaf and Kerbala]. The Americans just stood by and looked." Al-
Khoie had been promised a meeting with Secretary of State James Baker. But
when he
finally arrived in
Washington, Baker had
left for
Texas because his mother had died. Al-Klioie offered to wait, only to be told that, in any event,
he would not be seeing the
secretary.
In addition to his suspect credentials as a powerful religious Shia,
al-Khoie was not cut out for a serious career as a a prickly
independence
in
CIA asset, displaying own hotel bills.
such matters as paying his
Chalabi appeared a far better prospect.
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE" Later events all
their
made
it
appear that the
for a time pinning
hopes on fostering a movement, headed by Chalabi, that
would eventually take power any time. Looking
at
ClA were
53
at
in
Baghdad. This was
far
from the case
the hand he had been dealt, Anderson
apparently concluded that
it
was extremely weak. His operation was
only a part of a wider and somewhat amorphous scheme to box in
Saddam through
sanctions, the
now permanently
maintenance of a large U.S. force
stationed in the Gulf, and military protection for
the semiautonomous Kurdish zone in the north.
At
hope
tlie
upper
of the White House, there was
levels
that the "silver bullet"
would put an end
to
all
a lingering
still
from a disaffected bodyguard
their problems. Short of that,
in
Baghdad
CIA
officers
around the Middle East and beyond continually scanned the horizon for
anyone who could offer a connection inside the Iraqi military or
security forces in furtherance of the "palace coup" solution. In the
meantime,
as
one former CIA
official explains
with a shrug, the idea
was "a combination of sanctions and shaming him, humiliating him by showing that he did not control
all
his territory
and was not secure.
Create an ambience of 'coups and rumors of coups,' that sort of thing."
For some of the more experienced and honest upper
tiers
seemed about the best
One problem face
officials in
the
of the operations directorate, creating an ambience
the
that could
CIA
be done.
officials in
charge of the program did not
was money. Congressional intelligence committees, who did
not share the weary cynicism of the
official
quoted here, heartily
approved the notion of unleashing the CIA against Saddam and therefore authorized a budget of $40 million for the
first
year of the
operation. Anderson
was a seasoned enough Washington operator to
know that Congress
tends to measure action by expenditure. There-
fore, his it
main
priority
was
to
be seen
to
be spending that money. As
happened, there was a convenient outlet ready to hand.
Ever since the days when the agency covertly sponsored Radio Liberty
and Radio Free Europe
to
beam propaganda into Eastern Europe
and the Soviet Union, propaganda had been an important instrument of operations. Starting in the 1970s with a successful operation in the
Sudan, there had been a trend toward privatizing this
activity
by hand-
ing the contract to a suitable public relations firm. John Rendon, a vet-
DUT OF THE ASHES eran of political operations in the
Jimmy Carter
administration,
had
created what was widely considered an enormously successful propa-
ganda campaign in softening up Panama before the 1990 U.S. invasion of diat country. His
first
came via the botKuwaiti government after Saddam s inva-
encounter with Iraqi
tomless coffers of the exiled
affairs
Acting under a contract from the Kuwaitis, he had organized and
sion.
run radio and
TV broadcasts, beamed into the occupied emirate from
Saudi Arabia, to give succor to the population languishing under Iraqi military occupation.
Now the money tree
shook for him again
as
CIA
covert operations specialists sought suitable tools with which to harass
Saddam. At in
least
one of these
specialists
Panama and recommended him
for
had admired Rendon's work
work on the Iraq project.
In September 1991, Francis Brooke was looking for a job, having
fonnerly worked as a liquor lobbyist in his native Atlanta as well as having run the Georgia state census.
had once worked John Rendon,
in
for
Jimmy
an
equipment strewn
offer:
he might
Washington. "The place looked just
campaign headquarters," he cations
Now one of his political friends, who
Carter, suggested
"How would you
all
recalls.
over
like to
try calling
like a political
"There was high-tech communi-
it."
After a brief chat,
Rendon made
go to London to work on a program
describing atrocities committed by the Iraqi
army in Kuwait,
at
twenty
thousand a month?"
Brooke paused. "Let me think about it," he onds." Back don's
home he checked newspaper
background
in
was
plainly a
and came across Ren-
files
officer,
father, for-
heard his story and said that
CIA operation. Nothing loath, Brooke decamped
London, where he found a large salaries.
about two sec-
Panama and Kuwait. The young man's
merly a career military intelligence this
said, "for
He was not impressed.
in culturally adapting to
office full of
people on similarly
to fat
"These were people who had difficulty
London," he observes,
"let
alone the Middle
East."
One
of the projects under
way was an
"atrocity exhibition" of
photographs and other memorabilia traveling around Europe to impress people with the heinousness of the Iraqi regime. Central to this
undertaking was a sign-in book in which
their
comments. The hope was that
Iraqi exiles
visitors
could record
would thereby oblig-
ingly identify themselves for possible subsequent targeting
and
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE"
55
recruitment by the CIA. Other parts of the operation included a
roomful of "twenty-year-olds," according to Brooke,
sitting in
Wash-
ington writing scripts for radio propaganda broadcasts at $100 a day.
These were then shipped
to
Boston for translation into Arabic and
then on to radio stations in Cairo, Jeddah
Kuwait City "Yeah, officials
I
to
be beamed into
guess
Rendon
involved,
Iraq.
got a lot of the money," admits one of the
stressing
there was
that
summer of 1991,
involved. In the
Saudi Arabia), and
(in
certainly
"No one found any fraud, but an agency accountant was cally
opposed
to this connection with a
Rendon became the most audited
PR
outfit,
Ahmad Chalabi.
as well,
the Middle East."
in the
of course, as knowing a great deal about Iraq and
By the
commissioned by him
fall
to
made himself indisKubba remembers being
of 1991, Chalabi had
go on the road, speaking about Saddam's
Ignorant of the suspicious accountant back
indeed of the whole
CIA involvement
at
—and
Langley
—Kubba could never under-
stand Chalabi s fanatical insistence on receipts for everything,
bus
that
London office: "He was the one person who seemed to know what he
pensable to the Rendon operation. Laith
atrocities.
philosophi-
which meant
private firm in history."
There was one person who impressed Brooke was doing,
no fraud
there was an audit of the program.
down to
tickets.
To
lower-level employees fike Brooke, the entire plan appeared an
exercise in
futility.
Such
efforts as the "atrocity exhibition"
seemed
down Saddam. There was, however, another operation. The price being paid by the Iraqi popula-
hardly likely to bring
dimension to the
tion because of the tain
amount of
economic sanctions was beginning to
international attention.
Ahtisaari visited
Baghdad
in April
The Finnish
were
lifted.
politician Martti
1991 and returned with a gloom-
laden report predicting imminent mass starvation sanctions
attract a cer-
A month later,
a
among Iraqis
unless
team from the Harvard School
of Public Health toured Iraq and presented a more considered but hardly less alarming picture of the
immense and growing
a civilian population denied adequate food
suffering in
and medical supplies by
the blockade. Sanctions were at the center of U.S. policy as first
few months
it
had evolved
in the
after the war. It was, therefore, imperative to maintain
OUT OF THE ASHES
56
what casual readers of the Harvard
international public support for
team's findings
and other reports might conclude was an indefensibly
cruel policy. That
was where
tlie
CIA
operation, as deployed dirough
Rendon's public relations exercise in Europe and elsewhere, came in
"Every two months or so there would be a report about starving
useful.
Iraqi babies," explains
"We'd be on hand
and the video
that
one veteran of Rendon's propaganda campaign.
to counter that.
The photo
exhibition of atrocities
we had went around two dozen
countries. It
was aU
part of a concerted campaign to maintain pressure for sanctions."
Ahmad Chalabi, however, had no intention of confining his activPR in support of starving his fellow countrymen. He and
ities to
Kubba
Laith
(the
two are second cousins) and others had been con-
templating the formation of a
new
Iraqi opposition group. Unlike
the numerous others already in existence, this would be designed to
encompass
all
the major factions
and would have regime. later
It
as
among
Iraqis
opposed
to
Saddam
an ultimate aim the creation of a democratic
was called the
Iraqi National
Congress
—INC—a name
claimed by some to have been selected by the CIA, an asser-
tion indignantly denied
myself.
Rendon was
by Chalabi.
there
when
I
While necessarily concealing
did
"It's
a He!
I
picked the
name
it."
his relationship with the agency,
Chalabi had been pursuing an aggressive lobbying campaign for his
gained an audience in
members of ConDecember 1991 with a skep-
who heard him
out and finally agreed that
cause in Washington. After impressing various gress, tical
he
finally
Richard Haass,
"You've given us a
who
lot to
think about." That was enough for Chalabi,
flew off to the Middle East to spread the
word among the Arab
inteUigence services that the Americans were behind him. It
a
was
to
man who
be a recurring pattern. For the Americans, Chalabi was could speak for the
Iraqis.
For the
Iraqis,
Chalabi was
becoming "the American broker." In June, a horde of delegates flew to Vienna, Austria, for the found-
The expenses were paid by the agency, a fact known to most of the attendees. As one official helping to foot the biUs remembers with a smile, "There wasn't a single person there who didn't believe he was paying for it all out of money they believed he ing meeting of the INC.
not
had embezzled from the Petra Bank."
"WE HAVE SADDAM HUSSEIN STILL HERE" The
following month, the leading lights of the
Washington
for a full-dress presentation, to
5V
INC were flown to
meet with National
Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft and Secretary of State James Baker. tion
They were assured of American support
and
vigor.
for a democratic Iraq,
for their organiza-
and returned home
full
of hope and
Their hosts, however, took a more cynical view. The hopes and
prospects of Iraqis
who
resisted
Saddam were not
rated as high by
the professionals.
"We assumed," view Chalabi a
says
bit like
one of the
ning for statewide office in
Everyone knew he
had a
officials involved, "that
didn't
have a chance. His job was to act
was
stage
set for a tragic misunderstanding.
factions represented in the Iraqi National
now had
ment
better
at
like
he
serious chance."
Thus the they
we
someone in the 1950s runthe South on the Republican ticket.
people looked
Congress thought that
the unquafified backing of the United States govern-
in displacing
regarded the
The various
INC
Saddam. The White House and the CIA simply as
one more useful thorn
to stick in
Saddams
along with sanctions and whatever subterranean plot could be
flesh,
concocted to overthrow the dictator by means of a palace coup. In other words, the
INC was
The INC received
only half of a two-pronged U.S. strategy.
the pubhc endorsement of the U.S. government
because they were respectable democrats, suitably opposed to the Baath
Party's control of Iraq. In the
view of high
and Scowcroft, there was no harm done
INC
in
officials like
Baker
encouraging them. The
brought an added bonus in that the adherence of the Kurds to
this opposition
group forestalled Kurdish moves toward indepen-
dence, something that was always anathema to America's Turkey, facing
its
own Kurdish
ally
insurgency. In private, however, U.S.
national security decision makers believed that only a revolt within
Saddam's inner
However
circle stood a
halfheartedly,
chance of removing the Iraqi leader.
Washington
was
now
inescapably
involved in the political affairs of one of the most complex, divided,
and violent
societies
anywhere. That
tory and personality of the tion than
it
had so
man
far received
society,
not to mention the his-
at its center,
merited closer atten-
from the outside world.
THREE
The Origins of Saddam Hussein
Andoes notproverb Iraqi
unify,
says:
it
"Two
divides.
Iraqis, three sects." In Iraq,
The Sunni Arabs Uving
Islam
in the triangle
of territory between Baghdad, Mosul, and the Syrian border are a fifth
of the population but have always dominated Iraqi govern-
ments.
The
Shia Musfims
make up over
half the population and are
the overwhelming majority in southern Iraq between Baghdad and Basra. In the capital, they
ments have
outnumber the Sunni, though govern-
tried to limit their immigration. In the north, the
are a further
fifth
Kurds
of the Iraqi population, living in the mountains
along the Iranian and Turkish borders and the plains immediately below.
On
the map, the Mesopotamian plain, stretching 550 miles from
the mountains of Kurdistan to the Gulf, looks united.
and Tigris, the
rivers
one country in
Iraq, as the Nile did in Egypt.
made down
on which most
The Euphrates
Iraqi cities are built, never created
Their shoals and shallows
navigation difficult. In the last century,
the Tigris from Baghdad to Basra.
it
took a week to travel
When
the British tried to
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM HUSSEIN move
soldiers
wounded
by the Turkish army
at
59
in the battle to relieve the garrison besieged
Kut
1916 during World
in
War
took
I, it
thir-
teen days lor the barges to reach Basra, only two hundred miles downriver.
Mosul traded with Aleppo and northern
Syria,
and Baghdad and
the Shia holy cities of Kerbala and Najaf were strongly connected to Iran, while in the far south, Basra
looked toward the Gulf and India. At
the turn of the century, Iraq was not a single political people.
It
was divided
autonomous
cities, religious
and
and near
into a series of tribal federations
each with
cities,
community or
its
own complex
tribal divisions
Even within
politics.
go deep. In 1915, the people of
Najaf rose in rebellion against the Turks and expelled them. All die rebels
were
declared
two years
The
Shia, but
even
so,
each of the four quarters of the
independent and remained so
itself
city
until the British arrived
later.
diversity of Iraqis
is
comphcated by another
predates the introduction of Islam. frontier zone. It
is
factor,
The Mesopotamian
which
plain
is
a
overlooked by the Iranian plateau and the moun-
tains of eastern Turkey. It has
no natural defenses and has always
been the prey of the powerful
states
battlefields. In A.D. 401,
surrounding
it.
Iraq
is full
of
Xenophon and the ten thousand Greek
mercenaries started their long march to the Black Sea after being defeated
at
the battle of Cunaxa, close to the Euphrates River and
southwest of Baghdad. Seventy years
Alexander the Great
later,
fought his decisive battle against the Persian Empire at Gaugamela, in the stan.
northern plains east of Mosul below the mountains of Kurdi-
People living in what became Iraq were in the front line in the
struggles
between
ian plateau.
The
Rome and
the Persian rulers based on the Iran-
critical battle
between the invading Arab armies,
newly converted to Islam, and the Persians was fought
on the lower Euphrates
dam Hussein was
in a.d. 637.
at
Qadisiyah
(During the Iran-Iraq war, Sad-
often referred to in the Iraqi press as "Qadisiyat
Saddam.") Vulnerability to foreign invasion
is
a recurrent feature of
Iraqi history.
The most important
battle for present-day Iraqis
insignificant, almost a massacre, side.
But the
and ended
details of this tragic skirmish are
year in a majority of Iraqi houses.
It
was
militarily
in total defeat for
one
remembered every
started the conflict
between the
OUT OF THE ASHES
6a
Shia and the Sunni Muslims that divides Iraq, as world, fourteen hundred years tic
What began
later.
stRiggle to succeed the Prophet
does the Islamic
as a
bloody dynas-
Mohammed ended
systems of belief. In a.d. 656, a
rival
it
civil
by creating
war erupted over who
should,be the fourth caliph in the newly created Islamic world, just
estabhshed by a series of explosive conquests. The Arab garrisons of Iraq supported
Ali,
the pious and gentle cousin and son-in-law of
Mohammed. Outmaneuvered
prolonged negotiations, he was
in
assassinated in 661 as he stood at the door of a newly completed
mosque on the Euphrates, Nineteen years
persuaded by
in Kufa, the first
his partisans in Iraq to
renew
caliphate. Uncertain of his exact plans,
desert in a.d. 680 with seventy-two
When
retainers.
Muslim
city in Iraq.
son Hussein, living quietly in Medina, was
later, his
his family's claim to the
Hussein
members
set off across the
of his family and his
they got to Kufa, they found they had been
betrayed. Hussein's supporters had been rounded up, and there was
no
governor sent by
local uprising to support him. Ubaidullah, the
Damascus, surrounded the
Yazid, the caliph in
httle
thousand archers and cavalrymen and demanded In their last stand, Hussein and his supporters
them
to cut off their
own
retreat
surrender. As they began to
and show
fall
band with four
total surrender.
dug
a ditch
behind
their determination not to
under the arrows of UbaiduUah's
archers. Abbas, the heroic warrior-brother of Hussein, heard the
women and children in their party calling out for water. He fought his way through
to the Euphrates with watersldn in hand, but as
returned from the river his hand was hacked
off.
Abbas, whose picture
as a mailed warrior going to war often hangs on the in Iraq,
propped himself against a palm
geoned him the
tree,
sword
in
that of
They were buried in
Ah
at
where
his
one hand and the Koran
death of the two brothers in battle became faith.
waU of Shia houses enemies blud-
to death with clubs and branches. Hussein himself was
last to die, his
Shia
he
Najaf
fifty
Kerbala,
in the other.
the founding
The
myth of the
where their tombs, along with
became the chief shrines of Shia from across the Islamic world. The last bat-
miles away,
Islam, attracting pilgrims
theme of betrayal, suffering, martyrdom, and redemption, has the same significance in the Shia tradition as the crucifixion of Jesus in Christianity. It appeals to the downtrodden and has always tle,
with
its
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM MUSSEIN
61
The
created doubts about the legitimacy of rulers in Baghdad.
tombs of Hussein, Abbas, and Ali became, of
shrine-
for the Shia, the equivalent
Mecca and Medina. Rulers of Iraq, from the Ottomans
Saddam
to
Hussein, have had to cope with the fact that the holiest shrines of Shi-
dominant
ism, the
and with millions of adherents
religion of Iran
across the Islamic world, are
on
their doorstep.
Deep religious differences were containable under the Ottoman Turks, who captured Baghdad in 1534 and held it for almost four hundred years. They were Sunni Muslim, but they had side the cities. Tribal federations,
government
identity,
The
was stated
deputy from Baghdad to the Ottoman parliament is
tribe gave pro-
which the government did
attraction of tribal loyalty for an individual Iraqi
"To depend on the tribe
control out-
openly despised and flouted
authority, controlled the countryside.
and a sense of
tection
who
little
not.
clearly
in 1910.
He
The by a said:
a thousand times safer than depending on
the government, for while the latter defers or neglects oppression, the tribe,
no matter how feeble
it
may be,
as
soon
as
it
learns that an injus-
been committed against one of its members, readies
tice has
exact vengeance on his behalf."
Governments
in
itself to
Baghdad grew
stronger over the rest of the century, but belief in the clan and the tribe as the only true protector of the individual
Under the Ottoman
never died.
Turks, Iraq was not a single country.
It
was
divided into three provinces, based in Mosul, Baghdad, and Basra.
This was
War
all
about to change. In 1914,
at the
beginning of World
the British landed a small force at the southern tip of Iraq to
I,
defend the nearby Persian
oil fields
against possible Turkish attack.
British troops easily captured Basra and, in April 1915, overconfident
due
to the lack of Turkish opposition, decided to
On the
map,
this
looked deceptively
bisected by
easy.
but
use,
which provide ready-made defense works
What
salt
to
Baghdad. plain
marshes and waterways, abandoned or
flat,
is
push on
The Mesopotamian
is
in
for a defending army.
followed was one of the most disastrous campaigns in British
imperial history.
The
British force,
Townshend, marched up the
under Major General Charles
Tigris to within twenty-five miles of
Baghdad. At Ctesiphon, in sight of the famous brick arch of a
sixth-
century Persian banqueting hall, the British won a victory but suffered
heavy losses against the reinforced Turks. They
fell
back downriver to
DUT DF THE ASHES
62 now
tumbledown and evil-smelling town in a bend of Here General Townshend withstood a Turkish siege of 146
Kut, then as the Tigris.
a
days while British forces based in Basra fought desperately to reheve
The
him.
him
British
commander
suffered a nervous collapse, which led
systematically to underestimate his supplies.
Forced into launch-
army outside Kut had
ing premature attacks, the
lost
twenty-three
thousand dead or wounded by the time Townshend surrendered. further seven thousand British prisoners died in a waterless
A
march
north to forced labor in Turkey, being treated with exceptional cruelty
by the inhabitants of Tikrit when they passed through that town. Today the British cemetery, a
little
below the
level of the Tigris in the center
of Kut, has turned into a swamp, the tops of the gravestones just poking out of die
shmy green water.
The next British advance was more calculated and successful. An immense base was built at Basra and supplies poured in from India. In 1917, Major General Sir Stanley
Maude
captured Baghdad before
dying of cholera. The British had always intended to annex the Turkish provinces centered
around Basra and Baghdad. They were more
ambivalent about taking Mosul province, which looked toward Syria
and Turkey.
It
was the heartland of the Sunni Muslims and had a large
Kurdish population. At to
hand over Mosul
to
first
the British concocted a Machiavellian plan
France
as part of the carve-up of the
Empire, which was to create the
new Middle
which surprised the French, was whoUy
East.
The
Ottoman
British
self-serving.
move,
They
also
planned to hand over eastern Turkey to Russia and wanted the French as a
cordon
sions.
sanitaire
between themselves and the new Russian posses-
In any event, the Bolshevik revolution in 1917 negated such
arrangements with the
czar.
much discussion over the next three
After
years, the British decided that they
needed the province of Mosul
defend Baghdad and Basra. They would keep provinces for themselves, thus creating It
was not an idea without
its
all
modem
opponents.
to
three of the Turkish
Iraq.
From
the very begin-
ning, farsighted British officials Uke Captain Arnold Wilson, the British civil
commissioner
creation of the
new
state
in
newly captured Baghdad, believed the
was a recipe
for disaster. It involved weld-
ing together Shia, Sunni, and Kurds, three groups of people
who
detested each other. In 1919, he told the British government that
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM HUSSEIN the
new
state
S3
could only be "the antithesis of democratic govern-
ment." This was because the Shia majority rejected domination by the Sunni minority, but "no form of government has yet been envis-
aged which does not involve Sunni domination." The Kurds
whom
north,
it
was now intended to include
in the
in Iraq, "will
never
accept Arab rule." Wilson pointed out that three quarters of the
population was tribal and unused to obeying any government. These suspicions of central authority ran deep.
On the
War I,
eve of World
a tribe on the Euphrates had a chant that stigmatized the govern-
ment in Baghdad as "a flabby serpent which has no venom; we have come and have seen it. It is only in times past that it kept us in awe." Two years after Great Britain drove the Turks from the provinces that were to become Iraq, the country was on the verge of the greatest revolt in its history before 1991. It broke out in July 1920 among the tribes of the middle and lower Euphrates, but had support in
other parts of the country. As with the uprising seventy years
later, it
caught most experts on Iraq by surprise. Gertrude Bell, then the
most famous
British traveler
and writer
in the
Arab world, was
posted as an adviser to the British authorities in Baghdad. Just first
shots of the rebellion
were
fired,
as the
she was assuring the newly
commander General Aylmer Haldane that him that, having conducted many "heart-to-
arrived British mihtary all
was
well.
She told
heart interviews" with her Iraqi contacts, she believed: "The bottom
seems
to
have dropped out of the agitation and most of the leaders
are only too anxious to let bygones be bygones."
The
rebellion
was
essentially tribal, but the British
had managed
to offend almost every section of Iraqi society during their brief
occupation.
During the war with the Turks, the
promised an Arab regime, but had not delivered. An
who saw Gertrude
British
had
Iraqi notable
Bell just before the uprising in 1920 told her:
"Since you took Baghdad, you have been talking about an Arab gov-
ernment, but three years or more have elapsed and nothing has materialized." cers
and
There were other causes of
officials
the British.
who worked
The Shia
Iraqi resentment. Offi-
for the Turks
clergy disliked the
were marginalized by
new
authorities because
they were Ghristians. The tribes resented them because they were
more
diligent than the Turks in collecting taxes.
The tribesmen were
DUT DF THE ASHES
64
the British were to discover, heavily
also, as rifles
that
had come into
their
modem When the fight-
armed with
hands during the war.
ing was over, the British confiscated sixty-three thousand of them.
demanded
In Baghdad, nationafists Bell,
who
self-determination. Gertrude
alternated between nervousness and overconfidence,
railed against agitators in the city calling for unity of Islam
pendence if
anyone says boo
The
and inde-
She wrote: "They have created a reign of terror;
for Iraq.
in the bazaar,
the British had expected.
shuts like an oyster."
it
revolt lasted into 1921. It
was
By the time
dead and wounded and the
more
far it
was
serious than anything
over, they
had
lost
2,269
an estimated 8,450. Tribes in the
Iraqis
mid-Euphrates region ambushed and almost wiped out a battalion of the Manchester regiment. rifles,
The
rebels
made
skillful
use of their
though they were short of ammunition. "The Arab
is
most
treacherous," concluded General Haldane in frustration in his notes
on
fighting guerrillas.
when
"He
working peacefully easy reach."
The
overpower a small detachment, and
will
a larger force appears
he
will
in his fields
rebellion
—
put up white
flags
and be found
incidentally, with his rifle within
was never
fikely to succeed,
but
it
pro-
vided a potent myth for Iraqi nationalists. The uprising also saw the first
tentative
their
move toward
joint religious
first
unity between Shia and Sunni,
they disliked each other, some,
The
who held much
ceremonies in centuries. However at least,
hated the British more. at
one remove and cheaply,
through an Arab king. The problem with
this quasi-colonial control
British plan
was to rule Iraq
was that a monarch appointed by the
unknown
to the Iraqis,
whose very name was
British,
was tainted from the beginning. Different
candidates for the throne of Iraq were considered. in 1921,
backed by Gertrude Bell and
T
third son of the leader of the powerful
Mecca, whose claims rested on the Turks.
The
control. In a poll, the results of
government
it
choice
on
Faisal,
fell
family,
Hussein of
in
from the immediate
remained under
which
cent of Iraqis had voted for Faisal
A
final
his participation in the revolt against
problems of ruling the country, but
Iraq.
E. Lawrence,
Hashemite
British distanced themselves
Iraqi elections, the
The
eerily
their effective
resemble more recent
Baghdad announced
I,
that
96 per-
the only candidate, to be king of
hint of the monarch's real relationship with Great Britain
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM HUSSEIN came
a few years later
perfume
his
bills,
which he had
Britain did not rely
Great
was
when Faisal toured England. His tailor and London both asked the Colonial Office to
supplier in
underwrite his
wanted
65
on
pay after a previous
failed to
Faisal
I
to reduce the cost of maintaining a garrison,
to use air
visit.
alone to rule Iraq. But they
and the solution
power. This has always seemed an attractive option in
Iraq, in the 1920s as in the 1990s.
The
plains, deserts, marshes,
and
The Royal Iraq now became the test-
mountains of Iraq are difficult to police from the ground. Air Force was effective during the uprising. ing ground for the cessors.
Ground
RAF as the military backup for Faisal I and his suc-
troops were withdrawn. Great Britain had promised
the Kurds self-determination, but eventually gave priority to incorporating
them
bomber
into Iraq. Arthur
"Bomber"
who
Harris,
Germany twenty
offensive against
years
led the British
later,
pretend that he aimed for military targets. In 1924, he
did not even
said:
"They
[the
now know what real bombing means, in casualties and damage; they know that within forty-five minutes a fuU-sized vil-
Arabs and Kurds]
lage can
be
practically wiped out
injured." Delayed-action
were
less
and a third of its inhabitants
killed or
bombs were used. Other British officials bombing of civilians was an effective way
confident that the
of winning the hearts and minds of Iraqis. "If the Arab population realize that the peaceful control of
our bombing
women and
Mesopotamia ultimately depends on
children," wrote Sir
Laming Worthington-
Evans, the British secretary of state for war in 1921, ful if
we
shall obtain the
"I
am very doubt-
acquiescence of the fathers and husbands of
Mesopotamia." Not everybody was so discriminating. After the revolt of 1920,
T
E. Lawrence wrote to the
London Observer
to say: "It
is
we do not use poison gas on these occasions." The new Iraqi government was designed to be weak. Between
odd
that
the proclamation of Faisal
I
as king in
1921 and the overthrow of the
monarchy in 1958, it never established its nationalist credentials. Real power remained in the hands of a small coterie of former Ottoman officers who had fought with the British in the war. They were joined by some members of the Iraqi establishment who had stayed loyal to the Turks. For almost forty years, the
same leaders
followed each other in and out of power. Nuri al-Said served as
prime minister fourteen times before he was
killed,
dressed as a
OUT OF THE ASHES
Se woman,
trying to flee
the strength of his fidential
memo in
Baghdad
had no
in 1958. Faisal
own government, which,
as
illusions
he admitted
about con-
in a
1933, was "far and away weaker than the people."
In the country at large, there were "more than one hundred thou-
sand
whereas the government possesses only
rifles
sand."
He
fifteen thou-
concluded:
"There
is
still
—and
say this with a heart fufl of sorrow
I
Iraqi people, but unimaginable masses of
human
—no
beings devoid of
any patriotic ideas, imbued with religious traditions and absurdities,
connected by no
common
and perpetually ready Faisal
so weak.
I
tie,
giving ear to
to rise against
evil,
prone to anarchy,
any government whatsoever."
did not mention the other reason for his government being
It
was devised by the
Force squadrons based
in Basra
British
and backed up by Royal Air
and Habbaniya, northwest of Bagh-
dad. If there were any doubts about the monarchy's
Great
Britain, they
Ottoman colonels.
Encouraged by Hitlers to whittle
al-Ilah (Faisal
heir),
laid to rest in 1941.
became prime
officer,
ernment sought
Abd
were
I
away
a former
Ali,
backed by four army
minister, victories in
Europe, the
British imperial control.
new
The
died in 1933, leaving the infant Faisal
and Nuri al-Said were forced
from Jordan and
dependence on
Rashid
to flee.
German
never came and Iraqi troops were defeated after a month's the four colonels
regent,
II as his
Great Britain sent troops
India. Despite the rebels' hopes,
The regent returned and
gov-
support fighting.
who had overthrown him
were hanged.
The monarchy had been saved for the time being. But it depended on Britain at a moment when the British empire was being swept away. Arab nationalist army officers toppled governments in Egypt and Syria.
Unlike these countries, Iraq had
Kirkuk in 1927.
wanted try,
From
1951,
oil. It
had been discovered
the international
to punish neighboring Iran for nationalizing
its
oil
in
companies
own
oil
indus-
Kirkuk started to bring in significant oil revenues. In the long term,
the possession of
ernment
made
immense
in Iraq, as
it
oil fields
strengthened authoritarian gov-
did tliroughout the Middle East. Oil revenues
the state independent of society.
and security forces without this
when
came
relying
on
It
could pay for large armies
taxes or foreign subsidies.
too late for the Hashemite dynasty.
On July 14,
But
1958, troops
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM HUSSEIN
67
led by Brigadier
Abd
army
mixed Sunni-Shia background, stormed the
officer of
al-Karim Qassim, a thm-voiced, intense, ascetic
palace in Baghdad. Artillery set
the young King Faisal
II,
fire to
royal
the top story of the building. As
together with the regent and the rest of the
royal family, tried to escape out the
back of the burning building, they
were confronted by a semicircle of officers who shot them down with their
submachine guns.
The
fall
of the monarchy ushered in a ten-year period of military
coups, countercoups, and conspiracies.
The
price of failure
increased by the year. Qassim was overthrown and killed in a blood-
bath in 1963 in which after
being tortured.
became
States
five It
thousand were slaughtered, many of them
was the height of the cold war. The United
increasingly involved after the overthrow of the
British-backed monarchy. In 1959, Allen Dulles, the director of the
CIA, told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee: "Iraq today the most dangerous spot on earth." successors were even weaker. ers
seemed
like a
mask
and had no appeal in strength
and
its
for
is
its
The Arab nationalism of the new lead-
Sunni Arab domination to the Iraqi Shia
for the Kurds.
leaders
The monarchy was weak, but
Kurdish nationalism was growing
were soon
in a
semipermanent
state of
rebellion.
Saddam Hussein for
who was
determine the
fate of Iraq
most of the second half of the century, came of age
at a critical
al-Tikriti,
to
moment in the history of Iraq. He was twenty-one when the monarchy was overthrown. Over the next decade, he learned the bloody
mechanics of Iraqi
them
perfectly.
politics.
When
By
1968, he
showed
that he understood
he was only thirty-one years
old,
he helped
engineer the two coups, within two weeks of each other, in which the Arab nationalist Baath Party, led largely by
men from
his
home
The political musical chairs of the previous ten years ended. Saddam and his party are still in power thirty years later. In later years, Saddam liked to portray himself as a man who succeeded in the face of adversity. By the 1980s, Iraqi poets were winning prizes for drawing parallels between Saddam district
of Tikrit, seized power.
and the Prophet Mohammed, both of
whom
were orphaned
at
an
ea
OUT DFTHE ASHES
early age. In reality,
Saddam came from a Sunni Arab family with him to the front of Iraqi politics.
just the right connections to propel
He was bom in
Ouija, a typical Iraqi village of mud-brick houses,
in the plains of northern Iraq
al-Majid,
bom
on April
28, 1937. His father,
was a peasant farmer who died either
just before
Hussein
Saddam
mother, Subha al-Tulfah, a
He was brought up by his strong-looking woman who invariably
wore the dark robes of the
Iraqi countryside,
was
or a few months afterward.
and
his
two uncles.
One was his mothers brother, Khairallah Tulfah, who lived mainly in Baghdad. He was not only Saddam s uncle and foster parent but also his prospective father-in-law, since
he and
his sister
Subha arranged
Saddam, when he was five, to marry Khairallah daughter Sajida. The marriage took place in 1963, when Saddam returned from exile in Egypt. Photographs taken when he was still a boy illustrate the real dynamics of the family better than myths subsequently woven by critics or propagandists. They show individuals from a traditional for
's
society trying to master the
modem world.
Khairallah Tulfah, living
in the city, has neatly parted hair, but looks uncomfortable in a
white
and checked
shirt,
Hassan,
who
and
strength of
because he was its
Saddam's stepfather, Ibrahim
tie,
al-
stayed in Ouija, wears a white headdress and a tradi-
tional long robe,
The
jacket.
carries a double-barreled shotgun
Saddams
by
his side.
family and clan connections matter
bom into a tribal society. He has
characteristics throughout his
life. It
maintained
many of
was a world of intense
loyalties
wdthin the clan, but cruel and hostile to outsiders. "Myself and
cousin against the world," says an old Arab proverb.
Saddam
my
later
painted a picture of a deprived childhood, claiming his stepfather
would rouse him
dawn by
at
tend the sheep." His
came from brothers
saying:
"Get up, you son of a whore, go
critics also stressed early
a dysfunctional family. In
—Barzan,
traumas to prove that he
fact, his
Sabawi, and Watban
—and
rehance on his
half-
his cousins, like Ali
Hassan al-Majid, to stock the senior ranks of his regime argue that
his
inner family was always tightly knit against the outside world, whatever its
inner tensions.
Saddam came from the which was strong Tigris a
in
al-Bejat clan, part of the
Albu Nasir
tribe,
and around the nondescript town of Tikrit, on the
hundred miles north of the
capital. Set
on low bluffs above the
THE ORIGINS DF SADDAM HUSSEIN river, Tikrit
was a decayed
textile
town, once
to carry melons to Baghdad. In so
was
far as
it
Otherwise, Tikrit
made
mark on
little
for building rafts
was famous
for anything,
it
century of Saladin, the Arab
as the birthplace in the early twelfth
hero, though of Kurdish background,
known
69
who
defeated the Crusaders.
Iraqi history. Its inhabitants
were Arab Sunni with a curious reputation for being long-winded. "To talk Like a Tikriti"
is
an Iraqi saying meaning to be too garrulous. By the
time Saddam was growing up, the town no longer depended on trade
and agriculture
Baghdad
Few
young men increasingly took the road
alone. Its
to get jobs in the
government and, above
all,
of the sons of estabUshed families in the capital were joining
officers' corps.
Shia and Kurds had
little
to
in the army.
loyalty to the state. It
its
was
young men, often the sons of petty tradesmen and landowners, from provincial towns like Tikrit
saw the army
as a route to
five years in
1941]." jailed,
Tigris
and Euphrates, who
power.
"One of my uncles was Saddam later recalled in a spent
on the upper
a nationalist, an officer in the Iraqi army," rare interview about his background.
"He
prison after the revolution of Rashid Ali Kaylani [in
Saddam was only four when
his uncle,
KhairaUah Tulfah, was
but he says that he often asked his mother what had happened
to him.
She would reply: "He
is
in prison."
important positions in the army.
Other relatives
also
reached
One of them, Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr,
a reserved, quiet-spoken, but very ambitious brigadier, had a
Saddam s
influence on
career.
He was one
critical
of the rebel officers
who
took part in the overthrow of the monarchy in 1958 and later quarreled
He was bom in
with Qassim. traditionally
1914 into a family of petty notables
produced leaders
the 1963 coup, after which he politics at this
for the Bejat clan.
became prime
He was
minister.
who
a leader of
Given that
time were dominated by the military elite, Saddam,
Iraqi
who
never entered the army, could only have risen to power in tandem with a senior military officer.
Nor was
dam found
it
only in the upper ranks of the officers' corps that Sad-
alhes
and sympathizers. Sunni Arabs were only a
fifth
of
Ottoman times they had found jobs as petty officials. An example of the usefulness of this for the young Saddam was his astonishingly good treatment in the different prisons in which he was later incarcerated for political activity. For most
the Iraqi population, but since
OUT DF THE ASHES
70 Iraqis in the 1950s
But
in 1959,
members it
by
and 1960s, these were places of torture and
own
his
of the Baath Party to
was safer
for
them
fear.
Saddam was arranging for local be jailed with him in Tikrit because
account,
in prison than
on the
another prison
streets. In
Communist was being tortured for sawing through the bars of his cell. Saddam went to the prison governor and said he had cut the bars himself. Nothing happened to him. At a in
Baghdad
in the 1960s, a
moment
critical
escaped from
jail
where he was on had been
young Baath Party
for the
on
his
way back from the Higher
for trying to
trial
offense,
he persuaded
Abu Nawwas
way back from
Street,
court.
in
1966 he
Security Court,
overthrow the regime. His plan
to enter the presidential palace
ernment leaders attending in
leader,
and machine-gun the gov-
a meeting. Despite the seriousness of the
his prison guards to take
where
him
to a restaurant
Iraqis eat fish beside the Tigris,
During the meal, he and
six
on
his
companions sim-
ply walked out the back door of the restaurant.
may not have been rich or powerful in the 1940s, but they knew who they were. Saddam himself, in what sounds like a truthful explanation of his own social background, said he became a nationahst and not a Communist because in central Iraq, where he came from, social divisions were not great. He contrasted this with His family
the south and Kurdistan, where there were great landed estates. "I
never
He
disadvantage, even
felt at a social
landowner
said the biggest
Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr.
cousin
The
much more
in the district
but
at
got.
was a
relative of his
he beat
his relatives,
As a matter of fact, they
than he beat them."
Iraqi countryside
carried firearms. At
a peasant's son," he said.
"If he got angry,
but they gave him back as good as they beat him
I,
first
was a violent place
the family wanted
in
which everybody
Saddam
to
be a farmer,
the age of eight, Adnan, his cousin, the son of Khairallah Tul-
fah and later Iraq's defense minister, told
Saddam
that
he was learn-
Saddam was unable to persuade his him go to school. One day before dawn he set off across make his own way there. On the road he met some rela-
ing to read and write in Tikrit.
family to let
the fields to tives,
who approved of his
educational plans and agreed to help him.
Their response underlines the degree of insecurity in the 1950s.
"They gave him
a pistol
in provincial Iraq
and sent him off
in a car to
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM HUSSEIN
Accounts of Saddams early
says his official biographer.
Tikrit,"
bloodthirstiness are suspect, but Dr. Iraqi exile, says
Saddam was told
me
Abdul Wahad al-Haldm, an
quite prepared to use his fearsome rep-
utation in the next few years.
"My headmaster
71
He that
recalls:
he wanted
Saddam from he came to his head-
to expel
When Saddam heard about this decision, room and threatened him with death. He said: 'I will kill you do not withdraw your threat against me to expel me from the
school.
master's if
you
school.' "
At the age often, Saddam went to stay with Khairallah Tul-
fah in Baghdad, but with frequent trips Later, after
nickname
home to
Ouija and
Tikrit.
become
Saddam's ascent to power,
"Tikritis"
was
But
after the
overthrow of the
for the Iraqi pohtical elite.
to
a
king in 1958, Tikrit was intensely and violently divided between
Communists and ground
to the
nationalists
such as Saddam. This
by Saddam
first killing
for
which there
is
is
the back-
reliable evi-
The victim was Haji Sadoun al-Tikriti, a warrant officer and Communist leader in the city. It happened in 1959, and the dead dence.
man was
said to
be a distant
relative of Saddam's.
Twenty years
Saddam, by now vice chairman of the Revolution cil,
came
to the school of a relative of the
Following
tribal tradition,
later,
Command Coun-
dead man
in
Baghdad.
he gave him blood money and a Brown-
ing pistol.
when he was twenty, the year before the overthrow of the monarchy. Founded in Iraq in 1952, it was Saddam joined
the Baath Party
small and tightly organized in cells of three to seven members.
Its
ide-
ology combined intense Arab nationalism with woolly socialism. will to
power always exceeded
its
idea of what to do with
Batatu, the great Iraqi historian of these years, writes:
it.
"A Baathi would
have looked in vain through the whole Uterature of his party for a gle objective analysis of any of the serious
Its
Hanna sin-
problems besetting Iraq."
But there was nothing vague about how the Baath Party intended to deal with after
its
enemies.
It
had quarreled with Qassim immediately
he took power because of his opposition to pan- Arab unity with
Egypt and
Syria. In their first
independent
initiative,
the Baathists
Among those recruited for the attempt was unknown party militant Saddam Hussein, by now a law
decided to assassinate him. the hitherto
student in Baghdad.
What happened
next
became
part of Saddam's
OUT OF THE ASHES
72
personal mythology, the topic of a government-sponsored novel and a
The Long Days. In the cinematic version of the assassination
film,
attempt, the part of
Saddam
is
played with verve by
and namesake, who somewhat resembled the
his cousin
Thq. assassination attempt on October cess.
Saddam Kamel,
Qassim was driving
Iraqi leader
came close to sucEast German embassy.
1959,
7,
to a reception at the
The Baath Party had a source inside the Defense Ministry who could tell them when Qassim would drive down al-Rashid Street, then Baghmain thoroughfare, with
dad's
Saddam s to
kill
role
was
Qassim.
its
white colonnades and luxury shops.
to provide covering fire for the four
Two of the gunmen were to open
backseat while two aimed
at
the front.
fire
men who were
on anybody in the
When the shooting started, Sad-
dam became overexcited and drew the submachine gun he was hiding under a cloak given him by Khairallah Tulfah, killed Qassim's driver, seriously wounded self in the shoulder.
He was
his uncle.
an aide, and
hit
The
assassins
Qassim him-
rushed to the hospital in a passing
taxi.
One of the attackers was shot dead, apparently by a chance shot from his own side. Saddam himself was hit in the fleshy part of his leg. "It was a very superficial wound to the shin," said the doctor who treated him. "A bullet just penetrated the sldn and of his
leg.
.
.
.
it
stopped there in the shin
During the night he cut it by using a razor blade and took
the bullet out."
Saddam
Years later
would die
told
King Hussein that he had thought he
after his failed attempt to
and detailed accounts of from Baghdad
his
to Ouija. It
kill
Qassim.
He
gave lengthy
escape from the police, up the Tigris
was a
critical
element
in his self-image as
an Arab hero. For seven years after the Gulf War, Saddam was
sel-
When he did reemerge,
was
dom
seen in public.
almost his
where
to the village of al-Dhour,
on the
had swum ashore, hungry,
his teeth chattering
Tigris,
first visit
thirty years before
from the
cold,
he
and on
the run.
Even if embellished, the story of Saddam s escape is a dramatic The journey was long because Saddam was not able to hire a
tale.
car in Baghdad. Instead, he bought a horse. Dressed as a bedouin,
he rode north glers
for four nights.
by police
officers,
When he
he explained
fell
into a trap laid for
his lack of
them: "Bedouin do not carry identity cards."
smug-
papers by telling
He needed to cross the
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM HUSSEIN
73
to pay the owner of a barge one and a half dinars him and his horse across. The barge owner refused because curfew. Saddam decided he would leave his horse and swim.
Tigris
and offered
to ferry
of a
The water was cold and he was reached al-Dhour, on the
and
injured,
I
he recalled
Saddam
him
stay the night and
swum
thing
"Where
we
He
vengeance.
said:
is."
here and
me
clan finds out that
one of
is
true.
I
I
was
God
his brothers,
river;
killed
will
The
three years life
replied, until
apartment.
come dad.
He
Damascus and Cairo were the Once he gained power, his visits Most of
his
time in exile was
behavior
his
differ.
who was
military attache in
Baghdad and
to the faculty of law
at
Abdel Majid
Farid, the secretary general of the Egyptian presidency,
"We helped him go
"What
he found
in
fleeting.
odds with Qassim. Accounts of
me my
Syria.
spent in Cairo under the protection of President Nasser,
been an Egyptian
to hint at
a guard at an elementary school.
lived abroad.
were
we know
do you when
among you?" The man Saddam walked on
Saddam spent he
to foreign countries
it
protect us."
who was
means someuntil
suppose they follow
reached Ouija and safety and later escaped to
only time in his
you go
have committed a crime
your home. What good
in
but
When
of the house con-
Saddam s response was
"Supposing
on the other side of the
you say
man
are not going to let
against a clan kill
thief,
dry his clothes.
He
do you think you are going? You have
what the truth of the matter tribal
fire to
across the Tigris with your clothes on. This
very wrong and
is
you see
were wet,
thought he was a
first
a
lit
tried to leave in the morning, the
fronted him, saying: just
like
clothes
hadn't eaten properly for four days."
staggered into a house where people finally let
"My
later.
by the time he
was
far side of the Tigris. "It
in the movies, only worse,"
my leg was
in a state of collapse
who had
until expelled, says:
tried to get
him an
He was one of the leaders of the Iraqi Baath. He used to me now and then to talk about developments in Bagh-
to see
He was quiet, discipfined, and didn't ask for extra funds like the exiles. He didn't have much interest in alcohol and girls."
other
little too good to be true. Hussein Abdel Meguid, owner of the Andiana Cafe, where Saddam used to meet with
This sounds a the
friends in the early 1960s, describes
not pay his
bills.
"He would
him
fight for
as a
troublemaker
any reason," he
who did "We
says.
DUT OF THE ASHES
"74
wanted
to bar
him from coming
came back and Saddam finally left
here. But the police
he was protected by Nasser." Meguid says
said
owing the equivalent of several hundred
dollars.
Both the presidential adviser and the cafe owner were
Saddam
again.
He had
to
meet
a highly developed sense of favors received
or denied. Abdel Majid Farid was jailed by President Sadat after the
death of Nasser and
left
Egypt
he met Saddam Hussein
to live in Algeria. Fifteen years later,
again.
He was
dam
he became ruler of
after
president in the 1970s, he
He
paid his
bills
In early 1963,
Iraq.
He
came back
Meguid
bill at
saw Sadvice
and he came here.
extra."
Saddam had more important
Baghdad,
also
"When he was
recalls,
to Cairo,
and three hundred pounds
than his outstanding
Baghdad and
invited to
received financial help. At the Andiana Cafe,
the Andiana Cafe.
things to worry about
On
February
8,
a mil-
itary
coup
role,
overthrew Qassim. Support for the conspirators was limited. In
the
first
trol.
in
in
which the Baath Party played a leading
hours of fighting, they had only nine tanks under their con-
The Baath
Party had just 850 active members. But Qassim
What
ignored warnings about the impending coup.
tipped the bal-
ance against him was the involvement of the United
States.
He had
taken Iraq out of the anti-Soviet Baghdad Pact. In 1961, he threat-
ened
to
occupy Kuwait and nationalized part of the Iraq Petroleum
Company
(IPC), the foreign
In retrospect,
it
oil
consortium that exploited
was the CIA's
favorite coup.
"We
really
Iraq's oil.
had the
ts
crossed on what was happening," James Critchfield, then head of the
CIA
in the
Middle East, told
Iraqi participants later
us.
"We
regarded
it
as a great victory."
confirmed American involvement. 'W^e came to
power on a CIA train," admitted Ali Saleh Sa'adi, the Baath Party secretary general who was about to institute an unprecedented reign of terror.
CIA
plotters
assistance reportedly included coordination of the
from the agency's
station inside the U.S.
embassy
as well as a clandestine radio station in
Kuwait and
advice from around the Middle East on
who on
eliminated once the coup was successful. his popularity in the streets of
the
in
solicitation left
TV
and
retained
his execution, his sup-
porters refused to believe he was dead until the coup leaders pictures of his buUet-riddled body on
of
should be
To the end, Qassim
Baghdad. After
coup
Baghdad
in the
showed
newspapers. By
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM HUSSEIN one account, Qassim was buried corpse was unearthed by dogs
in a shallow,
who began
75 grave.
The
Horrified by
this,
unmarked
to eat
it.
peasant farmers reburied the body in a coffin, only for the secret police to dig
up again and throw it
it
in the Tigris.
The triumph of the Baath Party was between
its
civilian
and
military wings.
brief. It
was deeply divided
The new prime
minister was
Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, Saddam s cousin. Many of the other officers who overthrew Qassim were from Tikrit, though they
Brigadier senior
belonged to a tribe different from that of al-Bakr and Saddam. There
was
to hold the party together other than hatred of
little
In November, the
new president, Abd
al-Salaam Aref,
its
first
enemies.
persuaded
the military Baathists to turn on the civilian wing of their party and militia.
Soon afterward, Aref expelled the Baathist
officers
its
from the
government.
Saddam played no he took part jailed,
role in the
1963 coup.
in the massacres afterward.
It is
The
not even clear that
following year he was
but conditions were not onerous. The debacle of the
power put Saddam and al-Bakr in charge of They planned to seize power again, avoiding the mistakes The party was not strong enough to act on its own, but they
Baathists' first bid for
the party.
of 1963.
suborned Abd al-Razzaq al-Nayif, the head of military intelligence.
The coup took place on July 17, 1968, and, in contrast to what had happened five years before, this time it was the non-Baathist officers
who were
ousted within thirteen days of taking power.
Nine years
man
after
he tried to
of the Revolution
ond most powerful man deliberately shadowy.
kill
Command in Iraq.
He was
Qassim, Saddam was vice chair-
Council (the
The
RCC) and
the sec-
extent of his influence was kept
a civilian in
what was,
seventies, primarily a military regime, with
Saddam
until the late
Ahmed Hassan
al-Bakr
army him as "the new strongman of the regime." He seems to have assumed that they would not read Baath Party documents referring to them as "the as the president. In the 1970s,
tried to ensure that
officers did not see foreign publications referring to
military aristocracy." After the 1968 coup, the triumphant Baathists
were
as bloodthirsty as five years before,
more
systematic.
No opponent would
but their violence was
get a second chance.
took Nayif, the military intelligence chief
who had
Saddam
assisted the
76
OUT DF THE ASHES coup and then been displaced, to the airport with Nayif s back. Even in exile, Nayif was considered a possi-
Baathists in their his
gun
in
ble threat. In 1974, an assassin tried to
ment. Four years
General Hardan
he was shot dead
later,
al-Tikriti,
1970 and was assassinated
no regime
in Iraq
security services
dam was
in
had been
competed
Iraq,"
all
as well as ferocit)^.
made
His attitude
merciless and unforgiving to enemies, grateful and
Tikrit."
is
no
Saddams
man
second most powerful
and
and
Between 1968 and 1979, Sad-
real
rise
rising before
in later years
in Iraq.
we run exactly as we
mystery about the way
one of Saddam s associates once
though
year. Previously,
four centers of power, which
said.
"We run
it
was extraordinarily
than ten years after he had fled for his
little
in a hotel
Kuwait the following
for power.
generous to friends. "There
used to run
London apartin the same city.
in his
stable because army, party, tribe,
him almost impossible to overthrow. Saddam at this period had charm tribal,
him
the minister of defense, was dismissed in
able to get a grip on
was very
kill
life
from Baghdad, he was the
He was
dawn. There was
httle
he had trouble with
rapid. Less
hardworking, sleeping
wrong with
his back.
He
his health,
developed a
When younger, he smoked a Boumedienne of Algieria introduced him to cigars, which he has smoked ever since. For relaxation, all the Tikritis were fans of gypsy dancing, known as kawliya. Bakr used to phone Iraqi television to ask for a program of gypsy dancing. When it was finished, he would call again, congratulate them, and ask for more dancing. Iraqi viewers were irritated to find promised coverage of football matches abandoned for the kawliya. (When General Hussein Kamel fled to Jordan in 1995, one Iraqi said presciently: "He will go back to Iraq in the end. He can't last without taste for
Portuguese Mateus rose wine.
pipe, but President Houari
kawliya.") Television schedules only returned to normal
dam became
president, not because he was any less
when
Sad-
enamored of
kawliya, but because he had bought a video machine.
Saddam replaced
al-Bakr as president in July 1979.
bath with which he began his rule authority it
would
explains
in future
why nobody
from invading Iran
in
left
no
Iraqi in
stem from him. This
is
The blood-
any doubt that
important because
within the leadership tried to dissuade
1980 or Kuwait
in 1990.
all
him
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM HUSSEIN No
was allowed. This mattered
criticism
tic Iraqi politics,
affairs, his lack
less in
where Saddam showed great
VV
terms of domes-
skill.
But
in foreign
of experience and unwillingness to take advice was a
recipe for disaster.
The opening moves were
in the crisis that led to the
in early July 1979. President
resign
and hand over
He
July 10.
said
his office to
he was
in
Bakr announced that he was to
Saddam
at a
poor health. But
there was strong opposition to
purge of the party
meeting of the rapidly
it
Saddam among other
RCC on
emerged that Muhie
leaders.
Abdul-Hussein Mashhadi, the secretary of the ruling council, objected
and demanded a vote on the he told Bakr.
retire,"
decision. "It
"If you are iU,
inconceivable you should
is
why don't you take
Saddam's opponents had waited too long to
act.
a rest?"
Muhie Abdul-
Hussein Mashhadi was arrested for questioning and presumably tortured. Barzan, Saddam's half-brother,
In the next few days,
On
destroy.
headed the
investigation.
Saddam toyed with those he was about
July 18, party leaders
were invited
to
to a dinner party at
the presidential palace. After the meal, they were each asked to write a detailed report of any meetings they might have
Abdul-Hussein or another suspect,
Mohammed Ayesh,
minister, the previous year.
The
accused Ayesh of acting for
Syria, Iraq's
bers of the
RCC,
had with
the industry
circle of suspects increased.
hated
rival.
In
all,
Barzan
five
mem-
were expelled. Along
a quarter of its membership,
with sixteen others, they were executed on August
8.
Branches of
the Baath Party throughout Iraq each sent a delegate with a
rifle
to
join the firing squad.
Saddam wanted
the purge to create
maximum
terror
and so
ordered a videotape to be made of one of a series of meetings where
he singled out those accused of conspiring against him. The tape indeed records a numbing and carefully orchestrated spectacle of terror.
As
it
begins, the delegates to a meeting of the Baath Party
leadership wait anxiously as
"We used to be
we even theless,
Saddam prepares
gathered the evidence," he
we were
knowing
this,
to speak.
able to sense a conspiracy with our hearts before
patient and
tells
the party leaders. "Never-
some of our comrades blamed us
but not doing anything about
for
it."
In a prearranged move, a Baath Party official gets
up and admits
OUT OF THE ASHES
78 his guilt.
Others
Saddam
later notorious for using
a purge. Ali Hassan al-Majid, the cousin of
call for
chemical weapons against the
Kurds, says to him unctuously: "What you have done in the past was
What you
good.
do
will
in the future is good.
You have been too
small point.
ator"
is
time
this
I'll
there's this
one
gentle, too merciful."
"Yes, that's true. People have criticized
dam. "But
But
me
for that," replies Sad-
show no mercy." After half an hour
taken away from die meeting.
a "conspir-
Nobody has any doubt about liis
fate.
The camera focuses on Saddam looking relaxed and smoking a cigar. Then he rises to speak again and now his voice has turned harsh: "The witness has
just given us information
that organization,"
Get
ringleaders.
spirators!"
He
As
goes to
invites
if
Get
out!"
other
fear,
party!
Long
affected
among
sit
them
he shouts. "Similar confessions were made by the
out!
In a frenzy of
"Long Hve the
about the group leaders in
by these
the party
to join the firing
Ambassadors and
members
of the party leadership shout:
God save Saddam from
live tlie party!
officials
loyal cries,
members
squad that
is
were
Saddam begins to weep. show of solidarity. He
in a
to execute their colleagues.
abroad suspected of involvement in the
conspiracy were called to Baghdad. For the "traitors"
con-
first
time, the families of
The body of one
also punished.
senior leader was
returned to his house in Baghdad in a pickup truck. The body showed signs of torture.
A note attached to the corpse said the leader had died
of a heart attack and ordered that there should be no mourning.
It
took a year for the significance of Saddam's takeover in Baghdad
to
become apparent
to the rest of the
years after Britain created Iraq,
Despite growing to mobilize
its
oil
wealth,
resources.
it
it
Middle East. For the
was paralyzed by
its
own
sixty
divisions.
remained a third-rate power, unable
The purge of the Baath
Party leadership in
1979 gave Saddam total control. He eliminated competitors for power within the party. He had already disposed of those outside. The long-running Kurdish rebellion, which had destabilized previous Iraqi governments, ended in 1975 when the shah of Iran withdrew his support for the Iraqi Kurds in return for territorial conces-
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM HUSSEIN sions
by
Iraq.
The country was growing
79
produced 3.4
wealthier. It
milhon barrels of oil a day and, after Saudi Arabia, had the largest
oil
reserves in the Middle East. Internal feuding in the 1960s and 1970s
made
Iraq a marginal
power in the Middle East and a very small player in world affairs. Saddam now started on a sustained effort to win control of the Persian Gulf and leadership in the Arab world. His campaign had two phases: The first began with his invasion of Iran in 1980 and ended with Iraq's quahfied victory eight years later The second was much shorter. Frustrated by what he saw as an attempt by Kuwait backed by the United States and Britain to rob him of the fruits of his victory over Iran by driving down the price of oil through overproduction, Saddam invaded the emirate on August 2, 1990. It was a venture far beyond Iraq's political and military strength. The Americans and British were never likely to allow Iraq to win control of the
—
Gulf,
which has 55 percent of the world's proven
In 1979, this final disaster lay far in the future. political situation in the
oil reserves.
On the contrary, the
Gulf seemed to offer Iraq great opportunities.
In 1979, AyatoUah Khomeini, after sixteen years in exile in the Iraqi holy city of Najaf and subsequently in France, overthrew the shah and
returned to Iran. Militant students further radicalized the revolution
by taking over the American embassy and holding American diplomats hostage. This
had repercussions in
no reason why the revolution
in
groups saw
Iraq. Militant Iraqi Shia
Tehran should not be repeated
in
Baghdad. It
was not an idea ever
tradition than Iran. likely to unite the
The
likely to succeed. Iraq has a
more
threat of an Islamic revolution
secular
was always
Sunni Arab core of the regime behind Saddam. Nor
had Islamic fundamentalism any appeal
for the Kurds,
small but influential Christian minority.
may not have been
dence that one of the
first
attacks
It
by al-Dawa, the
still
less
the
a coinci-
militant Islamic
who was from Dawa threw
group, was against Tariq Aziz, then deputy prime minister,
Chaldean Christian from Mosul. grenade
at
him
as
A
militant
he was opening a student conference on April
a a 1,
1980, at the Mustansariyah, the ancient university in the heart of
Baghdad. The next day, standing
in the
meeting of students: "The Iraqi people
pouring is
now
rain,
Saddam
told a
a large and powerful
OUT OF THE ASHES
BD
mountain they cannot shake with
all
their
bombs. By God, the inno-
cent blood that was shed at Mustansariyah will not go unavenged."
few days
later,
Mohammed
bomb was thrown into
a second
of those killed in the
Bakr
first
attack.
the funeral procession
Vengeance followed
as promised.
and one of the
al-Sadr, a senior rehgious leader
heads of al-Dawa, was executed, along with his
A
sister Thirty
thousand
were expelled from Iraq. Saddam began to Khomeini as "that mummy" and Kliomeini called for
Iraqis of Iranian origin
refer to Ayatollah
army to
the Iraqi
leave
its
barracks and overthrow Saddam.
This was largely a blind. There was Htde threat to ship from the disanned
and
Saddam s
leaderless Iraqi Shia. Instead, the chaos in
the Iranian army and the diplomatic isolation of Iran
Saddam an
leader-
seemed
to offer
A hint of the real thinking in the Iraqi leader-
opportunity.
comes from a peculiar source. A declassified note from whose name is blacked out, of the Defense Intelligence
ship at this time
an agent,
Agency, the intelligence arm of the Pentagon, reported from Baghdad
on April 8 with
had ambitious plans
that Iraq
bomb
attacks
by al-Dawa.
for Iran tliat
He said:
that Iraq will attack Iran. Iraq has
"There
is
had nothing to do
a 50 percent chance
moved large numbers of military per-
sonnel and equipment to the Iraq-Iran border in anticipation of such an invasion."
A
rocket attack on an Iranian
oil field
two days before had
commando unit. The agent said Iraq believed: "The Iranian military is now weak and can be easily defeated." been carried out by an
It
Iraqi
was a disastrous miscalculation. The Iranian population
times as large as Iraqi tanks
Iraq's.
advanced
The
easily,
three
is
Iranian revolution was popular At
but within a year Iranian
first,
light infantry
was
causing serious casualties. Iraq was disastrously defeated in the battle
of Khorramshahr.
mated
that Iraq
By
had
the end of 1982, American intelligence
lost forty-five
thousand dead and the same num-
ber of prisoners. There were mass surrenders of Iraqi
West and
tlie
Arab Gulf states worried that Iraq would
soldiers.
collapse.
rushed in suppfies. Washington even removed Iraq from the states supporting terrorism,
hving in Baghdad
Kuwait $10
esti-
though Abu Nidal, a
The They
list
terrorist leader,
of
was
at the time. Saudi Arabia gave Iraq $25.7 biUion and
billion,
mosdy
in the first
crossed into Iraq, that
two years of the war. Iranian
They also found, once they had ordinary Iraqi soldiers, mosdy Shia, stopped
troops failed in their assault on Basra.
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM HUSSEIN surrendering. Within two years, the intelligence regular briefings
By
ian positions.
and
CIA was
satellite
B1
giving Iraqi military
photographs showing Iran-
1984, the U.S. embassy had reopened in Baghdad.
Supported by the United States and the Soviet Union, Western and
Saddam believed This long-haul strategy changed only when
Eastern Europe, as well as most of the Arab world,
he could sustain a long war. Iran captured the
Fao peninsula,
triangle of shifting
sand in the
a desolate but strategically important
far
south of Iraq, which sticks out into
the Gulf, by a surprise attack in 1986. Iraq planned a counterattack.
The Republican Guard was expanded from one to thirty-seven brigades. More weapons were needed. A problem was the low price of This hit Iraqi revenues and the pockets of previously generous
oil.
the Gulf. Iraq looked increasingly to the United States and
allies in
with Australia the only Iraqi creditors
Britain, along
After a
visit to Iraq,
reported that Iraqi
Clement
Miller,
officials told
being paid.
still
an Eximbank credit
him not
to
specialist,
worry "because Saddam
Hussein himself has sent around a circular that
said,
very simply, 'Pay
the Americans.'" In the Gulf, Iraqi planes were attacking Iranian
French Exocet
missiles.
The
facilities,
down an
By
under the American
Gulf The U.S. Navy attacked Iranian
showed
He
that the
all
290
civil-
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani believed
United States had joined the war on the Iraqi
persuaded Ayatollah Khomeini that the odds against Iran
were now too
great.
The
Iranian leader, telling his people that he
"drain the bitter cup," accepted a cease-fire on August
There was a second, unspoken reason
for Iran
had been using poison gas extensively on the
On April
ofl
eliminated the small Iranian navy, and in July 1988, shot Iranian civilian airliner en route to Dubai, kiUing
ians onboard. Iranian President
side.
sail
the United States effectively joined, on die Iraqi side, the so-
called "tanker war" in the
this
tankers with
Iranians retaliated against Kuwait.
agreeing that the Kuwaiti tanker fleet could flag,
oil
17, 1988, the
1988.
ending the war. Iraq
battlefield
from 1984 on.
Republican Guard counterattacked
carefully prepared assault. cially built
8,
The
must
at
Fao
in a
troops had previously trained at a spe-
model of the battleground at Lake Habbaniya, northwest of
Baghdad. Iranian Revolutionary Guards were pounded by heavy artillery, aerial
bombing, and
gas. After
two days of fighting, the Iran-
UT OF THE ASHES were routed. Iraq used not only mustard
ian troops
gas,
The mixture of deadly
gases such as tabun and sarin.
but nerve
gases
made
impossible for the Iranians to take countermeasures against
—and the
them. The effectiveness of gas attack
—may have convinced Saddam of the made
Iraq a regional
power and the
the seven countries that border die Gulf.
It
with an army often divisions and ended
with
the end of the war
it
it
started the
Saddam proved
up.
war
in
1980
fifty-five divisions.
coreligionists in Iran. Iraq
won
had fought
all
By
that
military defeats,
initial
the durability of his regime. For
patriotic exaggerations, the Iraqi Shia
Europeans, and
it
strongest of
had a tank force of four thousand and rockets
could reach Tehran or Tel Aviv. By surviving
of
great importance
of the weapon. This explains his determination not to give Iran
it
failure of the outside
world to react
The war with
all
the governments
fiercely against their
support from both superpowers, the
much of the Arab world.
None of this was cost-free.
Iraq, with a population of just 17 million
people, ended the war with at least 200,000 dead, 400,000 wounded,
and 70,000 taken
as prisoners. It
is
difficult
today to find an Iraqi
who
Saddam By the end of the war, he owed $25.7 billion
did not lose a close relative. There was also the financial cost.
fought the war on credit. to Saudi Arabia, states.
A
and the Iraq's
rest
at
to the
United
States,
crisis
Europe,
made much
of
because of the war. Confronting the emir of
an Arab summit conference in Baghdad in April 1990, he
"War
tler or
owed
of the industriafized world. Saddam later
economic
Kuwait said:
$10 biUion to Kuwait, and smaller sums to other Arab
further $40 billion was
doesn't
more
mean just
tanks, artillery, or ships. It
can take sub-
insidious forms, such as the overproduction of
nomic damage, and pressures gerated. Iraq's
oil
to enslave a nation." This
revenues in 1990 were due to
the course of the year
It
was
in a
much
rise to
oil,
eco-
sounds exag-
$13.7 billion in
better condition to pay
its
debts than countries like Brazil or Argentina.
The its
victory over Iran
extent. This
end of the in
It
real,
but
Saddam
was underlined on August
fighting,
Baghdad.
was
Iraqi
1989, a year after the
monument was opened Arc de Triomphe. Two metal forearms,
when an
was an
8,
grossly exaggerated
extraordinary
each forty feet long, reach out of the ground clutching steel sabers,
whose
tips cross,
forming an arch under which the Iraqi army
THE ORIGINS OF SADDAM HUSSEIN
S3
The arms were modeled from a cast taken of Saddam s own arms. They were too big to be made in Iraq and were cast in a metal foundry in Basingstoke, England. The invitation to guests for the
passed.
inauguration of the
monument
captures the flavor of the event:
"The ground bursts open and from
it
springs the
arm
that repre-
power and determination, carrying the sword of Qadissiya. It is ann of the Leader President Saddam Hussein (God preserve and watch over him) enlarged forty times. It springs out to announce the sents
the
good news of victory
been
filled
to
all
Iraqis
and puUs
in
its
wake a net
that has
with the helmets of the enemy."
Did the U.S. and Britain move to limit Iraq's power in the Gulf after the end of the war? Iraq later published a report from Brigadier Fahd Ahmed al-Fahd, Kuwaiti director-general of state security,
about his
"We agreed
visit
to the
CIA
October 1989. One item
in
with the American side that
it
was important
says:
to take
advantage of the deteriorating economic situation in Iraq in order to
common
put pressure on that country's government to dehneate our border."
The
point
is
only one of
entirely surprising that
many
Kuwait thought
in the report,
this a
and
good moment
it is
not
to settle
a territorial dispute concerning Bubiyan and Warba, two Kuwaiti
Gulf
islands that block Iraq's access to the
From February on,
Iraq's relations
riorated rapidly. In 1989,
with the U.S. and Britain dete-
Saddam severed relations with the CIA. John
Kelly, the U.S. assistant secretary
of
state, visited
Baghdad.
He
said:
'Tou are a force for moderation in the region, and the United States wants to broaden her relationship with Iraq." But Saddam immediately took exception to criticism of himself
On
on the Voice of America.
February 23, Saddam warned Arab leaders meeting
in
Jordan of
the waning power of the Soviet Union and the growing dominance of the United States in the Middle East.
—and the entire Arab world—
Gulf
ruled by the United States." At the zoft,
not vigilant, this area will be
same time, he arrested Farzad Bar-
an Iranian-bom journalist working for die British newspaper the
Observer,
dad
He said: "If the population of tlie is
who was accused of espionage. King Hussein went to BaghAbdul Karim al-Kabariti, who later
to appeal for his release.
became the Jordanian prime dam, This
is
minister, recalls:
"The King
said to Sad-
the beginning of the slippery slope [toward Iraq breaking
aUT OF THE ASHES with the West]. see what
Do
not
kill
can do about
I
him even
it.'
When
he
if
found that Barzoft had been executed [on March
15]."
said:
'I'll
Amman, he Saddam
sys-
On April 2, Baghdad radio broadcast a army officers. He said: "If the IsraeUs try anything
tematically escalated the
speech he made to
Saddam
a spy.'
is
the Idng got back to
against us, we'U see to
crisis.
that half their country
it
destroyed by
is
fire."
The speech was
in strong Iraqi dialect
audience. "I shall
bum half your house" is a colloquial expression com-
and designed
domestic
for a
mon among Baghdad street toughs. It
was a measure of Iraq's strength
that
on April 28
it
could
still
get
twenty-one Arab monarchs and heads of state to attend a summit in
Baghdad. Here Saddam targeted Kuwait for waging economic war against Iraq.
had moved
By the middle
of July, the
to the Kuwaiti border.
first
Republican Guard division
Two more
followed. There
was an
atmosphere of crisis, but an underlying presumption that the worst Iraq could do would be to This explains
settle its
why April
border dispute with Kuwait by force.
Glaspie, the U.S. ambassador in Baghdad, in a
notorious interview with
Saddam on
July 25, emphasized that the
United States had no opinion on "your border disagreement with Kuwait." Five days tee of die
later,
John Kelly told the Middle East subcommit-
House of Representatives
in
obligation for the United States to use
Washington
its
tliat
Kuwait certainly believed the threat was
limited.
emir, Sheikh Jabr al-Sabah, to the airport after the
and asked
sion, Sheikli Jabr
wrote to
weaken us and
said
he could
On July 31, on die eve of the Iraqi inva-
his brodier teUing
sions to die Iraqis at a final
Saddam drove its Baghdad summit
The emir
for the use of the disputed islands.
not give up part of his country.
there was no
forces if Iraq invaded Kuwait.
summit
in
him
to
make no conces-
Jeddah. "The Saudis want to
exploit our concessions to the Iraqis so that
we
will
make concessions to them in die demihtarized zone," he wrote. "As for the Iraqis, they wish to compensate for the cost of their war from our resources. Neither
demand will bear
fruit
.
.
.
that
is
also the position
of our friends in Egypt, Washington, and London."
Most of the
Iraqi leadership probably realized that
Saddam had
overplayed his hand, but after 1979 they were unlikely to contradict him. Tariq Aziz, the suave Iraqi foreign minister, later disclosed that the original Iraqi plan was for a partial invasion of Kuwait.
The
Iraqi
THE ORIGINS DF SADDAM HUSSEIN army was
to seize
Rumailah
Bubiyan and Warba,
The decision to moment" by Saddam
tries.
made
all tlie
The
U.S. and Britain
the Gulf to Iraq.
He
argued that
By
element
Saddam could have
islands off Kuwait, but not the
dif-
gotten
whole emi-
Saddam made easy
taking the whole of Kuwait,
world against him.
political miscalculations
invaded the Soviet Union in 1941. Perhaps tional
would make no
were never going to hand over hegemony in
their task of uniting the rest of the
one of the greatest
"it
how much of Kuwait was taken by Iraq.
difference in the world.
away with taking two barren rate.
between the two coun-
take the whole of Kuwait was taken "at the last himself.
ference to the United States" It
as well as the disputed
that straddles the border
oil field
S5
It
was, perhaps,
by any leader since Hider at
the
last
in his personality, the warrior-hero,
minute, the
came
irra-
to the fore as
he compared himself with Nebuchadnezzar, S argon of Akkad, the Prophet
he had
Mohammed, and
rebuilt
Saladin.
At the height of the Iran-Iraq war
Nebuchadnezzar's palace in the ancient
on the Euphrates.
city
of Babylon
Now he would establish himself as the preeminent
Arab leader who broke the power of the West and what he termed "the emirs of oil" in the Middle East. In any event, once the die was cast,
there was to be no compromise or retreat.
In the
six
months between the invasion of Kuwait and the
the allied bombing, Iraqis waited for
Once
Saddam
start
of
to pull out of Kuwait.
the United States had assembled
its vast coalition and was army in Saudi Arabia, Iraq's position got weaker and more isolated. Saddam had sympathy on the street in many Arab countries, but there were no revolutions. The Soviet Union cooperated with the United States. At the end of the day, Saddam's own army would not fight. Eleven years after Saddam began his campaign to make Iraq a regional superpower, the country had been
building up
its
reduced to semicolonial servitude.
Nothing than the
illustrated the Iraqi leader's
enemy he was
he had determined neighbors
Now the
—and the
humiUation more starkly
forced to tolerate in his midst. Years before,
to build himself rest of the
victorious allies
weapons
—
world
to
that
would force
acknowledge
his
his
power
had made him accept a group of officially
sanctioned spies, charged with rooting out the weapons and the secrets that
surrounded them.
FOUR
Saddam
Fights for
His Long
Dr.
Hussain al-Shahristani lay on the
Arm
soft carpet,
unable to move.
Eight months before, in September 1979, he and the other
members of the Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission had been summoned by Saddam Hussein to a special meeting. The dictator, only recently installed as the absolute master of Iraq, informed them that the country's nuclear research should be redirected to "develop our potential
in
strategic
fields."
Al-Shahristani,
an internationally
respected expert on neutron activation, had been the only person to object to what was obviously a plan to develop nuclear weapons.
"We have in
signed the nonproliferation treaty and
nonpeaceful uses of atomic energy," he had said "Dr. Shahristani,
tics to
on
we
I
politics
flatly.
suggest you stick to your field and leave poli-
me," rephed the being the
cannot engage
art
dictator,
who then
delivered his
little
homily
of saying one thing, intending to do another,
and then embarking on yet another course of action.
During one
at
this
exchange, the room had gone deathly quiet. Every-
the meeting
knew what was
likely to
happen
to the short.
SADDAM FIGHTS FOR
LONG ARM
HIS
BV
bespectacled physicist for daring to defy Saddam. They were In one of the interrogation centers of the
Amn
right.
al-Amm, an
intelhgence service reporting directly to the presidential palace, Dr. al-Shahristani s wrists
were
tied
behind
back by a rope that held
his
him hanging in the air while they beat him for twenty-two days and nights. Then he was taken to face a "revolutionary court," charged with the capital crimes of spying for the United States, Iran, and Israel.
There were three judges, two of whom were
fast asleep.
True to form, al-Shahristani, even though half paralyzed from the torture,
had lashed out
the Prophet, he pointed out,
ham.
"I
hanging court.
at this
who
He was
descended from
was descended from Abra-
in turn
challenge you and the president to
tell
me who his grandfather
was." At the sound of this suicidal insolence, the two slumbering
judges woke up. "If your family has lived for land," continued the defiant prisoner,
"it
five
thousand years in
this
does not matter if you respect
the president or not."
The charges tliemselves, were enough
age,
someone on high believed be
still
useful.
cial section"
sixty
for
Saddam s parent-
speedy death sentence. But apparently
that the scientist's nuclear expertise might
He was consigned to life in prison and taken to the "spe-
of the
Abu Ghraib
men were crammed
random beatings or
When
alone the allusions to
let
to earn a
prison,
where anywhere from
execution.
they came and bfindfolded him one morning in August
assumed
1980, eight months after his arrest, al-Shahristani had
he was going luxurious
to
villa,
be
killed after
all.
that
But instead, he found himself in a
the former residence, so he later discovered, of the
minister for planning,
who had been executed
in the
previous year. His guards showered and shaved him still
forty to
removed only
into small, windowless cells,
paralyzed from the torture
before leaving him on the carpet.
—and
—
purge of the
his
drenched him
arms were in
cologne
He was going to have some impor-
tant visitors.
Two men came
into the room.
Shahristani recognized
member
him
as
One
of them stood by the door. Al-
Abdul Razaq al-Hashemi, a hard-faced
of the Baadiist inner circle
who was
then minister of higher
The other, whose features resembled those of Saddam Hussein, came and sat on a chair close by the recumbent physicist.
education.
a
"
OUT DF THE ASHES
Sa This was Barzan leader.
half-brother and close confidant of the
al-Tikriti,
At the time, he was chief of the Mukhabarat, the secret police
and one of the several competing
by the regime.
When he
intelligence organizations deployed
spoke, his voice was
full
"The president is very sorry that you have been license of the rival intelligence service,
"We would
tani.
ready for you "I
"I
am
am
at
like
fit
"We have give us a long
arm
.
.
,"
you to go back to work.
to al-Shahris-
We have a nice place all
and mentally paralyzed," repHed
we need you
important programs,
We
.
he turned back
al-Shaliristani.
to work."
atomic bomb.
"Sir
said. "It's
the palace."
physically
not
he
Amn al-Amm." After cursing to Razaq at the brutal
the fault of the
all
of friendly concern.
arrested,"
work on the
to
need the atomic bomb," Barzan explained,
map
to reshape the
"to
of the Middle East."
interrupted Razaq from the doorway, worried that his
master was saying too much.
Barzan waved a hand to quiet him. looking at the
man on
"Don't worry, he
is
in
the
mean what
say,"
I
he
said,
then turning to reassure his aide.
floor,
our hands.
"I
He
can never be free again."
Al-Shahristani tried to close off the discussion by protesting that
would be of no use on a weapons
his particular expertise
Barzan would have none of it. can do," he
said. "It
is
every
"We know your
Lying on the tani
still
floor, his useless
managed
to
answer back.
to
be
arms "I
and what you
duty to serve his country. Any-
citizen's
one who refuses does not deserve
ability
project, but
alive."
trailing at his sides, al-Shahris-
agree with you that
we
should
all
serve our country," he riposted. "But what you are doing does not serve our country."
Barzan looked
at
him, as al-Shahristani
recalls, "like I
was mad"
—
not unreasonable assumption under the circumstances. Then, says Shahristani,
'At least we are agreed that we should now and think about what I have said.'
and rephed, try.
Rest
al-
"He gave a yellow smile,' as we say in Arabic, a false smile, all
serve our coun-
Al-Shahristani was to have ten years in solitary confinement to reflect
on Barzan's words, but he never buckled. Eventually, during
the chaos of the Gulf
War
in 1990, his astonishing fortitude
rewarded when he won over the
was
"trusty" assigned to deliver his
SADDAM FIGHTS FOR
LONG ARM
HIS
Saddam
meals. This man, a Palestinian incarcerated by
Yasser Arafat, agreed to help
Mukhabarat
the physicist
car,
S9
as a favor to
him escape. Exiting the jail in a made his way to the north and
stolen
across
the Iranian border to freedom.
Saddam and
In al-Shahristani, individual
who
his
henchmen had found
refused to buckle. But they had
recruiting others to help deliver the "long
spoken.
The nuclear program went
presiding genius of Jafr Dia scientist. Jafr
had
point of telling
into high gear in
he
left
1982 under
that
would be impossible
it
The
tlie
friend and fellow
tried to help his imprisoned colleague,
Saddam
trouble in
arm" of which Barzan had
Jafr, al-Shahristani's
the project without al-Shahristani's help. this as a threat
little
a rare
to
even to the
proceed with
dictator interpreted
of noncooperation and had Jafr arrested the
moment
the presidential office. Rather than torturing this scientist,
Saddam opted
to
whip up
enthusiasm by having others tortured
his
to death in front of him. Jafr
saw the
light,
accepted the unlimited
resources and benefits placed at his disposal, and set to work.
By
1990, he was on the verge of success.
No one knows precisely how many biUions of doUars were lavished on the Iraqi bomb project. Even during the darkest years of the IranIraq war,
work proceeded
at
fuU speed.
The
scale of the project, tlie
creation of a network of foreign contractors,
and the success with
which the program was kept out of the international public eye were a
monument not only to the talents of Jafr and the overall director of the scheme from 1987, Saddams cousin and son-in-law Hussein Kamel (Barzan had sHpped from favor in 1983), but also to the insouciance of the Western powers.
It
project was complete.
was not as
Even when
agreed to help finance the Iraqi
repayment about
it,"
in nuclear devices,
says
if the veil
of secrecy surrounding the
a close U.S.
ally,
bomb program on
Washington took no
one former U.S. diplomat
Saudi Arabia,
the promise of action. "I
the Saudi contribution, "and so did the CIA." In 1989, a senior at
knew
in the region in reference to official
the U.S. Department of Energy learned that nuclear detonators of
the most advanced land were being shipped from the United States to
Baghdad, indicating that designs for the actual operational Iraqi nuclear warhead were far pected.
He therefore
more
sophisticated than previously sus-
requested that intelligence scrutiny of the Iraqi
— OUT OF THE ASHES
90
program be made a high
priority.
The request was
question fired from his post and exiled to a bureaucratic
official in
Siberia. In explanation of this curious indifference, recalls diat,
our It
ally,
rejected and the
"We knew about
and anyway, we
was off the
one former
official
bomb program, but Saddam was how far along they really were.
their
didn't realize
radar." Official assessments
assumed
that Iraq
was
still
ten years from producing an atomic bomb. In
fact,
die
bomb program proposed by Saddam
which had commenced
early operations in 1982
back
and gone
in 1979,
into high
gear in 1988, had been far more successful than anyone in the outside
bomb
world had realized. As with any
was the production of fissile materials
nium
program, the crucial element
—
either
uranium 235 or pluto-
239. Jafr and his associates pursued a variety of
means
for pro-
ducing the requisite materials, an enormously costly approach. Simultaneously, others
among
and technicians assigned
warhead design
The
the eight-thousand-strong force of scientists to the nuclear
as well as a missile with
weapons program which
target date for production of a complete
toiled
on a
to deliver the
weapon.
weapon was
1991. In
before the Gulf War, the weapons design team was on the
fact, just
verge of success.
nium enriched Realizing
The program to produce a sufficient quantity of ura"bomb grade" was, however, far behind schedule.
to
this, in
the
fall
of 1990
tlie
high
command gave orders to take
enriched uranium from die country's one
officially
acknowledged
research reactor (which had hitherto been kept separate from the secret
weapons program) and process
it
into
bomb-grade
material.
Had this crash effort been concluded, Saddam would have had at least one bomb by the end of 1991.
Only
in the fall of 1990,
pubhc support for war with for official U.S. concern.
when
President Bush was seeking to rally
Iraq, did
Saddam's
bomb become a matter
PoUs showed that Americans, while generally
unmoved by the fate of Kuwait and its royal family, were agreed that a nuclear-armed Saddam was a serious matter. Sites known to be associated with the Iraqi nuclear program were given a high priority in the
bombing
plans and
were duly pulverized during the
air offensive
including the plant where the "crash program" was being frantically
implemented. By the end of the war, the White House and the Penta-
gon congratulated themselves on having destroyed the bulk of Sad-
SADDAM FIGHTS FDR
LDNG ARM
HIS
dam's nuclear weapons manufacturing potential. In
bombing had
fact,
though the
command was
damage, the U.S. high
inflicted severe
91
being overly optimistic. The Iraqi Los Alamos, an enormous complex south of Baghdad, that was the center of the entire
at al-Atlieer,
nuclear effort, escaped unscathed,
its
unknown
very existence
to die
Americans.
Nuclear weapons were not the only "unconventional" weapons
espoused by Saddam oil billions
and the
in the years before the
financial support of the
embarked on a wild spending tists
of
Gulf War Flush with
Arab
spree. Just as
oil states,
he gave
his
Saddam had
his nuclear scien-
carte blanche to investigate every possible route to the production
materials for a
fissile
bomb,
so he authorized limitless budgets for
research and development on advanced unconventional weapons of types that had hitherto been considered affordable only by superpowers.
Some
Gerald
convinced Saddam to invest huge sums in
Bull,
a giant cannon. cal
A
of these initiatives verged on the bizarre.
Of these,
tlie
Canadian, Dr.
his "supergun,"
only ones that ever saw use were chemi-
weapons.
The
British
had used poison gas on
fractious Iraqi
Kurds
in the
1920s and the Baghdad regime had used the same means on Kurds
middle of the war he had so rashly
in the 1960s. In 1984, in the
launched against Iran, Saddam turned to
traditional
this
Iraqi
standby and began using chemical weapons in large quantities on the front
lines. It
proved wonderfully efficacious
as a
defense against
"human wave"
the
Iranians.
attacks of teenage volunteers launched by the With the help of foreign experts and a host of willing sup-
pliers, particularly in
made
Germany, the
Iraqi chemical
weapons industry
From the early use of mustard gas, World War I, the local technicians and their
rapid progress.
developed in
initially
foreign
helpers rapidly progressed to "nerve agents" such as sarin and tabun, developed but never used by the
Whereas old-fashioned breathed to
kill
World War
II.
skin.
Iraqi progress with these nerve-gas
weapons was widely advertised.
However, by the end of the war, Baghdad's assistance
in
mustard gas had to be
the victim, the nerve gases could be deadly from the
merest contact with a victim s
man
Germans
variants such as
—had
also
made
scientists
—again with Ger-
significant strides in
producing VX, a
OUT OF THE ASHES
92
yet deadlier nerve agent that had the additional advantage of being safer to manufacture.
Saddam was preparing to put chemical warheads on long-range missiles and launch them at Iranian cities. In the final weeks of the war,
General al-Samarrai
which
illustrates their chilling
alties. Staff officers air,
of a tactical problem facing the Iraqi army,
tells
determination to maximize civiUan casu-
were concerned
would not penetrate
into houses
that the gas, being heavier than
and
offices in
Tehran and other
Even those close to a missile strike might survive if they kept windows shut. The plan devised by the Iraqi mifitary therefore
cities.
their
was to
first
send in Iraqi fighter-bombers to
planned to bombard the in the
windows,"
strike at
Tehran. "They
with bombs that would break all the glass Saddam s former miUtary intelligence chief.
city
recalls
"This would allow the gas to spread."
At
least
one source present
Tehran
in
at
the time believes that
the Iranians were aware of the Iraqi plan and that factors that finally
it
was one of the
persuaded Ayatollah Khomeini to stop
fighting.
Even if the Iranians remained unaware of how near Saddam had come to wiping out a large slice of their urban civifian population, the Iraqi leader
felt that his initiative in
developing these weapons
of mass destruction had yielded ample dividends. Not only had they
broken the back of the Iranian mass enabled Saddam,
at
long
last,
to
cow
attacks,
but they had also
the perennially rebelhous
Kurds into submission. The horror of the chemical attack on the of Halabja, in which
dren had been
five
thousand Kurdish men, women, and
killed in the space of half
with further attacks on
civilians in
city
chil-
an hour, was followed up
other parts of Kurdistan.
According to General al-Samarrai,
if
the Iranians had fought on
they would have been subjected to attacks from the third of Saddam s
unconventional weapons
developed during World
initiatives.
War
II,
Biological
principally
weapons had been
by the
British.
Through-
out the 1950s and 1960s, Britain, the United States, and the Soviet
Union had spent many infecting an
enemy with
billions
of doUars in refining the means of
disease.
But by the end of the 1960s, the
community had forsworn the research and development of such weapons, a fact that did not deter Saddam from embarking on his own ambitious program in the 1980s. The principal "agent" on international
SADDAM FIGHTS FOR
HIS
which his researchers, working in deepest tions
LONG ARM
secrecy, focused their atten-
was anthrax, a bacterium that naturally
livestock.
When humans become
spores, tliey initially exhibit the five days, lapse into toxic
93
infects cattle
infected
and other
by breathing anthrax
symptoms of flu and then,
after
two
to
shock and death.
At the time of the Gulf War, the outside world had only the vaguest inkling of the scope and success of
gram, as
it
Saddam s
biological pro-
did of his nuclear efforts. Thanks to the well-advertised
deployment of chemical weapons against Iran and the Kurds, the allied coalition
were more conscious of Iraq's potential
In the event,
the
allies
in that area.
Saddam never dared use chemical weapons
against
during the war, possibly out of fear of U.S. retaliation in kind.
Bush wrote a stem
Just before the war.
demanding
that
letter to
Saddam Hussein
he withdraw from Kuwait without conditions. The
president added that "the United States wiU not tolerate the use of
chemical or biological weapons or the destruction of Kuwait's
and
installations. Further,
rorist actions against
you will be held
members of the
oil fields
directly responsible for ter-
coahtion.
The American people
wiH demand the strongest possible response. You and your country will
pay a
terrible price if
you order unconscionable
acts of this sort." (It
has been subsequently assumed that Bush was threatening to use
nuclear weapons
if
Saddam
carried out any of the "unconscionable
acts" listed in the president's letter.
that
Saddam knew
that "if
A former senior CIA official insists
he used chemicals, we'd nuke him." Gen-
Saddam
eral al-Samarrai, intimate with
"Baghdad would have been a nuclear that, in fact, the U.S. military
at this time, believes that
target."
planned to
However,
retaliate
it
appears
own
with their
chemical arsenal in the event of an Iraqi chemical attack. General Walter
Boomer, the commander of the U.S. Marines
privately in
September 1990
in the Gulf, stated
that the United States
had shipped
large
stocks of these munitions to the region, ready for use in response to
Although the Pentagon issued a vehement
any Iraqi poison-gas
attack.
denial at the time,
Boomer was
certainly in a position to
know
the
truth.)
Along with
his
"weapons of mass destruction" Saddam had
also
invested large resources in long-range missiles with which to deliver
them on the enemy. Not only had he acquired
a large
number of
OUT DF THE ASHES
94 Scud medium-range entists
missiles
from the Russians,
had successfully labored
to
his
own
rocket
sci-
produce the "al-Hussein," an
adapted Scud with a longer range. Used against Saudi Arabia and Israel
during the Gulf War, though armed only with comparatively
innocuous conventional high-explosive warheads, the missiles pro-
duced mass panic
in Tel Aviv,
an unpleasant reminder of what might
Saddam had armed the weapons with more fearsome munitions some of which were already loaded in missile
have happened
if
—
warheads.
Thus
it
was that with the victory on the
battlefield, the U.S.
determined that Saddam would never again be able
one with mass destruction from chemical,
was
to threaten any-
or nuclear
biological,
weapons. The military were issuing glowing reports on the success of their
bombing campaign
against targets associated with these
weapons
programs, but just to make sure, the U.S. insisted that the cease-fire resolution passed
UN
by the
Security Council on April 3 should pro-
vide for continued economic sanctions until there had been a
accounting of
all
of Iraq's unconventional arsenal. (As
Washington was determined explicitly linking the rity
Council was, in
two
to continue sanctions in
issues
effect,
we have any
to
It
seen,
case.)
By
—sanctions and weapons—the Secu-
ceding control of United Nations policy
toward Iraq to whoever was adjudicating the question of weapons.
full
was a linkage that was
to
have profound effects
Iraq's
in the years
come. Phrased
in the uninspiring legalese
of all such documents, Security
Council Resolution 687 held momentous implications for the future of Iraq.
Apart from stringent injunctions regarding the payment of the
defeated country's foreign debts and compensation for damage
on Kuwait, the Security Council ordered the creation of a Special Commission "which shall carry out immediate on-site inspections of Iraq's biological, chemical and missile capabilities, based on
inflicted
Iraq's declarations
and the designation of any additional
the Special Commission
locations
by
itself."
Iraq was forever enjoined from developing or possessing such
weapons, along with any "nuclear weapons or nuclear-weapons-usable material." According to the somewhat mangled prose of paragraph twenty-two of the resolution, once
it
was agreed that Iraq had com-
SADDAM FIGHTS FOR plied with
all
the requirements on
on exports of
sanctions
its
HIS
LONG ARM
weapons of mass
from Iraq would be
oil
made
twenty-one, on the odier hand,
95
destruction, the
lifted.
(Paragraph
exports to Iraq conditional on
the "policies and practices of the Government of Iraq," a far vaguer
The resolution was written within a month of the cease-fire, when Washington still held out hope that Saddam would fall a period concept.)
victim to an internal military coup.
Thus the
stipulations
on the
accounting for Iraq's weapons of mass destruction were written pardy in the expectation that they
would be implemented by Saddam's suc-
cessors.
The
creation of the Special Commission, with the right of intru-
was an extraordinary imposition on Saddam,
sive inspection in Iraq,
who had
a leader
of his regime.
so successfully guarded the
Under the
lash of defeat,
unwholesome
secrets
he was being told to play
host to foreign "inspectors" while they conducted a fully fledged
espionage operation in his
The language of the
own
country.
resolution
makes
it
clear that
all
concerned
believed the task would not take very long. Iraq was given just
teen days to hand over types of
its
fif-
information on the location, amounts, and
all
nuclear, chemical, biological,
and
missile programs.
The
Commission would have 120 days to develop a plan for ensuring that Iraq had complied with the draconian stipulations of Special
the resolution. After
all,
given the well-advertised precision of the
American bombing campaign,
made up
first
this
commission,
little
more than
a bookkeeping exer-
This view was certainly shared by two very different men.
The
was Saddam Hussein.
The
A
was well aware that the bombing campaign weapons of mass destruction had been largely ineffec-
Iraqi leader
against his tual.
appeared that
of experts drawn from the United States, Great Britain,
and other countries, would be cise.
it
significant portion of his
uranium
to
bomb
production
facilities for
enriching
grade had not even been targeted. The Americans
were completely unaware that
Jafr's
engineers had adapted and
advanced a method of enriching uranium through the "calutron" system, or that Iraqi missile designers were in the process of devel-
oping a homegrown missile with a range of 1,250 miles. The
bombers had
failed, despite
enormous
efforts, to hit a single
mobile
OUT DF THE ASHES
96 Scud
missile launcher during the war.
Saddam
still
had large stocks
of chemical ammunition on hand. His main biological-weapons production center
Thus lution,
it
al-Hakam had remained untouched. The enemy
at
know
did not even
was
existed.
it
that as soon as the Security Council passed the reso-
Saddam ordered
his
diplomats to offer
full
cooperation with
the United Nations team that would be coming to certify that the
weapons had been or would be destroyed. At a private meeting the presidential palace, he laid out a very different agenda. "The Special Commission leader. will
"We
be over
Among
will fool
in a
is
those
a temporary measure," said the Iraqi
them and we
few months."
in
It
will bribe
them and the matter
Was a bad miscalculation.
summoned to this secret conference was General He knew exactly what his master was talking about.
Wafiq al-Samarrai.
Saddam
"thinks that everything
explained al-Samarrai years
possible
is
later.
tus gave presents of hard currency cies in the
world and to
if you
"We in the
officials
and gold to other intelligence agen-
who
are
now
governments." The Iraqi leader was under no
and
British inspectors could
he remarked
weak be
at the
have enough money,"
Iraqi inteUigence appara-
be corrupted
ministers in different
illusions that
in this way,
American
which was why
meeting that "the inspectors should come from
countries and from countries that believe the sanctions should
lifted."
Obviously, even the most venal inspection team could not be
completely neutrahzed, so Saddam formulated a policy of calculated concessions.
The
not complete
inspectors
would be given reasonably
—information
on
Iraq's
stocks
full
—though
of chemicals
and
was assumed that the Americans and their alHes would already have a great deal of data on these highprofile programs. The nuclear and biological programs would, howimported missiles because
ever,
it
be kept carefully concealed.
When the Iraqis heard who had been selected to head this "Special Commission," Tall
and
thin,
it
seemed
that
Saddam s optimism had been
justified.
with gray hair and a deceptively mild manner, Rolf
Ekeus was a diplomat from
traditionally neutral
and dovish Sweden
who had spent much of his career in the arcane world of arms-control negotiations. Iraqi diplomats remembered him fondly from 1976,
SADDAM FIGHTS FDR
HIS
when as Swedish liaison with the Palestine had worked effort that
them
closely with
PLO
get the
at
LONG ARM
97
liberation Organization he
New York to
the United Nations in
the right to speak in front of the Security Council, an
roused the venomous
ire
of the United States and
Israel.
In
1988, he had been his country's representative at the Conference on
Disarmament in Geneva, an ongoing international negotiation crafting
Baghdad government
a worldwide ban on chemical weapons. If the
had scrutinized his record closely at the time of his appointment to the Special Commission, however, they might have noticed an episode that gave
warning of trouble ahead.
As noted, when
Iraqi warplanes
showered
tard gas on the inhabitants of Halabja in
governments stayed mute.
Sweden, wished
No
sarin, tabun,
and mus-
March 1988, the worlds
one, including the government of
discommode Saddam Hussein, the hammer of
to
the ayatollahs. Ekeus found this outrageous and informed his foreign minister that, whatever the pohcy, he was going to
speech to the conference denouncing
he duly
ment
did.
He
was the only
in the world, apart
of barbarism
this act
make
a
—^which
representative of any govern-
official
from the Iranians,
to
do
so.
Like Saddam, Ekeus thought that the United Nations Special Commission on Iraq, soon to be known as Unscom, with headquarters in
New
York,
would be a short-term operation.
should be over quickly," he said
would be cheap.
When
later.
he arrived
in
thought
it
At the time, he also hoped
it
New York
to take
he discovered that no funds had been allocated
The only way he could
organization. sonally
vouch
for a loan
fund, which he did with fact that
A humane
up
his post,
for the fledgling
some money was
to per-
from the secretary general's ready cash
some
he had a wife and
raise
"I
six
trepidation, reflecting gloomily
on the
children to support.
man, Ekeus had noted the reports of the suffering
caused by sanctions on
oil
exports
—sanctions
that
would remain
in
force unless and until he certified to the Security Council that Sad-
dam had complied with appointed. things.
years just
I
But
had things
I felt I
to
do before
I
moved
to
New
I
was
York, family
couldn't afford to wait a day," he recaUed seven
later. "Iraqi oil
about
Resolution 687. "I was in Vienna when
exports had
been thirteen
thirty-five million a day.
billion dollars a year,
My conscience would not permit
"
OUT OF THE ASHES
9a
me
to delay
even one
day.
I
That day
thought,
will cost the Iraqi
children thirty- five million dollars.'
Meanwhile, of course,
White House,
it
at
meetings behind closed doors
was being decided that sanctions would
Saddam Hussein remained
the
at
stay in place
—
power that is to say, as long as he lived. At the CIA, news of the courtly Swede s appointment was greeted with a certain apprehension. "We were very, very skeptical of
as long as
what began admitted rity
as Ekeus's
open-minded approach," a senior CIA
Nor were
later.
in
Bob
Gallucci, a State Depart-
officer suspected of "liberal" attitudes
toward arms control, had
establishment thrilled to hear that
ment
official
hard-line officials in the U.S. national secu-
been appointed
as the
Swede s
deputy.
Ekeus was determined that he should have
— team "People
I
who would owe than to him.
He
he knew from
trusted"
their
his
own people on
—rather than a group selected by
first
his
others,
own governments rather recruiting drive among people
loyalties to their
therefore set out on a
his days negotiating
chemical disarmament.
Among
them was Nildta Smidovich, an expert on chemical and biological weapons at the Soviet foreign ministry, son of a diplomat and grandson of the general who had Uberated Vienna at the end of World War II. Smidovich, a burly young
man
with drooping mustaches, had already
enjoyed the unique experience of ferreting out a forbidden weapons
program Back tional
—one
that
was being concealed from
in 1972, the Soviet
own government.
his
Union, along with the bulk of the interna-
community, had acceded to President Nixon's suggestion that
biological
weapons be
forsaken. But, under the justification that the
United States could not
really
have closed
down
their program, the
had carried on with and even expanded research and development of biological weapons. Even as the cold war wound down Soviet military
in the era of
rapprochement between the United States and the
reformist regime of Mikhail Gorbachev, this huge effort continued,
employing thousands of
scientists
whose very existence was kept
hidden away
secret even from
in
remote
Gorbachev
institutes
himself.
In 1989, U.S. secretary of state James Baker, apprised by his
own
intelligence of the secret Soviet effort, casually pointed out a build-
ing visible from the highway near
Moscow down which he was
dri-
SADDAM FIGHTS FDR
LONG ARM
HIS
99
ving with the then Soviet foreign minister, Edvard Schevardnadze.
weapons program," he
"That's part of your biological
news
to
who
Schevardnadze,
exchange to Gorbachev
upon confronted
said.
This was
kept a straight face but reported the
Gorbachev there-
at the first opportunity.
who
his generals,
brazenly denied the existence of
the program. Schevardnadze then charged Smidovich with the task
of finding out the truth. Relentlessly picking his thicket of
half-truths,
lies,
way through the
and evasions with which the Soviet
mili-
tary surrounded their bacteriological arsenal, Smidovich eventually
forced the military to admit what was going on. that
was
to stand
him
in
It
was an experience
good stead when Ekeus put him
to
work
investigating the secrets of the Soviets' former ally Iraq.
Others recruited for Ekeus's commission were no Scott Ritter, for example,
had been a career
less eclectic.
officer with the U.S.
Marines. During the Gulf War, Major Ritter, then attached to military intelligence, wrote a report
on the enormous
allied effort to
seek out and destroy the mobile Scud missile launchers deployed against Israel
and Saudi Arabia. His conclusion, that not a
single
such launcher had been destroyed, was not only accurate but sharply at variance with the official line from the high
command.
Such independent thinking was not
his career
prospects. Subsequently, he
fell in
likely to
enhance
love with a Ukrainian
woman
and, in defiance of official edicts against such liaisons between intelligence personnel and citizens of the former Soviet Union, married her.
While he was compelled
security risk, his wife
to leave the military as a potential
was recruited by the CIA
as a translator
and
duly laden with security clearances. Reviewing Ritter's resume,
Ekeus had no all
hesitation in signing
him up
for his team.
They were
entering uncharted territory. Not since an interalhed commission
had roamed Germany
after
World War
I
in a (failed) effort to
destroy the defeated country's weapons-making potential had anything like this been attempted. Ekeus's
first
forays to Saddam's capital
by old acquaintances from the fect English
and observing the
were
beguiling.
Iraqi foreign ministry,
all
He was met
speaking per-
niceties of diplomatic protocol. It
was
not until late June 1991 that he had a glimpse of the real face of the
— 1
OUT OF THE ASHES
aa
regime.
The
occasion was the
operation and
tlie
first
confrontation between the
UN
government. The inspectors had stumbled across a
crucial part of the secret nuclear program.
Technically, responsibility for dealing with Iraqi nuclear issues
belonged to the International Atomic Energy Agency (the IAEA). This was the body that had regularly reported before the war that Iraq was in
full
comphance with the Nuclear Nonprohferation
Treaty and gave no signs of a covert nuclear weapons program.
was therefore
in the bureaucratic interests of the
any evidence to the contrary. However, seers operated as part of
It
IAEA to downplay
in Iraq, the nuclear over-
Ekeuss team. Their chief was an ebullient
American named David Kay. In late June,
pected nuclear
Kay was preparing facility in a
to lead a
team
to look at a sus-
place called Tarmiya, a few hours' drive
outside Baghdad. Saddam's plan to keep the scope of his nuclear
—and the degree which bombing— was already effort
to
secret
Jafr's scientists
it
had escaped destruction
in the
A month
one of
falling apart.
had managed
to
make
his
earUer,
way to Kurdistan and make The
contact with the American forces there before they withdrew. Iraqi nuclear overseers
were
unaware of the
as yet
betrayal, since
the scientist had faked a car accident, complete with an incinerated
Now
body.
the defector was telling
cans, information that
up shop
that Iraq
giant
to the inspection
Among his more
Baghdad.
in
had indeed found an
By
team
setting
interesting items of news
was
means of using calutrons around tried and discarded
efficient
magnets about twenty-five feet
in the
he knew to the Ameri-
that
all
was passed on
—
United States years before. this time,
CIA was
the
from the intelligence
willing to pass
satellites that
on information gleaned
hovered over
Iraq.
An
analyst
had
noted that large, round objects were being moved from a heavily bombed site called al-Tuwaitha to a military encampment in the West Baghdad suburb of Abu Ghraib. (Transmitting the information was proving a more
difficult
undertaking.
secure communications in Baghdad, so to
be sent
via a laborious
The all
UN
team had
as yet
confidential messages
no
had
book code, using a biography of George
Bush.)
Kay and
his
men, crowded
into
two Land Rovers and a bus, took
SADDAM FIGHTS FDR good care to
LONG ARM
HIS
IDl
arrive at the site unexpectedly, having led their Iraqi
"minders" to believe that they were headed to another destination.
At the
gate, they
were met by an astonished and angry base com-
mander who refused
to allow
American, threatening to
on
his satellite
call
them
the
UN
to enter.
Security Council in
New York
phone. Finally three inspectors were allowed to
climb a water tower just inside the fence.
men on
Kay played the ugly
A
few seconds
later,
the
the tower radioed to Kay.
"These guys are going out the back."
One of the Land Rovers
roared off in pursuit. Curiously, in view of
the importance vested in the whole inspection effort by the United
Nations and Washington, the operating on a shoestring. walkie-talkies picked
up
The
at
men and women on
the ground were
team was using their
own cameras and
Radio Shack. Their vehicles were
castoffs
from the British army, with the driving wheel on the wrong side for Iraq.
The one
racing to the rear of the base had a broken fuel gauge.
Two miles around the fence line, it spluttered to a halt, out of gas. The second Land Rover moved out, collected the stranded inspectors, and chased the convoy of huge transporters, heavily laden with calutrons, hurriedly exiting the base.
down
One inspector. Rich
Lally,
made two passes
the convoy and began to photograph the scene. Iraqi troops on
the convoy opened
fire
over his head.
off the
He ducked under the
as fast as he By Land Rover and demanded the camera and film, the
reemerged photographing
could.
the time
seat
officials roll
and cut
of film
He refused to turn over the camera. "The my wife told me before I left," Lally told Kay back at the base
was stashed on Lally s body. last
thing
gate, "was, 'Don't lose the
bloody camera.'
Kay finally called Ekeus on his satelhte phone and told him his men were under fire. Ekeus told him to withdraw. The fracas at the nuclear site was a turning point. It shattered any notions that the Iraqi nuclear program had been destroyed in the war or that the Iraqis were going to cooperate with the commission. Ekeus hurried to Baghdad. It was now clear, he told Tariq Aziz at
a meeting in Aziz's spacious
villa
near the
Tigris, that "Iraq has a
nuclear development program." Ever the diplomat, Ekeus chose the
word "development"
rather than "weapons" in order to be
more
pohte. Unfazed, Aziz denied everything without the shghtest trace
DUTDFTHEASHES
laZ
of embarrassment. For the
first
time,
Ekeus heard an explanation
with which he was to become famihar over the next few years.
you
we
really think
Iraqi with a beguifing
show of
sincere humihty.
"We
are not that
advanced, you know." The foreign minister and his deputy, Aziz's side, concurred,
as to
why
it
"Do
are capable of such an undertaking?" said the
throwing
in their
was simply impossible
own reasoned
for Iraq to have
sitting at
explanations
embarked on a
nuclear weapons program.
The
Iraqis
were
in the
middle of explaining that President Saddam
Hussein had ordered that the Foreign Ministry be dealings with the
in
charge of
all
UN inspectors when there was a sudden interruption
door opened and a uniformed newcomer strode noisily into the room and threw himself on a sofa "like a spoiled child," as Ekeus later as the
recalled. This
was Hussein Kamel, minister of defense, founder of the
Republican Guards, and overall supervisor of the huge
effort to pro-
duce weapons of mass destruction. From the moment of his the room, he clearly dominated the group of senior Iraqi
now
sat stiffly
and nervously
in their chairs.
Kamel did not speak English and the
arrival in
officials,
who
Alone of those present,
translation of
Ekeus s
carefully
enunciated points into Arabic was greeted with "coarse laughter from the sofa."
Of those
in the
room, only Kamel and Aziz knew that four days
on June 30, Saddam had set up a special high-level commitchaired by Aziz, to plan the concealment of weapons, materials,
before, tee,
and plans from Ekeus and
On July 7,
his inspectors.
the committee
came
to a tough decision. In
discovery of the calutrons, Iraq would have to
own up
view of the
to the nuclear
program. At the same time, however, the high-level group decided on a program to destroy, in secret, materials
wanted
on hand, the better
to keep.
The
dry riverbed close to
much
of the forbidden weapons and
to hide the essential items that Iraq
destruction was carried out later that Tikrit.
month
at
a
This decision was to dominate the whole
Saddam s hidden weapons
for years to come because, when Unscom deduced what had happened, the Iraqis were faced with demands to prove precisely what, and how much, had been destroyed. While the destruction was going on, some of the more precious
issue of
elements
in the Iraqi
weapons arsenal were being hidden away.
SADDAM FIGHTS FDR Some time
in July, the
LDNG ARM
HIS
secluded garden of a
villa in
1D3
Abu Ghraib was
torn apart as soldiers hurriedly buried a carefully chosen selection of parts
and production
from Project 1728,
tools
program
Iraq's
to
Unscom would
not even
learn of the existence of the project for another four years.
The bur-
manufacture
its
own homegrown
missile.
party was from the Special Republican Guard, an elite unit
ial
whose
duties
had hitherto consisted of safeguarding the person of
Saddam Hussein. The
villa
belonged to one of their
Izz al-Din al-Majid, Hussein Kamel's cousin
officers,
Major
and brother-in-law.
The same scene was being repeated elsewhere at other, carefully chosen sites around the country by members of this and other especially
trustworthy organizations, including the Mukhabarat
gence service and the
Amn
intelli-
al-Khass special security service, which
operated under the direct control of the presidential palace. So important
was task
tlie lies,
this responsibility that
were chosen only
the small
after the
number
of
men
selected for
most careful vetting of their fami-
their tribal ties, their absolute loyalty to
Saddam. They were being
entrusted with a secret that their leader considered almost as important as his
own
personal security.
It
may indeed be
that, for
the two were one and the same. These weapons had, after
Saddam, all,
been
conceived as the ultimate deterrent against his enemies in the world outside (not to mention inside Iraq's borders, as the Kurds had discov-
ered to their
cost).
By midsummer
1991,
involved (apart from to
Hans
it
was becoming clear to almost everyone
Blix,
concede the degree to which
head of the IAEA, who was reluctant tlie Iraqis
had fooled him over
nuclear weapons project) that Iraq was not prepared to
accounting of
its
various forbidden
embarked on an enormous gamble,
inspectors,
officials
had
tinue until
and
allies.
since
Saddam had for con-
we have seen, both President Bush and his senior
stated, for the record, diat
Saddam was gone. These
visible toll
full
by obstructing the
he was handing Washington a ready-made excuse
tinuing sanctions. As
the
weapons systems demanded,
through the United Nations, by the victorious therefore
make
dieir
on the people of
they wished sanctions to con-
sanctions
Iraq.
were taking a
terrible
There was, therefore, a slim
chance that outraged international public opinion might pressure the United States to
lift
the siege
—but not while Washington and London
"
aUTOFTHEASHES
1D4 could piously
insist that
Saddam was
clearly defying the
United
Nations by concealing his weapons.
The
Iraqi leader's
obduracy appears entirely
illogical.
Yet from his
point of view, the risks were evidently acceptable, especially as he tially
ini-
believed he could "fool" the investigators and get rid of them in
a short space of time. Back at
CIA
headquarters in Langley, Virginia,
senior officials pondering their opponents actions concluded that,
given the ruin inflicted on his conventional forces during the Gulf
War, Saddam
felt
he had
little
alternative. "In 1991,
conventional capabihty," explains one such after the
Saddam had zero
official. "I
war he was too busy dealing with day-to-day
long-term view.
He
think that right issues to take a
thought, 'We lost the battle, so we're going to
and grow the weapons programs.' Even though he was con-
retain
strained in his unconventional capabihty, that was his only option.
We
always thought that was what he was going to do."
"Unconventional" weapons held a natural attraction for Saddam because, after
all,
they had proved outstandingly useful in the past. As
noted above, the chemical weapons unleashed on the Iranians had turned the tide on the front lines and had played a key role in the
final
and successful offensives of 1988. The threat of using chemicals on Iranian cities
government Kurds
may
to
in this
also
throw
have played a role in convincing the Tehran
in the towel that year.
The
gas attacks
on the
same period had broken the back of the Kurdish
resis-
tance and reduced the population to a state of abject terror
Back
in the 1980s, in a relaxed
journalists
meeting with a group of
visiting
from the Gulf states, Saddam related an illuminating anec-
man walked through my village without carrying a weapon. An old man came up to him and said, 'Why are you asking for trouble?' He said, 'What do you mean?' The old man dote.
"When
I
was a
child, a
replied, 'By walking without a
attack you. Carry a
weapon
weapon, you are asking for people
so that
no blood will be
Apart from throwing an instructive dam's
village,
light
on
to
spilled!'
daily life in Ouija, Sad-
the story indicates his belief in the dangers of proceed-
unarmed and the benefits of possessing a powerful deterrent. He would fight long and hard to keep some vestige of his "strategic" arsenal. The United States and its aUies were no less determined to deprive him of any such capabihty so that King Fahd and their other ing
SADDAM FIGHTS FOR
LONG ARM
HIS
interests in the region could sleep in peace.
Thus the
stage
IDS was
set for
an ongoing confrontation.
One
veteran
CIA
covert operator admits that he and his col-
leagues were surprised as the extent of the secret Iraqi programs slowly
became apparent. "As we
greatly underestimated
what they
were before the war, so we greatly underestimated what they were after the war.
However, unlike Ekeus, we weren't disappointed to
were
find out the Iraqis
lying."
Over the summer of 1991, the CIA began judged Ekeus. Despite
his
As a
time,
first
in earnest
about probing Saddam s
agency became more willing to share infor-
result, the
mation. For the
had mis-
unpromising record in advocating disarma-
ment, the Swede appeared to be secrets.
to feel they
Ekeus was shown the
actual overhead
more important, he was
surveillance photographs and, even
told of
the existence and location of a "mother lode" of documents relating to the Iraqi nuclear program. In
team of in
forty-five
England
UN
for their
August 1991, a carefully selected
inspectors began training at a secret location
most important operation
yet.
The preparations were elaborate. The documents, according to the American
intelligence tip-off,
Office, in the heart of
were being kept
Baghdad. Ekeus and
would not have the luxury of browsing
his
at the
Central Records
people knew that they
at leisure
through the vast
amount of data in the building. Once the Iraqis realized what they were after, there was bound to be a confrontation. The team, therefore, trained hard on precisely which office on which floor of the building they would head
for.
So elaborate were the preparations for
mission that the inspectors' training cially
constructed full-scale
They had
to learn
how
site in
mockup
of the Baghdad records office.
complex documents
to recognize
in Arabic,
how to take pictures in a hurry, and how to do all this properly the time.
this
England contained a spe-
first
There would not be a second chance.
On September
24, the
team boarded a bus
Hotel,
where they lodged while
target.
The
exercise
in
at
the Palestine
Baghdad, and headed for their
was carefully planned
to
appear
as a routine
search in the course of which the inspectors would "discover" the
nuclear weapons data. Before setting
off,
was once again leading the operation
however, David Kay
—suggested
to U.S.
—^who
network
1
OUT DFTHE ASHES
as
TV
correspondents in Baghdad that they should hold themselves
ready to film an interesting scene that would soon unfold in the parking
The
lot
of the records building.
were not disappointed. Five hours
journalists
team reappeared
in the
parking
UN
the
later,
As they reboarded
lot.
their bus,
they were surrounded by armed and angry Iraqi soldiers. Inside,
they had raced to the specific offices and begun copying documents, videotaping and taking pictures as they did officials
The
so.
When
frantic security
stopped the photocopying, the confrontation began. Iraqis refused to allow the
team
to leave without their
hand-
ing back the documents already copied. Sequestered on their
air-
conditioned bus, the team refused to leave without them and the impasse continued into the night. The confrontation escalated as Kay
The evidence uncovered in the rapid satellite phone from his vehicle, included
broadcast his plight to the world. search,
he announced on a
the complete administrative structure of Iraq's nuclear weapons pro-
"We
gram.
are not willing to turn over film and videotape," he
declared. "This
is
absolutely essential for an inspection effort."
Tariq Aziz responded by accusing the confrontation. Kay,
he
said,
was a
confidential personnel records. list
UN
squad of provoking the
and the seized documents were
spy,
Other
Iraqi officials declared that the
of names of Iraqi nuclear scientists seized by the inspectors could
be used by Mossad, the assassination.
A
men for mosdy children, who
Israeli secret service, to target the
hundred and
people,
fifty
claimed to be relatives of those mentioned in the documents, duly
turned up in buses armed with neatly printed banners and placards in English and French.
"Return Personel
[sic]
They
read:
"Don't Trace
Records," and "Mossad Wants the Records."
While the operation was generally going fury with his deputy.
Bob
UN
Ekeus was
had gone
to
between
his role as
an
in a
Baghdad official
of
organization and his career loyalties as a U.S. Foreign Service
officer,
ment
well,
Gallucci. Gallucci
for the operation. Blurring the lines
a
Our Husbands,"
Gallucci was occupying his time by calling the State Departin
Washington, whence
his
views were disseminated by
department spokesmen. Thus, the American was ing Iraqi government claims that the Special
more than
a thinly disguised U.S.
implicitly confirm-
Commission was
little
espionage operation. Ekeus
SADDAM
FOR HIS LONG ARM
FI(3HTS
ordered him to stop. Irritated
1D7
Washington, unable to
officials in
comprehend the problem, speedily leaked news of Ekeus's order, thereby generating fresh headlines: "Ekeus Reprimands Teams." The Bush administration, paralleling Iraqi assessments, may have come to think of the special commission on Iraq as a useful arm of U.S. policy. Ekeus had forcefully to remind them that he worked for the Security Council and that Gallucci worked for him. Meanwhile the confrontation was escalating. President Bush declared that this was a "serious business" as the Pentagon began
moving troops back
Middle East.
to the
It
appeared that military
action against Iraq in support of the inspectors
haps because
had
it
was only just over
bombed
last
lot siege
months since the United
government caved
Iraq, the Iraqi
day of the parking
six
was imminent. Perin
and the inspectors were allowed
When
with their precious documents.
examined
States
on the fourth to leave
at leisure,
they
showed beyond a doubt that Iraq had indeed been building a weapon that could be delivered on a missile. A pattern had
nuclear
been established
that
denials, followed
by partial
tion
by the
was
to
endure for the next seven years: Iraqi
disclosure, followed
by further
investiga-
UN inspectors, leading to further Iraqi admissions. Thus
the Iraqi government
initially
denied that
it
had been engaged
in
—
work on a prohibited weapon in this case, nuclear. Following the initial investigation by the UN sleuths, Baghdad admitted that it had been working on methods of producing bomb-grade fissile material
—but not
parking that
to the point of developing an actual
lot siege,
Baghdad came clean
had been working on the
it
weapon. After the
to the extent of
conceding
"feasibihty" of building a nuclear
weapon. So
it
followed with the other categories of proscribed weapons.
Iraq conceded information on missiles imported from Russia, but
long concealed "Project 1728," the effort to produce
its
own
long-
range missile. In 1991, Iraq denied ever having investigated biological
weapons
no
less
by the Iraqis
work
than Iraqi
at
all.
This denial was progressively
six "Full,
Final and
amended through
Complete Declarations" submitted
government on the
subject, to the point
where the
conceded the production of weapons, but claimed that in the area
had ended
in
1991 and
all
all
weapons and materials
OUT OF THE ASHES destroyed
—
was greeted with
a claim that
justifiable derision
by
Unscom. Iraq had embarked on
Qa"
radiological
area.
Once
at first
a program to produce the "Al-Qabomb, an attempt to spread radiation over a wide
was
again, this
denied that
VX
any research on the
denied and then confirmed. Iraq
initially
chemical weapons establishment had done
its
nerve agent. This was ultimately replaced
with an admission that there had been such a program, discontinued
because
it
was unsuccessful
after only
some
six
the substance had been produced. Later the
produced went up
hundred pounds of amount admittedly
to four tons.
In 1992, the Iraqis began to explain discrepancies between records they produced and documentary evidence cited by
by claiming
that the previous July they
had
huge quantity of weapons and equipment rity
—though the
original Secu-
fall
Unscom
when pressed on weapons, manu-
supervision. Thereafter, the Iraqis,
would
Unscom
unilaterally destroyed a
Council resolution had forbidden them to do so without
facturing equipment, or
tlie
raw materials that could not be accounted for,
back on the argument that they had been destroyed. The
flaw in their case lay in the fact that they could never produce satisfactory documentation
regime such
on the destruction. In a
as Iraq,
it
ruthlessly authoritarian
was hardly credible that any
officer or official
would destroy important items of war-making equipment without clear,
written orders from above. Yet such orders were either never
produced
or,
when
accounts of the destruction of specific amounts
were produced, they turned out
to
be
clearly inconsistent with other
evidence gathered by Unscom.
The evidence emerged
only slowly, an arduous process in which
the scientists on the visiting
Unscom
mission would arrive for their
inspections from their offshore headquarters in
equipped by
known
as
British intelhgence as a secure
"Gateway"
—and
Bahrain
—
fully
communications center
descend on suspect
factories, offices,
research centers, or anywhere else evidence might possibly be concealed.
The evidence
collected
would then be analyzed and
collated
with data on Iraq's overseas purchases, reports from defectors, lite
satel-
photographs, and pictures from the high-flying U-2 surveillance
aircraft lent
arrive in
by the United States
Baghdad
to
Unscom.
for one of his periodic
Finally,
visits
and
sit
Ekeus would
down
across
SADDAM FIGHTS FOR
HIS
L
ON
ARM
C3
109
the table from the high-level Iraqi team detailed to negotiate with
him and painstakingly address all the discrepancies uncovered by his team between what the Iraqis claimed and what his team had uncovered
in their researches.
The process, which had brought Ekeus hurrying to New York without bothering to pack in the distant days of April 1991, stretched on
months and then
into cial
Commission
years. Later, die executive
ruefully
he had spent more of his
remarked that with the exception of his with Tariq Aziz than anyone
life
was under no illusion that he was dealing with Aziz, Iraqi
UN
fools.
else.
Such men
wife,
Ekeus
as Tariq
ambassador Nizar Hamdoon, and Deputy Foreign
Minister Ryadh al-Qaysi were, as he recalls, mats.
chairman of the Spe-
They could continue
to argue for hours
ting a point, never getting tired."
nocrats like General
Amer
No
less
very good diplo-
''Very,
and hours, never
forget-
impressive were the tech-
Rashid, deputy to Hussein Kamel, an
engineer trained in Birmingham, England.
There was a difference, however, between the cosmopolitans Aziz and
Hamdoon, adept
at
like
detecting the most obscure nuance in a
diplomatic communication, and the parochialism of even the most brilliant technocrats like Rashid. In 1994, for
the
New
tions
example, Ekeus
New York to inspire
lized his excellent connections in
York Times that argued for the immediate
lifting
later,
the
Washin^on
remained
Ekeus
Saddam Hussein
in power. "I don't
understand America," Rashid remarked
shortly afterward.
"The
New
York Times
is
owned by
Jews, but they are supporting us. Yet the Washington Post
ing us.
A
Post rebutted the Times, editorializ-
ing that sanctions should never be lifted so long as
is
the
attack-
Who is in charge?"
In dealing with Rashid, Ekeus had a secret
The Russian s
weapon
prior experience in dealing with his
in Smidovich.-
own
pursuit of their secret biological warfare program stood
stead in penetrating Iraqi obfuscations. as a
of sanc-
once Iraq had compUed with the requirements on weapons.
few days
to
uti-
an editorial in
formidable opponent.
On
The
military in
him
in
good
Iraqis recognized
him
one occasion, during a discussion
with Rashid on the topic of undeclared missile assets, Smidovich
who had been ordered
to
remain mute
—began
slowly from side to side, a prearranged signal to
to shake his
Ekeus
head
that the Iraqi
CDUTOFTHEASHES
IID was
lying.
Rashid
finally
exploded:
"I
cannot speak while Nikita
is
shaking his head like that." "Okay," said Ekeus. "I will
The
tell
Nikita not to shake his head."
discussion resumed. Smidovich once again concluded that
Rashid was not
telling the truth.
The ends of his drooping mustache
slowly lifted as his lips curled in an ironic smile. This was too
much
when he is smihng," shouted the Iraqi. While Washington may have been happy that Saddam continued
for Rashid. "I cannot talk
them with a ready-made excuse for preserving sanctions, Ekeus himself was sincere in his approach. At an early date, he
to provide
pointed out to the Iraqis the significance of paragraph twenty-two of the fateful Resolution 687, which
made
the lifting of sanctions on
oil
exports contingent on Iraqi compliance with the orders to account for
and destroy
their unconventional
making the point
it
was up
capability.
to him, not the U.S.
had complied with the resolution
certify that Iraq
did not go
that
weapons
He was
government, to
—a reminder
that
down well in Washington.
At times, Ekeus
felt
able to report a
little fight at
the end of the
tunnel. In October 1994, for example, he notified the Security
Council that "the commission
is
approaching a
full
understanding of
those past programs" of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. But, in reality,
the Special Commission was far from a
those programs.
full
understanding of
Two months after Ekeus wrote those words, a man appeared at the headquarters of a Kurdish
stocky, well-dressed
rebel group.
dam
He had walked for ten
days to escape the reach of Sad-
Hussein. This was none other than Wafiq al-Samarrai, formerly
chief of Iraqi mifitary intelfigence, the
first
had served during and since the Gulf War
high-ranking officer
to defect.
who
He had been in
contact with opposition groups in northern Iraq for over three years,
but had kept
his
weapons programs
explosive
to himself until
break with Baghdad. The that the
warmth of
knowledge about Saddams secret
he was ready
to
make
wily intelligence professional
a defector's reception
is
the final
had realized
directly related to the
novelty and value of the information he brings with him.
An Unscom
official
hastened to Kurdistan and interviewed the
newly arrived general. Referring to documents that had crossed
his
informed
his
desk
at military intelligence headquarters, al-Samarrai
SADDAM FIGHTS FDR
HIS
LONG ARM
1
1
1
manufacturing VX, the most deadly of all chemical nerve agents, but had actually loaded it into warheads, all of which came as news to
incredulous interviewer that Iraq had succeeded not only in
Unscom (and
to the
CIA and
British intelUgence).
Furthermore,
al-
Samarrai revealed, the Iraqi biological warfare effort was far more
advanced
—and
intact
that Iraq retained a biological
—than hitherto suspected.
number of
He
also reported
operational missiles, together with
and chemical warheads.
Not everyone wanted
to take
what al-Samarrai
said at face value.
His information flew in the face of what had previously been believed about the Iraqi weapons programs. Furthermore, in February 1995, Tariq Aziz offered Ekeus the outlines of an intriguing deal. If
Unscom were
to give Iraq a clean bill of health
and chemical weapons, Aziz would offer "help"
on missiles
in resolving the
issue of biological weapons.
The biological warfare program had been the most secret of all Saddams weapons initiatives, originally concealed even from officials as senior as Tariq Aziz and the army chief of staff. In its early years of operation, Unscom had discovered little about Saddams germ weapons. In fact, the organization did not even employ a single biologist until 1994. It took U.S. congressional investigators to
discover that during the late 1980s, Iraq had been buying strains of
anthrax and botulinum toxins from a biological supply firm in
The firm had failed to note or at least report immense quantities of these deadly pathogens purportedly required by Baghdad University, the purchaser of record Rockville, Maryland.
the mysteriously
which was,
in reality, acting at the
Unscom had been
suspicious of an
hour's drive southwest of
Baghdad
behest of the Iraqi military.
immense
facility at
al-Hakam, an
that covered almost seven square
miles of desert, but the Iraqis insisted that the buildings there, despite being surrounded by barbed wire and guard posts,
were
devoted to the production of animal feed and pesticides. In the absence of firm evidence, the inspectors did not probe further. It
was only after Unscom hired Dr. Richard
Spertzel, a graduate of
germ warfare program,
that the search for the
the long-defunct U.S.
Iraqi biological warfare
round-robin sent to a
program gathered speed. In response
number
to a
of countries requesting information on
OUT OF THE ASHES forwarded records showing that Iraq had
Iraqi purchases, Israel
bought no
ten tons of "growth media," used for manufactur-
less tlian
ing germs from the original strain, from a British company. Although
growdi media
is
tifying illnesses,
commonly used in hospitals and laboratories for identhis was an enormous quantity, enough to make tiiou-
sands of weapons. Soon Spertzels biologists found even more, as
much
as forty tons that
had found
way to
their
Iraq and, ultimately, to
al-Hakam.
Ekeus confronted Tariq Aziz with the
irrefutable facts his staff had
uncovered, but his opponent was unfazed. a
"When we were appointing
new minister of health," he said smoothly, "we had a choice between
a medical doctor and an administrator.
because he was considered more idiot.
He ordered far more of this
loyal,
We
and he turned out
to
be an
material than was needed."
Despite such creative excuses from the
becoming overwhelming.
picked the administrator
Iraqis, the
Rihab Taha, an
Finally, in July 1995, Dr.
intense, British-trained scientist, sat across a table
evidence was
from a group of
inspectors and admitted, reportedly near tears, that Iraq had indeed
had a germ warfare research program, though she denied
weapons had had
been produced. In
actually
one of the leading
lights
fact,
the scientist had been
of the biological weapons program. (Ekeus
already, unwittingly, played a big role in Dr. Taha's
had brought her and the redoubtable Amer Rashid discussion
on Unscom-Iraqi
bloomed on the East
River,
relations at the
Rashid
were married shortly afterward. ful pair," says
Ekeus
In August, as
we
that any
"I
to
life.
In 1993, he
New York for a
United Nations. Love
left his wife,
and he and Dr. Taha
was the matchmaker for this dread-
ruefully.)
shall see,
Unscom
received conclusive proof of
the flourishing state of the biological weapons program in a most
dramatic manner. As a
result, the Iraqis finally
function of al-Hakam as the central and,
some months
later,
had
to assist
That did not end the Unscom sifting
confessed the true
germ warfare production center
Unscom
in
blowing
biologists' mission,
it
up.
however. After
through thousands of pages of documents and hundreds of
hours of interviews,
it
was
still
impossible to account for as
150 bombs and warheads that had for the Iraqi air force.
For the
at
many
as
one time been manufactured
scientists recruited
by Ekeus
to seek
SADDAM FIGHTS FOR
HIS
LONG ARM
1
13
out these and other unaccounted-for weapons, that remained the central issue regardless of
of ordinary Iraqis cal or nuclear
To a
what was happening
who had never heard
weapons
of, let
to the vast majority
alone seen, a biologi-
plant.
certain extent, the
Unscom
inspectors
were shielded from
seeing the effect of the sanctions prolonged in their name. lived an isolated existence during their visits to
they did venture forth, willful officials
it
They
Baghdad, and when
was to encounter not starving children but
who all too often impeded their work or lied to them.
They were deeply convinced
that
Saddam had plenty of
resources
deepening misery of his people. Yet time and
available to relieve the
again they found evidence that he was instead spending
money on
weapons programs. In 1995, for example, Unscom detected a covert Iraqi operation to smuggle guidance systems for long-range his
On one
missiles out of Russia.
a demonstration for to deposit
Ekeus s
dead babies
made him very angry, spoiling a
good
case.
occasion, in 1995, the Iraqis arranged
benefit.
A
yet in a sense
Thanks
to
women
it
attempted
propaganda ploy
was a case of Saddam's crudity
Saddam, the date when Ekeus could
confirm that Iraq was complying with tion
group of
in his arms. This ghoulish
its
obligations
687 was continually postponed. Thanks
under Resolu-
to sanctions, there
was
a growing supply of little bodies to put in coffins. It
was
all
now growing
a continuation of the Gulf War. into the
The
casualty
claiming the lives of Iraqis officially
was
hundreds of thousands, many, many more
than had died in the actual bombing and fighting.
war had
list
ended
who had
in 1991.
not even been
The
siege
bom when
was the
Fl
VE
"Iraqis Will
Pay the Price"
In
May
security adviser, tions
M. Gates, President Bush's deputy national had officially announced that all possible sanc-
1991, Robert
would remain
in place
Saddam Hussein remained
and that in
"Iraqis will
pay the price" while
power The economic blockade
insti-
tuted after the invasion of Kuwait would continue.
Two months
later,
in
July,
garbage collectors
in
Baghdad
reported a sinister change in the loads they carted to the city dump.
A year before,
almost one third of
had consisted of food
all
household garbage
in the city
Now, after almost twelve months of war and sanctions, the scraps had entirely disappeared. Food, any food, had become too precious to throw away. Even the skins of melons were being saved and devoured. People were beginning to scraps.
go hungry. Before the days of sanctions and war, Iraqi doctors had considered obesity a national health problem and
overfeed dieir children. While
had pleaded with mothers not to
Saddam Hussein had squandered
tens
of bilhons of dollars on his war with Iran and his extravagant weapons
"IRAQIS WILL PAY THE PRICE" he had been careful
projects, oil
1
1
5
to lavish a sizaWe portion of the country's
wealth on the civiUan population. The World Bank classified Iraq
at
the same level of economic and social development as Greece. Iraqis
had grown accustomed
to a standard of free medical care that
have shamed many
world countries;
first
tliey
would
took the clean drinking
water that came out of their taps for granted; even the poor had
become used
to eating chicken at least
There were few chickens
left
once a
day.
now. Uncountable numbers of
these birds, bred from a strain developed by U.S. agricultural scientists
that
became known
electricity
as the "Iraqi chicken,"
powering their
flowing after the Iraqi chicken
first
modem
bombing
had died when the
henhouses had abruptly stopped
attacks
on the power
had been dependent on a
The
stations.
carefully designed diet
imported from abroad. Sanctions prevented any further supplies of the feed crossing the border, and in the market, a single sad-looking
Egg production had
bird cost the equivalent of thirty-seven dollars.
dropped from two just
two
The
billion a
year
—two
a
week
for every Iraqi
—
to
million.
rich diet, the
government-financed
London or Paris
trips to
specialized medical treatment, the clean water supplies
paid for by
oil
exports
—$13 biUion
ernment would gamer
just
in 1989.
Two
$400 milHon from
years
oil
under Turkish trucks
in defiance of the sanctions
United Nations. That
first
summer
after tlie war,
professional aid worker shipped to
had
later,
all
for
been
the gov-
smuggled abroad
mandated by
Doug
tlie
Broderick, a
Baghdad by the U.S.
charity
Catholic Relief Services, cast a professional eye on the breakdown in
the health system, food supplies, and the overall effect of sanctions on the
economy and
soberly forecast to us that, as a result, no less than
175,000 Iraqi children would inevitably
For the poor, the
die.
effect of an overall 2,000 percent increase in
food prices within a year of the Kuwait invasion was devastating. In the vast working-class suburb of
Saddam
City in the east of Bagh-
dad, the streets were dotted with what looked like heaps of rubbish.
On
closer examination, these turned out to
that people
For
were trying to
visitors to Iraq, the
be bundles of torn rags
sell as clothes.
most
striking evidence of the devastation
of Iraqi society was the plight of the middle
class.
DUTOFTHEASHES
IIS
When
the hundreds of thousands of Kurds fleeing
the postwar uprising had appeared on network
moved
1991, Western audiences had been
many
Saddam
after
TV news in early April
to pity partly because so
of the refugees shivering on the bleak mountainsides looked
"like us," doctors
and lawyers
in three-piece suits. Similarly, the sight
who would
of highly educated professional Baghdadis,
not have
appeared out of place in an American or British suburb, sinking inexorably to a subsistence level was in a
of those
way more
striking than the plight
who had always been poor.
On a blistering hot Thursday that first July after the war, a crowd of men and women
surged against the locked gates of
Fatimas
St.
Church in a quiet and prosperous-looking neighborhood near the cenSome of the women were dressed in the black chadors of the lower classes, but an equal or greater number showed by their
ter of Baghdad.
Western
and high heels
suits
had come
that they
were
solidly
explaining
how Iraqis were
him given
"Right
class.
They
to this Christian establishment because Catholic Relief was
about to distribute food. Behind the gate,
iar to
middle
Broderick was
responding in ways that were
his experience of famines
now throughout
Doug
the country,
all
too famil-
around the world:
we have
a classic response to
a food shortage, pre-famine. You have people selling jewelry here in
Baghdad. Your used-watch market are pawning
flooded with watches. Famihes
is
their carpets, their furniture, their gold, their silver-
ware. Anything that has any kind of value videos, their radios
—
in
—
their cameras, their
order to get cash for food."
There were now hundreds of shouting applicants on the other of the wrought-iron gates waving the
squashed
side
of paper that entitled them
The temperature was approaching 120
to a food handout.
The women
bits
degrees.
in front were being crushed against the gate, their faces
flat.
Suddenly there was a roar
as the gate
buckled and
crashed open, the crowd rushing through.
Once
inside, the rioters'
raw panic that they would be turned
away empty-handed subsided. The ladies straightened their skirts and examined their broken heels. The men brushed off their jackets. A line formed as if for a Safeway checkout counter. They were once again middle As
is
common
class
in
and civihzed.
many
of the ofl-rich countries, the Iraqi govern-
"IRAQIS WILL PAY THE PRICE" ment
is
1
IV
a major employer, once in a positioifto pay generous stipends
to civil servants, doctors,
backbone of the middle adequate
salaries
and university professors who formed the
class.
Now, with rampant
were being reduced,
inflation, their
once
in real terms, to a pittance.
Mohammed Jawad*, a handsome, well-built man, was a professor of engineering at Baghdad University, where he had taught for twenty-five years.
He had
a pleasant house with a shaded garden in
an affluent suburb and he drove a late-model white Subaru. Hala, his wife,
was a talented decorator. Eighteen months
sion of Kuwait
reduced by
and the
after the inva-
had been
disasters that followed, his salary
inflation to the equivalent of five dollars a
month.
He
expected that his pension would amount to seventy- five cents.
Jawad had nearly escaped.
many when Saddam invaded back
to see a student
sanctions
had just been offered a job
Kuwait," he recalls sadly. "But
through the
final stages
made
it
to resign
Ger-
I
came The
after the
impossible for ordinary Iraqis to travel.
was trapped here and haven't been able
wanted
in
of his Ph.D."
imposed by the United Nations on Iraq four days
invasion of Kuwait "I
"I
to get out since."
He
from the university and find work elsewhere, but
the Iraqi government had forbidden anybody to leave government service. In the
meantime, he was able to supplement
worthless salary with
some consulting work
for private
his nearly
companies
rebuilding bridges and offices hit by allied bombs. In that after the
first
year
Gulf War, he had hopes that both sanctions and Saddam
Hussein would speedily come to an end. Talk against the regime
among his
friends
though very
was
active,
fairly
open. At that time, the security services,
had more serious foes
to
pursue than academics,
whose opposition they knew would never get beyond words. Twelve months after the war, the Jawads threw a dinner party
for
a group of close and trusted friends. Hala produced an exiguous
composed of chickpeas, yogurt, and canned American ham. The ham had been part of the rehef supplies airlifted by the casserole
United States the previous year to Kurds starving on the mountains of the Turkish border after fleeing the counterattack that had
lowed the *Not
uprising.
his real
name.
fol-
Being Muslims, explained the hostess, "Kurds
OUT OF THE ASHES ham. Only the Christians and secular nonbelievers
don't eat do.
like us
They dropped this on the Kurds and we get it now in tlie market." The talk around the table dwelled on the catastrophes of the previ-
ous year and the repeatedly expressed belief that sanctions, in place since six
months before the war, had to end soon:
months now. They cannot go on much
"It
has been eighteen
longer." Sanctions, as several of
the guests noted, were reinforcing the regime s line that the war had
not been about the liberation of Kuwait but had been a direct attack on Iraq and folio, a
its
people. Soon
it
was time
to switch
on the TV to watch Port-
hugely popular series on the war narrated by an anchorman
who modeled his
style
on
that of Alistair Cooke. Subversive
about "him" died away as the images, pirated by state
murmurs
TV from foreign
bombing campaign flickered across the the Jawad living room repeated the anchor-
broadcasts, of the six-week screen.
The audience
in
man's solemnly intoned
statistics:
"Four
Idlos
of ordnance for each
Iraqi." It
was one of the Jawads'last dinner
Mohammed began meeting old friends crowded
in a
street in
longer entertaining at police was
becoming
parties. at a
Not long afterward,
schwarma sandwich bar
North Baghdad. His stated reason
home was
security.
The
for
no
attitude of the secret
harsher. "You cannot imagine the fear in the
hearts of the people," he explained. But there was a second unstated
reason for
why he now took
guests to a cheap cafe.
He had become
too poor to dispense hospitality. Pathetic signs of growing middle-class poverty were
more
evident. In the
Souq
al-Sarrai, in a yellow-brick
becoming
passageway off
al-Rashid Street in the center of Baghdad, a book market had
appeared where shoppers could buy Dostoyevsky or a copy of Plutarch's Lives in English for the equivalent of fifteen cents. Iraqi intellectuals
were
selling their books, sitting
heap of old volumes. Often the
been bought
in the
flyleaf
on the sidewalk beside a
of the book showed that
it
had
1930s by some eager Iraqi student in Britain,
where so many of them had been educated.
The rity.
Iraqi
Many
middle classes were plunged into
lives
of deep insecu-
of them had survived the political turmoil of the previous
thirty years surprisingly well.
They were conscious and proud of the
intellectual history of Iraq, stretching back to Babylon
and Ur, but
"IRAQIS WILL PAY THEPRICE" by the early 1990s, they were desperate nous development. The existence of this secular group
tf)
escape.
It
was an omi-
large, highly educated,
had helped propel Iraq out of the third world,
tuting a resource hardly less valuable than the
contributing
119
more
oil fields,
and
consti-
certainly
to the country's underlying strength than Sad-
dam's vainglorious military projects.
Mohammed Jawad applied to in the U.S.
and
now even
but
Britain,
dozens of universities and colleges
where he had once been a welcome
visitor,
the mechanics of sending a letter of application
through Jordan was complicated. His efforts were, in any case, without success.
The
fear
and loathing that Saddam had evoked
in the
West by his brutality, heavily publicized since the invasion of Kuwait, was being indiscriminately applied to his hapless people. It gradually dawned on Jawad that every Iraqi was regarded as a pariah by the outside world. Other
Iraqi academics
were
willing to take
any opportunity, how-
ever humiliating, to get out. Four years after the war, Qaddafi, the Libyan leader, expelled Palestinians
Libya for decades cials.
as teachers, accountants,
His motive, never entirely
number of
Palestinian refugees
clear,
Muammar
who had worked in
and low-ranking
was apparently
—and underline
to
add
offi-
to the
to the world that
the Oslo Accord, between Israel and the Palestinians, was doing
nothing to return them to their homes.
but
it
left
Libya short of teachers.
A
It
was an ineffectual gesture,
Libyan mission came to Iraq to
recruit Iraqi replacements for the Palestinians.
among
News
of its presence
Most of the jobs were at a lowly level, teaching children to read and write. But outside the Libyan embassy, in the Mansour district, there was a near riot as Iraqi acaspread
Iraqi intellectuals.
demics clustered around the
gate.
Dressed
in
suits
dresses, they pressed against the railings, clutching
several languages to prove they held Ph.D.s or
and smart
documents
were
in
multilingual.
Jawad was among those who applied, but without success. The professor had at least by that time finally freed himself from his university job.
He had
succeeded only through a complicated
process of fraud and bribery. "I tried to resign for two years," he
explained
later. "All
the professors were trying to leave. Eventually
bribed a doctor to say
I
had a serious heart condition. Even
so, I
I
had
aUTOFTHEASHES
12D to
spend two weeks
didn't need.
showing
I
was
really
university career:
He
ill."
"What
a
laughed sourly
way to
Middle East
in the
where they gave me medicine I end of my bed
fabricated charts at the
which before and long
Iraq,
noteworthy service,
in the hospital,
They even hung
at the
way he ended
Saddam took power, had been
after
for the rigorous honesty of
was becoming a corrupt society
as officials extracted
Radi, the leading Iraqi ceramicist,
aftermath, records the
and a bucket of yogurt Raging
for the
UN
renewal of the license on a
car.
to the
were manufacturing currency too.
agency, establishing itself in Baghdad, noticed that the its
be sent from Jordan
Iraqi staff asked
dad was an expensive color photocopier. to
al-
five dollars
was fueled by the government's resorting
inflation
piece of equipment
needed
meager
kept a diary of the war and
payment of the equivalent of
printing press for money, but others
One
who
its civil
Nuha
payments, even food, in exchange for routine services.
its
his
finish twenty-five years of service."
photocopy newly issued and
Officials
to
first
Bagh-
suspected that
it
was
easily forgeable twenty-five-
dinar notes, which were replacing the old Swiss-made currency. Iraqi
shopkeepers
all
under which they could
started using blue lights
detect the palm tree watermark on government-issue notes. In 1990,
one
Iraqi dinar was
worth $3.20. Five years
2,550 dinars. In Baghdad,
which
to take
Many
a single dollar bought plastic bags in
away weighty bundles of notes.
Iraqis
stopped using money
one person renting a room
for
two
that another family was so poor that
demanded
later,
money changers provided
for a house:
bills,
and
Nuha
al-Radi recorded
trays of eggs a year,
but she notes
could not afford the annual rent
it
one chicken.
American hundred-dollar
at aU.
All serious business
after 1996, only the
was done
new
in
hard-to-
forge issue, with a bigger picture of Benjamin Franklin on the front,
was acceptable. They were known
as
"phantoms" because
Iraqis
domed forehead and wispy white hair gave him a ghostly appearance. One Iraqi said: "A hundred dollars is worth so much to us these days that we can't afford to be taken in by a forgery."
thought Franklin's
With
society fraying at the edges,
life in
Baghdad and beyond was
becoming dangerous. Law and order had never been a problem, perhaps unsurprisingly. People routinely
left their
doors unlocked.
Now
conversations at gatherings like the one at the Jawad residence
"IRAQIS WILL PAY THE PRICE" dwelled increasingly on anecdotes about
The United Nations had Everybody in Baghdad had
tlie latest
IZl
crimes and their
victims.
four vehicles stolen, mostly at
point.
stories
of daring or ingenious
and the rudilessness of the thieves. In one case, a pious cooking pot
full
tliefts
woman gave
a
of dolma, or stuffed vegetables, to the guards at the
Abu Hanifa Mosque,
the most famous Sunni Muslim
The food was
of the oldest districts of Baghdad.
While the guards
reputedly for two
slept,
enormous
ancient carpets and even the
There were
gun-
mosque
in
one
heavily drugged.
days, thieves
removed
chandeliers.
other signs that people in
Baghdad were frightened
of robbers. Every Friday there was a dog market in the souq
al-
Ghalil, a stretch of empty ground beside the main road on the fringe
of the principal market
district.
In the years after the Gulf War,
guard dogs were in great demand. They came in all sizes, from dapper terriers to grim German shepherds. "Nimr is a clever dog," one
man told
us, pointing to the
tear a piece out of any
sees
somebody whom
pugnacious hound beside him. "He
enemy who he knows
gets near your
home. But
will
if
he
a friend of his owner, he will
is
never attack him." Nimr was on sale for the equivalent of eighteen dollars
and looked worth every
Not everyone was could put her
cent.
Hala Jawad found she work designing enormous floral bouwedding parties being thrown by the "new bilsuffering. Early in 1992,
artistic talents to
quets for the lavish lionaires,"
businessmen who were profiting hugely from smuggling
as well as
from the
work on bombed
lavish
government contracts
buildings,
ding parties, thrown
at
power
stations,
for reconstruction
and bridges. The wed-
the al-Rashid Hotel or other upmarket
venues, were in lurid contrast to the fraying and increasingly desperate society outside. In the vast hotel ballroom, rows of tables
groaned under plates of food, with a
fifth
of Johnnie Walker Black
Label (the Iraqi national drink) for every couple.
The
auction houses and antiques dealers provided a point of con-
nection between the
new
Baghdad Auction House,
rich
and the new poor
in the city.
tions generated a throng of
once comfortably off
professionals like Professor
Jawad
family heirlooms
—
At the
close to the city center, the weekly auc-
jostling to see
carpets, furniture, paintings
intellectuals
and
what treasured
—might
fetch from
OUT DF THE ASHES the black marketeers and senior Baathists at their elbow. Also
among
the bidders were dealers from Jordan, pouring into Baghdad
up the accumulated possessions of the dying middle class. Adding to the resentment the new poor felt toward the United
to snap
and
States
was the
its allies
supplemented by an
were highly paid
in
new rich had been a new colonial class, who
fact that the native
influx of
UN
officials,
quarters in the Canal Hotel in East Baghdad,
Jawad cial
at
UN head-
hard currency. At the heavily guarded
one point thought of applying for a job
where Professor
as a driver,
proudly pointed out to us the two glorious carpets on
floor,
each worth $1,500, which he bought for $40
Even between
that outrageous bargain might have fife
cent in the
and death
first
over the next
for Obstetrics
offi-
his office
in Basra.
made
the difference
for the seller. Real earnings fell
by 90 per-
year of sanctions, and then by another 40 percent
five years.
the government
an
fell
Monthly earnings
to five dollars a
for Iraqis
employed by
month. In the Alwiya Hospital
and Gynecology in Baghdad, there was no water avail-
able for washing mothers and their told to bring their
own mosquito
newborn
children. Patients
were
netting. In another hospital, a
team
of Western doctors observing the state of the Iraqi health service "witnessed a surgeon trying to operate with scissors that were too blunt to cut the patient's sldn."
means of securing
grain harvest in May, fields
Hunger
women were
left
banned food exports tion of medicine.
after the
The
invasion of Kuwait
to Iraq, as well as
all
For a short period, the
sanctions intro-
had
effectively
other goods, with the excepeffects of the blockade
masked by an inflow of goods looted from Kuwait. Then, thanks allied
bombing and the
came
to a halt.
Iraqi
behind.
decline did not follow an even pattern.
duced immediately
main
gleaning, walking through the
looking for stray grains of wheat
The
led to a return to ancient
food. Visitors noticed that after the
were
to the
rebellion that followed, the
economy basically
pump
water and sewage
There was no
electricity to
because the power stations had been bombed, no fuel for transportation because the refineries all
their lives. Hyperinflation
the
had
also
been hit. The
rebellions dislocated
administration in the Shiite and Kurdish areas as officials fled for
first six
weeks
after the
had
set in
—
prices rose
war and continued to
600 percent
rise.
in just
"IRAgiS WILL PAY THE PRICE" Given such a
few months
terrible situation,
who
on
.
.
.
Baghdad
"The recent
his return that
results.
preindustrial age."
first
Martti
in the
conflict has
some
Iraq has, for
that in the
The United Nations official middle of March 1991,
situation in cataclysmic terms. Ahtisaari,
wonder
and qualified observers reported the
after the war, sober
visited
it is little
1Z3
tirne to
Three months
stated
wrought near apocalyptic
come, been relegated
to a
later.
Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan,
UN
secretary general, toured the
a special envoy dispatched by the
country and reported that "the rapidly deteriorating food supply situation has brought the Iraqi people to the brink of a severe famine"
and predicted imminent "massive
starvation"
and spreading
disease.
In the event, although disease did inexorably spread through the population, there was no immediate massive starvation complete with
scenes familiar to television viewers from famines in Sudan, Ethiopia,
and Somalia.
were
Iraqis
at least able to survive
From
ment's system of rationing. all
Iraqis
were registered
acted as agents for the nal sum, seventeen
at
state.
thanks to the govern-
the introduction of sanctions in 1991,
one of
fifty
tliousand private shops that
Here the customer could buy,
pounds of wheat
flour,
for a
nomi-
three pounds of rice, half a
pound of cooking oil, three pounds of sugar, and just over three pounds of baby milk, where required, as well as two ounces of tea. There were also allowances for soap
in 1994, but
still
and washing powder. The
ration
provided about 53 percent of the
needed for an adult
Iraqi to stay alive.
was reduced
minimum food
A survey of households by a team
of Western specialists in 1996 "determined that the system
is
highly
equitable and appears to be one of the most efficient distribution sys-
tems operating haps
little
in the world."
(One consequence of this system, per-
noticed in Washington, was that dependence on rations from
the state actually strengthened the government's control over the people.)
The crowd
at
the gates of
St.
witliout their charity handout, they
Fatima's
Church would not
would merely be very hungry. For
Westerners accustomed to confronting third world poverty only
But
for a
out after two weeks,
it
Under the postwar
when
this
might not seem such a
mother whose monthly
ration of baby milk ran
emaciated corpses begin appearing on TV, dire situation.
starve
was quite
UN
terrible
enough.
sanctions regulations, Iraq was allowed to
import food and medicine, but these had to be paid for and, given the
aUTQFTHEASHES
124 embargo on
oil sales, it
seemed hard
ernment was finding the money
The
first
American banks, a
to freeze Iraqi financial assets in
part of these assets
had escaped firm
It
was known
that at least
no one knew how much.
seizure, but
in exile after the invasion, the
New York investigative
Iraqi gov-
response to the invasion of
in
followed by the rest of the coalition.
While
where the
to import food for the ration system.
move made by President Bush
Kuwait had been
move
to explain
government of Kuwait hired the
KroU Associates
to try
and
find
Saddam s
hidden treasure. The search was not a great success, although the firm did identify
some hidden
Iraqi holdings overseas, including a stake in
the French firm that publishes Elle magazine. Early in 1991, Kroll
Saddam might have as much as $5 billion squirreled The estimated $5 billion would not have been sufficient to meet the basic needs of the Iraqi people for very long, even if Saddam had reported that
away.
been disposed
to drain his entire
bank balance on
days of affluence, Iraq's food import
about $4
bill
their behalf. In the
alone had been running at
billion annually.
Part of the answer to the puzzle of the financing of food imports
could be found across the border, in
Amman. The
had become the entrepot for trade with
Iraq,
Jordanian capital
and the merchants of the
city,
many of them
cials
were turning up around the Middle East with gold ingots
exiled Iraqis,
were doing a roaring trade.
Iraqi offi-
for sale;
scrap metal and industrial machinery were being smuggled abroad by
the truckload; loot from Kuwait was also on a
good market
in
Iran.
Ironically,
depended on cooperation with the trolled the
more
offer, for
much
which there was
of the trade with Iran
rebellious Kurds, since they con-
border crossings favored by the smugglers. There were
direct routes to Iran farther south, but the bribes extracted there
army commanders were considered by the Amman traders to be outrageously high: "Fifty percent! Who can make a profit on that?" The Iranians paid for the goods in dollars, which then came by
local Iraqi
west to Jordan, addition,
Syria, Turkey,
some adventurous
and beyond to buy what was needed. In
speculators
were paying
dollars for con-
trolling stakes in Iraqi state corporations.
A
gathering in an out-of-the-way office in
the war provided a telling insight into the
Amman
way
enlisted the free market to help feed his people.
in
a year after
which Saddam
A young
Baghdadi
"IRAKIS WILL PAY THE PRICE" had arrived
trader in a leather jacket and jeans
to
125
do business with
the businessmen gathered in the office, an affluent and well-tailored
group who appeared to regard him
The Baghdad!, hke everyone
as a
else in the
somewhat
crass arriviste.
room, wore a Rolex and was
market for luxury goods. However, he announced that
in the
his
"conscience" impelled him also to buy sugar for donation to the gov-
ernment's ration
effort.
Once he had departed, his stated motives for generosity came in for some scornful commentary. "Bullshit," said one of the locals present.
"It's
not his conscience
was an
fingernails." This
"Iraqi
that's
making him buy
sugar,
his
it's
allusion to the routine administration of the
manicure" in the regime's torture chambers, involving the
extraction of fingernails
and often
toenails as well. In other words,
the leather-jacketed trader was under duress to import a basic com-
modity
like
activities.
sugar in exchange for leave to pursue his
Sometimes, more than fingernails were
more
profitable
at risk.
In July
1992, forty-two merchants were summarily executed in front of their shops in the
market
of Baghdad for "profiteering."
district
Iraq had a further resource in
neglected during the years of the ier to
from
own
its
oil
had been seemed far eas-
agriculture. This
boom,
since
it
import rice from California or beef from Ireland or wheat
Australia. After the war, following
flooded into the
decades in which Iraqis had
from the countryside, the flow was suddenly
cities
the other way. Perhaps a third of the Iraqi population lived in the greater
Baghdad
countryside and
area.
still
But many were recent immigrants from the
had
finks
desert the big city and go
Mesopotamian their ancestors
Munam
plain
were
villages.
Now they began to
home. Suddenly the
fields
of people again working
full
of the
much
as
had done before mechanization. Khalid Abdul
Rashid, the agriculture minister, explained: "Because of the
lack of machinery,
where we used
we do more
to use two."
fare estimated that nearly
engaged
with their
in agriculture in
things manually, using eight people
The
Ministry of Labor and Social Wel-
40 percent of the
Iraqi population
was
some way, three times the number before
the invasion of Kuwait.
The government was
careful to
make
sure that agriculture was
worth the farmers' while, steadily paying them the equivalent of
OUT OF THE ASHES about a hundred dollars a ton for their grain despite the collapse of
more than they had made money. "They come
the local currency. That was forty dollars a ton
received before the war. Big landowners in
here and buy mirrors and chandeliers," said one antiques dealer
of the newly rich agriculturists. With the traditional distaste of
Baghdadis for Iraqis
have very bad
who
live in
the countryside, she added: "They
taste."
As the government displayed unexpected resourcefulness viating the food crisis, so too did cles in repairing the
plants.
The
it
in alle-
appear to have performed mira-
bomb damage
power Mudhad," or
to vital systems like the
"Hujoum
reconstruction effort, billed as
al
"the Counterattack," was a crash program initiated within weeks of
the end of the war. trained technocrat repairing the after
he
set to
Its effective
named Saad
moving
spirit
al-Zubaidi.
damage without importing
was a brisk
He was
parts
work, he rattled off cherished
and
British-
given the task of expertise.
statistics
on
A year
his achieve-
ments, wrought with a "blank check" and a ministry staff of twentyeight thousand people
—"We reinvented the suspension bridge."
As the house Zubaidi upscale district of
built for himself on a palm-lined street in the
Mansour attested, the rewards
counterattack were considerable.
dump
for the heroes of the
Anyone lucky enough
to
own
a
truck could receive a thousand dinars (roughly five times the
average monthly wage in that period) a day. Rooting in his drinks cabinet for a bottle of Glenfiddich ("No, no. Black Label
enough"), Zubaidi talked of the pride he
felt
that Iraqis
not good
were rebuild-
own what before they had depended on others to provide.
ing on their
"More than ninety percent of the major bridges were companies. The telephone exchanges, die power exporting countries had a similar disease.
on
is
foreigners. It
was easier to send a
built
by foreign
stations. All oil-
They were totally dependent Japan when you needed
telex to
something." Zubaidi, as a favored and richly compensated servant of the
regime, might have been expected to talk like
this,
but pride in the
reconstruction effort ran across the pofitical spectrum.
"We
did
it
by
that fifty bridges
Jawad when the government had been rebuilt.
The achievements of the
counterattack indeed appeared impres-
ourselves!"
announced
exclaimed
Professor
"IRAQIS WILL PAY THE PRICE" sive.
The Jumhuriya Bridge
that linked the center of
127
Baghdad
the Tigris, smashed by allied bombs, was rebuilt within a year. all
across
By May,
known as govemorates, were reconnected to the The huge power station at al-Dohra in South
Iraqi provinces,
national electricity grid.
Baghdad, which supplied the bulk of Baghdad's power, had been put back in working order by cannibalizing parts from other power plants.
One of its four tall chimneys, brought down by allied bombs, had been and painted
rebuilt
power after
in the Iraqi national colors. Al-Hartha, the
had been reduced
station for Basra,
no
later, it
less
was
Once
again, miraculously,
producing power.
the electricity was flowing again, the situation appeared to
brighten. Within four
months of the end of the war, Iraq was generat-
The urgency of the
foreigners
it
had produced the previous
were working, so most
factories
sumers.
to a pile of tortured metal
than thirteen alHed raids during the war. Just over a year
ing 40 percent of the electricity
Few
main
had been
first,
electrical
power went
year.
to con-
doom-laden reports from concerned
partly inspired
by the
fact that the
wartime short-
age of gas had brought the country's food transportation system to a halt.
They thought the
halt
was permanent. But wdth power, the
repaired refineries (most of which had escaped total destruction
because one farsighted
official
had ordered them drained of
before the bombing) could produce
almost for free.
Now
fuel.
Gas was
food could be trucked into the
countryside and Jordan.
Subaru to work, even
oil just
available again, cities
from the
Mohammed Jawad could once more take the
if his tires
were bald and almost impossible
to
replace.
When officials
the
power was
stiU
almost totally out, aid workers and local
had predicted plague because sewage could not be pumped.
Just after the intifada, Khalid
Baghdad, told
us:
Abdul
Monem
"An epidemic could
Rashid, the
easily kill fifty
mayor of
thousand
in
Baghdad, if we cannot control the sewage." That threat retreated when it became possible to at least pump sewage into the river. The government was able to halt deterioration in other areas as well,
though sometimes by savage means. Three years after the war,
in response to the rising crime wave, the Revolution
Command
Council decreed that anybody convicted of robbery or car theft
would have
their right
hand amputated
at
the wrist. If they repeated
— DUTDFTHEASHES
IZa
the offense, they would lose their
was
to
knew
left foot. Iraqis
be taken seriously because on the day
the decree
was published,
it
Babel, the newspaper founded and controlled by Uday, the son of
Saddam Hussein, said that failure to implement it would be damaging. The paper cited the failure to implement an earher decree on the execution of the madams of brothels as an example of unpardonable laxness. In June 1994,
Baghdad radio began routinely reporting
court sentences such as the amputation of the hands of two people
convicted of stealing carpets from a
mosque
in
Baquba, northeast of
Baghdad, and a similar dismemberment for the television
from a
relative,
sentences
all
handed down
Such punishments were, of course, penalties of Islamic law, but
and
it
woman who
in line
in
one
stole a
day.
with the traditional
was a novel direction
for Iraq. Before
after the Baathists took power, Iraq, at least in the big cities,
had
always been a refreshingly secular society. Visitors from the bleak envi-
ronment of Saudi Arabia noted with
relief that
compulsion to conceal themselves under
women were under no
veils
and
scarves. Indeed,
women were encouraged to pursue careers; in the first stages of reconstruction,
many of the bustling building sites appeared to be under the
direction of startlingly attractive lady engineers, yellow hard hats
perched on top of their flowing
and consumed the
tresses.
in staggering quantities
Alcohol was freely available
by those who could afford
it
minimum order for a scotch in the Baghdad nightclub district near
the U.S. embassy was a quarter bottle.
Within three years after the war, to change.
this
easygoing atmosphere began
The impulse came both from below and
above. As their
standard of living collapsed, the salaried classes in Baghdad increasingly took refuge in religion. Attendance at prayers in the venerable
mosques of the
moved
city soared.
to capitalize
on
it,
Saddam noted
the trend and shrewdly
as with his institution of
amputation
as a
response to crime, by increasingly casting his regime as "Islamic." The
government was
also astute in
banning the public sale of alcohol. Ordi-
nary Iraqis were deeply resentful of the fortunes being
made by black
marketeers with connections to the regime. This resentment was fueled by garish and public displays of newfound wealth by the billionaires.
The
modest pittance
lavish
for
weddings
at the al-Rashid,
Hala Jawad with her
floral
new
which generated a
bouquets, were one
"IRAQIS WILL PAY THE PRICE"
129
much-noted example. Word of other extravagances quickly circulated
among
the population, as in the case of one suddenly wealthy entre-
preneur,
moved to
belly dancer,
who
by the nightclub performance of a talented
ecstasy
hurled a blank check at her
gained notoriety, the high
feet.
As the incident
command took notice. "Chemical Ali" Has-
san al-Majid denounced "denigrating nocturnal activities," and the
patron of dance was thrown in jail and fined the equivalent of twentyfive
thousand
More
dollars.
general measures followed.
By
1995, nightclubs and dis-
cotheques were closed. Restaurants were no longer allowed to serve alcohol, although Iraqis could
still
buy whisky,
arak,
and beer from
Christian-owned shops, which were specially licensed.
a measure
It is
of the fear with which the government was regarded that restaurant
owners did not dare break the new
meant
established Lebanese restaurant in pletely dry.
ened
rules,
even though
it
sometimes
their financial ruin. Restaurants like the al-Mudhif, a well-
Abu Nawwas
Street,
became com-
When a foreigner brought in a hip flask of whisky,
waiter, putting his wrists together as if
whispered: "Put In 1994,
it
away.
he were handcuffed,
Do you want me to go to jail?"
Saddam decided on
Islamic credentials.
a very concrete reaffirmation of his
He announced
whole world would soon be
built in
that the largest
Baghdad.
A
mosque
large site
able at Muthanna, the capital s old municipal airport that
wrecked by ture
allied aircraft
would be known
a fright-
avail-
had been
missiles in the war. The great Grand Saddam Mosque.
and
as the
was
in the
struc-
This was the first big building project in the country since the end of the frenzied reconstruction phase in 1992, and it was good news for hungry specialists like Professor Jawad. Although Saddam
appointed himself chief engineer, eleven design teams were set up,
and there was a job
for Professor
dome
was
to build a concrete
rise
from the center of an
world and fed by the
Tigris.
Jawad on one of them. The plan field. It would
the size of a football
artificial lake, in
On
the shape of the Arab
entering the mosque, the worshiper
would see an electronic picture of Saddam. Four massive towers
at
each corner of the lake would house an Islamic university. It
was an empty dream. Once upon a time, Iraq could have
fur-
nished the resources to build such a grandiose extravagance, but not
UT
OFTHE ASHES knew
now. Jawad and the other professionals
that the country simply
did not have the materials or the equipment for such a project and that
they could not be imported due to sanctions.
"We do
The most
basic require-
ments were
totally
pile drivers,
reinforcement bars, or additives for the cement," he said
at
out of reach.
the time. In the
mosque
first
not have high-tensile
steel,
year of construction, the only part of the
be completed was an elegant pavilion from which the chief
to
engineer could gaze on his barren
The Grand Saddam Mosque
site.
was, in a sense, a metaphor for the
On
hollowness of the whole "counterattack."
the
Iraq
surface,
appeared to have successfully surmounted the threat of plague and famine sincerely predicted by aid officials after the war. Power stations
had been brought back receded
some
as
to
life
and pools of
filth
on the
city streets
sewage once again flowed through the pipes,
The
areas.
ration system kept people
from
at least in
and
starving,
it
appeared that the economy of the country might be able to sputter along at a minimal level pending the day
when
sanctions
were
finally
Hfted.
However,
like
the plans for the great mosque, the reconstruction
had turned out
effort
to
be a chimera. The power
stations
had been
repaired with parts cannibalized from others, parts that could not be
replaced rebuilt,
when
they broke down.
Bombed
might have been
factories
New
but raw materials could not be imported to supply them.
had been planted, but diere were only scant amounts of vital
fields
pesticides,
fertilizers,
animal feed, and spare parts for irrigation
machinery.
A glance
at the Tigris indicated,
sick the country really was.
Khan, sacked Baghdad
changed color
twice.
When
both
literally
in 1258, Iraqis say the
On
the
first
and
figuratively,
day,
it
water in the river Tigris
turned red with the blood of
the thousands slaughtered by the Mongols; on the second, black because of the ink from the books
—^which Hulagu threw
In the 1990s, the Tigris changed color again.
not to river.
brown because raw sewage from mention effluent from the
The
partly revived
it
went
—from what were then the
greatest libraries in the world
au-lait
how
Hulagu, the grandson of Genghis
It
into the river.
was now a
rich cafe-
3.5 million people in Baghdad,
cities
upstream, was entering the
power system had made
it
possible to
pump
"IRAQIS WILL PAY THE PRICE" the sewage out of the sewers. Formerly
ft
131
would have gone
to the
highly up-to-date and efficient treatment plants before finally being
put in the
river.
But the plants were not and could not be repaired, so
the sewers emptied straight into the
river.
The treatment plants remained idle for various reasons, all of them man-made. They had originally ceased operation when the power stations were hit. Sewage had immediately begun backing up in the system, in some places causing the pipes under the city streets to rupture, leading, in turn, to the very noticeable pools of
sewage lapping
Restored power
ment
made
it
some
areas,
but meanwhile, some of the treat-
plants themselves
—had been
facility
complex
facilities
possible to
move sewage through
—including al-Rustamiya, the main Baghhit
by bombs. Treatment plants are highly
and, in any case, need constant maintenance and
Even without the need
repair.
at that time.
at least
the sewer system in
dad
doorways
at people's
to repair
bomb damage,
Iraq needed
a constant supply of spare parts from abroad, but the Iraqi govern-
ment could not or would not supply the hard currency needed to buy them. Even when the necessary parts were bought, they could not be imported until they had gone through time-consuming scrutiny from the sanctions committee.
There was, however, an additional problem. Sewage treatment plants rely not only
on machinery but
important being chlorine. Chlorine
is
also
also
on chemicals, the most
used
in the production of
chemical weapons. As a "dual use" item, therefore, chlorine was subject to tight restriction
by the sanctions committee. Imports were
effectively limited to supplies
duce some chlorine on
its
brought
in
own, but almost
by
UN ICE F.
all this
Iraq did pro-
supply was reserved
and even more vital plants diat treated drinking Even so, the amount available for the drinking-water treatment amounted at the best of times to only 70 percent of what was
for use in the separate
water. plants
needed.
When the treatment system failed, engineers simply pumped
untreated water through the system.
For
all
the euphoria of the "counterattack," therefore, the most
basic requirement of clean water
had not been met. Members of a
Harvard School of Public Health team who reported on the break-
down
of the water and sewage treatment system in late 1991 found
132
aUTDFTHEASHES
that almost nothing
had changed when they returned
"Water plants throughout Iraq are now operating ited capacity," they reported after the
second
trip,
at
1996.
in
extremely lim-
"and the sewage
system has virtually ceased to function."
The end results were visible in the children's wards of the hospitals. To cite just one statistic, every year the number of children who died before they reached their
first
birthday went up, from one in thirty the
year sanctions were imposed to one in eight seven years specialists
The
dirty
found
its
agreed that contaminated water was
water
brought gastroenteritis and cholera
tliat
httle victims easier to
weak. With malnutrition, the
immune system
salary buys just
its
train
weakened, particu-
is
were not getting
two chickens," explained
Viktor Wahlroos, the deputy coordinator for Iraq, in 1995.
The government
ration
meets to
become commonplace
main
would approach
in the
fifty
percent of people's needs
buy the other streets of
cars waiting for the traffic lights
when the
handles and wing mirrors let
UN relief operations in
"A quarter of the children are suffering from malnu-
and they don't have the money
only
in
to eat.
"An average monthly
trition.
Health
overcome because they were already
larly in children. Iraqis, especially their children,
enough
later.
killing the children.
dren under
five years
A
Begging had
Baghdad. Children
and hold on
car started to move.
go when given a small sum of money.
of 1995 showed
half."
door
They would
study of 2,120 chil-
of age in Baghdad carried out in the
how far their health had
to
summer
deteriorated since the war.
compared to 7 percent in The number of children classified as "stunted" had risen from 12 percent to 28 percent. The study's authors said such conditions
In 1995, 29 percent were underweight, 1991.
were comparable only to infamously poverty-stricken countries such as Mafi.
By the
late 1990s,
it
was becoming
difficult to
go anywhere in Iraq
without seeing signs of the disintegrating infrastructure. Diyala province, east of Baghdad,
is
potentially rich, with soil well-watered
by
the Diyala River, a tributary of the Tigris, flowing from the mountains
of Kurdistan. At
first sight,
the farmers in the village of al-Yaat on the
banks of the river did not look land,
grew their own
food,
like victims
of sanctions. They had good
and could take advantage of high prices
for
"IRAQIS WILL PAY THE PRICE"
133
their fruit. "It looks as if we are well off," saiS Buha'a Hussein al-Sayef,
one of the
he
largest fanners in the village, as
sat
on the balcony of his
spacious house overlooking a garden shaded by date and pomegranate trees.
He
admitted that people in the country were better off than
those in towns, but then he listed what the villagers lacked. Their small
They pumped
water-purification plant
had long ago ceased
contaminated
water into their homes. They also worried
irrigation
about their health and that of their
relatives.
to work.
Buha'a Hussein
intro-
duced his cousin Ahmed, a visibly ailing twenty-four-year-old, who had been operated on heart problems.
was unable
to
at the
Cromwell Hospital
He was meant to have
pay for
if it
came
were not
London
in
1985 for
it.
Because medicine was ing, Iraqis
in
further surgery, but the family
and hospitals deteriorat-
in short supply
to believe that almost
any disease might be curable
for the sanctions. In the Iraqi countryside, villagers
would often keep dusty
X
rays of sick relatives in case sanctions
ended one day and they could
find a cure.
Not
far
from Buha'a Hus-
Ahmed Suwaidan, who lived beside a canal, X ray. It showed the head of his five-year-old daughter Fatima, who was playing at his feet. He explained: "There is something wrong with her balance. She cannot stand up." He held sein's fruit groves, Ali
had
just
had such an
her upright for a
moment and then removed
immediately crumpled to the ground
On the woman in
his hands.
Fatima
at his feet.
banks of an irrigation canal not
far away, a lean-looking
named Nahay Mohammed was
dark peasant clothes
clambering down to get water with a steel bucket attached to a piece of rope. "It
is
bad water, of course," she
said. "It gives
you stomach
pains and hurts the kidneys, but the purified water supply was cut off in 1991." Heliathan Alwan, a farmer
from the same
he had recently
to see if they could restore
visited the nearest
the drinking water, but was told
it
town
village, said
was impossible.
Whatever sums might still be kept in reserve by Saddam for his and military purposes, it was clear that the resources
private
required to feed the country were running out. In 1994, food rations were cut back. In 1996, the merchants of Amman noticed that the gold ingots brought for sale by Iraqi government
officials
had
changed. Previously they had been of the standard shape and com-
— OUT QFTHE ASHES
134 position of ingots
made
for central banks.
indicated that the gold bars had been
Now,
close examination
made from melted-down wed-
ding rings and other jewelry.
The blockade on the economy was exported to Iraq had
legally
first
to
unrelenting. Every single item
be submitted
for approval to the
sanctions committee operating under the auspices of the Security
Council. This committee was rigorous in excluding even the most inoffensive items suspected of being of "dual use," with military applica-
Apart from the chlorine excluded because of
tions.
its
possible use in
manufacturing chemical weapons, items denied included spare parts for transporting troops —because they could be Bedand lead pencils—the graphite could have a nuclear
ambulances
useful for
application.
sheets were denied in one case, as were exercise books. Tires, which
could certainly be put to use by the
military,
goed, and Professor Jawad's Subaru spent
Even when
road.
process. Often
The
it
were absolutely embar-
more and more time
off the
indulgent, sanctions approval was a slow-moving
took a year for permission to import a spare part.
suffering caused
by sanctions did produce some
action on the part of those enforcing them. In the
summer
official
of 1991,
the Security Council offered an "oil-for-food" deal. As originally for-
mulated, Iraq would be allowed to export $1.6 billion worth of
every
six
trolled
by the United Nations and spent under
and medicine tee. It
oil
months. The money would be paid into an account con-
after approval of such items
appeared, and
may have been
designed, to
show generosity
victors,
though why the
fimited, given that the
United Nations
and humanitarian concern on the part of the
amount of money offered was
UN auspices on food
by the sanctions commit-
would control the spending of it, was never explained.
Even
so,
$1.6 billion
would have made a
difference.
Saddam,
however, obliged his enemies by rejecting the offer on the grounds that
its
strict
requirements for
infringed on Iraq's sovereignty.
same grounds
UN He
supervision of
oil
continued to reject
revenues it
on the
for the next four years. In 1995, the Security Council,
recognizing that the food situation in Iraq was growing worse,
adopted Resolution 986, an improvement on the earlier offer Iraq was
much
now
of that
in that
allowed to earn $1 billion every ninety days, though
money was
to
be diverted
as
compensation to Kuwait
"IRAQIS WILL PAY THE PRICE" and to pay the United Nations own
bills.
argument, Iraq continued to object before in
May
Citing the sovereignty
finally
accepting the deal
World Health Organization reported majority of the country's population has been on a
1996, not long after the
"The
that
135
vast
semi-starvation diet for years."
end of the
Oil began to flow at the first
year,
and
in
March 1997, the
shipment under the oil-for-food agreement, a load of chick peas
and white
from Turkey, arrived
flour
in Iraq.
Food became more
plentiful,
but by the end of the 1990s, after eight years of sanctions,
the Iraqi
economy could not be collapsing
and
restored by humanitarian aid. "The will take ten to
twenty years to
infrastructure
is
restore," said
Denis Hafliday, a fifty-seven-year-old
Appointed
UN
it
Irish
Quaker.
humanitarian coordinator for Iraq in August 1997,
he was responsible for spending the money now available under the
He
oil-for-food arrangement.
even with the money
tem was beyond old.
one example the
cited as
fact that,
now available, much of the electric power sys"We have generators that are twenty years
repair.
When we go to the
manufacturers [we find] they don't make the
spare parts anymore." His office estimated that $10 biflion was
needed
to restore Iraq's electrical system, but only
available
agreed upon between Iraq and the
By
UN in early 1998.
the end of the 1990s, the Iraqi
everywhere. Just as the
UN
February 1998 that Iraq could oil
every
$300 million was
even under the terms of an expanded oil-for-food program
six
was dying
economy was breaking down
Security Councfl was announcing in in future export $5.2 biflion
worth of
months, Hussein Ali Majhoul, an eight-month-old baby,
in the al-Khatin Hospital
from infectious diseases con-
tracted in the southern outskirts of Baghdad. Beside his
empty oxygen
bottle.
"He
bed was an
has meningitis," said Dr. Deraid Obousy,
the weary-looking director of the hospital, gently pressing the side
of Hussein's neck.
We
"He
is
already unconscious.
It is in
the hands of
more oxygen bottles in the hospital and we more money to hire a truck to pick up a new one from the factory that refills them on the other side of Baghdad." In the forecourt of the hospital, there were what from the distance God.
don't have any
don't have any
looked hke a
fleet
of trucks. But on closer inspection aU turned out to
be without wheels,
their axles resting
on
stones, or missing essential
aUTQFTHEASHES
136
engine parts. They had been progressively cannibalized over the previous eight years to try and keep one vehicle on the road. Dr. Obousy, forty-six but looking older, was gloomily reading an old
way to Baghdad where he had worked in
copy of the British Medical Journal that had found
He
despite sanctions.
said that in Britain,
hospitals for four years, "a place like this
They would
say
it is
rubbish.
It is
would
definitely
be closed.
and we
getting into the hot season
have no mosquito netting for the windows, or
enough sheets
its
for the beds." All this
air conditioners,
or even
was confirmed by a tour of the
The smell of disinfectant did not quite mask the stench of the lavatories. The patients were eating a meager meal of rice and chick-
wards.
pea soup.
baby Hussein Alis bedside were
Sitting beside
Nada, and her husband,
a factory worker,
Ali,
his mother,
who explained that their
family income was about 14,000 Iraqi dinars ($10) a month, which had to support both
"She
is
his office
did not
them and
their parents.
Nada was
pretty
and
slim.
obviously malnourished herself," explained the doctor. Later in
he spoke of the poverty of his
officially
patients.
He
admitted that he
earn more than $10 a month himself.
He had to have
a private cHnic to keep going, but this was producing less income
because
his patients
had progressively sold
had no money with which since
to
their possessions
pay him. His own
and now
TV and radio had long
been sold to buy food.
In the Canal Hotel, the
UN
aid headquarters, Denis Halliday
was
appalled by what he found in Iraq. His career had been spent in the
UN Development Program, trying to build up the resources of impoverished countries.
being ruined by
Now he was in charge of funneling aid to a country
UN sanctions. "You go to schools where there are no
desks," he said. "Kids
sit
on the
floor in
rooms
that are very hot in
sum-
mer and freezing in winter." Overall, HalHday thought that humanitarian aid
even
was "only Band- Aid
after the
stuff"
—a point reinforced by the
implementation of the oil-for-food agreement,
malnutrition remained unchanged. to
"lift
sanctions and
came down remarked the
UN"
to a
in
this
humane
were "undermining the moral
human
of
was
official, it
Early in his tenure, Halliday
"in contradiction of the
charter."
levels
said the only real solution
money." For
moral argument.
that sanctions
and
UN's own
pump
He
fact that
had
credibility of
rights provisions in the
"IRAQIS WILL PAY THE PRICE" Back in July 1991, when the notion
137
that the blockade of Iraq might
go on for years and years seemed incredible to anyone aware of conditions in the country, the relief worker
shocking observation that as
Doug
many as 175,000
because of the public health conditions. motion." Seven years
Broderick had
made
Iraqi children could die
He called it a "disaster in slow
prediction had been proved wrong.
later, his
the
Not
175,000 children had died, but upward of half a million. By the end of
1995 alone, according to an investigation by the United Nations Food
many as 576,000 Iraqi children had The World Health Organization, citing
and Agriculture Organization, died as a result of sanctions. figures
from
as
Ministry of Health, estimated that 90,000 Iraqis
Iraq's
were dying every year
in Iraq's public hospitals
above and beyond the
number who would have expired in a "normal" situation. The precise number was not exactly known because many Iraqis had stopped using the health care system.
Broderick had, however, been correct in calling
slow-motion
disaster.
tlie situation
a
At the end of the Gulf War, the Western public
had been moved to pity by reports of slaughter on the "road of death" leading north from Kuwait City.
and
cars fleeing
up the highway
allied warplanes; disquiet
An Iraqi convoy of hundreds of trucks to the
impel Bush to order a cease-fire. In
been comparatively
border had
fallen,
easy prey to
evoked by the "turkey shoot" had helped fact,
—
light
the casualties on the road had
perhaps four or
five
—
hundred
as
was the
from the fighting and bombing. The real slaughcame later, but because it happened in slow motion, without arrest-
entire Iraqi death toll ter
ing images of victims with protruding rib cages or heaps of corpses, the
impact in the West was minimal. Dry
statistics detailing
remorselessly
escalating infant mortaUty rates, or the percentage of underweight children, or even the death of little Hussein Ali
Majhoul
for
want of a
working truck to drive across town could not jump-start an international furor over the sanctions policy.
For every cited
statistic
on
infanticide, the enforcers of sanctions
could point to the latest evidence of Saddam's perfidy in concealing his
meager
stockpile of deadly weapons. In 1996,
CBS News'
60
Minutes broadcast a chilling exchange. Correspondent Lesley Stahl interviewed Madeleine Albright, then U.S.
ambassador to the
United Nations. Albright maintained that the sanctions had proved
DUT DF THE ASHES their worth because Saddam had made more admissions about his weapons programs and because he had recognized the indepen-
dence of Kuwait (which he did
"We have heard
more children than died
that's
know,
the price worth
think this
"I
price
is
is
in 1991, right after the war).
that half a miUion children have died. in
I
mean,
Hiroshima," said Stahl. "And, you
it?"
a very hard choice," replied Albright, "but the
—we think the price
worth
is
it."
Insofar as there was a debate, each side resorted to tendentious
moved by the plight of ordinary Iraqis derided the often fruidess efforts of Unscom inspectors to find Saddam s remaining cache of weapons. Unscom officials, on the other hand, sincerely arguments. Those
believed that the degree of suffering in Iraq was being deliberately
exaggerated by the government and that those
were dupes. As one inspector, remarked
Iraq,
to us,
who
raised the issue
a veteran of many inspection missions to
"Those people
who report all those dying babies
are very carefully steered to certain hospitals by the government."
was impossible
to convince
him that hospitals
like
It
the one in which Dr.
Obousy worked were not in short supply. For Washington, sanctions, as a former senior CIA official observed in early 1998, had been a "demonstrable success." By this he meant that they had kept Saddam too weak to reassert himself as a power in the region. By this yardstick, the policy had indeed justified itself. The leader of a country where over a quarter of the children were "stunted," class
and
where the once
flourishing
had been utterly ruined,
social level of Greece to that of the
of Mali was If,
bring
and highly educated middle
that overall
now obviously less
had sunk from the economic
barren sub-Saharan wasteland
of a threat.
however, the goal of the sanctions policy had been to actually
down Saddam,
respects, sanctions
it
had
The agony of ordinary have had
little
had
failed demonstrably. Indeed, in
some
actually strengthened the dictators position. Iraqis, fitfully
reported in the media,
may
resonance in the United States, but in the Arab world
Even those most disposed to fear and loathe Saddam were moved by the plight of their brethren. Prince Khahd bin Sultan, nephew of the king of Saudi Arabia and commander of the Arab forces in the Gulf War, called for an end to sanctions it
was
a different matter.
"IRAgiS WILL PAY THE PRICE"
139
on Iraq because "they have only reinforced President Saddam Hussein's
hold on power while starving [the] Iraqi people."
timent that was to cost the United States dearly, as Iraqis themselves implicitly
we
It
was a sen-
shall see.
confirmed the princes point by
unequivocally blaming the United States, rather than Saddam, for their troubles. Ali Jenabi, a highly educated economist
Professor Jawad, exclaimed angrily:
"Do you
think that Britain and
the U.S. are really afraid of our biological weapons? are not.
The
bathtub.
A
sort of things
he was moved by
to
his
they
make
in a
have, any country could
maniac
in
Saddam Hussein himself showed
Rhetoric aside,
Of course
Japan was able to make nerve keep Iraq weak and divide up its oil."
single religious
They just want
gas.
we
and friend of
little
people s plight. To him, as to those
sign that
who were
enforcing the sanctions, they were hostages, bargaining chips whose
very suffering was an asset. Thus he would arrange displays of dead children to ing
him
shame
his
enemies, as he did with Rolf Ekeus, into giv-
free rein in his drive to rebuild his power, perhaps with the
remnants of the weapons programs he had managed to keep hidden. But the dead children were
real.
The tragedy was
ing at the hostage taker, the United States and
were
that in aim-
remaining aUies
killing the hostages.
Meanwhile,
were immune
new
its
all
observers agreed,
to the
Saddam Hussein and his
family
deepening privation outside the gates of the
palaces that the leader set to building with whatever scarce
building materials were available. Secure in this family
was free
to
pursue
its
its
personal comforts,
own dark and bloody intrigues.
SIX
Uday and the Royal Family
It
was a cold night
rest of Iraq,
in
mid-February 1992. Across Baghdad and the
Saddam Hussein s subjects were sinking ever deeper The eerie yellow fog that had mingled with
into miserable privation.
smoke from the burning
oil
again swirling across the
refinery during the
war a year before was
over the pools of sewage lapping at
city,
doorways in the poverty-stricken southern suburb of Saddam over the gardens of once-affluent middle-class
villas in
City,
al-Mansour,
where householders contemplated which family heirloom they would next take
to the market, over the forecourt of the high-rise al-
Rashid Hotel and the just pulled
The
up
at the
fleet
of expensive sport
utility vehicles that
had
entrance to the lobby.
fog and the misery stopped at the doors of the hotel. Inside,
the National Restaurant, one of the most expensive establishments in
Baghdad, was having a
typically
busy evening. Seated amid the ornate
decor of casbah gold leaf and black lacquer, the families
were eating
their
fill
new
rich
and
their
of the lamb kebabs, thick steaks, and
UDAY AND THE ROYAL FAMILY grilled Tigris fish
rushed by busy waiters
141
onff) the crisp
white cloths of
the crowded tables. These customers were, for the most part, the
smugglers and profiteers for
whom
the shortages caused by sanctions
had provided boundless opportunity, now
months income or more entertainment.
Amid the
lavishing
carelessly
a
for an ordinary family on their evenings
rattle
came
of plates and roar of conversation
the sound of Mr. Abdullali, the house musician, plucking the strings of his santir.
A new party had
Suddenly, there was a commotion at the door. arrived, the occupants of the side.
Some
motorcade that had just drawn up out-
of them were dressed in the black leather jackets that
security agents of the regime
fanned out to various
had adopted
as their trademark.
These
comers of the spacious dining room, eying
Two
before them with the attentively suspicious gaze of bodyguards. of
them disappeared through the doors
their heels strolled a
all
into the kitchen. Close at
group of casually well-dressed men, most of
whom hung back with a suggestion of deference to the two youngest among them. These two were both
dark,
one with a
distinctive
designer stubble, the other bearing a softened version of the face that
adorned public posters the length and breadth of Iraq.
The new
brought a perceptible
arrivals
ground noise
in the
room.
directly at the party that
No one was
shift in
the level of back-
foolhardy enough to stare
was now heading
for a
comer
table next to
Mr. Abdullah, but everyone was conscious of their presence. Finally
someone
hissed, "It
is
with the stubble was Uday, at twenty-eight the Hussein.
He and his
head of the
brother, Qusay,
table, chatting relaxedly
were seating themselves
in Iraq
more
father, there
universally loathed
Everyone knew the
stories of his greed,
for public violence.
A few days
oned two guests road,"
around the clock." years before,
earher,
was
at that
Few
his
brutality,
and
taste
Mohammed Jawad had beck-
own currency
Iraqis
time
and feared than Uday.
extreme
into his garden to whisper that "just
Uday maintained
at the
with the rest of the company.
With the possible exception of his no individual
The young man eldest son of Saddam
the sons of the president!"
down
the
printing plant "working
had not heard of the occasion,
when an army officer had attempted
to
defend
six
his girl-
aUTaFTHEASHES
1-42
Udays advances
friend from
man dead on
in a discotlieque.
Uday had
shot the
the spot. Taxi drivers feared even to drive on the street
in front of his office.
To the untutored
eye,
might have seemed that Uday and com-
it
pany were merely a for
convivial and inoffensive group of friends out an evening meal. But within minutes of their arrival, the busy
room had been
The
Now
entirely transformed.
stretched around them,
some
still
restaurant s Iraqi patrons had
a sea of deserted tables
littered with half-eaten dishes.
abandoned
their dinners
and hur-
ried away, anxious to escape the lethally dangerous individual
had appeared
in their midst.
new
Mr. Abdullali struck up a
days of die Thousand and cigar.
One
Soon the party
tune.
was joining in a rousing chorus from,
Havana
who
lighting cigarettes
of Black Label and champagne
drank only from a
atmosphere gave
and
"The
Uday beating time with a large d',
refilling glasses
bustled up and
from the
bottles
Uday himself decanter of cognac he had brought widi him. The
little
the waiters' brows.
comer
as their host later explained,
Nights,"
Johnny, the suave Sudanese maitre
down the table
in the
lined the cloth.
tliat
hint of menace, save for the beads of sweat
on
one of the party stood up and made
his
By and
by,
way over to where two journalists from America (Leslie and Andrew Cockbum) were sitting, transfixed by the scene before them. He was carrying a bottle of champagne. After
ducing himself as "Alimed," he waved is
a lion in Iraq,"
filling their glasses
at the table
and
intro-
behind him. "There
announced the champagne bearer
in slightly slurred
tones, "and these are his cubs."
Saddam Hussein Iraqi leader has ever
in
tells
been heard
Uday has been
effect diat
As he
has always loved his cubs.
it,
Baghdad
is
an affectionate quip to the
a "political activist since
his wife, Sajida,
in 1964, bearing
18 that year.
to tell
The only joke the
would
visit
he was a baby."
him when he was
baby Uday, who had been
in prison
bom on June
They had married the year before when Saddam
returned in triumph from exile in Egypt as soon as the Baath
Part)'
overthrew and killed President Qassim. Sajida was the daughter of his uncle Khairallah Tulfah,
who brought him up, and their marriage
had been arranged when he was
five years old.
the newly married couple, in which
A rare photograph
Saddam
is
for
of
once clean-
UDAY AND THE ROYAL FAMILY
143
shaven and without his luxuriant mustaoke, reveals that the
Each has the same slightly pursed brown eyes that stare coldly at the camera.
cousins even look alike. large, deep-set
Sajida
was
visiting
her
new husband in jail because
first
lips
and
a year after the
wedding, the Baath Party was out of power again and Saddam, one of its
rising leaders,
as
he told
it
line of
notliing suspicious in this touching sign of paternal
diapers,
tlie
Saddam s story, would hand him the baby
The punch
was that Sajida
As Saddam cuddled
affection).
under
arrested.
in later years,
saw
(the guards
had been
his firstborn,
where comrades
he would
Baath Party,
in the
hand
a
slip
still
free,
had
hidden secret messages for their imprisoned colleague.
As Uday grew through childhood, the affectionate bond evidently persisted.
Family snapshots show father and son playing together on
the beach.
Nor was
this affection
bom
confined to Uday. Qusay,
1966, also appears in the beach games, and
Saddam
in
always presented
himself as a besotted and overtolerant father to his three daughters,
Raghad, Rina, and Hala. In his ily,
with the Iraqi
first
and only interview about
women's magazine Al-Mafa
in 1978,
his
fam-
Saddam
said:
I loved my daughters most, beginning witli When she was a pretty ten-year-old witli light brown hair, he
"When they were children, Raghad."
had a picture of himself taken mending the sleeve of his eldest daughter's
flowery pink dress with a needle and thread.
By
the time he gave that interview,
Saddam was on
the brink of
supreme power, which he achieved the following year with the
elimi-
nation of his rivals in the leadership of the Baath Party.
Such
unchecked power had not been seen
in
Baghdad
since the days of the
medieval caliphs, and, as in the medieval kingdom, the
ruler's
extended family constituted a court, with princes, great nobles, and lesser lords.
Uday himself was
often referred to as "The Prince" by
Iraqis.
The higher
nobility
extended family, or
came from two branches of Saddam's
clan, the Bejat,
which
in turn
formed part of the
tribe. The first of these branches were his al-Majid nephews of his father, Hussein al-Majid, whom he never knew. They played a public and aggressive role in supervising the army and repressing the Kurds and the Shia. The second branch of
Albu Nasir cousins,
the family on which
Saddam
relied
were the Ibrahims
—
his three
,
OUT OF THE ASHES half-brothers, Barzan,
Watban, and Sabawi, sons of
his
mother,
Subha, by her second marriage to Ibrahim al-Hassan. They played a critical role in
porarily
the intelligence and security services.
eclipsed
following
Subha's
death in
Though tem-
1983,
they again
returned to prominence after the Gulf War.
For Saddam, the bonds forged by the blood
ties
widiin his
extended family were not close enough. To create even tighter
links
he resolved that the cousins be further united through matrimony. Marriage between
first
cousins
is
common
in Iraqi tribal society,
and
the beloved daughters Raghad and Rina were accordingly bestowed
on
their al-Majid cousins,
Hussein Kamel and Saddam Kamel, both
rising stars within the family in the 1980s.
Barzan married lUian, the
exceptionally good-looking daughter of Khairallah Tulfah, uncle.
Uday married
Saddams
Barzan's daughter Saja after a brief marriage to
the daughter of Izzat Ibraliim al-Dhouri, vice chairman of the Revolutionary
Command
Council and leader of the powerful Dhouri clan,
long aUied to Saddam.
As rebellion exploded 1991,
in the south
of Iraq and Kurdistan in early
Saddam looked first to two of the al-Majids, Ali Hassan alhis nephew Hussein Kamel. On March 5, he put Ali Has-
Majid and
san, fifty years old
and
until recently
of security as interior minister. like face
and
infections,
had
he was, above
all,
the family enforcer, though
other, well-qualified contenders.
was a reputation he had won
It
governor of Kuwait, in charge
diabetic with a menacing, rodent-
and a scraggly mustache who suffered from hypertension
and spinal this title
A
in Kurdistan.
NCO, he had presided over tlie
A former army driver
regime s greatest crime. In 1987,
he was appointed secretary general of the Baath Northern Bureau charge of suppressing the Kurds, Iraq
war
to rise in rebellion.
in
who had taken advantage of die Iran-
Over the next two
years,
he slaughtered,
using poison gas and execution squads, between 60,000 and 200,000
Kurds.
Much
of the region became entirely depopulated.
Kurds rebelled again
in 1991,
When
the
they captured Iraqi security archives,
including tapes of Ali Hassan addressing subordinates in his distinctive,
high-pitched, whiny voice as he exhorts
At one
moment he
is
them to further atrocities.
heard rhetorically responding to potential
of his execution of Kurdish men,
women, and
children in 1988.
critics
"Am
I
UDAY AND THE ROYAL FAMILY supposed to keep them shall
in
good shape?" be asks
145
rhetorically.
"No,
I
bury them with bulldozers."
In another tape he
is
heard
telling
Baath Party cadres to disre-
gard any international reaction to the use of chemical weapons against the Kurds:
"Who
is
going to say anything? The international
community? Fuck them." Soon after his appointment was part of an
as interior minister in 1991, Ali
Iraqi delegation that
met with Kurdish
Hassan
leaders.
appeared nervous. The Kurds said that by their calculations,
He
at least
182,000 Kurds had disappeared during his two years in charge of Kurdistan.
Ah Hassan sprang to his
feet
and
angrily shouted:
"What
exaggerated figure of a hundred and eighty-two thousand?
have been more than a hundred thousand."
is
this
couldn't
It
A video of him interrogat-
ing and beating Shia prisoners captured in the south in
1991(see Chapter One) showed diat he had not changed
liis
March
methods.
The second of the al-Majid cousins to whom Saddam turned to his power during the rebellions was Hussein Kamel, the
defend
thirty-seven-year-old
husband of
his
favorite
Kamel's earlier services to the regime had,
more
if
daughter,
anything,
Raghad.
been even
significant than those of his uncle Ali Hassan.
month of March 1991, with the regime tottering on the brink of destruction, Hussein Kamel had been in the thick of In the terrible
the fighting, leading the Iraqi armored columns in their assault on the holy city of Kerbala. At the end of the battle, he had into the badly shattered shrine-tomb of
century Shia martyr and called Hussein
and
I
saint,
Imam
shouting triumphantly:
have won."
Rumor
marched
Hussein, the seventh-
"We
are both
quickly circulated news of
in Iraq. The fact army boots when entering the shrine was cited as an example of his arrogance and contempt for the Islamic tradition to which 55 percent of Iraqis belong. Kamel himself later had doubts about the wisdom of his actions. When he was diagnosed as having a brain tumor in 1994, he believed it was because he had profaned the shrine. Returning from a successful
Hussein Kamel's defiance of the founder of Shiism
that
he did not even remove
his
Amman, Jordan, he diverted his ambulance so he could tomb of Imam Hussein to give thanks for sparing his life.
operation in
pray
at
the
Imam
Hussein was not the only target of Hussein Kamel's ruthless
aUTaFTHEASHES
146
arrogance. Professional
army
officers resented
him because of
his
rapid promotion and inexperience. In 1982, he was only a captain in
the army but was given the job of forming the elite Republican divisions to
moted
ment
spearhead the counterattack against
to heutenant general in 1988.
He showed
and put
Iran.
great energy in both jobs, as well as
to build an oil pipeline to the
supported, was defeated by a
rival
Red
Sea,
When
oil
a
which Hussein Kamel
scheme, backed by Barzan, Sad-
dam's brother, in Geneva, he launched an anticorruption drive.
deputy
pro-
charge of military procure-
in
extreme greed in seeking commissions on military contracts.
scheme
Guard
He was
The
minister and Nazir Auchi, a prominent Iraqi businessman,
both Linked to the successful bidders, were accused of paying bribes
and summarily executed. Like almost all of Saddams close relatives, Kamel first made his mark running one of the security services. In his case, he helped
Amn
organize the
al-Khass, a special inner-security agency around
the president, founded after an attempt to assassinate
Saddam
in
the mid-eighties. But he befieved his chief claim to fame was to create the elite
RepubUcan Guards out of a
single brigade that
fered heavy casualties fighting the Iranians.
had
just six soldiers,"
he would
recall.
sisted of only twenty-four soldiers." It
was given the
right to co-opt
had
suf-
"One of the regiments
"The second regiment con-
was
his
proudest moment.
He
any officer he wanted out of the regular
army. Within a few years, he had built up the Republican Guard until
it
had thirty-seven brigades and was the main
strike force
of
the Iraqi army. In sharp contrast to Uday,
Kamel was
a puritan.
He
drank no
alcohol or even tea, an astonishing exercise of self-denial in Iraq,
where
social
and business
life is
of little glasses of sweet tea.
gave the impression of being attacks his
brittle
often aggressive or petulant but
under pressure. Strident
on others, he was wounded by
remarks
at the regional
leaders that five of later,
punctuated by regular consumption
He was
he resigned
in his
criticism of himself. In 1991,
Baath Party congress so angered other
them walked out of the meeting. A few days
as defense minister and,
when asked to
reconsider,
not only refused, but, as he later admitted, "did not go to the office for three months."
UDAY AND THE ROYAL FAMILY Hussein Kamel s authority,
like that
147
of others in the family
depended on access to Saddam. Barzan, the
circle,
Iraqi representative to the
United Nations in Geneva from 1988 to 1998, later claimed that
Kamel "threw
a ring around the president and prevented others from
He went on
getting to him."
to say that
Saddam
major way even though he was not competent
"relied
on him
as a military
in a
man, engi-
neer, or politician. In 1975, he was a driver in the president s motor-
him promotions he did not
cade, and later the president gave
He got into a position where he could see Kamel's
rise
deserve.
[the president] night or day."
had provoked the jealous rage of the Ibrahim branch
of the family since the early 1980s. Barzan, intelligent and articulate, in
appearance a slimmed-down version of Saddam, played a
critical role as security
he and
his
two brothers
Kamel and Raghad
is
Barzan was
that
fiercely resisted the marriage
in 1983,
rectly foresaw that this later,
chief in the Iraqi leader's rise to power. Both
still
when
would
dilute their
own
power.
A dozen years
fuming that Hussein Kamel's "only legitimacy
he married the president's daughter. Otherwise nobody
would have cared about him. within that clan there
He is
between
she was barely sixteen. They cor-
is
He now
an entire generation that supersedes him.
boy who knows no courtesy."
a rash, aggressive, and hard
To add
speaks about his clan, but
insult to injury,
Saddam Kamel, Hussein Kamel's younger Saddam Hussein's second daughter.
brother, later married Rina,
Saddam Kamel, an shadowed by
officer in the security service,
his sibling.
was always over-
among Iraqis was depicting Saddam Hus-
His chief claim to fame
his starring role in
The Long Days, the epic
sein's assassination
attempt on President Qassim.
Barzan's description of Hussein Kamel's lack of qualifications was accurate, but in the face of the uprisings,
Saddam probably
needed the straightforward energy and
brutality of his
felt
he
Majid
cousins. Meanwhile, however, his Ibrahim half-brothers
had recov-
ered some of the influence they had
They were
lost in
the eighties.
assigned to low-profile but crucial posts deahng with intelligence
and
security.
Control of this
field
had always been Saddam's preemi-
nent tool in building and maintaining years he
moved
his
power, and in the postwar
to tighten the family hold over these vital organs.
Sabawi, Saddam's youngest half-brother, was
made head of General
aUTOFTHEASHES
14-S
Security (al-Amn al-Amm). Qusay, of course, in his overall supervi-
more powerful
sory role of security overseer, had an even
November
In
Kamel
1991, Hussein
left
position.
the Defense Ministry,
which he had headed since the immediate aftermath of the war, and returned to military procurement. There was no sign of his losing influence. His defense post
was taken by Ali^Hassan al-Majid, whose
place at the Interior Ministry was in turn brother,
This
filled
Watban Ibrahim. game of musical chairs among Saddam's
been a recognition changing.
By
by the rulers
inner circle
half-
may have
that the nature of the threat to the regime
the late
summer
had withdrawn from Kurdistan.
was
of 1991, the army, after heavy losses, It
dug in along a fortified military line,
which snaked across the plain below the Kurdish mountains
like
an
Iraqi version of the
Maginot Line. Ground fighting had ceased every-
where
from occasional clashes with Shia guerrillas
in Iraq, apart
in the
reed beds of the soutliem marshes.
The
threat of
armed
insurrection died away, but Iraqis realized
that the siege of Iraq instituted
by the international community after
the invasion of Kuwait was not ending. Sanctions remained in place.
There were almost no increasing.
The
oil
exports. Political isolation
Soviet Union, Iraq's old
ally,
Jordan, a friendly neutral during the Gulf
means of access
to the outside world (as
was actually
collapsed in 1991.
War and
opposed
Iraq's
to the
one
Even legal
smuggling
routes across Kurdish-held territory), was beginning to reassess links
its
with Baghdad.
At home, there was the serious threat that the powerful Sunni tribes, a
days,
key component of Saddam's power base since the
might also be reassessing their
when Saddam oil
ruled an Iraq that
links
earliest
with the regime. In the days
was united, fabulously wealthy from
revenues, and a growing regional military power, they had been
happy
to support the
tribal alfiances.
man
They had
to
whom they were,
ralfied to
Saddam
in
any case, finked by
in die face
of the Shia and
Kurdish rebeUions that threatened Sunni control of the country.
Once
the rebels had been defeated, however, the costs to these
tribes of continuing rule
The United as
long as
States
by Saddam began
had made
it
to
outweigh the benefits.
clear that sanctions
Saddam Hussein remained
would continue
in power. Sanctions
were
UDAY AND THE ROYAL FAMILY
149
rapidly impoverishing the mass of the population, including not only
the Shia, tus,
who were
almost entirely excluded from the ruling appara-
but also Sunni technocrats, Baath Party
cers. It
would have been surprising
this situation and,
if
there had been no reaction to
among
officers
hm tribes, who had traditionally supported centered around the northern
under Saddam s
with
rule,
positions in the military
two senior Juburi
many
and security
—
city
The
it.
from Sunni MusJuburis, for
exam-
of Mosul, had prospered
of their
air force officers
director of operations
members reaching high
services. Nevertheless, in 1993,
—the deputy commander and the There
^were arrested for attempting a coup.
was further unrest among senior tribes
offi-
indeed, in the next few years there were a series
of conspiracies against the regime
ple,
and army
officials,
from other important
officials
such as the al-Dhouris and the Dalaim. The danger for Saddam
came from cities like Ramadi, Mosul, and Samarra, which had supported him in 1991. In a 1992 speech, Saddam mocked "imperialists" for recruiting to their conspiracies
was that the
plotters
"treacherous and perfidious people in Tikrit."
He
lesser lords
who have
spent part of their
life
could no longer take for granted the loyalty of the
who had once
clustered around his throne. Those in
Washington who believed that there was a good chance that the Iraqi military
would oust Saddam
if
the United States could keep up
the pressure were not being wholly unreafistic. After
one
all,
signifi-
cant reason for government control having evaporated so quickly
during the northern uprising was the sudden defection of formerly loyal
Kurdish
by Saddam,
The
armed and organized
into the Jash militia
to prevent the Kurdish
example happening
tribes, well
to the rebels.
Iraqi leader
had
again elsewhere. While the regime had always
from the Sunni towns on the upper tribal links
were
tribal leaders
strong,
its
strength
and Euphrates, where
did everything to conciliate
around the country. Cars were given to Shia
sheikhs in the south, all
Tigris
now Saddam
drawn
who were
also invited
on
trips to
tribal
Baghdad with
expenses paid. In 1992, these provincial dignitaries could be seen
uneasily sampling the
modem conveniences
of the al-Rashid Hotel,
ascending and descending in the elevators as they strove to master the controls. Irreverent foreign joumafists
dubbed them
"the flying
OUT OF THE ASHES sheikhs." Prohibitions against the concentration of land holdings,
introduced after the 1958 revolution, were dropped. In 1992, Sad-
dam even
apologized to tribal chiefs in southern Iraq for past agrar-
The government paid high prices for agricultural products, making wealthy the many tribal leaders who owned land. Peopte in Baghdad began to notice that those who now filled the
ian reforms.
city's
restaurants
were increasingly
tional flowing dishdashes
tribal notables,
and parking
their shiny
wearing
new
tradi-
four-wheel-
drive vehicles outside.
The heightened leled
profile of these traditional groupings
was paral-
by the declining importance of the Baath Party organization,
which between the revolution of 1968 and the Gulf War had
ened tions.
grip over Iraqi civil society
its
by controlling
Faleh Jabber, formerly a leading
Communist
ful Iraqi
cited a telling
Day
tight-
organiza-
of the once power-
Party and an acute observer of Iraqi politics,
example of these two trends
"The telegrams of support sent National
member
all civic
in a perceptive essay.
to the President
on Army Day and
are no longer from trade unions, students' organiza-
tions, professional societies, political parties or
other
modem
social
groups," he wrote in 1994. "Nowadays they are signed by tribal sheikhs
whose
members
is
tribes are
given.
intended to forge
The
named and even
the
number of their
revival of old social classes
new social
Saddam might attempt
seems
to
abortive),
defend himself and
immediate
family.
to conciliate
and reward
his grassroots
Cousins such
he turned more and more to
as the
elty
was
in Iraq
whose reputation
as great as his
of
his
fearsome Ali Hassan al-Majid their worth, but, as the base
of the regime appeared increasingly insecure,
man
(all
he could never depend on them. Therefore,
his regime,
and Hussein Kamel had already proved the one
clearly
alliances, particularly in the south."
supporters but, as indicated by the periodic conspiracies
which proved
tribe
Saddam reached
for personal violence
for
and cru-
own: Uday, the young prince.
Everything about Uday was flamboyant. Other members of the ing famfly lived in the shadows, but
Uday was
to
be seen
in
rul-
Baghdad's
best hotels, restaurants, and nightclubs. In the early 1990s, his headquarters was a ten-story yellow building in East Baghdad, with medieval-style watchtowers for machine gunners on
its
outer walls,
UDAY AND THE ROYAL FAMILY that
housed
man.
It
tlie
Iraqi
151
Olympic Committee,*of which Uday was
was probably the only Olympic headquarters
its own prison. Uday was a physically
in tlie
chair-
world to
have
striking figure. His
enormous
staring
brown
eyes dominated his face and he usually had a five days' growth of
when he was thirteen, he wears and an enormous black bow tie. The impression
beard. In a photograph taken in 1977, a loud striped jacket
given
is
of somebody trying to assert his personality against almost
overwhelming odds. His schoolmates speak of him
up
for classes,
and even then
five
as rarely turning
bodyguards accompanied him to the
classroom. Nevertheless, he and his brodier, Qusay, also said to have
Uday even had an He spoke about this when he
flunked in school, both learned fluent English.
be a nuclear
early ambition to
scientist.
was sixteen and repeated the story of his thwarted hopes sation with Leslie
Cockbum in Baghdad in
1992.
in a conver-
He said he had travmy
eled to the United States in search of further education: "I did
SATs, everything.
I
did very well. Passed with high marks." But, he
claimed, his ambitions were thwarted by the outbreak of the Iran-Iraq
He
war.
said:
'Tou
see, I
wanted
to
do nuclear
time there was a problem with Iraqis doing diat." "I
wanted
Some
to
go to MIT," he recalled
studies, It
was a
and
at that
bitter blow.
sadly.
aspects of his early education were, at least by his
own
Saddam sent Sajida and the boys They stayed with General Hassan
account, unique. In the late 1970s, off for a family vacation in Spain.
al-Naquib, Iraqi
who
later
defected to the opposition but was then the
ambassador to Madrid. Al-Naquib had two sons of roughly the
same age
as the
Saddam youngsters and also Uday boasted
the four boys played together,
send them to the prisons pare them for "the
impress the
young daughter. As
would
to witness torture sessions, in order to pre-
ahead." In an apparent effort to
difficult tasks
little girl,
a
that his father
he threw
in the further detail that
they were
sometimes allowed to execute prisoners themselves. Given the general
ambience of the Saddam
family, this
may even have been
true,
and, in any case, Uday's choice of themes for playground braggadocio are in themselves illuminating.
in
There
is
certainly evidence that
1979 the boys were treated to an outing to the semipubHc execu-
tions of Baathist leaders
opposed
to their father.
Whether because
OUT OF THE ASHES of the childhood experiences or not,
Uday
always reUshed instilling
fear as well as displaying a taste for very public violence, especially
when drunk on whisky or cognac. An Iraqi who used to work for him remembers going with Uday to a nightclub. As he described the "Uday lined up a group of male gypsy singers onstage, told them to drop their trousers and sing while he fired his submachine gun just over their heads. After ten minutes, some began to urinate evening,
with
fear.
Then he
told
them
to get dressed, gave
all
them some
money, and told them to go home." At the Saddam University of Technology the Baathists,
Uday
usually called "Ustav Uday,"
Baath Party
at the
in
Baghdad, founded by
led the cosseted Ufe of a crown prince.
He
was
He joined the Mohammed Dubdub, the chairman
meaning Master Uday.
age of twelve.
of the National Union of Iraqi Students (known as bear-bear because his
his
to
name as written in Arabic sounds like the word for "bear"), became political tutor. When the Iran-Iraq war began in 1980, Uday used go to the
staff.
front.
He was
always accompanied by the Iraqi chief of
General Abdul Jabber Shanshal,
who walked respectfully behind Uday s life in danger, he bit, so Uday went through
him. While his father was careful not to put
wanted
to
show
that his son
flight training to learn to fly
was doing
his
an army helicopter.
In 1982, father and son, accompanied as usual by the dutiful chief
of staff, turned up near Basra. Wafiq al-Samarrai, then a rising star in military intelligence,
happened
to
be on the scene and witnessed the
performance put on by father and son for the edification of the troops.
There was heavy his firstborn to
fighting just to the east
and Saddam loudly ordered
go and attack the enemy.
begged Saddam not
to
send Uday on
Uday
got into his helicopter and
Later
it
turned out that he had
we hit
On
this
cue, General Shanshal
dangerous mission. "But
could see him
firing his missiles.
our troops," recalled al-Samarrai
with a laugh. "One person was injured. report saying: 'You should punish the
The
unit involved even sent a
pilot.' "
Only years
later did al-
Samarrai learn from Hussein Kamel that Saddam and Uday had
choreographed the whole event, including the safe distance
from the
Iranians, before they
had
firing left
of missiles
at a
Baghdad.
In the final years of the war, while cousins like Hussein
Kamel were
performing important functions such as superintending the Iraqi
UDAY AND THE RDYAL FAMILY nuclear weapons project, play a minor political role. tee in 1987
153
Saddam began ^rmitting his eldest son to Uday took over the Iraqi Olympic Commit-
and turned it into tlie Ministry of Youth (there was another,
who received a medal from Saddam for proposof his own ministry "in accordance with Baathi val-
real minister of youth
ing the abolition ues"). In the
coming years, Uday was
a base for involvement in
all
to use the
aspects of Iraqi
Olympic committee
He seemed to
life.
as
have
unlimited funds, employing any veteran officer who appHed for a job.
He
set
up and managed
jail.
Spectators could teU
who
football teams. Players
goals or prevent opposing sides
failed to score
from doing so were routinely sent to
who had been punished because
the player-
prisoners had their heads shaved by their jailers.
known
Uday's reputation as a brutal playboy was elite,
to the Iraqi
but even a society as used to violence as Iraq was shocked and
astonished to learn in
November 1988
he was
that
in prison for the
public murder, during a party on an island in the Tigris, of one of his father's closest aides.
The motive
for the killing
dam had married
was
as lurid as the
Sajida Tulfah in 1963, but
Hamed
Majida, die wife of
had
murder
itself.
Sad-
mistresses, such as
Youssef Hamadi, the minister of infor-
mation. But in the middle of the Iran-Iraq war,
Saddam
fell in
love
with Samira al-Shahbander, a beautiful ophthalmologist. They were secretly married
was not only
Her
brother,
friend
and produced a son,
his wife,
Adnan
Khairallah Tulfah,
and minister of defense. In her
her favorite
child.
The cause of her
arranging his father's
Kamel Hannah
Jajo,
Ali.
Sajida
was enraged. She
members of his clan. was Saddams boyhood
but related to important
illicit
who
liaison,
for years
fury, Sajida
grief,
the
sought out Uday,
man
responsible for
she said, was none other than
had been
practically a
member of
the family as Saddam's aide, bodyguard, and sometime food
On
October
18,
unaware of or oblivious
taster.
to the seething passions
he had aroused,
Umm
Jajo threw a party on an island in the Tigris called al-Khanazir (Mother of Pigs), not far from the presidential
palace on the west bank of the
river. It
was a grand occasion, with
Suzanne Mubarak, the wife of the Egyptian president,
as guest of
Uday was not invited. Considering this a slight, he decided to hold his own rival party next door. Only a low hedge separated the honor.
OUTaFTHEASHES
154
two venues. The exact
details of
what happened next come from
Latif Yahia, who, because he closely resembled
had been recruited cial events.
Uday s
as his
double the year before to stand in
As such he became,
social circle, a
Uday in appearance,
at least for a while, a
at offi-
member
of
dubious privilege.
According to Uday s double's account of the dramatic events of the
Uday was
evening,
make
the
first
looking for a confrontation but did not want to
move.
He told Adel Aide, his favorite singer,
not to play
too loudly and to merely provide background music. As the evening
wore
on,
Uday became very drunk, mixing straight whisky and cognac
at the buffet.
At about midnight, shots rang out from the other side of
the hedge. This was Jajo, in a typical Iraqi gesture, firing volleys into the air with his submachine gun.
Uday sent an
aide to
tell
him
He
to stop
too had been drinking heavily.
making so much
noise.
When the aide returned, he told Uday that Jajo not only refused to do anything about the noise but had sent back a message: "Kamel
Hannah
says
forced his
he obeys only the presidents orders." Enraged, Uday
way through the hedge.
All
evening he had been carrying a
battery-powered electric knife, called a Magic Wand, which he normally used for cutting his roses. As he drank, he had been nervously
on and off,
up
napkins, and, at one stage, even
switching
it
his cigars.
When he appeared at the second party, Jajo was standing on
a table,
still
slicing
fruit,
holding his gun in one hand and a spare clip of ammuni-
Uday shouted at him: "Get down." Jajo did so, but then repeated: "I obey only the commands of the president." Uday lashed out and hit him twice on the head with the electric tion in the other.
knife and, as he staggered back, hacked at his throat. Jajo lay
ground, trying to kicked
it
to
one side and shot him twice with
back through the hedge to
his
own party,
his pistol.
but
left
Some
of the
offi-
the party rang the palace and Saddam Hussein himself arrived
within a few minutes, wearing just trousers and a into shoes without in the
He then walked
immediately to lock
himself in a room in a nearby government building. cers at
on the
pick up the submachine gun he had dropped. Uday
any socks.
shirt, his feet
thrust
When an ambulance arrived, Saddam got
back with Jajo to take him to the Ibn Sina Hospital, but accord-
ing to Yahia the double, Jajo was already dead.
Uday had meanwhile swallowed
a bottle of sleeping
pills
and was
UDAY AND THE ROYAL FAMILY
155
taken to the same hospital. As his stomacfi was being
Saddam
arrived in the
and
Uday
hit
pumped
emergency room, pushed the doctors
in the face, shouting:
"Your blood
will flow
out,
aside,
hke
my
friends!"
Frantic at the possibility that son, Sajida turned to
was
at
Saddam might
actually
kill
their
none other than King Hussein of Jordan, who
the time apparently close enough to the Iraqi ruling house to
function as a family counselor. Calling the royal palace in
she shouted, "Uday has killed Jajo and
now Saddam wants
Amman, to shoot
Uday." Without explaining to anyone what had happened, the king
drove straight to the airport and flew to Baghdad. As he related later,
he and the
Iraqi ruling family spent the next several days "talk-
ing the whole thing over."
Whether because of the king's counseling, Sajida's pleadings, or Saddam s anger cooled. The killing was initially completely hushed up, with no word in the press until a month had passed. Then, on November 22, Saddam called pubhcly for the justice minister to investigate what had happened. He declared that Uday had killed Jajo unintentionally, adding that his son had been in prison for a month and had tried to kill himself simple paternal affection,
three times.
Saddam
to
A
government-orchestrated press campaign begged
show
looked into the
leniency.
affair
stay with his uncle
Ultimately, a three-man
and freed Uday, who then
left
commission
the country to
Barzan in Geneva. His behavior did not improve.
Detained by the Swiss police for carrying a concealed weapon, he
was asked
to leave Switzerland.
In Baghdad, the family row over
Saddam s
mistress
and the murder
on the "Mother of Pigs" island had a final, mysterious chapter. Khairallah Tulfah, the Iraqi defense minister, took his sister Sajida's side in the affair
him The
and there were rumors
his job. In fact, official story
he died
was
in
Baghdad
that his support
would
cost
in a helicopter crash the following year.
that the crash
was due
to a sandstorm, but his
father believed his son's death was too opportune
and that Saddam had
arranged for his murder by having explosive charges placed in the helicopter. Others suggest that for
once Saddam was innocent because
there was indeed a blinding sandstorm that day.
Even though Saddam brought the
late
defense minister's two
little
OUTDFTHEASHES
156 sons to live with his father,
him
had no
at the palace, Khairallah s entire family, as well as
difficulty in believing that
he had been
killed
on Sad-
dam s orders. (Saddam might have had an added incentive to get rid of army and the
his cousin, given the latter s popularity with the
had shown
as a
commander
in the
war with
Iran.) Yet
ability
he
they could not
escape from the court of the ruler they believed was their brothers murderer. "Abdul" (not his real name), a young Iraqi businessman
from an old family that moved abroad lot
of
Uday and
during
his set
They
felt that
way,
it
was
all
all
the
Baghdad at this Saddam responsible
hated Saddam," he
more macabre
ters half-brothers, Luai, Ma'an, Muhvar,
spend much invitation
Adnan
they indeed
that the late defense minis-
and Kahlan, were forced
to
his
their equally vicious characters.
When
Luai
he had kidnapped a teacher who had displeased him and
bodyguards to beat up the unfortunate educator. But even
in the ruling family, only
the law.
for
from the prince. Uday especially liked Luai, an affection that
in school,
ordered
recalls. If
"The
time.
of their time in Uday's company. There was no refusing an
may have been based on was
1958 revolution, saw a
visits to
whole Khairallah family did hold Khairallah s death.
after the
When Saddam
Uday and Qusay enjoyed total immunity from
found out what had happened, he summoned
Luai to a family gathering and broke his arm with a blow from a
stick
while a video camera recorded the administration of family justice.
"They are
all
animals," says
Abdul of these characters with
whom
he socialized for a time. Nevertheless, there was a pecking order in jungle.
Abdul noticed how terrified
all
of the younger
family were of cousin Uday, "especially Ma'an, slightly slow-witted.
room, Ma'an would
Uday
liked to tease him.
sit silent,
not daring to
this
members of the
who is large and fat and
When Uday was
in the
move." Uday had a high
turnover of friends, demanding their constant company and attention before dropping them after a few months. "Friends
who have been
discarded are so happy," remembers Abdul.
Abdul himself was conscious of the dangers of proximity to Uday, but the Iraqi businessman endured the relationship because his family hoped to regain extensive holdings in Iraq that had been nationahzed years before. Even
phone
calls to his Paris office
so,
he came
to
dread the constant
beseeching him to come to Baghdad
UDAY AND THE ROYAL FAMILY He
on the next plane.
Uday
as the
explains the basis of his relationship with
envy of a self-consciously parochial neophyte for the
sophisticated Westerner. I
think he looked
up
to
"He was
me
always lived in the West, and
was
far richer
matter.
157
than
He was
I
was
always very pohte and hospitable.
because I
was
—he had
always asking
grew up
I
rich," all
in
Europe,
I
had
he observes. "Of course, he
of Iraq. But that didn't seem to
my opinion
of things."
This reverence for Western taste and culture was coupled with a
own people. On one occasion in 1990, Abdul was driving with Uday in Baghdad when they passed two young boys, about ten years old, who were eating sunflower seeds and spitting out the shells. "He picked up the commensurate and
phone and
limitless disdain for his
called his guards in the car behind to go
and beat up
these boys because he thought they were spitting at him!
no idea what shits
Iraqis are,'"
he expostulated
Tou have
they drove on.
as
After his return from Switzerland, Uday's rehabilitation was swift.
He was
reelected as chairman of the Olympic committee from which
he had resigned after the murder of Jajo. a biography of his father.
Uday was
He wrote the introduction to
A few days before his father invaded Kuwait,
part of the Iraqi delegation
who went
to Jidda
on July 31,
1990, for a final disastrous meeting with the Kuwaitis. But his under-
standing of the world was
still
as parochial as ever.
Abdul was with him
on the day that the United Nations imposed sanctions on
Iraq, four
Uday asked him how long he thought the sancactually believed they would be in place for a long time, but to be on the safe side he said, "Maybe a month." Uday looked at him as if he were mad. "He said, 'You're joking two or days after the invasion.
tions
would
last.
Abdul
—
Do you
three days at the most.
them go on longer than rest of his family
that!'
really think the oil
You
companies wiU
let
see," explained Abdul, "he and the
thought that Iraq was the center of the world, that the
world could not Hve without Iraq and
its oil."
That assumption, possibly shared by Saddam himself, had proven catastrophically wrong. Eighteen months
were
still
in place as
later,
the sanctions
Uday, his brother, and his cronies sang and
talked at the National Restaurant in the al-Rashid Hotel. Perhaps
was the envious
interest of
Uday
in the
it
unreachable world of the
DUT DF THE ASHES West
prompted
that
an
Ahmed
his friend
to invite the
empty restaurant
nahsts Ungering in the
to
American jour-
meet the "cubs."
was
It
irresistible invitation.
Uday was very clearly the dominant figure. Qusay, dressed out of a J. Crew catalog, gave an impression of being the boy At the
at the
table,
dance with sweaty palms
who would rather be
dissecting rats at
home. Flushed with shyness, he spoke quietly about Mesopotamian culture, occasionally glancing furtively at his elder brother as if asking for approval.
much
Only two years younger than Uday, he
the baby boy, but a polite
word of praise from
his sibling.
brother indulgently.
"He
The
runs
still
appeared very
inquiry about what he did ehcited a
"Not such a baby now," laughed elder
all
the security services."
outside world was as yet barely aware of the rising
mild-mannered Qusay
in
power of
the regime's apparatus of repression,
although he was already incorporated into the family's personality cult.
One propaganda mural
of the time showed
paternal sheikh on horseback with his
by both
his sons,
responsibilities
Saddam
skill in
to
side
The younger
father.
administration as well
hard work. In the years to come,
would only grow,
as the
and flanked on each
hawk-eyed defenders of their
son had obviously inherited his father's as his habits of
rifle
his executive
encompass such
vital tasks as
playing the different Kurdish factions off against each other, direct-
ing the battle of wits with the
Unscom
guarding the personal security of his
inspectors, and, above
father.
Saddam, always a shrewd judge of managerial to grant
Uday any
this dinner,
all,
talent,
was never
similar official responsibility, but at the time of
the elder son had been permitted to launch a
new news-
It was a sign that Uday's power was expanding beyond the modest prerogatives of the Olympic committee.
paper called Babel. well
"Iraq's only
independent
daily," as its editor
was already a smashing success and the its
uninhibited attacks on government
proprietor excepted). voice of
Recently
Uday but it
handsome
It
also
because
it
just
because
was interesting and for readers to vote
minister, v^th the health minister
it,
Baghdad because of
officials (the father
was powerful not
had run a competition
proudly described
talk of
it
of the
was the
irreverent.
on the most
winning by a landsUde.
Gossip about ministers, denunciations of black market racketeers,
UDAY AND THE ROYAL FAMILY
159
exposes of shoddy work in the reconstruction of war damage
were there
Not long before the dinner
in Babel.
at
—
all
the al-Rashid,
the paper had revealed that the Jumhuriya Bridge across the Tigris, a cherished city landmark
bombed and
hastily rebuilt,
an opposition," remarked Professor Jawad
paper was a shrewd matized by war, frustrations.
A
Babel's offices Sitting
was buckling
"Our government provides us with everything, even
in the center.
initiative in furnishing
inflation,
But the crusading
sourly.
an outlet for Iraqis trau-
and a collapsing economy
hundred or so
citizens
to vent their
were turning up every day
at
on Palestine Road with complaints about officialdom.
on a chair down the
table
from Uday
in the restaurant,
chain-smoking and nursing a whisky, was Abbas Jenabi, Babels editorin-chief
Asked where he worked before Babel, he explained
had been a foreign correspondent to
Havana.
He had not enjoyed his
for the Iraqi
that
he
News Agency, posted
time in Cuba, he
said,
"because of
the sheer lack of personal freedom."
The
conversation turned to news leaking out of Washington about
CIA covert operations under way to
"get"
Saddam. The "cubs" joined
in the general hearty laughter at the notion, recently
Pentagon spokesman, that there were "cracks
promulgated by a
in the inner circle"
around Saddam, which could be exploited by giving greater support to the Kurdish and Shia opposition. "Look," said Uday, his enormous brown eyes narrowing, "the business about splitting us is nonsense."
He gestured with his cigar around the table, which at this stage was littered with bottles of whisky, saying: "I have two Shiites here.
Kurd who works ded
in
tandem.
for
"I
me." Jenabi, a Shiite from a powerful
I
have a
tribe,
nod-
have a big family," he said proudly. "There are two
million of us." This Shiite, a loyal adherent of the Sunni ruhng clique,
was a case study
in the shifting alliances of Iraqi politics.
stage of his career, he
Kurdish rebellions. Later, in 1998, Jenabi
fled Iraq, bearing vivid tales of the
No one
torture
"We
monstrous habits of
he had suffered
at this table
or sanctions.
earlier
had worked on a paper owned by the Barzani
family, perennial leaders of
Uday and the
At an
at his
his master,
hands.
appeared to have suffered
iU effects
from war
spent the war at His Excellency's [meaning Uday]
place in the country," remarked one of the party in a jovial aside.
"Drinking and playing cards and watching the cruise missiles going
DUTnFTHEASHES
16a
Now this man was doing well in "import-export" with A few years later, Saddam was to complain to Uday about the
overhead." Turkey.
company he kept. This was clearly evident that at the the al-Rashid, where everyone in the party was profiting some way from their connection with the First Family. Down from
seediness of the
evening in
Their Excellencies were two Armenians, one with an enormous gut
who was boisterously drunk, the other very thin and even drunker. The thin one was the Saddam family jeweler, who was doing well out of the travails of ordinary Iraqis forced to pawn their jewelry to buy ever more expensive was Saddam s
food. Haroot, his well-fed
tailor,
companion one place away,
lauded by the rest of the company
as a "philoso-
pher." As the subject of conversation turned to America, Haroot
pomaded silver hair and asked, "Did you know Howard Hughes? Well, you know who he was. You know the Armenian who works with him? Owns all the casinos?" When the answer was negative, he crowed with delight. "How come I know more about America than you do? Because I'm from the [Armenian]
passed a beefy hand over his
Mafia. If you ever
need any help, the Mafia can help you.
mused on happy days
in
Las Vegas. "What
is
the
name
I'll fix it."
He
of this guy, you
know, with the rings and the big heart? Liberace! Oh, he was such a
good man." Haroot turned
to Saddam's eldest.
"Do you know
Liber-
ace, Las Vegas?"
"No," said
Uday with
Given Uday's infamy,
a lazy stare, "only Engelbert Humperdinck." it
would have been hard
to forget,
even
in
the midst of such a surreal conversation, that this was extremely
dangerous company. Even his brother out. If a
and
associates,
so, his
demeanor, together with that of
remained
reminder of the true
state of affairs
the form of the young security officer nearly
polite
and courteous throughwas needed,
it
came
who came swaggering into
in
the
empty restaurant. Suddenly, he registered the identity of the comer table. Within seconds he had turned on his heel
diners at the
and bolted out the
door.
Uday was already using his newspapers to attack junior government Over the next few years, he would raise his sights to take on more formidable targets, ultimately clashing with senior members of ministers.
his
own
bles for
family.
more
But he was competing with other
than just political influence.
Iraqi poUtical nota-
For Uday, greed was just
as
UDAY AND THE ROYAL FAMILY
161
important a motivating factor as power Frcffn behind a cloud of cigar
smoke
at
upside to the unfortunate fact that
war and
up the theme that there was an Iraq's economy was devastated by
die head of the table, he took
sanctions.
"With
situation, there
all this
a lot of trade to be
is
I am doing some trade." He was being too modest. The newspaper was merely the flagship of a growing business empire. He also controlled Babel TV, as
done, so
well as Babel Transportation, Babel Hotels, and Babel cessing.
When
Iraq was exporting
oil,
members of the
Food Pro-
ruling clique
could make great fortunes by taking commissions on contracts
worth hundreds of millions of dollars to foreign companies.
Now the
government was poor, so Uday, Hussein Kamel, and the others were instead using their political and security muscle to acquire lies in
monopo-
importing consumer goods such as food and cigarettes as well
as the profitable trade in
smuggling
oil in
trucks across Kurdish-held
territory.
Abdul's experience of Uday's approach to business, which he sum-
marizes as
"No money
dov^Ti
and demand
fifty
percent," had
left
him
unimpressed. His period of greatest contact with Uday was in 1990, prior to the invasion of Kuwait, at a time icy was to
when
Iraqi
government pol-
open up the economy to private business. But even with the
backing of his powerful friend, Abdul failed to regain his family's for-
mer businesses. "We didn't succeed," he trial
project or undertaking
fell
explains, "because
any indus-
under the control of Hussein Kamel,
and Kamel wanted the business
for himself.
For a long time, even
Kamel in business." That had been before the war Following the disasters of 1991, as his father permitted him greater political rein, Uday used his newfound status to compete on more equal ground with the hitherto
Uday couldn't go up
against
unassailable Kamel,
who
naturally resented this intrusion. In raising
the profile of his eldest son,
within the ruling family.
It
Saddam was exacerbating
was a potentially
fatal
tensions
development.
Nonetheless, Uday's power steadily increased, as did the status of his targets.
By February 1994, Babel was
attacking his uncle Wat-
ban, interior minister at the time, for faihng to prevent a series of
ten "extremely successful" terrorist
over the previous two years
—twice
bombing as
many,
attacks in as
Baghdad
Babel malignly
PUTDFTHEASHES
162
pointed out, as had struck Baghdad during the entire eight years of the war with Iran. In
new
institution, "the Saddamists'
and army
them the
loans,
and the
right to benefits such as salary increases, special
soon had twenty-five thousand members, most of
in the army.
At the end of the
fifteen-thousand-strong miUtia
year, the
known
Saddam, or Saddam's Commandos, his
own
officials
carried special identity cards,
right to a place at a university regardless of age or
qualifications. It
them
Union." All high-ranking
Members
officers enrolled.
giving
cial
March 1994, Uday was appointed leader of a
security force, an area that
union spawned a spe-
as the Firqat Fida'iyyi
also led
by Uday. He now had
had previously been the preserve
The commandos, largely teenage toughs, often drove around Baghdad in pickup trucks with heavy machine guns in the backs, reminding visitors of the murderous militiamen of Lebanon of his brother.
and Somalia. In the spring of 1994,
Uday had assumed a further responsibility as
overseer of the entire Iraqi media.
moted
universal criticism of
From
this
command post, he
government executives
and incompetence and ignoring
tlie
pro-
for negligence
wisdom of "the comrade
leader."
In particular, he incited abuse against the hapless prime minister, a
Ahmed
Baath Party veteran named
Hussein (unrelated to the ruling
clan) for failing to prevent the further collapse of the currency.
The prime
minister was duly dismissed in
Hussein himself took over the
would now do something hope."
to "dispel darkness
The president/prime
impression of activism. sick "should
be
minister
May
his
diat ministers
in their ministries at 0:800.
1
Saddam that
he
and despair and create
went out of
He announced
1994, and
were informed
post. Iraqis
way
to give
who were
an not
want no other excuses."
when official punctuality made any difwas mirrored by the precipitate fall in decline economic The ference. the dinar, despite Saddam s more active role, from 140 to the dollar at Iraq was well past the stage
the beginning of 1994 to 700 to the dollar in December. Baghdad
looked
like
an enormous
flea
market
as
people sold off their household
goods. The already meager monthly rations were reduced. Uday meanwhile appeared to be going from strength to strength.
His profitable business relationships with smugglers, as well as ential figures in Kurdistan,
enhanced
influ-
his relative position in "trade,"
UDAY AND THE ROYAL FAMILY
1S3
while that of Hussein Kamel, so dominanf only a few years before,
appeared
to decline.
Uday's elevation
may have seemed
a shrewd
move
to
Saddam,
always a deft manipulator in internal Iraqi politics. But in using his
son to diminish other powerful
dam
members of the
ruling family, Sad-
ran the risk of tearing the ruling house, once notable for
unity, into fractious pieces.
The
iise
Uday made of
gaining his father s favor was soon to provoke the worst political sis
its
his victory in cri-
since the days of the uprising.
In the meantime, in the rugged northern mountains of Iraq and far across the sea in
Washington, D.C., potent enemies were pon-
dering fresh attacks on the entire edifice of Saddam's rule.
SEVEN Intrigue in
October Ongathered
10, 1994,
tlie
Mountains
Columbus Day,
a group of senior officials
White House Situation Room, the traditional urgent and secret discussions on affairs of national secuin the
venue rity.
for
few days before, the U.S. government had learned that
Just a
Saddam Hussein was moving troops toward the Kuwaiti Once again the Iraqi leader was demonstrating his ability the headlines, disturb the weekends of senior
hurried movements of troops,
The
last
aircraft,
On
and prompt
and warships.
moved toward Kuwait had been
time Saddam had
before the 1990 invasion.
officials,
border. to seize
that occasion,
just
George Bush had done
nothing. Bill Clinton was naturally determined to avoid committing
the same mistake, and so from the continental United States to the
Indian Ocean, American forces were on the move. celed a campaign trip to
New
The President can-
Mexico and addressed the American
people in martial tones. Saddam Hussein, Chnton declared, would not
be allowed
to "defy the will of the United States
and the international
community."
The meeting in the situation room was not concerned with the weU-publicized movements of U.S. forces, but convened to review progress on a secret effort to eliminate the problem of Saddam Hus-
INTRIGUE sein
once and for
all.
administration had
Back
THE MOUNTAINS
IN
in April
165
1991 (see Chapter Two), the Bush
embarked on a two-track
strategy toward Iraq:
Saddam would be hemmed in by sanctions while the CIA simultaneworked to bring him down. The CUnton administration had left
ously
the Bush approach essentially unchanged (apart from an offhand
remark by the President-elect, hurriedly renounced, normal relations with Saddam were tained as rigorously as ever
announced plans
to seek a
by the
Iraqi regime,
When
details
were main-
possible). Sanctions
1993, Vice
In
to the effect that
President Al Gore
United Nations investigation of war crimes
though nothing further was ever heard of the idea.
emerged of a scheme by elements of the
Iraqi security
gang of whisky smugglers,
to assassinate
service, in association with a
ex-president George
Bush during a
visit to
Kuwait
in 1993, Clinton
fired off twenty-three cruise missiles at Iraqi intelligence headquarters
in
Baghdad, one of which went astray and
leading female
killed Leilah Attar, Iraq's
artist.
In secret, Clinton reaffirmed Bush's directive to the
CIA
to
unseat Saddam. Back in 1991, the agency, casting around for possible
mechanisms
Ahmad
to
accomplish the
task,
had ended when
his Jordanian
spirit
in
services of
whose banking career
bank collapsed amid charges of fraud
and embezzlement. By the following
moving
had accepted the
Chalabi, the exiled Iraqi millionaire
year, Chalabi
had become the
an umbrella organization of opposition groups
called the Iraqi National Congress (INC), pledged to overthrow
Saddam and
institute
those involved in the
democracy
INC
(apart
funding came from the CIA. in the first
year alone
campaign directed
in Iraq.
to
most of
—over $23 million
Much of this money
—was invested
at
Unbeknownst
from Chalabi) the organization's
in
an
anti- Saddam
propaganda
audiences both inside and outside Iraq and
partly designed to deflect international concern over the suffering
caused by sanctions. This campaign was subcontracted to John Rendon, a Washington
PR
specialist
with excellent agency connections.
While the connection between the agency and the
INC was
a
closely held secret, the publicly expressed aims of the opposition coali-
tion
were perfectly respectable: a democratic Iraq with a government
that
would represent
all
races
and creeds. The founding members had
included individuals and groups from across the political spectrum of
DUTDFTHEASHES
166
the Iraqi opposition. There were explicitly Islamic elements like the
Mohammed Bahr al-Ulum
Shiite exile
as well as
remnants of the once
powerful Iraqi Communist Party, the Sunni ex-general and ambassador Hassan al-Naquib, and liberals
neer
who had
effort to
draw attention
who were
forces at their
affiliated
with the
however, had once been
and
largest
INC were the Kurdish
to this
members
in
in 1992,
Some,
Baathist rule.
good standing of the Baathist
most part Sunnis, had found a home
National Accord, or "al-Wifaq."
had spent the greater
Saddam and
regime before gravitating to the opposition.
INC
engi-
also the only organizations with significant military
Most of those who pledged support
the
civil
command.
part of their lives in opposition to
for the
The
to die slaughter at Halabja.
most important of the groups parties,
Kubba, the
like Laith
traveled around the United States in 1988 in a lonely
Many of this in a
group,
group called the Iraqi
The Accord had
but from the outset pursued
latter
its
affiliated itself
own
with
agenda.
Chalabi and his colleagues believed that the way to undermine
Saddam was from
below, by sapping the dictator's power from a base
in liberated Kurdistan
through such means as propaganda and the
encouragement of defections by
among the ical
officials
of the regime and desertions
army. As endorsed by the CIA, this was an essentially polit-
operation. So long as the
INC
confined
itself to
the role of demo-
cratic opposition to
disaffection
populace, the
Saddam and promoting paymasters were happy More
aggressive initiatives on
the part of the
INC were less warmly received in Washington.
Even labi
so,
among
the
despite the fact that he was on the agency's payroll, Cha-
was not shy about promoting
his
views and agenda. In
November
1993, he flew to Washington to unveil an ambitious plan to foment
mutinies in army units around Iraq, which would eventually spread to
Baghdad and topple Saddam. Addressing State Department, (a
and the Pentagon
officials
at the
from the CIA, the
Key Bridge
Marriott Hotel
favored watering hole of the intelligence community), he gave pre-
cise details of the
adventurous scheme and outlined the support he
would need from the United and waited
for a response.
The problem with
States to carry
it
out.
Then he
flew
home
There was none.
Chalabi's grand plan, so far as
Washington was
concerned, was precisely the question of American support.
Any Iraqi
INTRIGUE unit that defected en masse
THE MOUNTAINS
IN
would
16V
certainly evoke a violent response
from Saddam. However decayed and disaffected the bulk of the
army might
be,
he could
still
Iraqi
count on the comparatively well-armed
Republican Guard. Resisting the counterattack, therefore, would require help from the Pentagon in the form of air support. But the U.S. military was very dubious about involving itself in fighting in Iraq. "I
would go
to the
JCS
a military unit that
tify
[Joint Chiefs
of Staff] and
ready to mutiny,
is
will
say,
If I can iden-
you adopt
recalls
it?' "
one CIA official involved in the Iraq operation. "The answer was never no.
The answer was never yes.
It
was always We'll get back
Opposition to Chalabi's grand
initiative
to you.'
was not confined
U.S. military. According to Frank Anderson, then
to the
head of the Near
East Division (colloquially referred to at Langley as
NE)
of the
agency's covert operations directorate, he thought at the time that
the
INC
for
Saddam,
represented merely "the capability to be another problem in fact, a serious
problem," but nothing more. In their
makers yearned
hearts, the decision
for the simple solution, a palace
coup that would replace Saddam with a (hopefully) more benign and well-disposed strongman. Ever since President Bush had issued his finding in
May
1991, the agency had been attentively waiting for
a person or persons
who might mount such
a coup. In the
of 1994, hope began to burgeon in the breasts of
offi-
deliverance might be at hand.
cials that It
summer
some agency
was not an entirely
unrealistic proposition.
there had been a series of conspiracies against
from Sunni Muslim ditionally
tribes, like the
As we have seen,
Saddam by
officers
Juburi and the Dalaim, that tra-
supported the regime. All were detected and the conspira-
tors ruthlessly punished,
but
if
the agency could only
make
contact
with the right group in time, then a successful coup might be possible. Unfortunately,
almost the only points of access for the
internal Iraqi dissent
were through
exile groups,
CIA
to
themselves under
the unblinking scrutiny of Saddam's intelUgence services.
lyad Alawi, the leader of the Accord, was a charming and articulate individual
He had
who had
the
gift
of impressing intelligence
officials.
long nurtured close links with MI-6, British intelligence,
who cherished him falling in love
as
an old and valued agent. "The Brits are always
with people," recalls one
CIA
officer involved in the
aUTDFTHEASHES
16B
Iraq operation of his transatlantic colleagues. "They are romantic in
FBI
that way. Funnily enough, the
From
early in 1994 on, Alawi
are the same."
began a
series
of intense meetings
with his British friends in London and various vacation resorts on the south coast of England.
The news he reported from
his contacts in
Iraq appeared to hold out exciting prospects of unrest at senior levels in the Iraqi army.
locutors,
AH
that
was needed, he reminded
was support and, above
on the news
all,
to the "cousins" in the
urged the merits of the This, then,
INA to
his
eager inter-
money from outside. MI-6 passed CIA London station, who in turn
sympathetic ears back at Langley.
was the background
White
to the gathering at the
House on Columbus Day, 1994. The senior officials assembled in the room included Peter Tamoff, the undersecretary of state for political affairs; George Tenet, the National Security Council director situation
for intelligence affairs;
Madeleine Albright, U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations; and Admiral David Jeremiah, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
They had commissioned
what the agency was
really
this classified briefing to
accomplishing behind
hear
enemy lines.
Leading the CIA delegation was the deputy director for Opera-
man
tions, the
in
charge of
all
CIA
covert actions,
graduate and ex-marine. Price was a ple.
Like
many officials who
torate in the 1980s,
man who
Ted
easily
rose to high rank in the operations direc-
—Arabic
and Chinese. Prices
China and he spoke fluent Mandarin.
No one
speciality
"quick but not wise."
He
was
was
disputed that he was
highly intelligent, though one former colleague describes
in
Yale
he was a graduate of what were called the "hard
language" programs
sights
A
Price.
impressed peo-
him
as
also intensely ambitious, having set his
on the coveted position of "DO" long before he was appointed
December
1993.
A former chief of another U.S. intelligence agency
recalls the short, sandy-haired Price as
being "very smart, as
much
a
politician as a professional." Given, therefore, the long-standing pref-
erence in the White House for a "silver bullet" coup by members of the Sunni
power
elite,
which would replace Saddam without
upsetting the Iraqi political order,
it
was natural
totally
for Price to tout the
CIA's potent contacts in such circles.
The centerpiece of the
briefing, as
planned by Price, was a chart
depicting the agency's network inside Saddam's regime. Tightly
INTRIGUE
THE MOUNTAINS
IN
packed with the names of
officials
from the
169
Iraqi mihtary, intelU-
gence, and other key components of the Iraqi ruUng apparatus, certainly
made
for a striking display.
depicted on the chart," recalls one tation, "it
looked
like
with the presen-
at
CIA
headquarters in Langley
that perhaps this tableau of Iraqi dissidence gave a far
greater impression of in fact, the case. "If
CIA
connections inside the country than was,
you say we have a direct communication from
so-and-so," recalls this
same
official, "that's
crossing the border with a note saying
and wants
"The way the names were
official familiar
he [Saddam] was surrounded."
However, there were those back
who thought
it
to bring
been generated
him down.'
in the
A lot
different
'My cousin
from someone
Ali hates
Saddam
of the names on the chart had
second way."
among man who had
Price was not the only important figure from the agency
those present.
By
his side
was Frank Anderson, the
been ordered by George Bush
to "create the conditions" for the
removal of Saddam Hussein nearly three and a half years before. Since the day that he scribbled "I don't like this" on Bush's directive,
Anderson's pessimism about the prospects for bringing
down by any kind
of covert action had not
to others involved in the operation,
he had paid
possible to the day-to-day details. "Frank
example,
I
Saddam
In fact, according
lifted.
as little attention as
would help out
if,
for
was having a problem with the State Department, but for
the most part he was far
more involved
peace deal that was happening
mer
subordinates.
Iraq
if
"He
he could help
in the Israeli-Palestinian
at that time," recalls
certainly never turned
up
at
one of
his for-
any briefings on
it."
The Columbus Day
briefing was, apparently, an exception. If
Price was determined to put on a big show, Anderson had every rea-
son to turn up. Relations between the two
Ever since the
arrest in
men were
not good.
February 1994 of Aldrich Ames, the
Russian spy in the heart of the Operations directorate,
James Woolsey had been under heavy pressure to
who had
failed to take note of the alcoholic
earnings from Russia. as
One
Moscow
of these
for betraying
officials
Ames
fire
as
CIA
senior officials
he flaunted
most of the agency's
was Ted Price who,
director
in his
head of counterintelligence, had been oblivious
his
spies in
former post
to the
mole
aUTDFTHEASHES
17D under
his nose. Price
remained
was not
fired
but merely reprimanded and
deputy director for Operations. Woolsey
as
decree that no one
who had
did, however,
ever been Ames's superior should be
given any sort of agency award or commendation.
Frank Anderson had never been
in contact with
old friend Milt Bearden had. Bearden was best
Ames, but
known
his
inside the
work in the Near East Division masterminding the shipment of huge quantities of weapons and money to the Afghan Mujalieddin for their war with the occupying Soviets in the 1980s. Following that triumph, Bearden had taken over the Soviet division, where Ames worked. Two weeks before the White House briefing on Iraq, Bearden had retired. Despite Woolsey s edict on awards, Anderson and another senior operations veteran and friend of Bearden, John MacGaffin, had agency for
his impressive
decided that their old comrade
arms should not be allowed to
dis-
appear into retirement without some small recognition of
his
in
Afghan triumphs. Anderson had therefore presented Bearden with a plaque from his colleagues. to Langley
Word of this
"transgression" sped back
and the receptive ears of Ted
Price,
who hastened
to
apprise Woolsey of what had happened.
Woolsey, a lawyer and a defense intellectual, rather hked derringdo, cloak-and-dagger types, but following Prices report he felt he
had
little
option other than punishing Anderson and MacGaffin by
demoting them. They denied him that option by
when Anderson his career
arrived at
the White House
quitting.
for the briefing,
Thus,
he knew
was over and who was responsible.
He could have left the briefing to Price, the most senior agency official
present. Instead,
he stepped up beside the chart and proceeded to
tear to pieces the entire elaborately crafted presentation of
prowess. Anderson pointed out that
tlie
CIA
carefully delineated lines of
communication between Saddam s security apparatus and the agency stations in neighboring countries
that those
who might have
were
little
more than rumors, and
sent messages indicating a willingness to
conspire against the leader were just as likely to be double agents
ulti-
mately controlled by the spymasters in Baghdad.
was a withering performance. The high-level group in the room, who had arrived in the expectation of good news, was aghast It
INTRIGUE
THE MOUNTAINS
IN
and indignant. After Anderson had spoke up
Anderson, as one it,
CIA
official
here?" she asked angrily.
discussing the events of the day put
had "rained on the parade." But
that
Madeleine Albright
finished,
"Why are we
in exasperation.
171
this
was
he dismissed the idea of pursuing the
swan song.
his
was not
It
of a coup, or
possibilities
favored one approach to the Iraqi problem over another.
He had sim-
ply decided to give the policy makers the unvarnished truth; casting a blight
on Price s big day may have been an added incentive. However,
the higher-level bureaucracy
news
that conflicts with
is
congenitally unwilling to accept
bad
deep-set hopes and desires. Anderson had
its
suggested that the glass was at least half empty. Despite his perfor-
mance, full.
officials at
In the White
gence
affairs
the highest levels persisted in believing
House
itself,
Tony Lake, was no
adviser
staff,
boss, National Secu-
by the
less intrigued
George Tenet,
possibility.
As head of NE, Frank Anderson had been catholic toward
in his attitude
aspects of the operation against Saddam. Lacking
all
faith that
was half
for example, the director for intelli-
on the National Security Council
was a powerful advocate of the coup option. His rity
it
much
anything was likely to work, he had been happy to endorse
London
avenues. If the
station
was excited about lyad Alawi and
plans for a coup, Anderson was happy to
let
other hand, there was the ongoing effort with Iraqi National Congress.
A month
all
his
them proceed. On the Ahmad Chalabi and the
Anderson was happy for that to proceed
also.
before his climactic interview with Jim Woolsey, Anderson
had given the go-ahead
to
send a team of CIA
would work with the INC
at their
officers into Iraq.
They
base in the liberated zone of Iraqi
Kurdistan.
"What
I
wanted them
decision, "was to
be
to do," as
Anderson
later explained his
in a position to look for this hoped-for,
but yet-
to-be-achieved coalition of forces that might put us in a position to
move forward
against the
smile as he said tle faith in
The
this,
Saddam regime." Anderson gave
a possible indication that he personally
a
wry
had
lit-
the prospects of any such forces appearing.
decision to send
on Capitol Intelligence
Hill.
CIA officers
into Iraq
In September 1994, two
Committee
staff,
had powerful support
members of
Chris Straub and
Don
the Senate
Mitchell,
had
ventured into Kurdistan on a fact-finding mission and had met with
DUT OF THE ASHES Ahmad
Chalabi, the Kurdish leader Massoud mer general Hassan al-Naquib, customarily
Barzani, and the for-
occasions as a representative of support for the military circles.
freedom
As a
result of their
on such
trotted out
INC
in senior
Sunni
encounter with these doughty
Straub and Mitchell returned to Washington
fighters,
vastly impressed. Senate support for the agency's cUents in northern
Iraq increased commensurately and the dispatch of a team of actual
CIA
officers
was speedily approved by the Intelligence Committee.
In early October, the
first
team, led by a ruddy-faced Chicagoan
named Warren Marik, arrived to set up shop. The four men on this team, Uke those who field
the agency equivalents of lieutenant colonels and
officers,
majors, far
followed them, were
removed
Anderson and
in rank
Price. Policy
and power from senior
officials like
was conceived and argued over high
above their pay grade. Their job was to deal with the surrogates, in this case
Kurds and opposition
Iraqis, in
the information seeping out of Iraq.
order to collect and evaluate
They had done
this
land of thing
had joined the CIA after fighting with the Army in Vietnam, and had then been part of the massive agency
before. Marik, for example,
U.S.
operation training and supporting the Afghan Mujaheddin against the
Russians in the 1980s. For a year before he went to Kurdistan, he had
been assigned
to the Iraq office at
ing under "Big operation.
CIA headquarters
Ron" Wren, the man
in
in Langley, act-
immediate charge of the Iraq
While there he had dealt with administrative
ing fruitless attempts to rein in the
enormous
tasks, includ-
costs of John
Rendons
propaganda operation. "Every time something happened John would jump on the Concorde," he lamented
later.
in Iraq,
While
at
headquarters, he had been in almost daily contact with Chalabi, far
away
in Kurdistan.
Now
he and
his colleagues
were going
into the
heart of tilings.
Salahudin, where the Americans were housed in a heavily
guarded
villa, sits
high up on the western fringe of the dramatically
beautiful Zagros Mountains, which stretch across Kurdistan and into Iran.
The
villa
looked out over the plains that extend
all
the
way
to
the Persian Gulf, far to the south, and in the near distance, the city
of Arbil, a forty-five-minute drive
down
the switchback road that
INTRIGUE
IN
THE MOUNTAINS
leads to the plains. In the 1970s, resort,
complete with some
Swiss-style chalets
it
had
beefi developed as a
summer
indifferent hotels and prefabricated
where middle-class
to escape the scorching
1V3
from Arbil would go
families
summer heat. By
1994, the vacationers were
long gone and the hotels were occupied by the Iraqi opposition.
INC had
taken over an
entire hotel, decorating
it
The
with lurid posters
depicting the imminent defeat of Saddam. Chalabi and his staff had all
rented houses for themselves. There were also offices to run the
INC s
radio and
TV
services
and one that produced
"It was like a mini-state," fondly recalls one
days. Since the
INC was funded by
INC
its
newspaper.
activist
of those
the CIA, this mini-state consti-
tuted an agency operation comparable in scale to the infamous Bay
of Pigs effort against Castro almost thirty years before. ter struck the
had
to
INC two
be evacuated
years
to safety
many
as five
by the United
States.
later, as
Despite the fact that the Kurdish enclave was
from the nication cers,
When
officially
sealed off
rest of Iraq, there was, nonetheless, considerable
between the two
went back and
regions. Individuals, even Iraqi
forth to visit friends
and
disas-
thousand people
relatives.
An
commu-
army
offi-
extensive
smugghng network crossed the lines, hauling diesel fuel up from the oil fields (still firmly in Saddam s hands) to the border crossing with Turkey at Khabur, controlled by the Kurds, and food and other consumer goods back down. Using such routes, the INC (hke the Kurdish groups and the host of foreign intelligence agencies at work in the north) was able to establish
its
own network of contacts to relay fines. The mechanism of this
news of what was going on behind the
arrangement was fueled by money, ultimately supplied by the CIA. Unfortunately, the nature of the system encouraged production but
who had information to supply got who had no news did not. A related "product" of the INC intelligence system was the individuals fleeing Saddam s regime. Many of these people had occupied sensitive positions before leaving. Those who had valuable not always accuracy, since those
paid, while those
secrets or contacts to divulge could
hope
to
be passed on into the
greater freedom of the outside world, with an American green card as the ultimate prize.
Sometimes these
arrivals
were of great impor-
DUT DF THE ASHES tance vices.
—high-ranking generals or
officers
from the inteUigence
Others were more problematic, minor figures eager to
their importance in the
Baghdad regime
in the
ser-
inflate
hope of a speedy
passage to the United States. Professional intelligence officers on the spot to debrief such "wallc-ins" tion,
even
would minimize the if all
interrogation
risk
had
of missing important informa-
to
be carried out through
inter-
preters (suppHed by Chalabi or one of the Kurdish groups). Only
one of the CIA
officers
and March 1995 spoke
posted to Salahudin between October 1994 Arabic;
none spoke Kurdish. Marik himself
could get along in Turkish and a few of his colleagues had learned Farsi, the
language of Iran.
For the INC, the presence of the Americans could be presented as an affirmation of American support. Later, Chalabi claimed that the
Americans had announced on dieir arrival that "the United States gov-
Saddam Hussein, and we want your help on this." This was a rather more dramatic take on the purposes of the mission than the modest objectives in Andersons mind when he ernment has decided
issued the orders.
to get rid of
The INC, with
feeble military strength and well-
its
advertised antipathy to installing another Baathist military strongman in place
rid" of
of Saddam, were not considered a promising vehicle to "get
Saddam. But the Americans were not there
the INC.
them
to
An
especially secret
component of
just to
work with
their orders directed
work direcdy with the Accord, bypassing die INC with which
the Accord was nominally
affiliated.
The Accord had its own presence in Kurdistan, headed by a former general in the Iraqi army named Adnan Nuri. Nuri, a somewhat sinister-looking Turcoman (a minority people in Iraq), had a direct connection with the CIA. In June 1992, just after the (CIA-funded)
INC
in Vienna, the
founding conference
Washington in the
for a discreet
Tysons
II
meeting
separately from the
was to
the Sheraton Premiere Hotel
suburban shopping mall. At the meeting, the
agency representatives told him,
INC, but work
at
agency had flown Nuri to
as
he
later reported,
"You work
INC, but don't resign from the INC. Be in the The "work" the Americans had in mind
separately."
facilitate a
coup. In public, meanwhile, the U.S. government
gave a very different impression of its plans for Iraq. Not long after
INTRIGUE
IN
THE MOUNTAINS
Hous? assured the INC of
the recruitment of Nuri, the White
lack of interest in the "dictator option,"
replace
its
a miUtary coup to
i.e.,
Saddam with another strongman.
Thus the American operation
in Kurdistan
and double-dealing from the moment the
was mired
covert
operation?"
Adding
to the complexities of the
that they
were
maliciously
sitting in the
inquired
as
situation
political
its
very
an overt or a
one Kurdish
CIA officers'
middle of a
in intrigue
team made
first
appearance in Salahudin. ("Are you here
visible
1V5
official.)
was the
fact
earthquake zone.
Ever since George Bush had been reluctantly impelled to send
American troops a safe
haven
into Kurdistan in April 1991, the
in their
Kurds had enjoyed
mountainous homeland. The troops had
der in Turkey were a guarantee that Saddam s forces
would not come north
but
from their Incerlik base across the bor-
daily flights of U.S. warplanes
plains
left,
again.
As a
result,
down on
the
the Iraqi Kurds were
enjoying a de facto independence. Turkish Kurds under the banner of
the militarily efficient and ruthless
been waging a bloody insurgency while the death
toll
PKK
against
guerrilla organization
had
Ankara ever since 1984, but
mounted, diey seemed no nearer to achieving
To the east, a short-lived bid for autonomy by the Kurds in Iran had been summarily crushed by the ayatollahs in Tehran soon
their goal.
after the Iranian revolution in 1979.
Only
in Iraq
were these long-
suffering people in a position to govern themselves. In the spring of
1992, they had held an election, voting for an assembly that provided
the mandate for a Kurdish regional government.
Launched with great
enthusiasm, the Kurdish Regional Government
(KRG)
struggled
manfully to cope with the overwhelming problems of a country with a
minimally functioning economy devastated by war and seeded with land mines. late in 1991,
The Kurds' problems were compounded by the fact that Saddam instituted his own sanctions on the Kurdish area,
banning trade and refusing to allow the transport, via Baghdad, of humanitarian supplies by international agencies. Since the sanctions
imposed by the United Nations made no
distinction
between liberated
Kurdish Iraq and those parts of the country ruled by Saddam, the
Kurds were under a double
These pressing
siege.
difficulties
were caused by the recent wars and
the rebellion that had devastated the region. In addition, the quasi-
aUTQFTHEASHES
176
independent enclave had to contend with an equally destructive
his-
torical legacy.
Traditionally, the
Kurds had always been cursed by
factionalism. Kurdish society
rivalries
had remained divided along
and
tribal lines
long after the societies around them had evolved into nation-states.
Even
Kurdish nationalism began to emerge well into
as a sense of
the twentieth century, such divisions remained a fatal weakness.
Time and again a Kurdish leader challenging a central government in Baghdad would find that other leaders from rival tribes would seize the opportunity to make deals with the enemy, at the expense of the insurgent, in exchange for cash or increased local influence.
It
was a
semifeudal society in which division had long been the natural order.
Adding million,
to the difficulties of the Kurds,
was the
fact diat
who numbered some 25
they were divided by national borders. Con-
centrated in Turkey, Iraq, and Iran (with
some in
Syria
and some in the
former Soviet Union), they were strong enough to frighten and cause trouble for the central authorities in each of these countries but never
strong or united enough to wrest control of their or anodier of these powers might, for their
encouragement lions,
to a neighbor's
Kurds
in
own
one of
own homeland. One reasons, give aid
and
their periodic rebel-
but never enough to ensure success and almost always with a
view to ultimate betrayal. In 1974-75, for example, the Kurdish leader Mustafa Barzani led a massive insurgency against the
government.
He
tribal
Baghdad
accepted military help from the shall of Iran, who,
however, was only giving
it
as a
means
to pressure
Baghdad
into con-
cessions in another area. Barzani foolishly believed that the involve-
ment of the CIA on his side, on orders from the White House, was a guarantee against abandonment by his ally in Tehran. Once Saddam Hussein agreed to Iran's demands for increased control over the Shatt al-Arab waterway on the two countries' southern border, the shah
abandoned Barzani without any protest from the U.S. government. As a subsequent U.S. congressional report noted, secret
on the operation
clearly
showed
did not want their Kurdish
that the
allies to
CIA documents
White House and the shah
win. "They preferred instead that
the insurgents simply continue a level of hostilities sufficient to sap the resources of [Iraq]. report, "ours
.
.
.
Even
was a cynical
in the context of covert action," said the
exercise."
INTRIGUE
THE MOUNTAINS
IN
177
may have been to decent Americans, such a doublecross by governments who used the Kurds for their own purposes was hardly novel. As Saddam HusAs shocking
as the
evidence of
mention
sein himself took care to
this perfidy
in his address to the nation
halfway through the Kurdish uprising that followed the Gulf War:
"Every Kurdish movement that was linked to the foreigner or relied
on him
politically,
militarily,
or materially brought only loss and
destruction to our Kurdish people."
Once
the Barzani uprising had been crushed, in 1975, the Kurdish
Democratic Party (KDP), the party that the old rebel had led to defeat, formally split apart.
An urban
intellectual, Jalal Talabani,
who
had long resented and contested the feudal control of the Barzani famfounded a
ily,
rival
group that he called the
stan (PUK). Within a
among
few
years, the
The KDP, now
themselves.
"Mullah Mustafa" (who had died in
from Iran in exchange
By
groups united in
Saddam
—even
Union of Kurdi-
were
fighting bitterly
sides
by Massoud Barzani, a son of
accepted arms and money Saddam when the Iran-Iraq war
exile),
for help against
broke out in 1980. Talabani s with Saddam.
two
led
Patriotic
PUK in turn formed a temporary alliance
1986, the wheel had turned again.
both accepting support from Tehran to
alliance,
as the Iraqi leader
Kurds so they would
The Kurdish
fight
on
fight
was busily subsidizing the Iranian
his side.
As we have seen, the two main Kurdish leaders and their respective followers
combined
March 1991, although
to plan another uprising in
the rebellion that did break out was largely a spontaneous affair that swiftly ran out of control.
Following the ejection of Saddam's forces
from northern Iraq (with U.S. and that they
had a joint
allied help),
and despite the
fact
interest in maintaining the fragile statelet of Iraqi
Kurdistan, Barzani and Talabani were hardly united.
The "govern-
ment" was delegated to underlings while the two leaders concentrated on advancing rivalry,"
on the
common
Talabani
interests.
"They are obsessed with
politician told
modem
strategy.
the other party." ers.
own
one Kurdish
authority
a
their
David MacDowall, the leading
history of the Kurds.
There
is
no
their party
strategy at
all,
"They do not work out except to get aliead of
Each of them jockeyed for support from outside pow-
made
overtures to the Turks, while for a long period
Barzani enjoyed the patronage of the Iranians.
They both lobbied
for
"
OUT OF THE ASHES the support of the most important patron of covertly, they
both maintained
lines of
all:
Washington. More
communication
witli tlieir old
enemy in Baghdad. However, while
officially
partners in governing Iraqi Kurdistan,
the two Kurdish leaders were also leading
National Congress.
warmed
to the
had agreed
One
INC
—^which
Washington's Turkish
post-Saddam
its
genesis was the fact that the Kurds
inside Iraq's borders.
were forswearing thoughts of
would have deeply offended and alarmed
ally
Iraq. In
the Iraqi
of the reasons that the United States had
during
to join, signifying that they
independence
members of
—and pledging
It also
to
remain part of a unified
INC
consequence, the
gained a secure base
gained, at least in theory, the potential
use of the Kurdish groups' thirty thousand or so Peshmerga fighters.
The INC did begin fielding its own force of a few hundred lightly armed troops in 1993, mostly deserters from the Iraqi army, and for outside consumption their numbers were inflated to "thousands. The INC and its CIA backers therefore were dependent for their continued operation on
political stability in a
land where the natural
order was dissension and fighting. If the Kurds were to escalate their
arguments and intrigues and revert to actual warfare, then Saddam
would have the opportunity event, the
to
move back
INC would be doomed.
into the mountains. In that
In 1994, the Kurds began fighting
again.
The immediate cause was money.
Kurdistan, economically isolated
and devastated by war, did possess one
significant asset: the
border
between Iraq and Turkey. The Unes of huge trucks, laden with sanctionsbusting Iraqi diesel-fuel exports, waiting to cross into Turkey at
Khabur, outside Zakho, provided a
fruitful
source of revenue to who-
ever controlled the crossing point. Every truck, coming or going, paid toUs,
adding up to hundreds of millions of dollars a year. As
pened, Zakho and
soud Barzani's Barzani's in
its
KDP
it
so hap-
environs lay in the territory controlled by Mas-
and was more immediately dominated by
nephew, Nachirvan. U.S. State Department officials involved
humanitarian aid took to calling him "the best-dressed
distan," his
man in Kur-
wardrobe periodically updated by trips to Neiman Marcus
and other fashionable
stores in the malls
Jalal Talabani's principal
around Washington.
support lay farther to the
east.
While the
INTRIGUE
IN
THE MOUNTAINS
179
PUK controlled major cities such as Sulaimaniya as well as a few minor border crossings with Iran, Talabani did not directly dominate any lucrative border-crossing point.
For a few years
ment of the Kurdish Regional Government
after the establish-
in 1992, this
major bone of contention. The "minister of finance"
ment was
a
PUK man who
was
in
charge of collecting die
Khabur, closely watched by an emissary from the portion of die
May
was not a
in the governtolls at
KDP At least a pro-
money found its way into the common kitty. Then, modus vivendi began to break down.
in
1994, the Kurdish
The immediate cause was
between two
a local land dispute
groups, each allied with a different dominant faction. Neither of the
two leaders could completely control
and
his followers,
fighting
gradually flared across the north, with casualties in the hundreds. It fell
to the
INC
leader
Ahmad
Chalabi to broker a cease-fire.
Americans who were on the ground agreed that he and nates — mostly Arabs, with some Kurds —
his subordi-
^were extraordinarily suc-
cessful in the mediation effort. Essentially, the
between the two
sides,
INC
inserted itself
sometimes when they were actually
each other, setting up checkpoints complete with leading from one group s area to the other.
By
the
flags
firing at
on roads
end of August
1994, these unremitting efforts had paid off and an uneasy peace
had descended over the mountains. As a
INC
the
result, the local prestige
of
skyrocketed.
Chalabi, however, soon began complaining to Washington that
keeping the peace in Kurdistan was expensive. In messages to headquarters,
he cited the cost of maintaining checkpoints and teams
INC personnel were well compared with the Peshmerga, who were paid little, He needed more money a million dollars, he said
ready to mediate whenever tension flared. paid, at least as
when but
at
all
all.
—
he received from Washington were exhortations to continue
keeping the peace coupled with vague promises of payment later date. It
seemed
that Langley
was losing
interest in
its
at
some
proteges
in Salahudin.
Warren Marik had every sympathy with Chalabi s predicament. In exasperated cables back to headquarters, he pointed out the importance of keeping the rival Kurds from each others throats and the small amount of money involved. "All I got were sort of
UT OF THE ASHES 'check s-in-the-mail-type promises,' that there
were
that "there's later
problems
no authorization
did Marik
reflected the
In
legal
come
in
to
"
he said
fund an
INC
He was
money on
informed
the grounds
mediation force." Only
understand that Langley's disinterest
to
waning appeal of the INC
December
later.
sending the
in
Washington.
1995, the Kurds started fighting again, this time
PUK had been Khabur were now gone
with greater intensity. Whatever revenues the receiving indirectly from the border forever, as
freight
were
own
Talabani's
companies
tolls at
highly profitable investments in
border crossing with Turkey. The
at the
PUK
leader, however, scored a considerable military success at Christmas
by capturing the Kurdish from
Salaliudin, ejecting the forces of the
the Kurds had
managed
to rule themselves in
dad, was embroiled in a vicious Just as the civil
civil
freedom from Bagh-
war.
war broke out anew,
importance arrived
down the mountain KDP. Kurdistan, where
"capital" of Arbil,
a defector of extraordinary
General Wafiq al-Samarrai had
in Salahudin.
some time. In the summer of 1991, feeling that the Kurds had to come to some kind of settlement with their mortal enemy, since none of their neighbors would countenance an independent Kurdistan, Massoud Barzani had gone to Baghdad to negotiate. Since Kurdish affairs were tradibeen preparing his escape from Baghdad
for
had
tionally the responsibility of military intelligence, al-Samarrai
been ordered by Saddam
to escort the
Kurdish delegation. During a
meeting with Hussein Kamel, the Kurds watched, open mouthed, the loutish but all-powerful for
some imagined
infraction. In the car after the meeting, the
Kurds asked al-Samarrai how he,
army
officer,
as
Kamel cursed and abused al-Samarrai as a high-ranking professional
could tolerate such behavior from "a sergeant." Al-
Samarrai gazed out the window and then muttered,
"It
might not
always be hke this."
That was dangerous
talk in
Samarrai and the Kurds knew
Saddam's Baghdad and both it.
When
Barzani and his
al-
men
returned to the north after breaking off negotiations with Saddam, the intelligence general stayed in touch. This was a hair-raisingly risky course of action, but, as a
came
to
know
member of the
the general well put
it,
Iraqi opposition
who
"Wafiq was one of them, he
INTRIGUE
IN
THE MOUNTAINS
1B1
knew how they operated their intelHgence and how to evade them." Early in 1992, Saddam transferred al-Samarrai to an inteUigence post in the presidential palace, where he stayed until the day he was
informed by a friend, planning to
kill
him.
for help in being
ber
2,
late in 1994, that his suspicious
He was
smuggled
out.
The Kurds
met there were very surprised indeed officer took
"Ali!
What
one look
at
obliged,
Some
1994, he walked into Salaliudin.
CIA
master was
able to get a message to Barzani, asking
and on Decem-
of the old friends he
to see him.
A
newly arrived
the general and shouted defightedly:
are you doing here?"
It
transpired that in a previous age,
the officer had been posted to Baghdad as part of the liaison group sent by the agency to assist
He had
code name
The
Saddam Hussein
dealt directly with al-Samarrai, but
in his
Iran.
"Ali."
assorted guerrillas and revolutionaries in the
bemusedly
war with
had known him by the
as the
room watched
two intelligence professionals reminisced about
old times. "It proves a point," laughs Alimad Chalabi. "The only real friends
and contacts the CIA had
in Iraq
were
Baathists!"
The Iraqi intelligence general had many secrets to tell. For Unscom, he had news of Saddam s ongoing biological weapons program. For Chalabi, he had exciting news about conditions inside the
army and which commanders were disaffected. He mentioned Saddam might be contemplating a visit to the city of Samarra, al-Samarrai s hometown, in the near future. Were that to happen, the general thought that it might be possible to enlist members of his own numerous and powerful clan to ambush the leader's cavalIraqi
that
cade
as
it
crossed a bridge into the
city.
This kind of idle talk did not constitute a concrete assassination plot,
and none of the seasoned conspirators who talked
that time took
him
particularly seriously.
to
him
"Maybe Wafiq was
at
exag-
gerating everything in order to give himself a big role in Kurdistan,"
suggested one senior
INC
official
afterward. But discussion of the
Samarra assassination scheme was to cause problems Chalabi, beset witli
money problems, an
later on.
attitude of apparent indif-
ference back in Langley, and bitter fighting between his Kurdish aUies,
INC with what he called the "two To the south of the liberated zone lay two large and impor-
saw a way of raising the profile of tiie cities" plan.
OUT DF THE ASHES tant cities,
Saddam were to lose them, it would The INC leaders notion was to apply generals commanding the Iraqi army gar-
Mosul and Kirkuk.
be a serious blow
the "carrot and stick." If the risons in
If
to his regime.
and around the
they would allow the
cities
INC
could be suborned to the extent that
free rein to infiltrate their cities, this
provoke a reaction from Saddam, relieved. It would to
Baghdad
who would order the
would
generals to be
then be put to these generals that rather than return
to face their masters wrath, they should defect with their
families to the
INC. Should the generals
resist
these blandishments,
then the "stick" would be applied in the form of military attacks by the
INC and units ful
its allies.
Given the poor shape of the ordinary
up near the front
enough
lines,
Iraqi
army
these attacks would probably be success-
to embarrass the generals
and get them
into trouble with
Baghdad. Either way, the Iraqi military would be progressively weak-
ened and even further demoralized, leading loss
in turn to a progressive
of Saddams control. Al-Samarrai gave vocal encouragement to the
scheme. According to some reports, the general was promising an uprising by his friends and supporters in military units around Iraq, to
occur as soon as Saddam was distracted by an north. In the best of
INC
offensive in the
possible outcomes for Chalabi, an Iraqi
all
counter-attack in the North
would
in turn
prompt U.S.
military inter-
vention. It
was an
intricate
and imaginative
mander operating with might have approved
which any guerrilla com-
plan,
a secure base and firm support from outside as a sensible initiative in
wearing down the
enemy's main forces. But Chalabi did not have a secure base allies
were
fighting.
since the high
Nor did he have
command
of the
the possibilities of a coup. fact,
CIA was
He was
his
increasingly transfixed by
running short of money and, in
had recently borrowed considerable sums from
men grown
—
firm support from outside,
rich in the smuggling trade.
If,
local business-
however, he were to
score a dramatic success, the situation might be recouped. But he
would have
to act soon, since
he knew
full
well that he had rivals for
the agency's affections.
The
senior
management of the
CIA's
Near East Division might
have been deluding themselves into thinking that the INA's preparations for a
coup were cloaked
in darkest secrecy,
but they were
INTRIGUE INC knew
wrong. "The
THE MOUNTAINS
IN
1S3
what was*^oing on,"
exactly
INA was
the field officers formerly stationed in northern Iraq. "The as leaky as a sieve.
Chalabi wanted to preempt them."
The catalyst that was to spark Chalabi's move the prospects of the
INC
—
"Bob," as he later became
who had
one of
recalls
known
in the media,
served in Afghanistan. In addition he
well from postings to various
the region, including Syria.
—and
in
doing so ruin
arrived in Salahudin in early January 1995.
CIA
He
was a lanky
knew
six-footer
die Middle East
around
stations in U.S. embassies
spoke passable Arabic.
Bob's mission, as conceived at headquarters in Langley, appears to
have been no different from that of the other agency
had been
rotating in
officers
who
and out of Kurdistan since October. This was
to
collect inteUigence as well as assist the purportedly super-secret
plots of
General Nuri and the Iraqi National Accord. Bob had not
been
in the
thing
more adventurous
country long when,
—a
it
seems, he decided to try some-
direct attack
on the
Iraqi regime.
For some of the characters who encountered that time, his
heady enthusiasm
this
CIA
officer at
for energetic action against
Saddam
appeared ludicrously naive. To a man, the veterans of countless encounters on the battlefield and
at
the bargaining table, betrayals,
defeats, massacres, exile, shifting aUiances,
of Iraqi Kurdish politics found of the local situation. adviser to
Massoud
ing to talk to about
"I liked
Barzani. all
bitter
and other routine aspects
Bob totally lacking in an understanding Bob," recalled Hoshyar Zibari, a senior
"He was
a really interesting guy, fascinat-
sorts of things.
But he had some
really
weird
ideas."
The spark
that impelled the
CIA
officer into full-scale action
was
struck far to the south of Kurdistan, in a place called al-Quma, near
the marshes that straddle the border between Iran and southern Iraq.
On February
426th Brigade of the Iraqi army suffered a armed clash there and lost several hundred men killed or taken prisoner The attackers were part of the "Badr Brigade," Iraqi Shiites armed and financed by Iran. It may be recalled that Iran had done Htde or nothing to help the Shiite rebels in March 1991. Despite fears in Washington that the 12, 1995, the
severe defeat in an
rebellion
was backed by
Iran, the
Tehran government,
fearful in
its
turn of provoking the United States, had permitted only small groups
aUTOFTHEASHES
1S4
of armed exiles to cross the border to help the uprising. did were
members of
been raised by the
the
The few
same Badr Brigade, which had
Iraqi Shiite leader
had fought with considerable
effect
that
originally
Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim and on the Iranian side
in the Iran-
Iraq war. Since the uprising, the brigade had been permitted by the Iranian government to
make armed
incursions into southern Iraq,
operating out of the sanctuary of the marshes. (These marshes were,
however, a diminishing sanctuary, since Saddam was dealing with the
problem by draining them, displacing the unique community of the
Marsh Arabs who had
lived there for thousands of years.
few people who worked to draw attention al-Shahristani,
As
Iraq's
now in exile in
to their plight
of the
was Hussain
Iran.)
most powerful neighbor and bitter enemy, Iran was a cru-
cial factor in
the politics of the region, which the United States, as a
matter of pohcy, was determined to ignore. In the
some
One
officials in
emissaries of
the National Security Council had
Hakim with
summer of 1992, made overtures to
a view to assisting the southern fighters,
embarrassing Saddam, and aiding President Bush's reelection campaign.
The
initiative
foundered, though Bush did institute a southern
"no-fly zone" for the Iraqis, enforced
symboHc gesture office,
by
allied aircraft, as
to aid those fighting in the south.
Soon
an entirely after taking
the Clinton administration proclaimed the policy of "dual con-
tainment," under which Iraq and Iran were to be treated as pariahs of
equal status. Cooperation with Iran against
Saddam was absolutely out
of the question. Witli the eager encouragement of Ahmad Chalabi and
Wafiq al-Samarrai, Bob resolved to change
all that.
"Bob got very excited when he heard what the Badr Brigade had "He almost went berserk. It showed that the Iraqi army was vulnerable." The American and the Iraqi had already
done," says Chalabi.
had long discussions about the "two Chalabi
later,
"Bob
said, 'Let's
cities" plan.
Now, explained
do the plan from the north and the
south.'"
Bob's excitement appears to have been additionally fueled by
al-
Samarrai's assertions regarding the possibility of a military-led uprising that could occur simultaneously with an offensive
However, al-Samarrai's
talk
of assassinating
from the north.
Saddam himself
Samarra gave him pause. Assassination of a foreign leader was
in
clearly
INTRIGUE
IN
THE MOUNTAINS
and while the Bush
against U.S. law,
admiflistration
IBS
had
set out to
do
Gulf War bombing campaign, the targeting of the Iraqi
just that in the
leader had been
cloaked in euphemisms about aim-
legally, if flimsily,
"command and control centers." Involvement in a plan to gun down Saddam in his car would have no such excuse, certainly not for a CIA field officer acting on his own initiative.
ing at
According to a former colleague in the CIA, "Bob got scared. tried to cover himself by reporting
got into a system [of communication] that reached the shall see, this report
was
He
back about Samarra. That message
to cause
Bob
NSC." As we
a lot of trouble in the near
future.
Meanwhile (according to statements by Chalabi, other senior INC officials,
and Hoshyar Zibari of the KDP, which Bob denies). Bob
out to enlist Iran in his scheme to
dam's forces. This was very
much
mount an
forbidden
territory, since
orders strictly warned against any contact by Iranians.
Bob was not
so reckless as to
make
set
offensive against Sad-
CIA
officers
standing
with the
direct contact with his
opposite numbers in Iranian intelligence (though he did confer with the Iranian-backed Shiite group) but, according to Chalabi, he did the next best thing.
"Bob came
to
me and said, T have a message for the
Iranians from
the White House: "The United States would not object to Iran joining in the fight against territorial integrity
Saddam Hussein provided it is committed to the of Iraq."'" Bob denies making the statement and
Chalabi recalls that he did not believe the message, which was hardly surprising, since
it
suggested a sudden abandonment of "dual contain-
ment," a cornerstone of the Clinton administration's foreign said,
T
As
can't it
do
that,' "
reports the
INC
so happened, "the Iranians"
leader, "but
Bob
were close
at
policy. "I
insisted."
hand. Like the
CIA, Tehran's intelligence services kept a close eye on develop-
ments
in Salahudin. Like the
to talk to their
CIA team,
they were
American counterparts. In
late
strictly
forbidden
February 1995, two
such officers from the Pasdaran, a part of the Revolutionary Guards (an especially influential military and intelligence
regime), were in the town. Chalabi went to the
CIA man could
message to pass on.
arm of the Islamic
them and
said that while
not talk directly to them, he had given Chalabi a
He
then related the contents of Bob's
electrify-
"
UT OF THE ASHES ing communication, adding that "I cannot vouch for the authenticity
of the message."
Despite
this caveat,
Chalabi cooperated in a
which by prior agreement the CIA
little
made
bit
of theater, in
a public appearance
lobby of the al-Khadra Hotel in Salahudin while the Iranians
in the
were
officer
visiting
the White
Chalabi as an impHcit guarantee that the message from
House was
"Neither side was allowed to talk to
autlientic.
the other, but they spoke in body language!" chortles an observer of the mime. "They were Iranians, the Iranians
all
Bob eyed the
standing there in the lobby;
eyed Bob.
must have gone on
It
for three or four
minutes."
This exercise in mute communication worked,
at least for a while.
The Iranians, in a state of high excitement, rushed to report the momentous news of the U.S. message to General Mohammed Jaafari, the presiding
By now, around
it
official
on Kurdish
affairs for Iranian intelligence.
the welter of intrigue swirling in Salahudin and the area
was becoming increasingly complicated. Various players
appear to have convinced themselves that they were the ones manipu-
Bob was convinced
lating events.
pushing Chalabi into action. time, but,
Bob
later
"I told
that he was the moving spirit in him he was wasting our money and
more important, he was wasting
Chalabi has not been loath to support that
a historical opportunity,"
claimed in a newspaper interview. "He knew
"Bob kept
pressing,
"When
is
this
this version
I
was
right."
of events, agreeing
going to happen?'
Others are not so sure, suggesting
that, in fact,
was being manipulated by Chalabi, who
in turn
it
was Bob who
was taking a
lot
of
advice from Wafiq al-Samarrai. Hoshyar Zibari, the senior adviser to
Massoud
Barzani, states that "Wafiq,
years before he
came north
or at least better than
some
we
—
whom we
his information
got from others
—
had been paying
for
was good, by the way,
^was discussing a plan for
sort of coup with us, with the idea that
we
should make a mili-
tary offensive as a cover. Chalabi sold the idea of the offensive to
Bob
in
rowed
February 1995. Chalabi owed a in late
1994 from businessmen
lot
in
of money that he had bor-
northern Iraq and he had to
do something."
A Bob
former close associate of Chalabi s agrees: "Chalabi was using as a tool rather than believing everything
he
said
and promised."
INTRIGUE
—
concerned
All
CIA
officer
1S7
emphatic exception of the hyperactive
^with the
—are agreed
THE MOUNTAINS
IN
Bob now made
that
audacity of his promises. Iraqi tank units,
quantum jump in the he announced, would be a
defecting to fight on the rebel side. According to Chalabi and Zibari, as
an incentive to the various groups involved, particularly Barzani's
KDP—militarily
by
far
strongest
the
faction
Kurdistan
in
promised that the military offensive would have American
air
—he
support,
a virtual guarantee of success.
Bob now angry
if
you mention
it,"
if
there would be air cover,
In one area at
Bob did
least.
I
air cover.
heard Bob
When
he and Chalabi
effort,
persuaded the two warring Kurdish factions to declare a that they
Barzani
say, Tes.'"
score a notable success. Energeti-
cally throwing his weight into the mediation
The hope was
gets very
says Chalabi. "But he certainly encouraged
Barzani to believe that there would be U.S.
asked him
"He
claims that he never promised air cover.
would now join forces
cease-fire.
Saddam. But
against
the most powerful of the Kurds, Massoud Barzani, remained highly
dubious about the undertaking.
"Bob hed to everybody," us and
said,
'I
to execute his plan.' fool,
says
He
promised
was the very last person
face value.
Bob was probably
had a
real
in
I
am
(Curiously,
no
CIA promise at father in 1975
one former CIA
officer insists
the only agency officer in northern Iraq "who
why
States.")
in late February, according to sources in the Iraqi
opposition, Barzani
made
been a major change "because every
here
air support." Barzani, definitely
understanding of what Barzani had been through and
At a meeting
official
some sharp
his misgivings clear.
in U.S. policy,"
who
not to provoke the Iraqis."
"How
"He came to see
northern Iraq to take a
he had good reason to mistrust the United
tion with
flatly.
The memory of the American betrayal of his
had not dimmed with time. that
Hoshyar Zibari
represent the President of the United States.
has ever
He
"There must have
he remarked pointedly
come here
to
Bob,
has always told us
followed up this pertinent observa-
questions.
wiU you defend Mosul and Kirkuk once
we have
taken
them?" "With our planes."
"How will the planes
differentiate
between
Iraqi units that
come
a
OUT OF THE ASHES over to us and the ones that are
still
The Kurds were amused by allies in
and trucks so
Barzani's suspicions
and trusted aide Zibari
ment
at the
sions.
were not to
Washington,
He
allayed.
London
to
insists,
was contemplating military action of
northern Iraq. Barzani drew the appropriate concluoffensive
would go forward without
air
his activities
is
how much
fully
informed
KDP
support
—
allies.
Bob's superiors really
and when they knew
he kept Washington
afoot. It
of horrified astonish-
eliciting cries
an open question as to
It is
dispatched his close
check out what he had been
decision he neglected to communicate to his
knew about
given
news of what was being promised coupled with fervent
in
Any
"We have
that the planes will recognize them."
denials that the United States
any land
Saddam?"
the garrison in Mosul a special paint to put on
our secret their tanks
told. Zibari called
loyal to
Bob's quick reply:
it.
at all
Just possibly, as
he
times of what was
possible that they found out about the alleged promise of
support and the discussions with al-Samarrai about assassinating
Saddam when
the National Security Agency (NSA) intercepted a
radio report from the Iranian intelligence officers in Salahudin to their superiors regarding their encounter with Bob. Zibari's queries
would
also
have
let
the cat out of the bag.
In addition, Chalabi's
CIA were determined ing a success. 1995.
Two
The
rivals for
the affections and support of the
that there should
offensive
be no
was scheduled
days before. General
Adnan
risk
of the
to begin
INC
scor-
on March
3,
Nuri, leader of the Iraqi
National Accord in northern Iraq, flew to Washington to drip poison in the ears of his
agency handlers. The
INC
operation, he declared,
was a devious plot masterminded by Wafiq al-Samarrai United States into another war with Saddam.
He
to
draw the
claimed that
al-
Samarrai himself had attempted to enlist him in the scheme, saying,
"Come, and we make a plan to deceive the Americans." Whether or not Nuri's malign spin was accepted, the highest levels of the U.S. government reacted with horror to- the news from Kurdistan. A full-scale offensive by the opposition could well draw Saddam's forces north in a counterattack. The last thing the White House, the Pentagon, or the CIA wanted was to have to make good on the U.S.
commitment
to protect the Kurdish enclave in the north.
INTRIGUE The
IN
was timed
offensive
THE MOUNTAINS
to begin at midnight
189
on March
3.
That
morning a cable arrived over the CIA communications system, patched by the President s national security addressed to the
INC
Bob
leaders. It fell to
adviser,
dis-
Tony Lake, and
to deliver the message.
This must have been an unappealing task, since the message stated that "the
United States would not support
operation militarily
this
or in any other way."
Despite ing his
this
depressing news, Chalabi did not give up. Address-
commanders on the eve of battle, he declared
fighting for the liberation of Iraq
regardless.
The
The order was
Peshmerga would a
given to advance on
be on two
attack was to
that they
were
and that they should press on fronts.
all
fronts. In the east, Jalal Talabani s
strike out for Kirkuk.
A hundred miles
combined force of some ten thousand
KDP
PUK
to the west,
Peshmerga and the
INC's one thousand-strong mihtia were to advance toward Mosul.
The
front line opposite
tary of the Tigris,
eager
them
INC body
Mosul
lay along the
Great Zab River, a tribu-
and was manned by KDP forces.
When the small but
of troops reached the
KDP
river,
the
refused to
let
pass.
Realizing that he had been
abandoned
for the
second time
ters at Sara Rash, a
few miles outside Salahudin, only to be greeted
with the news that Barzani was out of town and on his
The
one
rushed to Barzani s gaudily ornate personal headquar-
day, Chalabi
Turkey.
in
anxious
INC
leader had to
make do with
way
to
the famously
well-dressed Nachirvan, and despite pleading through the night,
Chalabi failed to get the
KDP to move.
Meanwhile, though Barzani had decided to Jalal
Talabani and the
sit
out the offensive,
PUK remained fully supportive. He may have
agreed to press on in pursuit, despite the evaporation of American
and
KDP
support, merely with the limited objective of pushing the
Iraqis farther
December
away from
Arbil, the prize
he had gained
in the
fighting.
Initially, the offensive went well. Seven hundred Iraqi troops "who probably hadn't been fed in two weeks," as one American
—
refief official observed surrendered. The lightly armed groups of Peshmerga "occupied" a few square miles of countryside. There were no uprisings in any Iraqi military units elsewhere
humanitarian
OUT DF THE ASHES in the country. Just
On March Iraqi
over two weeks after
it
began, the attack was over.
numbers of Turkish troops crossed the border of Kurdistan from the north. They were officially in pursuit of PKK 19, large
guerrillas fighting the
though they may in
Ankara government from bases inside
reality
have been responding to a request for help
from Saddam. In any event, Talabani hurriedly pulled back to protect Arbil,
which
front line reverted to
be
let go, as
grace
previous position.
Iraqi division in front of Kirkuk
—a belated example of the
he did not
and the
"stick"
prisoners had to
At
least the
was sacked,
approach
in action
com-
in dis-
—though
defect.
The whole
sorry affair was a disaster for
Iraqi National Congress, his
Even the
INC could not afford to feed tliem.
the
mander of the
his forces
lay in the line of the Turkish advance,
its
Iraq,
Ahmad
Chalabi, the
and anyone who hoped that Saddam and
regime could be displaced, with help from the outside, by an
uprising.
The CIA hierarchy had never been among
school and
sumption
now
they vented their irritation on Chalabi for his pre-
in attempting
already in decline,
no more attempts
From
that particular
now went at
INC
such a bold stroke. into a
stock at Langley,
deep slump. There were
be
to
undermining Saddam from the periphery.
this point on, the
agency devoted the bulk of
fostering the long-anticipated coup, launched
its
attention to
from within the
Iraqi
rulers inner circle. Bob's dutiful report of the Samarra assassination idea,
which had
also
reached the ears of the Iranians, gave the
White House an excuse
to punish him.
He
spent
much
of the
fol-
lowing year under investigation by the FBI on charges of conspiring to
murder
a foreign leader. Ultimately, the Justice
decided not to prosecute. The
"military option," as
termed the increasingly popular coup inevitably result in the violent
plan,
Department
CIA
officers
would of course almost
demise of Saddam Hussein.
As the spring of 1995 turned into summer and recriminations flew back and forth both within and between the opposition groups, a far the court of
more
vicious dispute
Saddam Hussein. "Cracks
CIA and
was gathering force
in the inner circle,"
advertised by hopeful American spokesmen, were about to
a dramatic
reality.
Iraqi at
long
become
EIGHT
Deaths
The
the Family
in
convoy of black Mercedeses had been driving
the night across the
empty
fast
Iraqi desert for five hours
through
when
the
white concrete arch marking the border with Jordan appeared in the headhghts.
It
was the night of August
7,
1995, and Lieutenant
General Hussein Kamel, long one of the most powerful country, his
was fleeing
into exile.
younger brother, but
fifteen friends
and
in the
With him he was bringing not only
his wife,
Raghad, and sister-in-law Rina,
two of Saddam's much loved daughters, not dren and
men
relations
to
mention their
from the Majid
family.
chil-
The
world was about to learn of a momentous and unprecedented crack in
Saddam s inner circle. The fleet of cars roared toward
the border post, the headlights
Saddam Hussein that slowed down. The border
briefly illuminating the life-size statue of
stands watch over the frontier, and briefly officials
fully
took one look
waved them on
at
the august group of travelers and respect-
their way.
arch into Jordan, they
left
increasingly bitter hatreds
the group raced
down
As the motorcade sped under the
behind a regime consumed with the
and feuds of the ruling
the narrow road to
family.
Amman,
rancor was exploding in gunfire and bloodshed.
Even
as
the unbridled
OUT OF THE ASHES Infighting within the family
had been growing more intense since
early in 1995, exacerbated at every stage
by Uday. The previous year
he had directed the strident media campaign against government cials that
offi-
culminated in the assumption by Saddam himself of the post
of prime minister. There had been no improvement in the general
and economic
uation. Iraq's political
isolation continued.
sit-
Bombs were among
going off in Baghdad. There were increasing signs of unrest
once
fiercely loyal
Sunni
tribes, especially the
powerful Dalaim, cen-
tered in the city of Ramadi, west of Baghdad on the upper Euphrates. After what
may have been
a conspiracy to assassinate
time early in 1995, General arrested. In torture,
May, the government handed
back to his
and attacked police
dam and the
Mohammed Mazlum
Saddam someal-Dalaimi was
his body, mutilated
from
relatives.
Outraged, his fellow tribesmen rioted
stations. It
took the dispatch of efite troops by Sad-
death and wounding of several hundred Dalaimis before
the trouble subsided. (A detailed and colorful report of a further uprising by Dalaimis in the
army the following month was almost
disinformation, possibly part of a
CIA
strategy to create an
certainly
ambience
of "coups and rumors of coups.")
Uday had
mercilessly criticized these security lapses in the press,
criticisms that
uncles,
were by impfication
Watban, the
direct attacks
interior minister,
on
his
Ibrahim
and Sabawi, chief of the
al-
Amn al-Amm general security service, Saddam s half-brothers by his mothers second marriage. In May, Watban was dismissed. But Uday was Saddam's attacks
also directing his fire at the Majids, cousins
father's side, traditionally rivals
on
Ali
as the
hammer
late 1991, this ferocious
of the
hench-
of the ruler was dismissed from the defense ministry in the
middle of July 1995.
It is
hard to say whether Saddam himself was
actively encouraging these assaults
whether Uday was running out of san's dismissal, in
who
on men so close
control.
A week
to him, or
before Ali Has-
what may have been a veiled reference
relatives falhng out of favor, als
of the Ibrahims. Following
Hassan al-Majid, notorious
Kurds and defense minister since
man
on
Saddam
to those
criticized unspecified individu-
placed obstacles in his way "at a time
when we were remov-
ing one arrow after another from between our ribs." In any event, the ruler did not rein in his son,
who now began
to
DEATHS INTHE FAMILY
193
encroach on the military prerogatives of Htissein Kamel. As
we have
Uday had been competing with the once all-powerful Kamel for some years in the business sphere. Now, two weeks after the downfall of Kamel s uncle Ali Hassan, Uday suddenly appeared to seen,
be moving
to take charge of military transport
newfound
his
money as well
Hussein Kamel was trying to
em European country. Kamel
he and
up a
muscle
in.
now a lieutenant colonel
He
said
he talked
Raghad, with
to
he now had three children, and Rina (Saddam Kamel's
"Ten days before we decided to they might
show.
military contract with an Eastto
his brother,
without any hesitation. Perhaps
Tou
air
this precise time,
al-Khass presidential security service, decided to flee
the country at the end of July.
whom
At
as authority.
Uday wanted
later said that
Amn
in the
set
further highlighting
Uday attended an
interest in military affairs,
This was a fight over
by publicly oversee-
On August 3,
ing the repair of mihtary vehicles.
tell
their family.
But
travel, I at
I
explained
the beginning
all
we
wife).
the details
thought that
did not care about that and said:
either get ready to travel with
me
or
I
will travel alone.'
They
mind at all and came along with me to Amman." Kamel had certainly laid careful plans for his escape. For some time before he set off on that fateful trip across the desert he had been sending his accountant around the headquarters of the various did not
government organizations he controlled with requisition whatever hard currency they happened to have in their
slips for
safes.
None
could refuse the emissary of the apparently all-powerful Kamel, and as
much "I
am
as several million dollars
a
known
person,"
were collected
Kamel
said later with the arrogance that
me
on the road." Even
on August 7 before
setting off, either to
never deserted him. "No soldier could stop so,
he waited
until night fell
in this fashion.
escape notice in the darkness or simply to avoid the searing daytime heat of midsummer in the western desert. that date held
deep
significance for the
He must have known that
Saddam regime,
since
it
was
the eve of the anniversary of the victory over Iran in 1988, a victory in large part gained
by the
himself had founded. that at a
many
elite
Republican Guards divisions that he
The departing general may
also
have known
of the Iraqi ruling chque would be celebrating at a party
country house outside Baghdad.
OUT DF THE ASHES It
was
was a party that Kamel was fortunate
in
many
respects a rerun of
tlie
to miss.
night on the
island in the Tigris seven years before,
What happened
"Mother of Pigs"
when Uday had murdered
Kamel Hannah Jajo, his father's aide and pimp, in a fit of drunken rage. senior members of the regime present at this festivity was the riiler's half-brother Watban Ibrahim. Also present was Uday's cousin and boon companion Luai, the young man who had once had his arm broken by Saddam for kidnapping and beating up his school-
Among the
teacher.
There are various reports of what caused the party
to turn violent.
Ahmad quarreled with Luai Luai called Uday, who raced out to the party with
According to one account, Watban s son
and slapped his his
face.
submachine gun,
arriving at about three-thirty in the morning.
assert that Uday's angry arrival was prompted by the Watban had been speaking ill of him. In any event, his reaction was extreme. Bursting in on the festivities, he sprayed the room with gunfire. The hail of bullets hit Uncle Watban, severely wounding him in the leg, as well as killing six young women, gypsy dancers and
Other reports
news
that
singers considered essential that morning,
by
firing a rocket-propelled
Even
by
Tikritis for
any
social occasion. (Later
Ahmad retaliated with the feuding vigor of a true Tikriti
as Uday's victims
grenade
at Luai's father's house.)
were being transported
to the hospital or
morgue, Hussein Kamel and party were checking into the al-Amra Hotel in the center of Amman, the Jordanian Jordanian government
officials later
capital.
claimed that
his defection
came as a complete surprise. "Only Hussein Kamel and his brother knew what they were going to do," says Abdul Karim al-Kabariti, Jordanian foreign minister at the time. "We knew he had crossed the border, but
it
was not unusual
for an Iraqi official to enter Jor-
dan without giving us any information about what he was doing
had met Hushim immediately.
here." Al-Kabariti, a svelte, intelligent, former banker, sein
Kamel
"He
tried to impress
weapon.
The
It
a few years before and
was
all
on
had
disliked
me how anybody
could build a nuclear
a matter of will and funds and natural materials."
foreign minister only learned the astonishing reason for the
Iraqi general's return to Jordan
when King Hussein
called
him
to
the palace, where he found other senior ministers already assem-
DEATHS INTHE FAMILY bled.
the
The king
official in
he and
them
told
that Hussein
K^el
195
had
telephoned
just
charge of the royal court from the al-Amra to say that
his family
planned to seek
political
asylum
in Jordan.
The king was not being entirely forthcoming with his ministers. At some point before Kamel set off, he had contacted the Jordanian monarch and intimated what was afoot. The king in turn relayed a
CIA
cautious message to Washington that, in the words of a former
who was
official
happen"
privy to the message, "something big was going to
in Iraq.
Keeping the secret of Kamel s plans and welcoming him when he arrived was a critical decision for King Hussein.
He had allied his
He was
Iraq's clos-
country with
Saddam
during his war with Iran. Iraq was Jordan's biggest market.
He had
est friend in the
Arab world.
been a friendly neutral during the Gulf War. The long road between
Amman was
and Baghdad, down which Hussein Kamel had
Iraq's
The
only outlet to the world.
Palestinian origin.
just driven,
majority of Jordanians are of
They sympathized with Saddam Hussein's assault in the Arab world in 1991. They applauded
on the estabhshed order
Iraqi missiles fired at Israel.
For months, Saddam's picture deco-
Amman.
rated every shop and taxi in
Jordan had paid heavily for
its
friendship with Baghdad.
Most of
War
the 350,000 Palestinians in Kuwait, expelled after the Gulf
because Kuwaitis saw them
as pro-Iraqi,
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the Gulf subsidized Jordan, tors in
became
hostile.
had moved
states,
to Jordan.
which had previously
The king had
told Jordanian edi-
1993 that "Saddam has broken our backs." The king had
ated his return to America's
initi-
good graces by signing a peace treaty
with Israel in 1994.
Now
old ally in Baghdad.
He told his
he decided to make a
final
break with his
ministers: "Things can't
be tolerated
Saddam anymore." Two days after the king had granted Kamel's request for political asylum, Uday and Ali Hassan al-Majid arrived in Amman demanding to see King Hussein. Hussein Kamel warned tlie Jordanians about the
with
possibly Ali.
He
murderous intentions of said:
"Don't
let his
might have something did not think he had
in his
his relatives, particularly his uncle
majesty shake hands with this man.
hand
that might kiU him."
much choice but to meet the two
He
King Hussein
Iraqi emissaries.
QUTDFTHEASHES
19e They asked this
was a
for the extradition of the defectors, but
lost cause.
—
bank card
must have known
Their main interests were in retrieving Kamels
evidently his fund-raising initiative prior to leaving had
been noticed
—
as well as in seeing
Raghad and Rina,
claimed had been brought to Jordan against their
turned them down.
He
said:
"My
whom
they
King Hussein
will.
daughters spend time with them.
They want to stay." He promised to look after them. Uday and Ali Hassan went back to Baghdad empty-handed. They had seen how King Hussein was using the opportunity offered by the Kamel brothers' defection to turn against Saddam. The king praised Hussein Kamel in an interview and said it was "the right time for change" in it
will
Iraq's leadership,
adding that
only be a change for the better."
"if
a change occurs
The new direction
in Jordan's
diplomatic allegiance was underlined by the fact that the king chose to
announce
his
new stance
in an interview with Yediot Aharanot,
an
newspaper. President Clinton phoned him to promise to
Israeli
defend Jordan against Iraqi
The
retaliation.
defection of Hussein
Kamel had caused an
international
Commentators around the world eagerly interpreted
sensation.
his
dramatic departure as a sign that Saddam's regime was a "sinking ship."
When,
after four days in seclusion, this erstwhile pillar of the
mysterious and frightening regime in Baghdad
appearance palaces,
it
at a press
made
his first pubfic
conference in the garden of one of the king's
indeed appeared that Saddam had gained a formidable
opponent. Dressed in a double-breasted gray pin-striped gave a resume of his career and declared:
He made clear that he was
the regime."
"We
suit,
he
are working to topple
speaking of a coup and not a
popular insurrection by appealing to "the entire army, Republican Guards, and Special Guard
officers."
He was
factual
and well
informed, accusing the regime of leading Iraq into "complete tion."
He
did not attack
of kinship."
any
secrets.
He said he would not "take He was not unimpressive,
"
who had been
in
Despite his
power too long to make sudden metamorphosis
Kamel was hardly leading
Saddam
member
likely
isola-
and his family personally "because responsibility for unveiling
but he seemed a
like a
man
good revolutionary.
into a critic of
Saddam,
ever to succeed as an opposition leader.
of the Iraqi regime until just days before, he
A
had
DEATHS shared in
its
IN
THE FAMILY
crimes. Jaundiced though Barzani was on the subject of
Hussein Kamel, he had a point when he
Kurds there are deep wounds.
Baghdad ing
agents.
.
.
How
.
said:
"Between him and the
a Kurdish delegation
he was the harshest
[in 1991],
them
When
in attacking
came
them and
to
call-
can the Shiites of Iraq deal with him
tomb of Imam Hussein bin Ah?" Kamel appealed to the security services and the army. But the place for him to lead such a coup was Baghdad. The very fact that he and his brother had fled to Amman showed that they did not really believe in a military
when he
attacked the
In calhng for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein,
uprising.
Nevertheless, even
intelligence catch
nizations
if
he was not the man
to lead the overthrow of
and former master, Kamel represented a tremendous
his father-in-law
and Jordanian, Arab, and Western intelligence orga-
were eager
to speak to him.
"They wanted information and
"But it wasn't up to expectations. The them about hostages [who disappeared during the Iraqi occupation of Kuwait]. The Saudis thought he would tell them about Iraqi plans. The Americans thought he would brief them about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. One could consider or wanted something in that either he didn't have the information
he provided
says Kabariti.
it,"
Kuwaitis thought he would
tell
—
return."
That was not entirely
true. Certainly, the arrogant general's inter-
view with the CIA did not go
well.
He
felt
insulted that the officers
him were not of high rank, nor did they speak Arabic. Instead, the CIA team had brought along an interpreter of Egyptian origin, who found Kamel s Tikriti accent difficult to undersent to interview
stand.
an
For their
idiot," as
part, the
agency
officers
one of their colleagues
he would return
to
concluded that he was
later recalled.
"just
"His plan was that
Baghdad behind the U.S. Army and Air Force.
End of subject." Another interviewer had better
luck. Rolf
Ekeus had
Hussein Kamel in June 1991, when the Iraqi was power.
On
first
at the height
met
of his
Kamel had rudely interrupted a meeting Iraq's more suave since then, Kamel had been in charge of the
that occasion,
between the Unscom chairman and some of diplomats. In the years
elaborate effort to obstruct
Unscom and conceal
as
much as possible
aUTOFTHEASHES
19S
Now
of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programs.
mer
were meeting under very
antagonists
Their
meeting
first
defection,
in
Amman,
began with a startUng
almost two weeks after Kamels
revelation.
the Iraqi looked carefully at the faces of the ting
on Ekeus's side of the
the two for-
different circumstances.
On
entering the room,
Unscom personnel
sit-
gaze settled on the
table. Finally his
Unscom chairman's Arabic interpreter. "Are you a Syrian?" he asked. The man admitted that he was. Kamel asked: "Is your name
When
Tanous?"
Kamel
the visibly nervous translator said this was correct,
"Get the fuck out of here. You have been working for
replied,
my own agents." As he man had been infiltrated into Unscom employment and had long provided much useful intelligence. Jordanian security officials monitoring the meeting were much amused. me.
I
refuse to be debriefed by one of
explained, the
Once
the Iraqi mole had been removed,
Kamel was anxious
to
be
accommodating. "We have been enemies before," he said to Ekeus.
"Now we meet to
as friends."
Before Ekeus could turn the discussion
weapons, Kamel wanted to complain about
Uday spent
his brother-in-law.
his life in bars, picking fights, drinking, chasing
women.
He, on the other hand, complained the general, worked long hours.
He was
a teetotaler and a family man.
The whole Saddam family, he Unscom inspec-
explained, squeezed by sanctions and violated by tions,
was
"full
of hatred. They are boiling with hatred."
Having gotten that off his interest.
He had been
chest,
surprised,
Unscom, something none of the the inspectors
first
Kamel turned he
to Ekeus's area of
said, at the effectiveness
Iraqi leadership
arrived. Ekeus, for his part,
marily in the methods employed by Kamel's
of
had expected when was interested
men
pri-
in their task
of
concealing weapons, materials, and documents from the intrusive searches of the
Unscom
team.
"One of my first questions was 'How did you do it?' " the Swedish later. "He was eventually quite forthcoming, and so were some of the officers who had come with him, even though it was hard for them to change" from the habits of secrecy about such diplomat recalled
matters ingrained in
Ekeus was being officers in the
all
Iraqi security officials.
discreet.
One in particular among those
Kamel party supplied the most important
al-Majid
information.
DEATHS INTHE FAMILY
199
Major Izz al-Din al-Majid was the Special Republican Guard in
whose Abu Ghraib
villa garden the priceless parts
Project 1728 had been buried in July 1991. As a
and
officer
tools
from
member of the ruhng
family and an officer in the elite security unit, Izz al-Din was one of
the select few chosen to
forbidden weapons and
move and
materials.
hide, out of
Unscom s
As such, he was able
interviewers with crucial insights into the
reach, the
to furnish the
way the concealment
sys-
tem functioned and who was involved. Kamels defection had in any case yielded a rich dividend for Ekeus even before the two men met in Amman. Three weeks prior to the flight of the Kamel brothers, Saddam Hussein had made a defiant speech in Baghdad in which he threatened that Iraq would cease all cooperation with Unscom if there were no progress in the Security Council toward the Lifting of sanctions. When Ekeus met Tariq Aziz in Baghdad just three days before the Mercedes convoy sped across the border, Aziz repeated the threat, adding that the deadline for the
Security Council to change
its
ways was the end of August. The deep-
voiced deputy prime minister also added
done research on succeeded
in
that,
while Iraq had indeed
biological warfare agents, the scientists
had never
producing them in a form suitable for use in a weapon.
This was too
much for Ekeus. "Of course you have," he interjected. cigar, his normal reaction when con-
Aziz took a deep puff on his fronted, then
fell
den, where you
On August Iraqi
back on a familiar defense. "Iraq
make
13, the
a plan and implement
it.
is
not fike Swe-
We are incompetent."
day after Hussein Kamel s press conference, the
government performed an abrupt and dramatic about-face.
Fearful that the traitor would earn
away their darkest
secrets, the
some reward
for himself by giving
government resolved to beat him
to the
punch.
who by this time had returned to New York, got an urgent message from General Amer Rashid, the brilliant British-trained engineer who had been acting as Kamels deputy in dealing with Unscom, asking Ekeus to come back to Baghdad as soon as possible. Ekeus,
Furthermore, wrote Rashid, "the government had ascertained that
General Hussein Kamel had been responsible for hiding important information on Iraq's prohibited programs from the commission and
IAEA by ordering the
Iraqi technical personnel not to disclose such
OUT DF THE ASHES information and also not to inform Mr. Tariq Aziz or General
Amer
of these instructions."
Ekeus returned
Baghdad, where he encountered Aziz, Rashid,
to
and other senior
officials
suddenly exuding goodwill and
all
promises of cooperation. Everything, they explained, had been the fault
The
of Hussein Kamel.
rest
of the Iraqi government had been
quite ignorant of his nefarious activities in concealing the forbidden
weapons programs. Henceforth Iraq would pursue a policy of full cooperation with Unscom and "good-neighborhness" with other countries. In addition, it was now admitted that Iraq had not only succeeded
manufacturing biological weapons but had actually
in
loaded them into 166 bombs and 25 al-Hussein missile warheads.
Nor was
that
all.
As he was about
to leave
Baghdad, Ekeus com-
plained that so far he had not seen a single document to back up interesting
all
this
new information. Within less than an hour, Ekeus got a call
from Rashid suggesting that on sanctions to
all
but
his
way
to the airport (closed
under
UN flights) he and his team should stop by a farm
belonging to Hussein Kamel, in a place called Haidar, where he would find "items of great interest."
That was putting
it
mildly. In a
locked
chicken shed, Ekeus found piles of metal and wooden boxes packed with over half a milHon documents as well as microfiches, computer
and photographs. Almost
disks,
abundance of
detail
all
of this treasure trove carried an
about the secret weapons programs, particularly
The Unscom group
the nuclear weapons effort.
carefully analyzing pictures of the farm taken
a high-flying carefully
Kamels
U-2 spy plane,
that the
purged of the most
files
concluded, after
on preceding days from
they had discovered had been
sensitive material in the twelve days since
flight.
Thanks
to the debriefings in Jordan
and the "chicken farm" doc-
uments, Ekeus and his team discovered fooled
later
them over the previous four
Samarrai s information on amplified, but they
had
1728 and a secret missile
how
years.
well the Iraqis
had
Not only was Wafiq
al-
VX and biological weapons confirmed and also learned for the first time of Project
test that
had taken place
in 1993.
They had
also learned of the invisible organization dedicated to outwitting
them
that they
came
to call the
"concealment mechanism."
Meanwhile, Ekeus reported on his
arrival in
Amman that there was
D E AT HSINTHEFAMILY "political panic" in
to Jordan. Hussein
to Jordan "there
Guard position They had never seen such a split in the
a Republican electrified.
militia were deployed Kamel himself said that since is not a single street in Baghdad without to search people." Ordinary Iraqis were
Baghdad. Uday's Fedayeen
on the road leading he had gone
ZOl
ruling family. "Peo-
ple held parties throughout Baghdad," says one of those
who
cele-
"They believed the regime was wobbling."
brated.
The most dangerous moment for Saddam was immediately after the defection. The defectors denied that they had organized a conspiracy while still in Iraq, but he could not be sure. He did not know how much support Hussein Kamel enjoyed in presidential security the Special Guard and the Republican Guard. After their flight, Hussein Kamel said he expected arrests and executions. But the regime must have had some confidence that he could not orchestrate a coup from Amman, since
it
did not cut the telephone link to Jordan.
Meanwhile, Kamel was rapidly removed from tant positions.
On
August
fired as industry minister
10,
it
his
many impor-
was announced that he had been
and director of miUtary industrialization.
A
week later, the Baath Party expelled him. More menacing for the exiles was the strength of the denunciations from Saddam Hussein and the al-Majid clan. In a wordy and elhptical speech on August 11, the Iraqi leader compared Hussein Kamel, successively, to Cain, who murdered Abel; to Judas, who betrayed Ghrist; to Croesus, the infamously avaricious king of
Abu Lahab, who had opposed his nephew, the Mohammed. Saddam said his son-in-law would be "stoned
ancient times; and to
Prophet
by
history"
and would do better
"to die than live in humiliation."
He
accused him of stealing several million dollars through front companies.
He
be
the mercy of his
at
predicted, not wholly wrongly, that Hussein
new
foreign masters and
them "without any argument or right of veto." Even more damning was a statement from signed by Hussein Kamel's uncle
Kamel to his
for treason against
life,
tribal law.
family,"
Saddam.
underlining, at the
"Although the
to
obey
the al-Majid clan,
Hassan al-Majid, denouncing
It also
carried a very direct threat
same time, how seriously
traitor
wrote the al-Majids,
7\li
Kamel would
would have
Iraqis
still
took
Hussein Kamel belongs to an Iraqi
"this small family within Iraq
denounces
OUT OF THE ASHES his
cowardly
act."
They
called for his punishment. His relatives for-
mally announced that they would not seek vengeance against anybody
who
killed
him, saying
flatly:
permit with impunity the
The
Iraqi press
"tolerance" of
"His family has unanimously decided to
spilling
of blood."
denounced the
traitor for taking
Saddam Hussein and
for stealing
money. Most of the
abuse was crude, but the media did publish one
aimed
at
showing up Hussein Kamel
phant. This was a letter he had sent
when
Iraqi troops
advantage of the
telling
as a poorly
document,
educated syco-
Saddam on October
13, 1994,
were withdrawing from the border with Kuwait
after a mini-crisis with the
United
States. It
is
in
ungrammatical
Arabic and contains several spelling mistakes.
The note reads: "Dear What is important is the world mentioning your name everyday. Our hope is being not important that sanctions be
Sir, It is
to see
materialized.
May God be
lifted.
with your excellency and our souls are
nothing before your excellency."
Meanwhile, Watban was in the
were
was a
fighting to save his leg. It
which the government
who was
He was
also tending
still
where Cuban doctors measure of the rigor with
hospital,
controlled Iraq that an Iraqi specialist
Watban had
to return every night to prison.
serving a six-month sentence for illegally erecting a televi-
sion satellite dish to
watch foreign broadcasts.
Uday s murderous unmentioned
assault
on
his uncle
in the Iraqi media,
and the gypsy dancers went
but for the
first
on the receiving end of official and public abuse.
time, the prince
Mohammed
was
Said
al-
Sahhaf, the Iraqi foreign minister, said he was "unfit to govern."
Barzan, in Geneva, coupled
lems come from people
Uday with Hussein Kamel,
who do
saying: "Prob-
not appreciate what their true size
is.
The notion of inheriting power is not acceptable in Iraq. People do not accept Uday or Hussein Kamel. Neither of them has the legitimacy to govern."
Even Saddam was
distancing himself, at least publicly, from
and clamping down on reelected
Uday
as
its
his empire.
head by 155
confining himself to sports.
room
The
The
Uday
Iraqi Football Association
to 0, but officials said
he would be
Iraqi leader declared there
in Iraq "for a state within a state." Iraqi security raided
Olympic headquarters and freed three people from
was no
Udays
his private
jail.
DEATHS INTHE FAMILY
203
One street rumor, possibly inspired by the government itself, told how Saddam had gone
to his son's
owned
cover that his son
immense
private garage.
Shocked
to dis-
luxury cars, he was alleged to have
sixty
ordered his guards to sprinkle petrol over the vehicles and set them alight.
show that he was still in Watban by Uday and the defection of control despite the shooting of Hussein Kamel. The government announced tliat a referendum would be held on October 15 in which 8 million Iraqis would vote on the question: "Do you agree that Saddam Hussein should be presi-
Saddam adopted an
aggressive strategy to
dent of Iraq?" While the result was not in doubt, the campaign focused attention on the Iraqi leader, health,
though he dyed
Hundreds of foreign
his
still
only fifty-eight and in good
mustache and suffered from back
journalists
were invited
more than had been allowed into the country Even
if
their coverage
government had a
at
to
pains.
watch the voting,
any time since 1991.
was unsympathetic, they could see that the
tight
hold on power everywhere in Iraq except
Kurdistan.
The referendum campaign, organized with by the Baath Party organization,
also
dam s personality cult. "O lofty Hassan al-Majid. "By God we have
saw a further exaltation of Sad-
mountain!
ficult
relentless efficiency
O glory of Iraq!" wrote Ali
always found you in the most dif-
conditions a roaring lion and courageous horseman, one of the
few true men." The
deification of
At one polling station
Saddam was evident
in the Arafa
district
of the
all
oil city
over Iraq. of Kirkuk,
there were thirteen pictures of the Iraqi leader on the walls.
He was
portrayed in different guises, such as an Arab sheikh, a baggytrousered Kurd, and a white-suited businessman.
A
fourteenth pic-
ture of the leader was stuck to the ballot box. In a local primary school, there letters
was a special board on which children had stuck love
and birthday cards
to the Iraqi leader. It faced a large
mural
depicting an Iraqi soldier in the act of repeating the words of his leader: "Victory
is
sweet."
Saddam won 99.96 percent of the vote. It was the first such vote when the British had organized an equally spurious poll
since 1921,
showing that 96 percent of Iraqis wanted Faisal
were no
I
as their king.
alternative candidates in either 1921 or 1995.
There
Saddam had
a
OUT DF THE ASHES further objective.
By curbing Uday and holding
a
referendum under
the auspices of the party, he was saying, as one diplomat in
put
that "in future,
it,
the Revolution
government
Command
be
will
in the
Baghdad
hands of bodies
like
Council and the Baath Party and not the
inner family."
The inner
command
family did not lose power.
Qusay
rapidly
assumed
The
of the important offices vacated by Hussein Kamel.
essential levers of power
were
still
the carrot and a very brutal
But Saddam had always shown an uncanny
gift for
stick.
balancing the
administration of Iraq between loyal subordinates chosen for their
unquestioning loyalty experts.
—usually family members—and highly
Often he dispensed mercy
as a reward, all the
skilled
more wel-
come to the recipients because it was unexpected. For example, when Kamel left, his highly intelligent and capable deputy. General Amer Rashid, must have felt extremely nervous. His proximity to the departed traitor would certainly have laid
and the tender mercies of Qusay s
dam promoted him
him open
interrogators. But, instead, Sad-
Kamel's old job of dealing with Unscom. In addition,
down
the millions of dollars
Saddam befieved Hussein Kamel had stolen. Hussein Kamel could not have predicted one flight
from
Iraq. His arrival in
The
pohtical isolation of Iraq
come out
was complete. In of
Amman
serious conse-
Amman gave Jordan an
excellent opportunity to switch decisively into the
the regime would
him Rashid was
to the post of oil minister as well as giving
entrusted with the task of trying to track
quence of his
to suspicion
and
American camp.
future, plots against
not, as hitherto, Iraqi
Kurdistan.
In
Amman, Hussein Kamel was
sures of exile. to a
not responding well to the pres-
The king had lent him
former wife who had died
there with Raghad, with
whom
a
house that had once belonged
in a helicopter crash.
Kamel
lived
he was getting on badly, and their
three children, along with his brother, Rina, and their two children.
He
only once went out into the city
hospital.
owned
He was bored and
lonely.
—
for a medical
checkup
in the
AHa, the king's eldest daughter,
the neighboring palace in the royal compound. She found
the Kamels always walking through her garden to borrow videos.
The
exiled couple
would then hang around
in
her house for hours.
D E AT HSINTHEFAMILY
ZDS
To escape their company, she finally fled to one of her other houses in Palm Beach, Florida. The opposition, mainly based in London and northern Iraq, spumed Hussein Kamel. His appeal to the elite units of the Iraqi army to support
him had not produced
a single mutiny. After a
few months,
foreign intelligence services lost interest in debriefing him. nians,
who had now
settled
on the
exiled opposition
The Jorda-
group Iraqi
down Saddam, Kamels' presence in Amman.
National Accord as their chosen instrument to bring
were no longer enthusiastic about the
King Hussein pointedly invited Raghad and Rina
to dinner, but not
their husbands.
One
of the few people
who came
was Rolf Ekeus,
to call
still
win-
on the weapons programs. He found the sad Kamels fortunes mirrored in his surroundings. During their meetings, the house had been a hive of activity. The phones
kling out information
decline in early
never stopped, fax machines spat out endless messages, aides and emissaries bustled in air
and
out.
Now Kamel
sat alone.
A
single
broken
conditioner sent out a continuous rasping noise. There was a layer
of dust everywhere and the phone never rang.
Hussein Kamel did use the telephone to Samarrai who, following the debacle of the 1995, had hurriedly
made
his
talk to
INC
General Wafiq
offensive in
way from Kurdistan
to
where he enjoyed the protection and sponsorship of the October,
Kamel was considering
faced a problem.
When he
he was told that he and
his
a
move
al-
March
Damascus,
By Here he
Syrians.
to Syria himself.
asked King Hussein for permission to go, brother were free to travel to Syria, but
The Idng had promised Uday in my daughters." The Jordanians had already aroused the dangerous ire of Saddam Hussein by accepting Kamel and swinging into the American orbit. They did not want to provoke Saddam any further by sending the Iraqi rulers own
without their wives and children.
August that "Saddam s daughters are
daughters into the custody of his most hated
Hafez al-Assad. The king
said:
"The
girls will
rival,
Syrian president
have to stay here."
Relations between the Iraqi exiles and their Jordanian hosts
by the montli. On January 4, 1996, Kabariti gave an Amman newspaper Dustur in which he said that HusKamel was "most welcome when he came. When he wishes to
became
frostier
interview to the sein
OUT OF THE ASHES
ZOe leave,
we will treat him the same way." The general made a brief effort
to establish himself as the leader of
an opposition group, to be called
the "Higher Council for the Salvation of Iraq."
Its
intended to appeal to the Sunni estabHshment in Iraq.
dam
It
program was opposed Sad-
Hussein, but renounced foreign aid to get rid of him.
would be no witch-hunt
that there
promised
after
elections, but not federalism.
rights within a unified Iraq.
the higher council or
Abdul Karim
its
he was overthrown and
Kurds would get their natural
Nobody showed
the slightest interest in
program.
Kabariti,
beginning of February,
who became prime minister of Jordan at the
says, kindly, that
Hussein Kamel's problem was
not stupidity, but that "he could not do without power." to giving orders
and seeing them carried
out.
Even
Others,
He was
his first
appealing for the support of the Iraqi army sounds like a officer giving
pledged
It
used
speech
commanding
an order rather than a politician looking for support.
who came to know Kamel at least as well as Kabariti, were less abifities. "He had a reputation as an
impressed by his intelligence and excellent manager, based
on
his
work with the Republican Guards and
other things," said Rolf Ekeus. "But the test of a good manager ability to
operate with
finite resources, to
operated simply by means of ness.
is
his
decide on options. Kamel
and
infinite resources
infinite ruthless-
Otherwise he was an extremely stupid man."
One
incident in particular brought
diminished establish
status.
home
to the general his
He had begun to criticize King Hussein's plans to anti-Iraq front. He praised some minor
a pan-Arab,
reforms in Baghdad. Nayef Tawarah, the editor of the
Amman
Kamel of his
some of
newspaper
Bilat, told
comments
his
critical
him. Reverting to a
threatened to
kill
told the journalist,
intention of publishing
of King Hussein.
mode
Tawarah.
who was
The
Iraqi
wanted
to stop
of behavior customary in Baghdad, he "I will cut
you up piece by piece," he
taping the conversation.
Tawarah, a friend of Kabariti s, announced that he was going to
The Jordanian government told Kamel he would have to stand trial. Kamel riposted to Kabariti that the journalists action was "inconceivable." The Jordanian minister piously observed that "We sue.
are
all
recalls:
living
"He
under the law
in Jordan." Kabariti, with a certain glee,
really couldn't believe
it.
His face went pale, in
fact, yel-
THE FA M
D E AT H S IN
He
low.
I
207
LY
clutched a pillow to his stomach. iTe kept repeating, 'This
is
unbelievable, unbelievable, unbelievable.'
Saddam had predicted immediately after Hussein Kamel's flight that his newfound friends would suck him dry of information "until he is burnt out and then throw him into the road." Now he set to work with chilling skill to seduce Kamel into returning. He sent assurances through Kamel's father and to Raghad, through her mother, Sajida,
On
that the defectors could return in safety to Baghdad.
occasion, he called
Kamel
at least
one
directly with assurances that the prodigal
"Do you think I could harm the Saddam with dramatic sincerity. Unbelievably, Kamel began to take him seriously. There were prolonged negotiations. Baghdad was obsessed by the belief that Kamel had built up an enormous fortune abroad through commissions from when he had been in charge of Iraqi milson-in-law need fear no repercussions. father of
itary
my
grandchildren?" asked
procurement. Barzan gave a precise
figure.
He
said:
"Between
1985 and 1995, he controlled seventy-three percent of Iraq's funds."
When Uday and Ali
Hassan al-Majid
when
Amman
they
came
to
trouble of canceling
diverted Hussein
him made
On
six
it.
19,
to the
specific threats to kill
earlier.
Hussein Kamel sent a formal
in-law asking about his return.
response was positive." Not once,
bank card
went
These negotiations about money may have
Kamel from considering the
months
Februaiy
failed to retrieve his
after his defection, they
all
He
letter to his father-
told reporters that "the initial
his family
agreed with his decision. For
Saddam Kamel, who had made little impact on anybody in his six
months out of Iraq, protested vigorously. 'Tou donkey," he reportedly shouted
at his brother.
In reply, Hussein
come
'Tou want us to go back to our deaths."
Kamel pulled out
and
said,
"You
back." Izz al-Din al-Majid called a Jordanian intelligence
cial
from Turkey, where he was
will
be
them
his pistol
killed,"
he said
visiting.
plaintively.
"What about
The Jordanians
will offi-
my kids? They
told
him
to
send
a fax saying he did not want his children to go back to Bagh-
dad. Nothing arrived. resignedly: "Let
When
them go
they spoke with him again, he said
back. Leave
it
to
God."
Kamel's decision to return, knowing what he did about his fatherin-law's attitude to
anyone who betrayed him, has long mystified even
OUT OF THE ASHES
ZaS
those witli only a passing interest in Iraq and
A
who spoke
its
malignant ruling fam-
him near the end of his brief exile suggests that Kamel was "driven mad" by King Hussein and his advisers. In parily.
friend
the decision to
ticular,
to
let
the journalist's lawsuit go forward convinced
the distracted general that the king intended to
my relatives
by
killed
than to rot in a Jordanian
The Jordanians did have some King Hussein called Kabariti
20,
been
to the Iraqi
—a
embassy
him
let
he
said.
to say that
On
leave?" asked the king. "Let
him
go,"
February
Hussein Kamel had
ambassadors residence and was now
at
Amman.
the Iraqi "Shall
answered the
be a great reUef." By now, Hussein Kamel and
were loading
their belongings into the
had brought them
that
him. "Better to be
last-minute qualms.
kitsch Babylonian building in central
cian. "It will tives
jail
jail,"
to
Amman seven
we
politi-
his rela-
same Mercedes sedans
months before.
Hussein Kamel himself must have had misgivings about the wis-
dom
of his actions during the four-hour drive through the stony
desert of eastern Jordan.
It is
a depressing road, narrow and danger-
Amman
ous because of the large trucks traveling between
Baghdad. Every half hour he said to the
The
a piss."
Kamel would up
his
"get out and pace
mind, but he would not
It is
driver: "Stop.
driver reported later that he
not clear
I
want
and
to take
would stop and Hussein
up and down
as if
he were making
piss."
when Hussein Kamel and his brother realized that The Iraqi government said that on his arrival
they were going to die. at
the border at Trebeil "the leadership took a decision to accept his
More ominously, Uday arrest the Kamel brothers, but
appeal ... to return as an ordinary citizen."
was waiting he took
He did not try to
for him.
his sisters
Raghad and Rina, with
their children, into his
motorcade.
From watching
the other side of the border, a Jordanian security closely,
with an open line to the kings palace in
moment he saw Kamel being
back: "Khallas"— "He's
Left to their to a
own
official
was
Amman. The
separated from his family he reported
finished."
devices for the time being, the brothers drove
house they owned
in Tikrit.
When they arrived, they found their
al-Majid relatives angry and threatening. Not daring to spend the night there, they drove south along the Tigris to Baghdad, to the
D E AT HSINTHEFAMILY house of their
sister,
ZDS
who, along with her children, had returned
with them despite the misgivings of her husband, Izz al-Din. Here they were joined by their father, and Hakim, their youngest brother.
Then came
summons
a
to the presidential palace. Uday's friend
Abbas Jenabi, the editor of Babel,
dam demanded that the brothers them on the
have two
spot,
one of tlie family threatened to
but Saddam intervened, saying they should
days to reconsider.
announced
recounted that an angry Sad-
documents immediately divorc-
sign
When they refused,
ing his daughters.
shoot
later
On
February 23, Uday's television station
Raghad and Rina had divorced
that
The Saddam
their husbands.
language of the announcement showed that Hussein and could expect
had
mercy.
little
It
claimed, as
daughters had been brought to
had
Uday and Ali Hassan al-Majid earlier, that Saddams two
King Hussein seven months
said to
told the king that "they
failed traitors." It
were "refusing
Amman against their will.
It
said they
had been deceived and misled by two
concluded by announcing that Raghad and Rina
to stay married to
men who
betrayed
homeland,
tlie
the trust, and the lofty values of their noble family and kinfolk."
By now Hussein Kamel must have known there was no Along with in
his father
Baghdad.
A
and two brothers, he waited
squad of forty
men from
escape.
in his sisters villa
the presidential guard, of
which Hussein and Saddam had once both been members,
rounded the house. Given that Saddam had recruited guards from close relatives,
ensure that they were
all
it
would not have been
members of
his
sur-
body-
difficult to
the al-Majid family.
They
were led by Ah Hassan al-Majid himself. In bizarre deference to the proprieties of tribal feuding, the assault party sent
ammunition
ahead a Honda
filled with automatic weapons and Kamel family to defend themselves with. It fight. Uday and Qusay watched the proceedings
for the
would be a fair from a car parked nearby.
When
the assault began, Hussein, Saddam, and
fought back fiercely from the house. hours, during which time the attackers.
When
The
battle
Haldm Kamel
went on
Kamels succeeded
for thirteen
in kilfing
two of the
they ran out of ammunition, Hussein Kamel,
who
had already been wounded, came staggering out of the house and shouted: "Kill me, but not them."
He was
shot dead.
Saddam Kamel
OUT OF THE ASHES was
hit
of the
and
killed
by a rocket grenade
san al-Majid stood over his
head, saying: "This
is
When the
fired
from the balcony
at the
sister,
was
to
all
those
who
and her
over, Ali
last
Has-
shot in the
deal with the
King Hussein). According
to
time in Baghdad, the attackers then put
in the eyes of the
Babel TV, Uday's
fighting
nephew and gave him one
what happens
(a reference to the diminutive
one story current
meat hooks
he
His father, Kamel Hassan al-Majid, his
villa.
children died inside the house.
midget"
as
dead brothers and dragged them away.
station, got the
scoop on what had happened.
quoted a spokesman from die Interior Ministry
as saying that "a
It
num-
ber of young people from the Majid family" had killed the three Kamel brotliers.
The
official Line
them, but not their own
ment
saying:
"We have
was that the
tribe.
state
might have pardoned
Later the al-Majid clan put out a state-
cut off the treacherous branch from our noble
family tree. Your amnesty does not obliterate the right of our family to
impose the necessary punishment." Saddam himself said
later
of the
"Had they asked me, I would have prevented them, but it was good that they did not." The next day, Uday, wearing al-Majid family's actions,
tribal robes,
walked
in the state funeral procession of tlie al-Majid
Kamel house. Raghad and Rina, once Saddam s favorite children, never forgave him for the killing of their husbands. They assumed he had orchestrated the attack by the al-Majid clan. They continued to live with clansmen
killed in the battle at the
their five children in a family
house
in Tikrit,
wearing black, and refusing to see any
never going out, always
member of their
family apart
from their mother.
Saddam had
survived what might at
first
have been a crippling
Hussein Kamel s defection had signaled a defin-
blow
to his regime.
itive
crack in the inner circle that ruled Iraq, and yet the apostate
son-in-law had been neutralized and ultimately eliminated with
comparative ease. Yet the dramatic episode of Hussein Kamel's flight had shifted the axis of the Western intelligence agencies working to bring
Saddam.
Now
few months they were destroy him.
down
they were working from Jordan, and over the next to
make
their
most determined bid so
far to
NINE
"Bring
Me
the Head of
Saddam Hussein"
The amateur cameraman focused on the dark-suited man with a scraggly mustache sitting behind the paper-strewn desk. It
was
midwinter, and the Zagros Mountains of northern Iraq, visible
through the window behind the desk, were topped with snow. Just outside, traffic thronged the busy street in
downtown Sulaimaniya,
the capital of eastern Kurdistan. Staring fixedly into the lens, his
Abu Amneh a terrorist bomber on the
rodenthke face showing signs of extreme nervousness,
al-Khadami began to recount
his career as
CIA payroll.
No one had
bomb blasts that One explosion had gone a mosque. A car bomb outside the offices
ever claimed responsibility for the
echoed around Baghdad
in
off in a cinema, another in
1994 and 1995.
wounded a large number of passersby and killed a child. Altogether, the bombs had killed as many as a hundred civilians. As we have seen, Uday put the blasts to political use, publicizing them as a means of undermining his uncle, interior minister Watban Ibrahim. Now, on January 25, of al-Jumhuriya, the Baath Party newspaper, had
DUT OF THE ASHES Amneh had
1996,
brought the video camera to
his office to
record
the history of his role in the lethal blasts.
For the next hour and a light cigarettes, occasionally
paymaster to
half,
he talked
pausing only to
steadily,
holding up operational orders from his This was not a confession by a
illustrate the story.
repentant murderer, but a rambling complaint that his work for the
cause had been impeded by lack of explosives and money.
The bombings, claimed Amneh, had been planned and executed He was referring to Adnan Nuri, the former general in Saddam s army who had been recruited by the CIA in 1992 to work directly for the agency. Since that time, Nuri had risen to comon the orders of "Adnan."
mand
the operations of the opposition Iraqi National Accord in Kur-
distan.
His mission, as mandated by the CIA, was to work on prepara-
coup inside the
tions for a
Iraqi military that would, finally, eliminate
Saddam. Nuri had recruited
Amneh from
a
of the INC.
official
tion
by
tlie
He claimed his
in Salaliudin,
jail
been incarcerated by Massoud Barzani s
release
was due to direct interven-
CIA, quoting Nuri s boast that he "made the American
Washington telephone Massoud Barzani prison.'"
where he had
KDP for attempting to kill an
Once
freed,
to say 'Let
Amneh
in
out of
he was ordered to move from Salaliudin to
Sulaimaniya and set to work. But, in time, he came to suspect that
Nuri was, dad.
in fact,
He was
an Iraqi agent intent on handing him over to Bagh-
therefore making the tape to alert the leadership of the
Iraqi National Accord to what he perceived as the perfidy of their rep-
resentative in Kurdistan.
The aim of the bombing campaign, by Amneh s impress Nuri s sponsors at the nization they were funding.
To
CIA with
account, was to
the capabilities of the orga-
that end, the agent
was commissioned
not only to organize the planting of bombs but also the distribution of leaflets in the streets
ganda at
in the heart of
of Baghdad. Handing out opposition propa-
Saddam s
capital
would be a
risky undertaking
the best of times, but the dangers were magnified by Nuri s insis-
tence that the distribution be recorded on camera as proof that the leaflets
had not simply been dumped. "Those
leaflets,"
complained
Amneh as he held up one such picture, "cost us more than a bomb. A bomb somebody just takes it and leaves it. Leaflets need two people:
—
"BRING ME THE HEAD OF SADDAM HUSSEIN" one to take photographs and the other to hand out the Despite such precautions, fretting that "the
Americans
Amneh
213
leaflets."
described Nuri as continually
Whether bomber s comshort changed him
will cut off financial aid to us."
or not Nuri s funding was curtailed, the burden of the plaint
concerned the way
his superior continually
on pay and expenses. "We blew up a car and we were supposed two thousand at
dollars,
one point, going on
to get
but Adnan gave us one thousand," he grumbled to gripe that at a supply
dump meant to contain
two tons of explosives he had been given only a hundred pounds, the
He had not been able to buy a car or pay the dozen men on his team. On one occadump's custodian claiming that the
sion,
rest
had been
stolen.
Nuri had paid him with dollars that turned out to be counterfeit.
Despite his position as a subcontractor for the richest intelligence
agency in the world, he "had to buy clocks turn
them
From
in the
into timers."
the evidence of the tape,
aware of their agent's role
in the
it
Baghdad bombings and had even
from the Americans that he was "too much a
Amneh
cited criticism
but observed
terrorist,"
"Saddam Hussein has ruined the whole
anybody say we are
CIA was well
appeared that the
expressed some reservations. At one point,
that
souk [market] and
country, so
how can
terrorists?"
Rarely had a foot soldier in a covert operation been so voluntarily
forthcoming about his work. Only once, he claimed, had he refused
an assignment from Nuri. Soon after starting work, he had been asked to
kill
Ahmad
Chalabi, leader of the other opposition group
supported and funded by the CIA. Nuri had suggested using a
booby-trapped car for the purpose, a proposal have declined on the grounds that
—"You can say he
tyr
is
this
a thief, doesn't
Amneh
claimed to
would make Chalabi a mar-
know how
to
mixes with the wrong kind of people, but none of this
work
well, or
justifies killing
him," and besides, "there will be Americans there."
Someone lacked
his sense of
moral discrimination.
On
October
31, 1995, a massive blast ripped apart one of the headquarters build-
ings used
by the
Iraqi National
Congress in Salahudin. Twenty-eight
people (though not Chalabi or any Americans) were ing the
KDP,
INC
all
killed, includ-
The CIA, as well as the INC and the opened investigations. The Americans appropriated some security chief.
UT OF THE ASHES
bomb
fragments from the scene of the
but refused to divulge
blast,
any of their conclusions. The KDP, however,
who,
individuals
they were
members
bomb under
the
swiftly arrested three
after severe interrogation, eventually
claimed that
of the Iraqi National Accord and had planted
Adnan
orders from
Nuri.
Amneh
repeated the
accusation of Nuri s culpability on his tape.
Since the victims and the alleged perpetrators of this savage attack
were both sponsored and subsidized by the CIA (no one sug-
gested that the Americans themselves were behind
it), it
was hardly
mute on the results of its own The episode was even more embarrassing in view of the fact that the Accord was gaining favor among many senior agency officials as the more useful tool to deploy against Saddam surprising that the agency remained
investigation.
even
as their rivals for the CIA's affections lost favor.
The debacle of die INC s offensive in March 1995 had caused great powerful circles
irritation in
delayed.
A month
at Langley.
after the offensive,
Punishment was not long
York Times the previously secret fact that the thus removing Chalabi s
roll,
fig leaf
New INC was on the CIA pay-
somebody leaked
to the
of respectable independence and
thereby creating a furor in northern Iraq. In May, Chalabi was sum-
moned
to a
meeting
at
the
CIA
station in
London
at
which
his high-
level detractors in the
agency planned to give him a savage dressing-
down
the offensive without proper authorization.
for launching
However, he
still
had friends and supporters
fered informed advice on tell
them, 1 didn't do
it
in the agency,
how to deal with the angry bureaucrats. and
I
won't do
it
again,' "
these pro-Chalabi partisans. "Bureaucrats in the ing with
tlieir
who prof"Just
counseled one of
CIA are used to deal-
superiors, inferiors, people of the
same
rank,
and
bureaucrats in other agencies," this cynical veteran of covert operations later explained.
"They are not used
to dealing with
someone
like
Ahmad who is capable of saying, 'Fuck you.' So the big meeting ended Ahmad just getting a slap on the wrist."
with
Facing the
chill
down his accusers may have been satisfying for Chalabi, but
from Washington only got
London, orders were
colder. After the
issued, apparently
from
tlie
May encounter in
White House
itself,
INC leader was persona non grata at CIA headquarters. Since the agency was still sending teams to work with the INC in Salahudin, that the
"BRING ME THE HEAD OF SADDAM HUSSEIN" seemed somewhat absurd, and
this
to
evade the ban on
Chalabi's supporters
215
maneuvered
his visits.
INC
Suspicions that the devastating attack on the
in
October had
been carried out by agents of the Accord was a dramatic and
CIA
extreme symptom of a widening spHt within the ingly,
what had once been a
relatively
itself.
Increas-
harmonious operation was
sphtting into two partisan groups, the devotees of Chalabi and the
INC, and those who believed
and glowing prospects
in the efficacy
of lyad Alawi and the Iraqi National Accord.
known
It
was a phenomenon
as "clientism."
who had
"Things got really bad," recalled Warren Marik,
CIA team
first
"I
to Salahudin
realized that clientism
and was very much
in the
led the
Chalabi camp.
was out of control when
I
saw some
[Accord supporters] in the [CIA's] Iraq office challenge and scoff the head of the office,
between the two
sides. I
who was
at
only trying to keep a balance
suspected that they thought they could get
it because they had a direct line to someone in the White House who was backing the 'zipless coup' idea." The headquarters of the Accord was in London, which was why lyad Alawi's supporters were concentrated in the CIA's London sta-
away with
tion,
while those agency officers
loyal to
Ahmad
Chalabi and the
clustered in the Iraq operations office at Langley
even there the in
still
—though
INC were
lines
were sharply divided. The
battle that
was fought
Kurdish mountain towns with bombs continued across the Atlantic,
but
now was
fought with angry classified cables.
On
one occasion,
for
example, lyad Alawi reported to his friends in the station that Chalabi
had bounced a check. "London sent angry messages 'Chalabi is
is
bouncing checks, what has he done with
all
to Washington.
the money, this
a scandal, etc., etc.,'" recalled Marik. "I said, 'Hold on,
check.'
I
because
called I
Ahmad, who
said, 'It didn't
didn't trust the vendor.' I
bounce,
checked
it
out,
I
let's
see the
stopped payment
and it was indeed a
stopped payment." Despite such small victories, the balance of power was against Chalabi.
He was
in
bad odor because of the
and the eager enthusiasm from the upper
tilted
failed offensive
levels of the
agency for a
quick solution. In any case, London had an additional advantage in the internal dispute because in the mid-1990s the station chiefs
aUTQFTHEASHES
216 were
influential
men who had
previously occupied very important
posts. "Basically," explained Marik, "the
screwup was because of
cir-
cumstances. Normally London
is not so important. The station chief some superannuated guy near retirement. But on this occasion, London was involved to a great extent because of the British involvement with Alawi. Second, it so happened that London
is
usually
was headed
Tom
time by these eight-hundred-pound
at that
Twetton, an
ex-DDO
gorillas,
[deputy director of operations], and Jack
DDO.
Devine, an ex-acting
"So the whole thing got subsumed in vicious bureaucratic
battles.
Faxes flying back and forth about Ahmad's check, rather than thinking about getting rid of
On the Bob
door frame
Mattingly,
who
Saddam Hussein."
at the Iraq
illustrated with a quotation
after his
operation s group offices at Langley,
took over die group in late 1994, hung a banner
appointment
as
from a
letter written
head of the
by Winston ChurchiU
British Colonial Office, with
some
misgivings," Churchill
had
declared, "about the political consequences to myself of taking on
my
responsibility for Iraq, in 1921. "I feel
shoulders the burden and odium of the Mesopotamia entanglement."
As internal
and
relations inside the
factionalized, a
agency grew increasingly bitter
new and weighty factor appeared on
Coincidental with the INC's
March 1995
the scene.
offensive, President
Clinton nominated John M. Deutch to be the director of the CIA.
Woolsey, undermined by the fallout from his handling of the affair,
had resigned
in
Ames
January and two prospective replacements
had successively self-destructed tions about their private lives.
in the face of inquiries
and revela-
Deutch, the former provost of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was a highly intelligent man.
He was
also highly ambitious, having only reluctantly
agreed to
leave his powerful post of deputy secretary of defense,
where he
supervised the disbursement of over $250 billion a year, to take over the CIA. His eyes, according to
many both
inside
and outside the
agency, were firmly set on achieving a lifelong goal of becoming secretary of defense.
An
impressive performance at the
him in that quest. The new director was not
universally popular
CIA would
among
aid
his staff.
"BRING ME THE HEAD OF SADDAM HUSSEIN" among whom
his
Pentagon ambitions were*ho
be a rule against anyone running the stepping-stone,"
one of
"There should
CIA who wants
to use
it
as a
from the agency sourly
detractors
his
secret.
Z1V
remarked.
Deutch,
If
who
formally took over the
impress senior subordinates, procated.
He made
it
clear that
and was
and professionalism,
CIA
officers to their faces
gon.
"He would be
officer
walked
brains here,'
"
in,
it is
in a
CIA
May, did not
in
say that the feeling was reci-
fair to
he had
regard for their
little
in the habit of unfavorably
with his former colleagues
Deutch would
at
CIA people and
meeting with
say: 'At last
skills
comparing the Penta-
if
a military
we've got someone with
CIA official. "Every 'How does this improve
asserted one former very senior
finding that
Deutch
my chances
of becoming SecDef?'
signed, he
was thinking
"Deutch mistrusted people, misunderstood
things,"
recalled
another detractor. "He was most in need of what he was least likely
—subordinates who would
to seek
tell
him
his plans
were a bad
idea."
The new CIA
chief had promised, on taking office, that he
"clean house" at the agency. Accordingly,
new
would
faces appeared in
many key positions. Ted Price, who had done his best to hang on in wake of the Ames disaster, finally left the office of deputy director for Operations and was replaced by David Cohen, who had the
spent most of his career on the intelligence analysis side of the agency. Like his master,
among old hands
Cohen did not
ous experience had been the
who had
cans
our
story,
was
Anderson
left in
where
his only previ-
task of debriefing Ameri-
The Near East
Division, central to
the hands of Steve Richter, a graduate of the division,
in January. Richter
ters, possibly
humdrum
traveled abroad.
counterterrorism
agency's
inspire universal confidence
in the operations directorate,
because of
ill
who had succeeded Frank
was not highly regarded
in
all
quar-
feehngs arising out of a dark and
highly secret episode back in 1988
when
still
the CIA's entire spy net-
work
in Iran
tions.
(An internal inquiry absolved Richter of any responsibility for
had been rounded up, with many subsequent execu-
the disaster.)
Most
significantly of
all,
Deutch selected
as his
deputy director
aUTaFTHEASHES
Z1B
former congressional
and
NSC intelligence
tlie
affable
tor
George Tenet, who had learned much about covert operations
staffer
without ever acquiring any direct experience. Thus the
direc-
man who
while overseeing inteUigence on the National Security Council staff
had consistently promoted the notion of a CIA-backed in
Baghdad
command
at
Several
was now high up
as a viable option
military
coup
in the direct chain of
the agency.
CIA
officials
formerly engaged on the Iraq operation
agree that Deutch s arrival at Langley coincided with a heightened
Saddam Hussein on
sense of urgency regarding the elimination of
"the seventh floor," site of the office of the director. After reviewing
new management should be made tighter and
the record of the Iraq operation to date, Deutch s
team concluded that the Iraq operation
more focused on the
single objective of overthrowing the Iraqi
more general changes to the Iraqi to the management of Pentagon weapons programs, Deutch decreed "milestones," scheduled leader, without worrying about
common
regime. Adopting procedures
points of progress toward the ultimate objective of the Iraqi leaders downfall. If any of the newly
promoted
their master's eagerness to take
officials
had doubts about
on the burden of "the Mesopotamia
entanglement," they kept quiet. "Deutch recruited subordinates
who
did not like to get yelled
In truth,
it
seemed
at,"
observes one retired
a propitious
moment
Saddam. The new team had hardly
to
official.
push forward against
settled in at Langley at the
when King Hussein sent his cautious momentous developments in Iraq, followed
beginning of August 1995 report of imminent and
soon after by the dramatic news of Hussein Kamel's
Amman. While the agency soon wrote
off
Kamel
arrival in
as a potential asset,
the effect of his arrival on the position of the Jordanian government
was
infinitely gratifying.
Saddam camp
at last,
The king swung
and
in
decisively into the anti-
consequence began
mend
to
fences
with some important neighbors. It
had taken years
Hussein s dictated
soft line
for the Saudis to get over their
by the fervent support
monarch's subjects. The frustration to the
pique
at
King
toward Saddam during the Gulf War, a position for Iraq
among
the majority of the
Saudi attitude had been a source of great
CIA, who wanted to be able
to use
Amman
as a
"BRING ME THE HEAD DF SADDAM HUSSEIN"
219
base in plotting against Saddam, and Riyadh as a source of funds for the operation
—the
traditional Saudi role in
intelligence relation-
its
ship with the United States. As one former senior recalled,
"For years
we were
in dealing with Jordan."
significantly affected
Almost
CIA
official
by Saudi slowness
soon as Kamel had arrived in Jor-
as
dan, however. Prince Turki bin Feisel, the Saudi intelligence chief,
made
a "secret" but nonetheless widely noted trip to
Amman to
see
the king, followed by a return trip to Riyadh by the anti-Iraqi Jor-
danian foreign minister, Abdul Karim Kabariti.
At the end of September, in the course of a
King Hussein and to
be given a
his foreign minister
full-court briefing
self,
Washington, to
Langley
on the increasingly elaborate plans an enthusiastic endorse-
for a coup. Part of the briefing included
ment of lyad Alawi s
trip to
were invited out
Iraqi National Accord. President
CUnton him-
according to one of the king's advisers, pressed the royal visitor
Not everyone was
to give his full cooperation.
friend of the king's, a
man who had
and knew the Middle East
well,
so optimistic.
served in the
CIA
An
old
years before
He
counseled caution.
later
explained his instinctive reservations. "I wasn't given any briefings,
but I'm
like
an old farmer
people in charge
[at
who can
smell bad weather coming.
The
the CIA] just weren't very experienced, but
it's
not the same outfit these days. This was not being professionally handled. Too
many people knew about
operation than a covert operation.
my advice.
I
guess
when
arm around you and
it
Still,
—
it
was more of an overt
the Idng didn't really take
the president of the United States puts his
says.
Tour
Majesty,
we need your
help,'
it's
hard to say no." Matters were station chief
now moving
was dispatched
some speed. A new CIA team These Americans were in turn ser-
forward
at
to Jordan along with a special
devoted to the Iraq operation.
viced by a special unit created inside Jordanian intelligence, insulated from their colleagues, in the
pay of the
newly
installed
Iraqis.
many of whom were suspected
head of intelfigence, Sami
sible for assisting their
of being
This special unit reported directly to the
CIA
counterparts
Bartikhi,
and was respon-
—interpreting
for Arabic
speakers, providing transport, facilitating secret meetings with Iraqi military officers,
and other
tasks.
The CIA
officer in day-to-day
OUT DF THE ASHES charge of the operation had previously served as an analyst in the
Though
agency's Directorate of Intelligence.
lacking in any experi-
ence of covert operations, he was much esteemed for the fluency
at
headquarters
and coherence with which he briefed superiors on
the ongoing operation.
Cohen and
In mid-January 1996, David
Steve Richter flew to
Riyadh for a grand conclave of high-level intefligence
by Prince Turld and the Saudi for Iraq,
General
officials.
Hosted
intelligence organizations desk officer
Abu Abdul Mohssan,
those gathered around the
table included the British MI-6, the Jordanians,
and the Kuwaitis. By
had been agreed that all would
the time they adjourned the next day,
it
support the Iraqi National Accord in
its
forthcoming effort to displace
Saddam. The Saudis, of course, had helped give back in the distant days of 1990, only to see
Omar
founders, lyad Alawi and Sahh
Ali,
it
birth to the
Accord
spHt between the two
allegedly because of a dis-
pute over a check from Saudi intelligence. Alawi had moved to Lon-
now
don, and there the Accord had risen again,
embrace of British
intelligence.
Those
at the
in the protective
meeting
financial contributions for the undertaking.
also
agreed on
The Americans were
authorizing $6 million, and the Saudis offered to contribute an equal
sum. The Kuwaitis also made a pledge.
There had not been such aggressive and high-level interaction
among
the
retrospect,
of Hussein
allies it is
on the subject of Iraq since
difficult to
dam's enemies, but after the
at
Gulf War and,
initial
in control.
intelligence agencies of Sad-
panic in Baghdad, the regime
There was, however, another factor
work of which CIA personnel were well aware, and
impending 1996 U.S. presidential
CIA
officials closely
in
understand why. Certainly the defection
Kamel had energized the
appeared to be firmly
tlie
engaged
election.
that
was the
According to former
in the Iraq operation, pressure
from
on high to "move" against Saddam, which had increased from the
moment Deutch
May 1995, became even more intense at the beginning of 1996. One such official stated to us that "It is my understanding that early in 1996 the CIA was given orders took office in
mount a coup in this time frame. Just do it.' The came from the White House. Deutch signed off on it."
that 'You will
orders
If there
was indeed such a
directive
from the White House,
it
was
"BRING ME THE HEAD OF SADDAM HUSSEIN"
221
very closely held. Political operatives dedicated to President Clinton s reelection attested later diat they
knew nothing of such a link between
the election and the
CIA
covert action. "Not even the chief of staff
would have known,"
said
Harold Ickes, deputy chief of
time. "It
would have been between the President, Lake [National
Security adviser],
added
On
staff at the
that
maybe Berger
[Lake's deputy],
and Deutch." Ickes
he thought such a connection was "highly unlikely"
who know Tony
the other hand, those
Lake, the deceptively
mild-mannered and professorial National Security Council
chief,
suggest that, with a pohtical payoff in mind, he would have been
"He was much
quite capable of approving such a bold initiative.
more gung ho on says
this sort
of thing than people might have thought,"
one acquaintance.
Deutch himself denied
that
he received any such commission, a
denial vehemently seconded by Lake. However, that was not the
impression at Langley As one former
came back from words
a meeting at the
to the effect of 'Bring
PoHtics aside,
by
official
White House,
"Deutch
recalled: all
fired up, stating
me the head of Saddam
Hussein.'
early 1996, expectations in Washington,
Amman, and Riyadh were
London,
certainly great that at long last the reign of
the defiant Iraqi leader might be drawing to an abrupt close.
The ques-
tion therefore arises as to the reasons for such optimism. lyad Alawi, as
noted, had a remarkable organizations. In addition, in
Amman. The
—
impressing
he had excellent
officials in intelligence
relations with the
regime
king personally Hked him, as did Abdul Kabariti. In
contrast to his prejudicial
wise"
gift for
comments about Chalabi
—"smart but not
Kabariti exhibited sincere admiration for Alawi, an indulgent
attitude that
was
to survive the
impending catastrophe.
met Alawi many times," Kabariti told us. "He impressed me in way he analyzed internal Iraqi politics. He did not have high
"I
the
hopes for a coup against Saddam." at
the time, he did not share
it
If this
with the
was
CIA
really Alawi's opinion
contingent in
Amman
in the spring of 1996.
The Accord was by no means an impotent his
immediate colleagues
been
in the
organization. Alawi
and
upper ranks of the organization had
influential figures in the Baathist regime. Salah al-Sheikhly,
a weU-known Sunni religious family in Baghdad, was a statistician
from
who
UT OF THE ASHES had
risen to a high position in the Iraqi central
who
ing in the Baathist pantheon as the doctor
wound
after the
Nun had been was married
a
bank before defecting
Tahseen Mu'alla had once enjoyed honored stand-
in the early 1980s.
dressed Saddams
attempted assassination of Qassim. General Adnan
member of the
Iraqi army's elite Special Forces
to the daughter of a close colleague of
Such men had an informed,
if
and
Hussein Kamel.
somewhat dated, understanding of the
workings of Saddams regime.
The second
ingredient that appeared to bolster the prospects of
the Accord was the opportunity, afforded by the change with the king's position, following
Hussein Kamel's defection, to agree to
mount operations out of Amman. Ever since the Gulf War, the formerly sleepy Jordanian
capital
had
taken on some of the atmosphere of Casablanca during World War
Amman
II.
was the window through which Iraq and the outside world
watched each
High up on a
other.
United States signaled
its
hill in
the suburb of Abdoun, the
presence with a
vast,
newly constructed
embassy, heavily fortified but also isolated from the chatter in the
busy
streets below.
On Jebel Amman,
a thoroughfare in the center of
town, the Iraqi embassy constituted a diplomatic outpost second in
importance only to the mission to the United Nations the ambassador carefully selected both for his
The
city
abilities
in
New
and
York,
loyalty.
was crowded with newcomers: Palestinians who had
been expelled by the vengeful Kuwaitis immediately following the war; exiles from Iraq
mosques and public
who
gling trade; journalists
importuning the somewhat
Baghdad. The
for visas to exiles
had sparked
many
itself,
of
them reduced
to sleeping in
parks; businessmen growing rich in the
smug-
periodically flooded the hotels while
sinister
diplomats at the Iraqi embassy
arrival of the Palestinians
a building
boom
in the
and the richer
expanding
city.
Intelli-
gence agents from across the Middle East and beyond congregated there, mingling with the agents of Saddam's
roamed the murdering
city, alert
exiles,
Mukhabarat who
for threats to their master
also
and occasionally
such as the nuclear physicist Muayad Hassan Naji,
gunned down in the street way to Libya.
in front of his wife
and children
in
1992
while on his
Of particular interest
to the
Accord and their American sponsors
"BRING ME THE HEAD OF SADDAM HUSSEIN" were
officers of the Iraqi
settled in
ZZ3
army who made tneir way out of Iraq and these were of exalted rank. In March
Amman. Sometimes
1996, for example, there arrived General Nizar al-Khazraji, former
army and the man whose capture by rebels (though wounded, he had survived) had been the first indication of the seriousness of the southern uprising in 1991. The general, whom chief of staff of the Iraqi
Saddam had tried to rescue from the rebels, now declared that "Saddam s policies have led to the fragmentation and breakdown of the unity of our land, our people, and our army." He announced his intention of working with the Accord and with "the devoted brothers in the military in Iraq."
However,
al-Khazraji's defection
was not greeted with quite the
Saddams enemies
he may have expected.
applause from
that
He
was quickly interviewed by members of the CIA group riding herd
on Alawi. They strongly urged him Accord staff. "I
his
own
leader's orders.
don't
know
"Why
this
to place himself
under the
should I?" replied the former chief of
man." In consequence, he was soon
devices, alone in a small house in
left to
Amman without even the
necessary privilege of bodyguards.
CIA team felt they could afford to dispense with al-Khazraji, who would have been greatly prized a
Presumably, the characters like
few years
earfier,
because they were convinced that the Accord had
already furnished
them with
links to a potent conspiracy against
Saddam.
The
first
fink in the chain
was
in
Amman,
in the
form of a retired
general from the Iraqi Special Forces helicopter force
Mohammed
named
Abdullah al-Shawani. Al-Shawani, a native of the
northern Iraqi city of Mosul, was living in the Jordanian capital but
had not publicly broken connections with the regime In the
fall
of 1994, just before the
into northern Iraq, al-Shawani
He had
a startling proposal:
and Atheer, were resolved leader.
were
to
The young men were
officers,
came
He and work still
first
in
Baghdad.
insertion of a
CIA team
into contact with lyad Alawi. his three sons,
to organize a
Anmar, Ayead,
coup against the
living in Iraq and, furthermore,
not merely in the army, but in the vaunted Republican
Guard itself, where only recruits of impeccable political reliability were accepted. Anmar was a major, Ayead a captain, and Atheer a
DUT OF THE ASHES
224 lieutenant.
Known
as
among
staunch Baathists, they could circulate
their brother officers without attracting the
immediate attention of
the security services.
Alawi hastened to pass on
MI-6,
who
in turn
shared
it
that ignited such enthusiasm
London
station, Langley,
news
this electrifying
with the CIA.
among
It
was
to his friends in
development
this
the coup enthusiasts in the
and the White House. By the end of the
following year, the news from the al-Shawani brothers of the contacts
they had forged in the Iraqi military and security system was
sufficiently
encouraging for the operation to go into high gear with
the dispatch of the special in
Amman,
CIA
their
undercover
miles away, across the desert.
Anyone wishing it
Amman
noted above. Once
however, the sponsors of the impending coup
communicate with
send
unit to
in the care
It
to send a
was
allies in
Baghdad,
to prove a fatal
message
had
still
six
to
hundred
impediment.
had
to the Iraqi capital
to
of one of the professional drivers sanctioned by
the Iraqi Mukhabarat to
make the
Baghdad,
the war, had been difficult at the best of
at least since
times. Since late in 1995
phone exchange
regular run.
had to go
international calls
all
at al-Rashedia,
Phone contact with via the tele-
north of Baghdad, instead of being
dialed directly. Operators taped
all calls,
and the recordings were
subsequently examined by a special committee of representatives
from the various intelligence agencies. For secret communications, the drivers were a vital and vulnerable
on
link.
Everything depended
their evading the pervasive scrutiny of Saddam's intelligence.
But
the Mukhabarat was well aware of the significance of the drivers,
and devoted special care
to
watching their every move.
The CIA, once the team dedicated to had arrived in force in Amman, made it a this professionally offensive
assisting the
priority to
coup
effort
move beyond
system of hand-carried messages. The
Accord was therefore furnished with a
state-of-the-art satellite
com-
munication system, complete with high-technology encryption features to frustrate eavesdroppers.
For further
security, the
Ameri-
cans gave instruction on a system of code words and phrases to be
used
in conversation.
In the light of these painstaking security precautions,
more
astonishing that lyad Alawi, in
Amman
it
was
all
the
to direct a secret con-
"BRING ME THE HEAD DF SADDAM HUSSEIN"
225
spiracy against the leader of one of the most efficiently repressive police states in the world, almost immediately began to broadcast both his
presence and his intentions.
On February 18,
1996, he held a press
conference to announce the imminent opening of a headquarters in
Amman.
This event was, declared Alawi, a "historic
Iraqi opposition
movement
which Saddam
will find
spleen at Uday,
... a
beacon of light into
no hiding
moment
in the
Iraq, a light
from
place." After venting particular
who "profits from the black market, uses his gun freely
on those who cannot defend themselves, physically abuses our
women," Alawi did concede activities that
were areas of his
that there
ensure that lives are not unnecessarily put forces
had previously
attendants in
Amman,
failed to note the
after, hailing
presence of Alawi and his
Further announcements followed
the forthcoming launch of an Accord radio station in
Jordan, al-Mustaqbal atory viewing in
at risk." If Saddams security
they could hardly have remained in ignorance
after this promotional exercise.
soon
organization's
"must remain secret if we are to succeed in our work and
all
—"The Future." Alawi appeared on CNN Iraqi
government
regard Jordan as the door to Iraq, and
offices),
it is
(oblig-
declaring that
"We
important for us to talk to
people inside." In the same news item, the Jordanian information minister stated for
the record that
overthrow the regime.
"We will
not be involved in any plans to
We think this should happen [sic] by the Iraqis
peacefully."
A
review by the State Department's Northern
classified internal
Gulf Affairs Bureau
in
mid-March concluded
that
U.S. policy
toward Iraq was an "unqualified success."
On March
26, an array of Jordanian notables, together with the
leading fights of the Accord, gathered to celebrate the inauguration
of the skirts
new headquarters in a heavily guarded compound on the outof Amman. The festivities were, however, marred by the
appearance that morning in the London Independent of a front-
page
article
by one of the present authors, Patrick Cockbum,
describing the contents of the tape recorded by
Abu Amneh two
months before. Publication of the mercenary bomber's unedifying account of the Accord's terrorist campaign in Baghdad and the revelations of
American sponsorship (not
the Accord in the slaughter at the
to
mention the alleged role of
INC
headquarters in Salahudin),
OUT DF THE ASHES
226 came
as
an embarrassing thunderbolt. Only two weeks before, Pres-
ident Clinton had hosted an "antiterror" conference at an Egyptian seaside resort to
denounce
terrorist
group Hamas.
cal Palestinian
Now
bombings the
in Israel
CIA was
by the
radi-
revealed as having
indirectly sponsored similar tactics. (Following publication of the tape, Nuri hurried out of northern Iraq, eventually finding his to
Amman, where he
quarreled with everyone before
ing to sulk in Turkey.) But this
pened.
way
depart-
unwelcome news was quickly
more catastrophic information. Sometime in January or February 1996, the
lowed by
finally
fol-
far
A
driver carrying messages from
Baghdad was intercepted and
inevitable
Amman
to the
had hap-
coup
plot-
That would have been serious enough, but the man was carrying the vaunted highters in
technology
satellite
arrested.
communication system donated by the CIA. At
a stroke, the entire elaborately crafted plot
CIA, discussed
—
fiercely
argued
at the
at high-level intelligence conferences, discussed in
the Oval Office, and possibly even factored into the campaign for the presidency of the United States
With predictable
craft
—was brought
to ruin.
and cunning, Saddams intelhgence
offi-
chose not to give the slightest hint of their breakthrough.
cials
The al-Shawani brothfollowed instructions earlier communi-
Instead, they waited, watched, ers, all
unaware,
cated by their that they It
were
faithfully
CIA still
advisers
and
listened.
on evading surveillance and believed
above suspicion.
may well have been
that the plot
would have been blown even
without the interception of the driver and his precious cargo. Several
former
CIA officials conveyed
dled with Iraqi cial.
Years
— double agents
later, reflecting
he had helped to
foster,
Accords networks "were
The reason
I
the view that the Accord was rid-
"at least half"
on the
disaster that
according to one
offi-
overcame the scheme
Prime Minister Kabariti concluded that the all
penetrated by the Iraqi security service.
think they were manipulated by Iraqi intelligence
is
that nothing succeeded, nothing worked."
But
if
the Accords secrets were laid bare to
services, there
was
also a leak
Saddam s
security
from the inner recesses of the
Mukhabarat. Late in March 1996, just as Alawi was getting ready for the grand
"BRING ME THE HEAD OF SADDAM HUSSEIN"
227
new headquarters in Amman, a member of Iraqi security with whom Ahmad Chalabi s INC had previously been in contact relayed an urgent dispatch to Salahudin. The Iraqis, he reported, had
opening of his
names of every
the
by the Accord. Further-
single officer recruited
now
more, the captured high-tech communications system was installed in
dad.
The
and operated from an intelligence headquarters
Iraqi intelligence officers,
he reported, were
notion that they were communicating directly with in Langley. (In reality, the link
Bagh-
in
thrilled at the
CIA headquarters
was only with Amman.)
This was electrifying news, and at the end of March, Chalabi flew to Washington.
Ushered
into the office of the director,
he found
himself facing John Deutch and Steve Richter, head of the Near East Division. The two
men
silence as the
sat in
INC
leader
methodically presented the detailed evidence that their cherished
scheme was being brought to nought. It was an acid test of their experience and professionalism. Would they accept that they had been bested by the enemy, and
The answer was young
officers
swift in
who had
retire gracefully
unwelcome
field?
coming. Consulted on the subject, the
enthusiastically
pushed forward when older
hands had counseled caution were unanimous the
from the
bulletin. Clearly, this
in their rejection of
was an exercise
in spite
Chalabi and his people, directed against their more successful for
CIA
funds and support.
for the Iraqis to have
It
by
rivals
was simply impossible, they argued,
circumvented
their precautions against
all
penetration quite so successfully. If their plans had indeed been
compromised, argued the former intelligence analyst imported
to
more reason to speed things up. Deutch and Richter agreed. The operation would go on. D day for the coup was set for the third week in June. So confisupervise the coup scheme, that was
all
the
dent was Alawi in his prospects that he granted yet another inter-
Washington
view, this time to the
intervention from his
CIA
Post,
and without any apparent
case officers, in which he publicized the
forthcoming "secret" operation. With a lack of discretion that astonished the journalist, Alawi declared that the "uprising should have at its
very center the [Iraqi] armed forces.
war.
On
uprising
the contrary, [i.e.,
we preach
a coup], supported
.
.
.
We
don't preach
civil
controlled, coordinated mifitary
by the people,
that
would not allow
DUT OF THE ASHES itself to
go into acts of revenge or chaos." In other words, the Sunnis
who had
rallied to
Saddam
Kurds need not worry that
would be no
1991 out of fear of the Shia and the
in
this
would be another
intifada; there
"acts of revenge" against the regime's erstwhile sup-
porters in the Baath Party.
The
interview was picked up and dissem-
inated around the Middle East and the world by numerous wire ser-
with most of the stories emphasizing the connections
vices,
Alawi, the CIA, and the plans for an If the interview
prompted Saddam June 26,
arrests
was timed to lack off the coup, to
end
were
his
scale
and scope was a
it
may
begun
on June
tribute both to the success of the
apparatus and to the even greater success of
— 120
in the first
—
sweep
to
20. Their
coup
plotters
and security
Saddams agents
monitoring the plot every step of the way. arrested officers
have
Accord came
Later, the
earUer, possibly
in spreading their net so widely across the Iraqi military
The
also
cat-and-mouse game. By Wednesday,
in full swing.
believe that the arrests had
among
imminent coup.
in
from the
^were
superelite Special Republican Guards, the General Security Service,
the Republican Guard, and the regular army.
from Baghdad past
as well as
key
had been staunchly
Some
cities in tlie
loyal:
Mosul,
They were
all
Sunnis,
Sunni heartland that
Tikrit, Faluja,
in the
and Ramadi.
of the officers arrested were from a highly secret special com-
munications unit called B32, attached to Saddam himself and responsible for his secure
communications with military units around the
country. So sensitive
and important was the work of this unit
those of unimpeachable loyalty had been accepted into
its
that only
ranks.
But
even the B32 s commander himself, Brigadier General Ata Samaw'al,
was among those This was the
arrested, tortured,
moment
and executed.
for Qusay, the quiet
had appeared so shy and deferential
to
Uday
younger brother who years before in the
al-
Rashid Hotel restaurant, to show his mettle. Saddam appointed him to
head a
special
committee consisting of the heads of the
Mukhabarat, General Security, and Military Intelligence. The committee was given unlimited powers to arrest any person, regardless
who was implicated in the coup attempt. Among those who passed into the hands of the committee,
of official status,
ensconced
in the headquarters of the
Mukhabarat
in the
up-market
"BRING ME THE HEAD OF SADDAM HUSSEIN"
229
Mansour district of Baghdad, were officers oFvery senior official status indeed. Apart from General Samaw'al, there was Colonel Omar alDhouri, a section director for the
Amn
al-Khass (the special security
most powerful of the intelligence
service), the
services,
and Colonel
Riyadh al-Dhouri, from the Mukhabarat, both members of a tribe that in spite of disturbances the previous year
A
die regime.
general from the
Tikriti
was picked up,
Nasiri,
was
Amn
still
considered loyal to
al-Khass,
Muwaffaq
another from the Mukhabarat. Out-
as well as
—^where those implicated included several
side the military officers
and two army generals
Dalaim
clan,
where
air force
—Qusay's scythe swept through the
members of
several
al-
the leading families were
arrested while others fled for their lives to Jordan.
Some ily
of the victims had been even closer to
than the
officers.
Saddam and his fam-
The family's domestic staff was drawn from the community of Iraq. They were now arrested
small Assyrian Christian
and interrogated. Two cooks, Butrous Eliya Tome and Wilfiam
were
have confessed to being involved
later reported to
poison Saddam. Three months
later,
the
Matti,
in a plot to
number of those swept up
in
the purge had reportedly grown to eight hundred.
Needless to
Mohammed
the three sons of
say,
Shawani, the young Republican Guard officers heart of the plot, were
among
the
first
Abdullah
who had been
al-
at the
be picked up. But they
to
were not immediately executed. Qusay and
his
minions had other
plans for them. Sitting
expectantly
informed of the direct resist
Amman,
the
use one
last
26, the special
arrested
all
their
hopes in the most
opponents in Baghdad could not full
extent of the Iraqi
tri-
communications device purred into
time, carrying a message from
"We have
CIA team was
special
and utter collapse of all
fashion. Their
the temptation of displaying the
umph. On June CIA.
total
and brutal
in
your people,"
tlie it
Mukhabarat
to the
reportedly said. "You
as well pack up and go home." The CIA did just that. Within twenty-four hours,
might
all
the
members
Amman.
of the group that had been working on the coup had
left
"They ran away," an embittered
"Maybe
were
scared,
I
don't
know
Iraqi exile said later.
why."
Some members
tliey
of the Accord
remained behind, issuing doleful press statements that chronicled the
OUT OF THE ASHES rout:
"We have
learned that several
members of the
special
group
[as
the Accord termed the coup plotters] have died during interrogation.
We mourn their deaths and promise them that their deaths will not be in vain."
When they sped out of Jordan, the CIA took with them General Mohammed Abdullah al-Shawani and lodged him in a safe house in London, the location of which was kept a closely guarded secret. A few weeks
later,
the safe-house
Anmar had you are not Atheer
in
will all
The
old
Baghdad be
in a
week. Father," he
said, "I
and Ayead and
killed."
man broke down
in tears.
cried. "I
did not go to Baghdad.
would be honored.
gain
Abdullah's eldest son,
a message for his father from his Iraqi captors. "If
done?" he reportedly
He
was Anmar, the
rang. It
from Baghdad.
calling
I
phone
Mohammed
Repubhcan Guard major and
"What have
have killed
No one
I
done, what have
my sons."
imagined that the implied bar-
Instead, shaken
by the contemptuous ease
with which the Iraqis had once again penetrated their security, his pro-
moved the heartbroken fatlier across the Atlantic. The attempted Iraqi coup of 1996 marked one of the most colossal
tectors hurriedly
failures in the history of the
CIA, deserving a place on the roster of
such fiascos with the far more famous Cuban Bay of Pigs operation in 1961. So complete was the disaster that those concerned could only
hope
to evade
condemnation by pretending nothing much out of the
ordinary had occurred. "In the Central Intelligence Agency, like every-
where
else in the world, they always
"They
aren't always successful.
have
risk," said
John Deutch
These were responsible
later.
risks carried
out by dedicated individuals coordinated with an overall government policy."
plot
Asked whether he had understood beforehand
had been penetrated
(as
that the
coup
Chalabi had warned him three months in
advance), Deutch refused to comment.
To reinforce the notion apologize, the
CIA
that there
was nothing
for
which
it
had
to
kept Alawi on the payroll, budgeting almost $5
million to support his activities in the following year alone.
In the meantime, Saddam,
was turning
his eyes north.
emboldened by
his crushing victory,
There were fresh defeats and humilia-
tions in store for his enemies.
TEN
Saddam Moves North
After
long years of confrontation with
government had gradually
Saddam Hussein,
the U.S.
fallen into the habit of taking
its
most
tangible asset for granted. Northern Iraq, the land of the Kurds,
been freed from
government control
Iraqi
in
had
1991 only under pres-
sure from Western public opinion, outraged by the spectacle of a million Kurdish refugees to
on the borders of Turkey and
George Bush's reluctant dispatch of
Iran.
allied troops into
Thanks
northern
Iraq and the consequent withdrawal of the Iraqi military, the United
—the Kurdish groups—and a base from
States
had acquired aUies
which
to collect intelHgence
that
Saddam
rest of Iraq. In addition, the fact
own country was a who first sat down at
did not control a large portion of his
valuable propaganda point.
the
on the
end of May 1991
to
The CIA
officials
ponder the future course of operations
Saddam had concluded that the existence of the northern safe haven gave them a public relations tool with which to "take a whack at his prestige," as one of them put it, "by accentuating his against
loss of sovereignty
By
over the north."
1996, the U.S. presence in Kurdistan had taken on the appear-
ance of permanence. U.S. parallel, a visible sign
aircraft
patroUed the skies above the 36th
of U.S. protection as they enforced the north-
OUT OF THE ASHES
em "no-fly zone"
for Iraqi aircraft. In Zakho, U.S.
and
allied officers
staffed the Military Coordination Center, a relic of the 1991 negotiations that
had led to the
from Kurdistan and
Iraqi withdrawal
still
pro-
vided a symbolic affirmation of Western military support. The State
Department's Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance disbursed millions of dollars'
worth of food and medicine annually. In Salahudin,
the
CIA teams continued to come and go, though since the debacle of
the
March 1995
offensive their role
was
strictly limited to collecting
intelligence.
The two main Kurdish factions, Massoud Barzani's KDP and Jalal Talabani's PUK, had turned their guns on each other in 1994. The U.S. State Department had sponsored a cease-fire at meetings in Ireland in August But
this stability
was entirely
superficial.
and September 1995, but had lacked the
on the underlying causes of the
for a settlement still
interest or energy to
push
fighting. Barzani
refused to share the enormous revenues flowing into his coffers
from the border crossing
at
Khabur, while Talabani decUned to
share power in Arbil, the administrative capital and also the largest city in Kurdistan, containing a fifth of the total population.
While Washington was playing
and
less
less
of an active role in
Kurdistan, others were taking an increasingly disruptive interest.
For Turkey and
Iran, northern Iraq
cern. Since 1992,
was an area of deepening con-
Turkey had been routinely sending military expe-
ditions across the border in pursuit of Turkish
PKK. The
Iranians
had no love
Kurd
government
for the
guerrillas of the in
Baghdad, but
neither did they want to see Iraqi rule permanently displaced by that of
Turkey and the United
States.
close off Iraqi Kurdistan as a safe
while, in Baghdad,
Furthermore, they wanted to
haven for their own Kurds. Mean-
Saddam watched
the political currents in and
around the northern provinces, waiting for the opportunity reassert his
power
to
in his lost territories.
Underneath the umbrella of the two main
parties in Kurdistan,
there remained a multitude of smaller but significant power centers,
especiaUy tribes and clans such as the Harki, Zibari, and Sourchi, still
who
preserved a semifeudal social order amid the valleys and canyons
of the fierce mountain landscape. The Sourchi, led by a rich and pow-
SADDAM MOVES NORTH erful family of that
and a
tribal
name that exercised authority over a dozen villages
army of
several thousand
enterprises as far afield as
men, not
High on a hilltop, the Sourchi home vital strategic position, for
by a
built
to
mention business
London and Casablanca, were among the
most powerful of these semi-independent
highway
233
entities.
village of Kalaqin
occupied a
overlooked the Hamilton Road, the
it
New Zealand engineer of that name
in the
1920s
to give the British access to the Kurdish heartlands. In a land almost
without roads, to
it is
the road.
It
runs from Arbil, the Kurdish capital,
Haj Omran, on the Iranian border, connecting the plains with the
high mountains.
Whoever controls
the narrow, winding highway can
cut Kurdistan in two, and warring armies have paid dearly to take or
hold
it.
Even
years, the
in a country almost continually at
war
for thirty-five
Hamilton Road has the reputation of being bathed
in
Below Kalaqin, the road runs through the deep gorge of the Gali Ali Beg under towering black cliffs, where a single machine gunner can stop an army. As recently as the 1950s, the Sourchi were in the habit of periodically closing the gorge with the aid of a few blood.
bursts from the ancient Vickers fort,
machine gun on top of
releasing traffic on the Hamilton
had been extracted from
By
Road only
Beg was
after suitable tolls
villas in
moved
out of the fort
the family compound, but the Gali Ali
as vital a strategic prize as ever, especially to
Barzani and the
KDR
It
was the main supply route
risons holding the front line in the intermittent civil
Talabani's fire
mud
stalled travelers.
1996, the masters of Kalaqin had long
and into luxurious
their
PUK, which held
eastern Kurdistan.
brokered by the Americans in Ireland
was fundamentally unstable. At
all costs,
still
Massoud
for their gar-
war with
The tenuous
Jalal
cease-
held, but the situation
Barzani had to protect his
military lifeline.
The Sourchi had maintained an uneasy clusion of the previous round of fighting
bani in 1995 had
left
them
neutrality since the con-
between Barzani and Tala-
in Barzani's territory.
Now
the
KDP
leader suspected that there was treachery afoot. His intelligence service
had intercepted radio messages between Zayed, the eldest
son of Hussein Agha al-Sourchi, the sixty-five-year-old head of the
OUT OF THE ASHES
23^*
tribe,
and
PUK
KDP
The
units to the east.
later
claimed that the
messages contained mihtary information, including
movements of Barzani, Hoshyar
that might
be of use
details of the
to potential assassins.
Zibari, Barzani's veteran lieutenant, says that
what hap-
pened next should not have surprised the Sourchi. He insists that the KDP demanded that "they either tell Zayed to go away, or at least hand over his radio." The Sourchi refused. They cannot have
demand too seriously, since they made no preparations to resist attack. They did not rally their sizable tribal militia, and Hussein Agha s large villa in the family compound was not fortified. The KDP did not have to move many men into the area. Because of its
taken the
strategic importance,
it
already had detachments of Peshmerga
nearby, notably at the old Iraqi
on the other
valley
The
Kalaqin.
KDP
army
fortress of Spilik, across the
Hamilton Road, to the east of
side of the
achieved complete surprise with
its
early
morn-
ing attack.
"My father was
come to lunch, not to attack "He was sleeping in his house protected by just three or four bodyguards when they attacked." At 5:00 A.M., the KDP Peshmerga opened fire with Kalashnikov expecting Massoud to
him," says Zayed's brother Jahwar.
automatic Agha's
him
rifles
villa.
and rocket-propelled grenade launchers on Hussein
His bodyguards fired back. The attackers shouted
he refused and fought on. By
to surrender, but
account, the old
man
house, presumably to shoot better.
When ing.
Wounded by
the
KDP
KDP
"He was
hit
flat
by
roof of his
a rocket," says
the fragments, he was carried downstairs.
stormed the house, they shot him
Three of his bodyguards were
The
his family's
held out for over four hours against over-
whelming odds. At the end, he climbed onto the Jahwar.
at
insist that
as
he
lay bleed-
also killed.
they did not attack Kalaqin in order to
kill
Hussein Agha, but to arrest Zayed. They say the death of the Sourchi leader was "an unfortunate incident," and an accidental by-
product of the attack. This explanation
which
all
is
belied by the fury with
the houses in the village belonging to the Sourchi family
were destroyed. Within a few
days,
demoUtion gangs had systemati-
cally leveled their villas, carefully taking care to
remove the valuable
reinforcement bars from the concrete. Ducks wandered through the
SADDAM MOVES NORTH
235
wreckage of the sumptuous Sourchi homes, pitted with bullet holes, looking for food.
A
$3 million Sourchi-owned chicken farm near
Kalaqin was dismantled and sold to Iran
—"For peanuts!" laments
Jahwar. Zayed himself, allegedly the object of the exercise, had
escaped during
tlie battle,
and with other members of the family
swore an eternal blood feud against Barzani.
Even
in Kurdistan,
many people found
ble Sourchi chief rather shocking.
It
the killing of the venera-
showed
just
Barzani was prepared to go in defending himself.
about Massoud
as a quiet
how far Massoud "Many people talk
and gentle person; but there
when it comes to his survival," "He knew the PUK was determined to Barzani
says
is
no gentle
one Kurdish observer.
finish
him
off."
The speed
with which Barzani reacted to what he saw as impending treachery
by the Sourchi was a sign that he believed
He was
northern Iraq. left to fight
Jalal
Kurdish since he
on
their
right,
but
this
civil
war was returning
to
time the Kurds would not be
own.
Talabani has always had the reputation of a gambler in pofitics,
being more mercurial than Massoud Barzani. Ever
founded the
Patriotic
Union of Kurdistan
in the
wake of
the great Kurdish defeat of 1975, Talabani has switched alliances
with bewildering speed, even by local standards. In 1991, he was the
—
to kiss Saddam on the cheek a gesture greeted with astonishment by other Kurds, not to mention his numerous friends in the West but later he denounced negotiations with Baghdad. first
—
In the uneasy calm that followed the Sourchi
was making
final
He
preparations for yet another dangerous gamble.
was planning to change the balance of power it
Talabani
killing,
in Kurdistan
and
to
do
with the aid of a major outside power: Iran. Iranian support was essential for Talabani. Like other Kurdish
leaders,
he was not short of weapons such
as
Kalashnikovs or
launchers for rocket-propelled grenades (RPG-7s). These were, in
any case, part of the arsenal of any Kurdish household. artillery,
He
also
had
including multiple rocket launchers and 155-millimeter
them he needed ammunition, which he could get The Iranians could also give him a military advantage over Barzani simply by allowing him to use the Iranian road system to ferry troops in safety up and down the long border on the guns, but to use
only from Iran.
OUT DF THE ASHES Iranian side. This enabled
him
KDP wherever he wanted,
outflanking their positions.
to concentrate troops to attack the
In return, Talabani could offer the Iranians his cooperation
Kurds of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran
against the Iranian
(KDPI). Documents captured by Barzanis forces
later in
1996
showed Talabani cooperating with Iranian intelligence. Iranian Kurdish militants were arrested in his territory and were handed over to Iran. Very soon after the Sourchi
Deep
ther.
killing,
Talabani went fur-
within his territory at Khoi Sanjaq, his
own
birthplace,
the Iranian Kurdish guerrillas had a base, fortified with earth walls
and machine-gun
posts. In July,
he agreed to allow Iran to send a
column of two thousand Revolutionary Guards
to capture
it.
In
August, the Iranian Kurds signed an agreement with Talabani to stop
all
military operations against Iran. It
for active Iranian support in the
war
that
was evidently the price
was about
to start.
Barzani could see what was coming and began searching desper-
own. Later, he was to make
ately for outside help of his
much
of his
warnings to Washington of the looming threat from Iran. His aides had, for example, faxed the
who was
official
on the National Security Council
responsible for the Middle East to report that Iran had
KDP
"approached the
leadership on the evening of July 26-27
requesting access for their troops to
come through Haj Omran, but
Mr. Barzani refused to offer such access."
Washington may have imagined that the to
win
its
KDP was
simply trying
support in a Kurdish faction fight by playing up the Iranian
bogeyman and therefore there was no cause
for alarm. This
miscalculation that was to prove fatal to a large
number
was a
of Iraqis in
the very near future. "The chief American mistake," as
Kamran
Karadaghi, the highly astute Kurdish commentator, later observed,
"was that they thought the Kurds had nowhere else to go."
On August Kalaqin, the
17,
two months almost to the day
PUK launched its
attack. It
after the incident at
was cleverly timed
cide with the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the
1946,
when
ebrations. party's
to coin-
KDP
in
the party leaders would be attending golden jubilee cel-
KDP
offices
and checkpoints were decorated with the
yellow flag and pictures of Mullah Mustafa, Massoud s father
and the hero of the
fight for
Kurdish self-determination.
SADDAM MOVES NORTH The
first
mountains.
days' fighting
were
which they were
Kurdish
typical of warfare in the
The number of troops
vast areas over
237
involved was not large, given the
fighting.
The
PUK probably had,
most, seven to eight thousand trained Peshmerga and another
thousand hold
militia.
was a war of
The
KDP had similar numbers.
swift advances
and
retreats.
heavy casualties to their hard-core
The
em
Each
side tried to
towns, strong points^ and the few surfaced roads.
villages,
early battles
all
Both sides
It
tried to avoid
units.
went Talabani s way.
end of the Hamilton Road
at
five
swiftly
KDP units at the north-
crumbled because, so
their
commanders claimed, they were being attacked "with the help of Iranian artillery and rocket
fire."
Some
KDP units changed sides.
the broken terrain, nobody on Barzani's side of the front really if
the shell
fire
was coming from Talabani s forces or Iranian
forces firing across the border. Nevertheless, the
mand was
insistent that their
side help.
Hoshyar
knew
artillery
high com-
only with out-
Zibari, Barzani's principal interlocutor with the
outside world, said at the time that
the attack because
KDP
enemy was succeeding
In
it
it
was impossible
to hold
back
was "backed by howitzers and Katyusha rocket
launchers provided by Iran."
Despite the outbreak of full-scale war in northern Iraq, the U.S.
government gave no indication of concern or even awareness of
what was happening. Only two months before, the CIA-backed coup organized from Amman,
and promised
in
for
which so much had been hoped
Washington, had been routed with contemptuous
ease by Saddam. Qusay's torture and execution squads were
still
mopping up the remnants of the conspiracy. President Chnton was what seemed certain to be a triumphant reelection campaign in which the foreign policy of his administration barely featured as an issue. No one in the government wanted to raise the profile of Iraq at that particular moment. The day that the PUK-Iranian onslaught fell on Barzani, he in the midst of
received a letter from Robert Pelletreau, assistant secretary of state for
Near East
for a
Affairs, suggesting that
peace meeting. Four days
plea for intervention: clear
message
"We
to Iran to
later,
he get together with Talabani
Barzani faxed Pelletreau with a
request the United States to
end
its
meddfing
in
.
.
.
send a
northern Iraq." The
OUT OF THE ASHES
23B
request was coupled with an ominous warning: "Our options are limited and since the U.S.
only option In
left is
On
.
.
.
the
Barzani had apparently concluded that American promises
fact,
many
of support, repeated
were
not responding even poUtically
is
the Iraqis."
times by senior U.S.
as worthless as similar
officials since
promises had proved in his
August 22, hardly giving Pelletreau time to take
composed a
respectful request for help to the
1991,
father's time.
action, Barzani
man who had
killed
three of his brothers, selectively murdered eight thousand of his tribe,
and more generally slaughtered
many
as
two hundred thousand
as
Kurds only eight years before. "His Excellency" Saddam Hussein was asked to "interfere to ease the foreign threat" from Iran.
Saddam was only
too happy to oblige.
He was
already enjoying a
very successful summer. In June, he had not only crushed the CIA-
sponsored Accord coup, but his deputy prime minister, Tariq Aziz,
had
also deftly avoided a threatened
threat
had emerged
as a result
American bombing
attack.
of attempts by Rolf Ekeus s
That
Unscom
inspectors to gain access to certain "sensitive sites" thought to contain information
on
Iraq's
had been instructed
hidden weapons. The guards
to block the inspectors
had taken the matter
at
the sites
from entering; Unscom
to the Security Council.
The United
States
was
highly confident that the Security Council would cite Iraq as being in "material breach" of the original cease-fire resolution, thus giving
the Americans the authority to launch a miUtary strike in retaliation.
But Ekeus had flown irritation
to
Baghdad, and, on June 22, to the intense
of the U.S. government, which thought he had conceded
too much, had negotiated an agreement that ended the
averted the
Saddam, therefore, may well have ation
was
months
shifting in his favor.
later,
and
When
felt that
the international situ-
Barzani's request arrived
two
the Iraqi leader was ready to take the risk and defy the
Americans by interfering Further
crisis
strike.
letters
in the north.
from the
week of August, warning
KDP
leader to Washington in the
have to turn to Baghdad, were a smoke screen to conceal intentions.
He had
Talabani's
blitzkrieg
last
again in tones of desperation that he might
already
was
made
his
his real
arrangement with Saddam.
threatening
KDP
headquarters
at
SADDAM MOVES NORTH
239
Salahudin on the mountain ridge overlooking the southern end of the Hamilton Road. Unless he received help soon, Barzani faced total defeat.
The
object of the exercise now, therefore, was to keep
the Americans in ignorance of what was happening. Barzani therefore agreed to send emissaries to a
London on August was interested
By
30.
meeting
in the U.S.
this time, neither
American mediation. Pelletreau
in
that
he had telephoned Talabani to arrange a
the
PUK
leader "promised
full
embassy
in
of the Kurdish leaders later explained
cease-fire,
whereupon
cooperation, [but] did nothing."
According to the American diplomats account, the United States to intervene. The State Department refused to come up with the money for a proposed mediation effort and the Pentagon wanted nothing whatsoever to do with northern Iraq. On the ground around Arbil, the Kurdish capital and one of the
was powerless
oldest cities in the world, with a population of 600,000, the change in the poUtical situation
was more evident than
in
London and
Washington. Since Iraqi forces had pulled out of most of Kurdistan in 1991, they
had manned a heavily
twenty miles from the
city.
fortified line
The ground
is flat
some
fifteen to
and, apart from
some
earth ramparts, the Kurds had nothing to stop Iraqi armor.
Any
resident of northern Iraq
would have had good reason
dread the day when Iraqi tanks rolled out of those
moved was
north.
For one group
fortified lines
to
and
in particular, however, the prospect
positively terrifying. Despite the vastly diminished standing of
Ahmad
Chalabi with his old patrons
Congress was
thousand
very
still
much
Kurdish
ties
they could expect
On
the CIA, the Iraqi National
The
several
soldiers, administrators, intelligence officials, translators,
broadcasters, and propagandists local
at
a presence in Kurdistan.
—most of them
—who had remained little
Iraqi Arabs without
faithful to the
cause
knew
mercy if Saddam returned.
the other hand, the
INC had
mum success and popularity in
achieved
1994 when
it
its
moment
had acted
as a
of maxi-
mediat-
ing force between the warring Kurdish groups. In London,
where
the United States was convening the peace talks due to begin on
August 30,
INC
Ahmad
mediation
Chalabi was pressing for support for a renewed
effort. It
may well have
been, given the scale of the
fighting (and Talabani s confidence that
he was winning), that the
OUT OF THE ASHES time for such efforts was
any case, such an effort was
past. But, in
impossible without money. As Chalabi and anyone else famihar with
Kurdistan well knew, a mediation force would have had to be able to grease
its
way with myriad
payoffs to local
commanders on
either
side to assure the safety, let alone the success, of the mediators.
who
Nevertheless, there were officials in the State Department
thought
this
ernment
might be a good investment. Other more powerful govreportedly nixed the idea because of their antipa-
officials
Ahmad
thy to
Chalabi. But, sitting in London, Chalabi remained
hopeful and therefore instructed his
men
in
northern Iraq to hold
themselves in readiness.
One astute
INC
of these
leaders on the ground was the extremely
Ahmad
and experienced
who commanded an
Allawi,
excel-
lent intelligence service with spies in the Iraqi intelligence services
and army. Soon
after Talabanis bid to finish with the
begun on August Iraqi
intelligence
17, Allawi says
—both
civil
he "began
and
preparing a huge attack on the north."
INC
KDP
from
to hear reports
—saying
military
had
they were
He passed the news on to the
headquarters in London.
Over the next week, Allawi found himself mately tragic dilemma.
On
renewed INC mediation knew, the
effort. If
was to play this
it
INC needed to concentrate its
to get tliem into big camps.
They
and
ulti-
role again, Allawi
scattered forces.
totaled
twenty-five tliousand officers and men.
maps of Arbil." Rumors of an Iraqi
in a bizarre
the one hand, tliere was the hope for a
"We began
between twenty-two and
We began to give them train-
ing and
attack
grew
stronger.
On
August 29, Allawi
sent out patrols behind the Iraqi lines to gather information.
They
returned with reports from their informants that the Iraqi army
would begin
to
move
soon.
"On August
thirtieth,
we
started to build
defensive fines around Arbil," says Allawi. "At the same time, reports of a deal
between the
Ghanim Jawad,
we
got
KDP and Baghdad. We told London."
senior official of the
INC, who was
at the
INC
headquarters in London, says that he and his colleagues were
alarmed by what Allawi was teUing them over the
from
Arbil.
satellite
phone
Chalabi contacted the Americans with the news. But
Barzani s delegates to the
London
talks
were under
instructions to
SADDAM MOVES NORTH of what was afoot. At
allay suspicions
embassy meeting on
tITe
KDP
August 30, an American diplomat asked one of the
what was happening between
his party
and
pening," the delegate rephed. "Everything
The CIA team
in Salahudin at least
tion to the reports of Allawi and others. basis of information
from the
nent, agency officers
Turkish border. front lines
INC
is
Iraq.
delegates
"Nothing
hap-
is
normal."
was belatedly paying atten-
On August 27,
acting
on the
was immi-
that an Iraqi offensive
climbed into their vehicles and raced for the
They had no
intention of being anywhere near the
when Saddam made
his
move. Their
the Iraqi
allies in
National Congress, fostered and funded by the agency from inception,
The heavy
were
left to
Iraqi attack
artillery fire
began
at 4:51 a.m.
from the
on Saturday, August 31, with and south of
east, west,
defenders saw some Iraqi helicopters. Half an hour
began tia,
its
fend for themselves.
to roll forward against sporadic resistance
The
Arbil.
later, Iraqi
tanks
INC
from the
mili-
mostly former soldiers in the Iraqi army, and some three thou-
sand Peshmerga of the PUK. Directly in the path of the advancing Iraqi
camp
at
army was an INC
Qushtapa, just to the east of Arbil and about three miles
from the
Iraqi front line. It
features.
The
site
A
the main road.
was not defended by any
had been chosen simply because
large unit of
INC
or natural
hills it
was close
to
had been gathered here
soldiers
in a large, disused garage, awaiting orders
from London
to
com-
mence mediation efforts. Qushtapa was infamous in Kurdistan as Saddam Hussein had sent the women and children of the Barzani tribe, after he had massacred eight thousand male members
the place
of the tribe in 1983.
"The
Iraqi
Now it was to be the
army came
scene of another tragedy.
straight across the fields," says
Jawad. "They surrounded the camp by eight or nine collected the tions
INC
as prisoners,
and put them
forecourt of the ies
of dead
Ghanim morning,
in a big hall."
began immediately. An old woman who came
in the afternoon of August 31 to look for
in the
to
Execu-
Qushtapa
later
her son was allowed into the
camp by Iraqi soldiers. She said they had put the bod-
INC men into two open pits,
in
one of which she counted
twenty-eight corpses. She said she could see fresh blood, showing that the killings
had only
just stopped. In
all,
ninety-six
men were
OUT DF THE ASHES
242 killed.
Only
six
or seven escaped by putting on Kurdish Peshmerga
uniforms, speaking Kurdish, and pretending to belong to the
Ahmad
men
Allawi says so few of his
KDP.
got away because they were
"caught in a sandwich and just couldn't escape."
As the
Iraqi
were moving
army was massacring the INC
into Arbil. Kosorat Rasul, the
could not defend
at
Qushtapa,
tanks
its
PUK commander
in the
armed troops against between thirty and forty thousand Iraqi soldiers. He had been extremely nervous about Iraqi troop movements since the previous city,
day, repeatedly his
it
with only three thousand
phoning
Ahmad Allawi and Jalal
lightly
Talabani,
who was
in
headquarters just outside Sulaimaniya, for information. Talabani meanwhile was making frantic
him
tary of State Pelletreau to tell to plead for
calls to Assistant
that the Iraqis
Secre-
were coming and
American intervention. Pelletreau responded with an
assurance that there would be "serious consequences"
if
Saddam
was indeed advancing into the north. The experienced diplomat was careful not to
make any
direct promises of
But Talabani chose
vention.
to
American
interpret
military inter-
Pelletreau's judicious
phrasing as meaning that U.S. help was on the way, or
veyed that message
to his troops.
On the
bombs to fall on the attackers. The Iraqi advance into the city was slow and also
U.S. Air Force
first
methodical.
Saddam
probably monitoring American reaction. The defenders were
cheered when they heard American the morning.
overhead
aircraft
More appeared twenty minutes
later,
at
10:40 A.M. in
but the planes
flew away and did not return. Allawi said the fight was hopeless:
had only AK-47s and RPG-7s of the morning, local
city."
that Iraqi tanks
ers then issued their
During much
PUK leaders, who had ruled Arbil for two years,
were locked in prolonged discussions about what to do.
them
"We
and Republican Guards.
against tanks
At two o'clock, the Iraqi tanks began to enter the
told
con-
front lines in front of Arbil,
the defending troops waited expectantly for the
was
at least
first
were
in the center of town.
decisive order of the day,
Finally, Allawi
The
PUK lead-
which was that
"everybody should escape as best they can."
By seven
in the evening, the Iraqi flag
been the Kurdish parliament, quickly
showed
that they
was
flying
over what had
in the center of Arbil. Iraqi security
had a
chilfingly accurate
knowledge of die
SADDAM MOVES NORTH whereabouts of their enemies
in the city.
Western diplomats and the
Kurdish parties later decried the effectiveness of the
group a
intelligence paid the opposition
urgency with which they sought
officers
fatal
INC, but
compliment
Iraqi
in the
and members of the group.
Nineteen of them were arrested by Iraqi security and taken to Baghdad, never to be seen again. Asked later if he
knew what had happened
CIA contingent had left behind as they fled to
to the people the
safety,
Robert Pelletreau repHed with chilling blandness: 'Tou're asking
whether some of them were people were
But the
killed.
killed? It
INC s
is
very possible that a
lot
of INC
an independent organization."
campaign bus in Troy, Tennessee, on the day Chnton expressed "grave concern" about the Arbil fell, President situation but said it would be "highly premature to speculate on any Speaking from
response
his
we might
have."
Defense Secretary William Perry gave a hint that Saddam had little
from an American response when he said that U.S.
to fear
interests
were concentrated
ter" of Iraq, adding, in the civil
war
in the south
"My judgment is
in the north."
and
that we
vital
in the "strategic cen-
should not be involved
Half a decade of American involve-
ment in Iraqi Kurdistan was instantly forgotten. American
when
retaliation,
it
did
come on
the second and third
of September, provided a convincing demonstration of the limits of
American power
in the region.
Gulf War coalition
allies
For the
first
time, formerly staunch
Saudi Arabia and Turkey
flatly
refused to
allow U.S. warplanes to attack Iraq from their territory. Clinton therefore unleashed
unmanned
cruise missiles from ships in the
Persian Gulf, but the forty-four such missiles fired over two days
were aimed
at Iraqi
command
posts and air defense centers near
and
Nassariyali, far to the south of the fighting. Iraqis, Kurds,
immediate neighbors,
if
scious that these targets
got the bitterly.
map
not the rest of the world, were very con-
were four hundred miles from
of Iraq the wrong
em
way
no-fly zone,
Arbil.
"They
INC
official
up," remarked one
(Among other excuses advanced by
for steering clear of the north Iran, Talabani's backer.)
their
administration officials
was the fear of being seen
The United
which had proved wholly ineffective
an
as
States also extended
its
ally
of
south-
in protecting
the Iraqi Shia, seventy miles farther to the north, from the
32nd par-
OUT OF THE ASHES allel to
the 33rd parallel.
UN
south," declared
"We have choked Saddam Hussein
ambassador Madeleine Albright
put a gloss on the debacle.
was
It
left to
cial affirmations
Intelligence in the
"We
in
in the
an effort to
whacked him." CIA director John Deutch to pour cold water on really
offi-
of success. Saddam, he bluntly informed the Senate
Committee on September
19, "is politically stronger
Middle East than he was before sending
now
his troops into north-
em Iraq in recent weeks." Older and wiser perhaps after the failure of who may have known that Clinmake him secretary of defense, also stated that tliere was little prospect of Saddam being removed in the near term. This was in sharp contrast to the CIAs assessment to the same committee only four months before that "Saddam s prospects for surviving the attempted coup in June, Deutch,
ton was not going to
another year are declining." Six years before,
Saddam had
foolishly stayed put in
Kuwait while
the Americans gathered up the will and the forces to punish him. did not forces nally,
commit the same mistake
from Arbil almost
the
ner of the
as
again,
soon as the
city
withdrawing
He
his military
had been secured. Nomi-
KDP was in control, its yellow flag replacing the green banPUK on buildings diroughout the city. But even as the tanks
pulled back, Iraqi security remained behind.
The KDP, having made its Faustian bargain with Saddam Hussein, was eager to show that it could not be pushed too far. When the Iraqi Mukhabarat arrested some members of a small Kurdish Islamic group with
whom the KDP enjoyed friendly relations,
ened to take some
Iraqi intelligence
Barzani s men threatmen in Arbil and kill them unless
own amazement, the eight who had in the interim been hung upside down and
the prisoners were returned. To their Islamic prisoners,
beaten with cables selves driven
at intelligence
headquarters in Mosul, found them-
back to Arbil and released. The
the Kurds and the Americans that
its
KDP wanted to prove to
deal with
Saddam was
"a limited
agreement."
The subdued American response gave Saddam Hussein big political success since the invasion of Kuwait. that the
United States would not intervene, especially
quickly,
and he had been
right.
The
fall
his first
He had calculated if
he withdrew
of Arbil had no political
repercussions in the United States. Despite pleas from his advisers,
SADDAM MOVES NORTH
245
Republican presidential candidate Robert Dole was loath to make
it
a campaign issue, conscious perhaps of the existence of a public
record of his
own fawning encounter with Saddam Hussein while on
a visit to Iraq before the invasion of Kuwait.
The impact of the capture of Arbil was Middle East than
in the
far greater in Iraq
United States or Europe. In Jordan, Prime
He
Minister al-Kabariti remembers calling "the Americans." don't
want anything
what happened;
With the
to
do with you.
was something
it
and the
It
said, "I
wasn't an embarrassment,
like treason."
of Arbil, the tide of battle in Kurdistan swiftly
fall
turned. Barzani's forces were
now routing the PUK without any fur-
ther aid from the Iraqis. Talabani's forces, additionally demoralized
by
their leader's foolish claim that the Iraqis
ers with chemical
vention),
fell
back
were aiding the
weapons (he hoped thereby to provoke U.S. in disarray
tion
for their lives.
between the
made
their
way
KDP
inter-
toward the Iranian border.
Meanwhile, the surviving members of the
were running
attack-
None knew
and the
Iraqi
INC
in
Kurdistan
the extent of the coopera-
Mukhabarat.
Many
of them
directly to Zakho, close to the Turkish border, but
some two hundred and fifty were trapped in Salahudin in the alKhadra Hotel, which had long served as their headquarters. Not far away, the house formerly inhabited by their CIA friends, who had often promised them that there was a detailed evacuation plan in the event of a disaster such as was now happening, stood empty and under KDP guard. There had indeed been an evacuation plan, but only for Americans. The INC members were desperate to leave but fearful that the KDP would hand them over to Baghdad before they reached Turkey.
During those tense days, the smell of fear and defeat was almost
tangible. Iraqis are often chain-smokers, but the sur-
vivors of the massacres in Arbil
They
arette.
in the hotel
sat in
seemed
to live
an office on overstuffed
from cigarette sofas,
to cig-
beneath a wall
poster showing Saddam's famous victory arch of crossed sabers in
Baghdad
"We leaders.
collapsing in ruin before the rising star of the
expect death
is
coming," said
"There are Iraqi agents everywhere.
weapons. The
KDP is just
INC.
Ahmed al-Nassari, one of their
We cannot abandon our
an agent of Saddam."
On September
15,
OUT OF THE ASHES
246
there was a near riot as they milled about in the forecourt of the
al-
Khadra, clutching their submachine guns and waiting to board ten blue-and-white buses and two trucks, which were to drive them to
Zakho. "If we hear nothing from the Kurds,
one of them
For several nights they waited, sion to leave. Ironically, the
INC,
as well as of the
Kurdistan. to
will
simply go," said
dieir nerves cracking, for permis-
KDP may have delayed the exodus of the
Kurds and
aid agencies, because they
wanted
we
in desperation.
Iraqis
who had worked with
However much Barzani
distrusted the United States,
keep the no-fly zone enforced by its warplanes
in
he
as insurance
However, press reports of the
against a full-scale Iraqi reoccupation.
phght of these people were surfacing
in
Washington, shaming the
administration into at least putting pressure on the get to the border.
foreign
were a symbol of American involvement
KDP to help them
An anonymous administration official told the Wash-
ington Post on September 9 that diere would be no attempt to actually
INC members, excusing this morally questionable decision on the grounds that the CIA had "merely financed the group, rescue the stranded
not directed the
CIA
its activities
officers in
[Iraqi National]
time to
flee."
CIA officials
inside Iraq." Furthermore, said the official,
Salahudin "had provided advance warning to the
Congress of the Iraqi assault on
FinaUy, Karim Sinjari, the
Khadra
Arbil, giving
it
ample
Reminded of this remark, Ahmad Chalabi observes "are not known for their veracity."
to say the
KDP head of security,
that
arrived at the
al-
INC could leave. They left behind about twenty of who complained that they had not been paid for
their Kurdish guards,
sixteen months. Their story turned out to
When Ahmad
KDP given
Chalabi had
first
come
be
as sad as that of the
to Salahudin,
INC.
he had asked the
for guards who were especially trustworthy, and was therefore members of the Barzani tribe who had survived the massacre of
1983 because they had escaped or, in most cases, were children.
"I lost
my father and three uncles when they were taken with the eight thousand Barzanis in 1983," said Niyaz Salem
INC
headquarters.
He
he stood in the abandoned flight
of the INC: "They
left the Kurds, apart from a few. We We don't know if they were CIA and we don't care."
took aU the Arabs and betrayed.
as
spoke bitterly of the
feel
Across Kurdistan the same scene was being repeated wherever
SADDAM MOVES NDRTH Kurds or
Iraqis
24
On September 3,
had worked with foreign agencies.
just as the first cniise missiles
were being
fired at Nassariyah, the
Pentagon had ordered the evacuation of the alUed Mihtary Coordi-
The MCC had played a progressively when the allies had first intervened in Kurwere reduced further when U.S. aircraft acci-
nation Center at Zakho.
reduced
role since 1991,
distan. Its activities
down two
dentally shot
U.S. helicopters in 1994, but
remained a
it
symbol of allied protection of Kurdistan. Within a few days of the evacuation of American,
MCC
aUied officers, the long, gray satellite
dishes from
its
roof,
One man,
bly frightened.
glish, said: "Iraqi
foreigners
amnesty, glish,
is
law
When we
was not
just
who
felt
agencies
They were
all visi-
heard that Saddam had offered an
frightened."
bitterly: 'Tes, I
of those corrupted Kurds It
States.
and
anybody
speaking perfect American-accented En-
we were even more
he added
United
for
extremely clear. Anybody who cooperates with
is
a traitor.
building, sprouting aerials
had become a holding station
in northern Iraq associated with the
and other
British,
Complimented on
speak good English because
his
En-
am one
I
who deal with foreigners." Iraqis who had worked v^th American
Kurds and
threatened. At Diyana, close to the northern
end
of the Hamilton Road, the Mines Advisory Group, a British charity,
employed laid
fifty
Kurds
remove antipersonnel and antitank mines
to
during the war along Iraq's border with Iran.
work looking
for aging
mines with rusting
It
was dangerous
trip wires in
growth, but this was not what worried the fifty-odd
Diyana camp. at
an
When we
article in the
visited
at
the
them, they were nervously looking
September 12
which they passed from hand
the under-
men
issue of Babel, Uday's newspaper,
to hand. It contained a
government
statement spelling out the terms of an amnesty for Iraqi citizens
who had worked
for foreigners.
The men
in the
camp were
inter-
ested in a wide-ranging exclusion clause covering not only those guilty of murder, rape, also those
who
and the
theft of
government property but
"spied for a foreign center."
definition of espionage
had every reason
is
The
Iraqi government's
notoriously elastic and the
to fear that
it
might be expanded
war. Barzani
had swept
all
specialists
to include them.
While they waited, the pendulum swung again civil
mine
in the
Kurdish
before him in his counterattack after
OUT OF THE ASHES now
the capture of Arbil and
triumph of what seemed hke
KDP
the
leader was flushed with the
But Talabani s troops had
total victory.
retreated too fast to suffer heavy casualties. In the hidden valleys and
mountain fastnesses along the Iranian border, they regrouped and prepared to counterattack
by
Iran, they
in their turn.
earher.
October
13,
reequipped
swept out of their mountains and drove back the KDP.
The flight of Barzani's men was But the
PUK
stopped
Baghdad made
Arbil.
On
tried to retake the
it
city.
speedy as that of the
as
at the
clear that
it
PUK a month
bridge at Degala, just before
would use
There was a new referee
its
tanks
if
Talabani
in Kurdistan.
Saddam emerged as the clear winner from the Kurdish civil war of 1996. He had shown the Hmits of U.S. strength and resolve. He had eliminated Kurdistan
haven for the CIA and
as a safe
its
friends.
The INC suffered a blow from which it would find it hard to recover. Some ninety-six of its members were executed at Qushtapa and another thirty-nine shot fifty
were
With
zation.
in Arbil itself,
killed in the fighting. It his victory,
while between forty and
was a heavy loss
Saddam
for a small organi-
lifted the trade
embargo he had
enforced on Kurdistan since the end of 1991. Cheap Iraqi gasohne could
now flow north unimpeded,
By
moving
to control the
distan.
Some
most
visible
could the secret police.
Uday's definition of espionage island of
Guam
in the
northern
until the presidential election
United
evidence of the disaster in Kur-
6,500 Iraqis and Kurds
their families as well as others
to the
as
the end of September, the administration in Washington was
—members of the
who might have
—were
Pacific.
was
INC and
qualified
under
evacuated to the remote
Here they were sequestered
safely over before being admitted
States.
Plucked from northern Iraq by the vagaries of war, pohtics, and
new immigrants might have thought that the worst of their problems were over when they reached American soil. covert action, these
For the
vast majority, this
was
true.
But others found themselves the
victims of an extraordinary series of blunders by the
FBI and the
Immigration and Naturalization Service.
to imagine a
It is difficult
clearer example of the callous ignorance habitually exhibited
by the
U.S. government toward Saddam's opponents and, indeed, to Iraq
SADDAM MOVES NORTH and the Middle East
in general than the cSSe of the six refugees
who
Saddam only to find themselves in an American jail. While on Guam, the entire body of refugees was investigated by agents of the FBI assigned to ferret out any agents of Saddam, or other threats to U.S. national security, who might have infiltrated the group. The FBI agents were normally based in the United States, so to educate them in tlie intricacies of Iraqi and Kurdish politics, they were given a classified briefing by the CIA that lasted for forty-five minutes. fled
Thus equipped, the agents
One office,
set out for
of the agents, Jennifer
P.
Guam
and began
their work.
Rettig of the FBI's Chicago field
grew suspicious while interviewing
Hashim
resistance fighter
Qadir Hawlery. Hawlery asserted, in Arabic, that he had spent fighting in the "Kurdish liberation
bom U.S.
his life
movement," a phrase the Egyptian-
Marine who had been pressed into service
as
an interpreter
chose to shorten in translation to "KLM." Rettig had never heard of the
KLM, and immediately deduced that it was a previously unknown
and therefore highly suspect
terrorist organization. In
consequence,
the unfortunate Hawlery was separated from his wife and seven chil-
dren and consigned to the Los Angeles County jail for the next eighteen months while his lawyers fought immigration service efforts to
deport him back to Saddam s Iraq and certain death.
Another of the cases concerned Major Safa
al-Battat,
become
deserted from the Iraqi army in 1991 and had gone on to
hero of the Iraqi opposition.
fought in the southern marshes against the Iraqi
Thallium
a
A native of Basra, he joined the INC and army
In 1994, he was
poisoned with thallium, a poison commonly used against visiting Kurdistan.
who had
is
rats,
when
favored by Iraqi security because
it is
very slow-acting, allowing the poisoner to get away before his victim dies. Al-Battat
would
aged to get him to pital in Cardiff.
certainly have expired
Britain,
where he was
had
his friends not
man-
successfully treated at a hos-
He could have stayed and enjoyed a peaceful life in the
United Kingdom, but instead volunteered to return to northern Iraq
where he became one of the INC's senior September 1996, he was his official interviewer.
airlifted to
The
military
commanders. In
Guam, where he
told his story to
—
interviewer, however, concluded
having confused thallium with Valium
—
that
possibly
he was taking thallium
for
OUT OF THE ASHES
ZSD
recreational purposes, as well as being an undercover Iraqi agent. At
the time of this writing he was
send him back to
Mark Merfalen
Iraq.
still
in prison, appealing the decision to
Testimony in the case revealed that FBI agent
believed the Iraqis "He an awful lot" and that fellow
agent John Cosenza believed that there
is
"no
guilt in the
Arab world,
only shame."
As 1996 drew
to a close,
Saddam had reason
to celebrate.
He had
scored three significant victories in the course of the year. In February,
he had
artfully lured
Hussein Kamel back to
his
doom;
he had liquidated the most serious conspiracy against
in June,
his rule to
date and had discredited the Iraqi National Accord; in August, he
had once more reasserted
Iraqi influence in Kurdistan
and had
destroyed the INC, in the process exposing the weakness and indifference of American policy toward Iraq. Yet, in the heart of
Saddam's
people, unconnected with any intelligence agency,
the ruling family.
found the means.
capital, a
known
were preparing to
group of
idealistic
young
opposition group or foreign strike a
They had long had
the
dramatic blow against
will;
recently they had
ELEVEN
Uday Takes a
evening Oncedeses drove a cool
is
December 1996, three identical white Merdown Mansour Street, in West Baghdad. The
in
fast
road
Hit
long and straight as
it
passes the white walls of the old race-
track but ends abruptly at the
T junction
with International Street,
forcing cars to slow as they approach the traffic lights.
and night was intersection
is
but
falling,
well-lit
by
this is a
license plates, a telling sign that
involved.
A
was 7:25
p.m.
wealthy neighborhood and the
Anyone
street lamps.
close look might have noticed that
It
all
giving the convoy a
three vehicles bore identical
somebody out of the ordinary was make a closer examination
passerby brave enough to
might have registered the identity of the passenger
in the front seat
of the leading car: Uday, the much-loathed eldest son of Saddam.
He had just come at
from feeding
his pet police dogs,
the Jadriya Boat Club in South Baghdad, and was
a party being
thrown by
his friend
which he kept
now on his way to
and cousin Luai
Khairallah. His
bodyguards, used to Uday's obsessive socializing, were packed into the
two following
cars.
The
party was in a house only a few blocks away,
and Mansour was an area Uday knew weU and where he
was
filled
with security
felt
secure.
It
men in uniform and plainclothes, most of them
guarding the nearby Russian and Jordanian embassies or
tlie
haunts of
OUT OF THE ASHES
252 senior Iraqi
officials, like
self in the late
the Hunting Club, founded by
Saddam him-
1960s after he and his fellow Baathists found themselves
blackballed from ancien regime estabhshments like the
Mansour and
Alwiya clubs.
As the cars neared the intersection, neither Uday nor the bodyguards had any cause to notice a young
man
feet standing nonchalantly outside the
Karkh Sports Club.
eying the
with a sports bag
at his
He was
coming down Mansour Street and had been there
traffic
Mansour
several hours, but without attracting attention.
is
of small shops catering to the well-off Iraqis
able district,
full
in the area,
and the sidewalks are usually crowded with
for
a fashion-
who live cus-
tlieir
tomers.
The waiting man was not alone. Although they made no sign that they knew each other, he had three companions nearby, also with
Two lingered outside the busy Ruwad, a restaurant on opposite comer of Mansour Street. A third stood by a Toyota
sports bags.
the
pickup truck and a Toyota Super Salon sedan parked since earlier in the day on a nearby side street.
White Mercedeses are not common side the sports club
in
had plenty of time
Baghdad. The
man
out-
to identify his target.
As
Uday's car approached, he reached down, unzipped his bag, and
took out the Kalashnikov automatic the butt of the
rifle,
he stepped into the
crucial role in the operation
cedes while the two
rifle
men
was
to
kill
stowed
street
inside.
Unfolding
and opened
fire.
His
the driver of the lead Mer-
in front of the restaurant attacked the rest
of the convoy. As he began to shoot, the others also produced
AK-
47s from their sports bags, each with four magazines holding thirty
rounds of ammunition apiece, and closed in on the
The lets.
cars.
lead driver was almost instantly torn apart by the hail of bul-
Everything appeared to be going as the attackers had planned.
For months, they had been watching Uday as he roamed across Baghdad. Always, he took the wheel of the
why, that night, ing
away
December
12,
car They never discovered
he decided not
at the driver, the first
that his real target
first
gunman
to drive himself Blaz-
did not immediately realize
was on the passenger side of the
however, one of the
car.
Seconds
later,
men firing from outside the Ruwad saw that Uday,
crouched down under the dashboard, was
still
unscathed. Shifting his
UDAY TAKES A HIT
253
aim, he poured the rest of his magazine into the most hated
man
in
Iraq at almost point-blank range.
The gunmen had two minutes
calculated that they
to start shooting,
kill
would have a maximum of
Uday, and make their escape.
After ninety seconds, confident that they had accomplished their mission, the three Street
man
men
in the
ambush
gave them covering
street.
down Mansour The fourth gun-
prevent the surviving bodyguards,
fire to
most of whom were wounded or
in a state of shock,
The
of the Mercedeses and giving chase. their
party ran
and around the comer into the side
from getting out
men jumped
four
from the scene. Both the cars were stolen and had been false plates
fitted
with
showing they came from Anbar, a province west of
Baghdad famous that this
A
into
two getaway vehicles, the pickup and the sedan, and sped away
made
it
for
its
loyalty to
less likely
Saddam. The attackers figured
they would be stopped
at checkpoints.
diplomat from the nearby embassy of Jordan
who
diplomat was convinced that he was dead after seeing him final,
on
arrived
the scene as the shooting ended recognized the bleeding Uday. hit
The
by the
prolonged burst of gunfire from some nine feet away. Other
eyewitnesses said he was covered in blood, but they could not
how seriously he was
injured.
Uday was rushed
to
tell
Ibn Sina Hospital,
where Cuban doctors found he had been hit by eight bullets. Saddam himself soon arrived at the emergency room, where the Cubans Iraqi
finally
woman,
were able
that his son
to tell him, through a Spanish-speaking
would
live.
The
translator said later that
the Iraqi leader looked deeply relieved at the news.
Bad news about the
health of the
secret in Iraq, but rumors that
first
on the it
Iraqi
Uday had been
in a telling
media
"slightly
measure of Uday's
economy, the Baghdad stock market crashed
as
was announced that Uday's group of companies, which
dominated the market, had ceased
trading.
the dinar, always a reliable indicator of its
normally a state
seriously injured. So the
quickly reported the attack, stating that
soon as
is
were already spreading across Baghdad
Saddam himself had been
wounded." The following morning, grip
family
The exchange rate for plummeted to
crisis in Iraq,
lowest level in ten months.
In their lonely house in Tikrit, Raghad and Rina, the widows of
OUT OF THE ASHES
254 Hussein Kamel and
his
brother
who Hved in man
brated the shooting of their brother, the
bitter isolation, cele-
they regarded as pri-
marily responsible for the downfall and murder of their husbands.
The government took time to admit the severity of Uday s wounds. At first it was more interested in publicizing the fact that he was still alive.
Three days
after the shooting,
had telephoned the
games
in the
Iraqi national soccer team,
competing in the Asian
United Arab Emirates, "to bless the team s
Iraqi Journalists Union, of which its
Baghdad radio announced that he efforts."
The
Uday was head, held a ceremony at Uday Saddam Hussein had sur-
headquarters "to celebrate that
vived the sinful incident to which he was subjected on Thursday evening."
They slaughtered a sheep
that their chairman
On
had
show their "overwhelming joy"
to
survived.
the following day, there was the
other casualties.
The
Iraqi
media did
first official
Iraqi
this obliquely
mention of
by announcing
Saddam had ordered
that during a visit to the Ibn Sina Hospital
that
who were "seriously wounded in the cowardly attack" receive same medical care as his son. It did not say if they were bodythe those
guards or passers by caught in the crossfire. In the meantime,
up
to
two thousand people had been arrested,
including hundreds of hapless shopkeepers and residents of
Even Sabawi and Watban, Saddams
sour.
half-brothers
and
Manbitter
enemies of Uday, were reportedly among those questioned. Watban
was
suffering from the
still
mous
wounds
by Uday at the infaKamel had fled to Jordan
inflicted
party on the night that Hussein
Uday himself, according to rumors among well-informed circles in Baghdad, later even
almost eighteen months before. circulating
expressed the unworthy suspicion that his father might have had a role in the assassination attempt.
This was the most serious blow ever struck at the ruling family,
but no one had any idea
who was behind
it,
not that there was any
shortage of claimants for the credit. Al-Dawa, the venerable Shia militant
group that had existed since 1958, put out a statement
Beirut saying
it
was responsible
for trying to
kill
Uday. This boast
was not widely believed because al-Dawa had made few
Baghdad
since the early 1980s. In addition, the group was
be very much under the control of
Iran,
whose
in
rulers
attacks in
known
to
would be
UDAY TAKES A HIT by supporting a plot
unlikely to provoke Iraq
More
son.
Dalaim
to
kill
credible was a claim from Kuwait by a
tribe that the assassination
was
in
the president s
member
of the
revenge for the murder of
Mohammed Mazlum al-Dalaimi, tortured before his execu-
General
tion in 1995.
In the West, intelligence agencies were as baffled as
Saddam by
the dramatic shooting in Mansour. After having been seen running for their cars that night, the
gunmen had
utterly vanished, leaving
only a haze of rumor and conjecture behind. Years of plotting by exiled opposition groups,
failed to inflict as
$100 million
bombing
tion the high-tech
much
as a scratch
of his immediate family.
Six
Ismail
months
later,
CIA money,
on Saddam or a
Now someone
Uday himself and then make
shoot
in
not to
single
had managed
to
all
member
to locate
and
a clean getaway.
a fresh-faced Iraqi in his late twenties
Othman came
men-
during the Gulf War, had
efforts
London and
related to
named
one of the present
authors the real story of the attack and those behind
it.
In 1991, following the chaos and ruin inflicted on Iraq after Sad-
dam Husseins
Kuwaiti adventure, a group of weU-educated young
people in Baghdad founded an opposition group. They called Nahdali"
—"The Awakening." Like other groups, these young
opposed the
dictatorship,
sectarian lines,
opposed the
it
"al-
idealists
division of Iraq along racial
and
and supported democracy. But there the resemblance
to better-known pohtical parties ended. Exile groups such as the Iraqi
National Congress solicited publicity through conferences, interviews,
and
Web
sites,
attracting thereby not only funds
from foreign
intelli-
gence agencies but also the unblinking scrutiny of Iraqi intelligence.
Al-Nahdah remained a It
did not have
whose
activities
its
totally
underground organization.
origins in the Shia or Kurdish communities,
the regime always carefully monitored. Most of
its
members were well educated, graduates from colleges in Baghdad. Many of them were women. The leader was Ali Hamoudi, an electrical engineer. His deputy was a woman named Raja Zangana, who had
a job in the civil service.
''We studied
how left-wing
Latin American groups survived under
repression by military dictatorships," explains
organized
itself into
Othman. The group
hermetically sealed cells in order to survive any
OUT OF THE ASHES arrests
—and the
ciilled
"dead
that
inevitable torture
cells,"
which were
—among
inactive until
were eUminated. Al-Nahdah was
its
members.
needed
also careful to
It
had
so-
to replace those
Umit
nications with the world outside Iraq. Iraqi intelligence
its
commu-
had a proven
record of success in intercepting links between opposition groups in
Baghdad and
their headquarters in Kurdistan or
Amman.
Ali
Hamoudi, the secretary
any
member of al-Nahdah who traveled abroad was
lated
from the
general, instituted a policy
rest of the organization.
gence heard rumors that such a group or even find outsiders
it.
Therefore,
under which
automatically iso-
At one point, Jordanian existed,
intelli-
but failed to penetrate
"Their security was very, very good," says one of the few
who ever came
to
know them.
Early on, they considered emulating the Latin Americans and
launching an armed struggle against the regime. But by 1994, according to
Othman, the group decided
enough
that while they
were not strong
to launch regular guerrilla warfare, they could carry out selec-
"We thought the regime had four pillars," says Oth-
tive assassinations.
man. "Saddam himself, Uday, Uday's younger brother, Qusay, and their cousin Ali
Hassan al-Majid."
They considered quickly concluded
which the
the option of assassinating
Saddam Hussein, but
was impossible owing
tliat this
to the care with
They were aware that even know where he was at any particular time. other hand, was a more viable target because of his hec-
Iraqi leader concealed himself.
his senior ministers did not
Uday, on die tic social life
that, aside
and frequent business meetings. Al-Nahdah
also
diought
from Saddam himself, he was the leader whose elimination
would do most to destabilize the regime. "After Saddam, Uday had the most
authority," says
Othman. "He would often make decisions with-
out consulting his father.
group began to track Their
first
his
We
decided to
movements
in
kill
Uday."
Members
Baghdad.
attempt came in April 1966. Al-Nahdah believed
good information
that
Uday would
of the
visit
it
had
owned in Salman They activated a military turn up. The group faced the a farm he
Pak, an hour's drive southeast of Baghdad. cell
and waited
same problem
for him, but
he
as other Iraqis
failed to
who had considered kiUing senior mem-
bers of the regime over the previous thirty years. "There have always
been Shia willing to die to assassinate leading members of the regime,"
UDAY TAKES A HIT one
says
Iraqi intellectual.
257
"But they neverTiad access to the
intelli-
gence you would need to be successful."
A month first
after die abortive
serious reverse,
been
for
its
arrested at a house
When
attack, al-Nalidah
had
which might have destroyed the group had
system of cutouts. Secretary General Ali
where he was hiding
the great Shia slum hves.
Salman Pak
where almost
in
Saddam
came
not
it
Hamoudi was
City (al-Thawra),
half of the population of
Raja Zangana, his deputy,
its
to visit him, she
Baghdad was
also
detained. Otliman says: "They didn't succeed in getting any information out of him.
He died under torture. She was executed at the end of
September and her body handed back ber."
The
cell structure
unraveling
its
to her brother in early Octo-
of al-Nahdah prevented Iraqi security from
organization.
A member whose
identity they feared
might be revealed by their imprisoned leaders was sent out of the country.
movements of Saddam s inner ciritself. The flight to Amman of Hussein and Saddam Kamel showed how difficult it was for dissident members of his family to cooperate with members of Precise intelligence about the
cle could
come
an opposition
only from within the ehte
who had
dedicated their
lives to
overthrowing the
The breakthrough for al-Nahdah came only because of a blood feud within Saddam s family, which had caused one member to vow revenge against his own clan. In the last months of 1996, al-Nalidali came into contact with Ra'ad regime.
al-Hazaa, a Tikriti and a relative of Saddams.
Up until
1990, al-Hazaa
had been a trusted member of the presidential guard. At that point, career was blighted by the independent actions of a
—a
family
Omar Iraqi
fate suffered
by many
in
Saddam s
Iraq.
al-Hazaa, had formerly been a divisional
member
His uncle. General
commander
in the
army but had retired soon after the outbreak of the war with
Thereafter, the general spent
much
his
of his
of his time at a comfortable
Iran. offi-
home in the Yarmuk district of Baghdad. officer, now in exile, the general was known for drinking heavily at his club and, when drunk, would often cers' club
near his
According to another Iraqi
criticize
Saddam
for his
conduct of the war. The consequences were
inevitable. "In 1990, the general relates.
"He was taken
to al-Ouija
was arrested," the exiled
and
his
officer
tongue was cut out. Then
aUT OF THE ASHES he was executed. His son Farouq was
killed at the
same time, and
the general's house in Baghdad was bulldozed."
Saddam
later
on
inflicted
his
Uday s bedside
showed himself uneasy al-Hazaa
after
he was
from what had happened
at the savage
shot, the Iraqi leader distanced himself
in 1990.
He blamed
the executions on Ali
Hassan al-Majid and Hussein Kamel. By now, the
dead
for a year, but Ali
punishments
At a family gathering around
relatives.
had been
latter
Hassan was present and Saddam was
scathing about his actions. "It was you and Hussein Kamel,"
the dictator, "who caused
and had
me
to execute
not been for your persistence and provocation,
it
I
of his family, and their houses were destroyed on your orders.
Saddam did Hussein Kamel did it."
Hassan or
Although he
lost his
that.
People
son,
would
members
not have embarked on that action. Together you pursued
always be said that
fumed
Omar al-Hazaa and his
It will
will not say that Ali
job as a presidential guard, Ra'ad al-Hazaa
survived the death and disgrace of his uncle.
He
even remained a
Saddams inner family. Most important, he was still a friend of Uday s relative and boon companion Luai Khairallah. By the end of 1996, unknown to the rest of his family, he was in contact with members of al-Nahdah, who realized habitue of the social circle around
that
he could provide the
critical intelligence
they needed.
On December 9, 1996, Ra'ad was having a drink at Luai's house when his host let slip a vital piece of information. "We are planning a Mansour on Thursday," he
party in
said,
and issued an
invitation.
While giving the address, Luai mentioned that Uday was going to be there. Ra'ad immediately passed the
news on
to his contact with al-
Nahdah.
"We
gave the information to our group to be ready in three days'
time," says
the party."
Othman. 'W^e knew the route Uday was Hkely to take to They chose the intersection of Mansour and Interna-
tional streets as the perfect spot to
He
in wait
because
in driving to
Uday would have to pass that way, no matter what direction he was coming from. The long, straight-approach road meant they could see the car coming from some way off and then spring the party
the ambush.
Uday
did not die, but al-Nahdah nonetheless considered their
UDAY TAKES A HIT bold attack a success.
"We proved
259
that thS Iraqi people could
act after the crushing of the uprising in 1991," says
wanted tion
group
end the common sense of hopelessness. The Iraqi opposigone out of the country, with nobody left inside." The
to
had
all
also
greater
still
Othman. "We
if
knew
that the poKtical
damage
to the
regime would be
the assassins could escape undetected and unscathed.
There was chaos
in the area in the
minutes immediately follow-
ing the attack as the security forces frantically reacted to what had
happened. The main roads were sealed already gone.
Othman s
story
is
off,
gunmen had
but the
that they drove west
and took refuge
with a bedouin tribe for four days. There they were joined by Ra'ad
made their way to Jordan. He says that because they knew Iraqi security would expect
al-Hazaa, after which they
they chose
them
this
route
all
to escape to Iraqi Kurdistan or Iran,
each of which
is
less
than
three hours' drive from Baghdad. It is
not a likely
and
its
not
know
tribes
story.
Western Iraq
would be unlikely
at a
time
when
is
to give sanctuary to
Iraqi security
looking for Uday's attackers. vice
largely uninhabited desert,
is
Nor would
men
they did
was scouring the country
Jordan,
whose
security ser-
thoroughly infiltrated by Iraq, be a safe refuge. Al-Nahdah
had considered sending the gunmen advised not to go because
Saddam s
to Kurdistan but
"we were
agents were very active there
since the invasion of Arbil." Instead, according to unimpeachable
sources, al-Hazaa
and the gunmen took the obvious course and
escaped over the Iranian border.
Once in Iran, their problems were not over. The Iraqi government was officially demanding their return. They feared that Iranian security, in an undercover deal with Baghdad, might hand them back. They therefore got in touch with Sayid Majid al-Khoie, the leading Shia clergyman from Najaf
who was
in exile in
London.
Explaining what they had done, they asked him to intervene with the
They also wanted to make sure that if they could not stay in Iran, they would be allowed to go to a third country where they would be safe. The cleric persuaded the Iranians to coopauthorities in Tehran.
erate, although the authorities in
members
Tehran insisted that the al-Nahdah
avoid any mention of their escape to Iran (hence the misin-
formation about the escape to Jordan). Eventually the
gunmen
OUT OF THE ASHES moved on in
though their neighbors
to Afghanistan, posing as Iranians,
Kabul were perplexed about the origin of "the young
men who
arrived in their street speaking such poor Farsi."
The core of Baathist leader,
former
Saddam appointed three difwho was behind the December 12 attack,
in exile, says that
ferent investigations into
but without success. later, in
A
the organization remained in Baghdad.
now
A
sign of their failure
that almost
is
August 1998, Iraqi security announced that
dozen people involved
in the
tions are that those arrested
it
two years
had arrested a
attempted assassination. All indica-
had nothing
to
do with the attack on
Uday.
The dent.
heaviest blow to
On
February
members gathered suburb
in
2,
fall
on al-Nahdah happened entirely by
ten weeks after the attack on Uday,
for a
meeting
North Baghdad.
at a
It is full
house
acci-
some of its
in al-Kreeat, a pleasant
of trees and well
known
market gardens and busy restaurants lining the bank of the
for
its
Tigris.
Suddenly, one of the al-Nalidah guards saw a soldier climbing over the fence surrounding the house. battle
He immediately opened fire. A gun
broke out, which went on for four hours. "They used rocket-
propelled grenades and destroyed the house over the heads of our people," says Othman. "Eleven people in the house were killed along
with an officer and two soldiers."
The tracked
security forces
had arrived on
tlie
scene not because they had
down al-Nahdah, but through sheer chance. One of the orgamembers had recently bought a car, not realizing that it was
nization's
stolen
and
documents forged.
its
On
a routine check, the police dis-
covered the stolen car outside the house in al-Kreeat and realized that
some
official
sort of
meeting was going on inside (always grounds for
suspicion in Iraq).
Othman s
list
of those
who
died in
al-
Kreeat confirms the impression that most members of al-Nahdah are well-educated professionals: Ra'ad Kamil, a pharmacist; Saif Nuri
Mohammed,
a goldsmith; several others
and education
who worked in
the planning
ministries.
In the space of just over a year,
Saddam had seen two of his
sons-
in-law killed, his half-brother shot in the leg, and his eldest son rid-
dled with bullets. Even
if
he was scoring
against the Americans at Arbil
and elsewhere,
significant successes this
was
clearly not a
UDAY TAKES A HIT happy
family. Early in 1997,
gather around
Uday s bed
to eliminate
were there
—
1
he summoned surviving members to
in the
nary family meeting. All the
26
Ibn Sina Hospital for an extraordi-
pillars
Qusay,
of the regime al-Nalidah wanted
Ah Hassan
Saddam s two
al-Majid,
Watban Saddam may have always intended the tape of what he said to be made public (it found its way to London), since he systematically blames his relatives for many acts of violence and corruption in Iraq previously attributed to himself He also tells them that they owe and Sabawi, as well as the recumbent Uday.
half-brothers
everything to him, inheriting "power, influence, and standing, which
you are using
in the ugliest
way
...
we
are not a monarchy, at least
not yet."
Saddam begins by reminding Ali Hassan
al-Majid that before the
1968 revolution "you were a lance corporal and a driver in Kirkuk."
He
says
one of the reasons he dismissed him
1995 was because he was smuggling grain to
as
defense minister in
Iran. After
throwing in
the recriminations over the killing of General al-Hazaa,
moves
on.
The performance
and Sabawd
know
is
in office of his half-brothers
treated wdth scornful contempt. "You, Watban, must
that the Interior Ministry
Saddam. "As
Saddam Watban
for Sabawi,
was ruined during your term," says
what kind of a security director
he, in a
is
He goes to his office at 1100 He left pubhc security to dishonest elements who
country experiencing such conditions? hours, half asleep.
are stealing people's money.
The
I
had
to execute
some of them."
diatribe continues with a reference to Luai Khairallah,
(unknown sins their
to
Saddam) had accidentally given the al-Nahdah
who
assas-
chance to intercept Uday. Luai had reached agreements
"with Mafia and drug traders to smuggle sums of
dered
in Iraq."
much
of his bile
He is
money to be
laun-
then accuses Qusay of being two-faced, but
reserved for Uday: "Your behavior, Uday,
and there could be no worse behavior than yours.
know what kind of person you
are," says the father.
cian, a trader, a people's leader, or a
you have done nothing
for this
.
.
.
We
bad,
want
to
"Are you a poUti-
playboy? You must
homeland or
is
this people.
know that The oppo-
site is true."
By the time Saddam spoke, it was evident that Uday was too seriwounded to return to his former role as his father's viceroy.
ously
— OUT OF THE ASHES
262
The Information Ministry admitted he had been hit by eight bullets. The government tried and failed to send him to France for treatment. Although by 1998 he was driving again, he had almost entirely lost
the use of one
leg. Iraqis
hopefully circulated a rumor that he
had become impotent. According Abbas Jenabi, who the case.
fled Iraq in
Uday continued
as
young
business and was
many
was
far
from
as four different
He had certainly not
as eleven.
still
this
active in a multitude of prof-
smuggling operations, particularly through
itable sanctions-busting his Asia
former friend and editor
to have sex with as
women a day, some of them lost his zest for
to his
September 1998,
and Kani companies.
More
important, and despite Saddam's bedside strictures,
gradually began to
meddle
in politics again,
of disrupting relations in the inner family.
aim
offensive, this time taking
ambassador to the
came under
UN
in
at his
Geneva.
performing
By
attack in Uday's newspaper,
his usual role
1998, he was on the
uncle Barzan, Officials
Uday
still
serving as Iraqi
connected with Barzan
which
also placed
renewed
emphasis on the close relations between the proprietor and Saddam "the beloved apple of his fathers eye
.
.
.
the Hon's eldest cub."
August 30, 1998, Barzan was recalled to Baghdad. At to leave Switzerland. sein,
first
A replacement ambassador arrived,
On
he refused
Khalid Hus-
formerly Uday's office director at the Olympic committee. After
initially
hinting that he was resigning from the Iraqi foreign service
and remaining
in Switzerland as a private citizen,
Barzan returned to
Baghdad. Despite Uday's survival and eventual resurgence, al-Nahdah, without
money
or resources, succeeded in doing
more damage
to
the regime than the Iraqi National Congress and the Iraqi National
Accord combined.
It
had thereby damaged,
showed
that the family
was vulnerable, and
not destroyed, the aura of invincibifity that
if
surrounded Saddam and
his
immediate
kin.
attempted assassination of Uday came too
But
late.
in
The
one sense the killing
of Hus-
IN As conspiracy, and the entry of Iraqi made Saddam stronger than at any other time
sein Kamel, the defeat of the
tanks into Arbil had since 1991.
The
Iraqi leader
was preparing
to
go on the offensive.
TWELVE
Endgame
In
her four years as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations,
Madeleine Albright had staked a claim to be regarded
Hussein's most unremitting foe. in a
TV
1996
drens' lives
famous at
Saddam
to the question
posed
interview regarding the cost of sanctions in Iraqi chil-
—"We
in the
Her answer
as
think the price
is
worth
it"
—which
became
Arab world, only underscored her hawkish credentials
home on the
issue
and did nothing to impede her eventual eleva-
tion as secretary of state.
Soon that she
after Mrs. Albrights arrival in
would be making
a
Washington, word spread
major policy address on the subject of
Iraq at Georgetown University. Expectations ran high, on
all sides.
Before the speech, a prominent businessman of Iraqi extraction,
known
to
be
in close
touch with Nizar Hamdoon, Saddam's
UN
word among the Iraqi exile community in Washington that the speech would contain dramatic new initiatives. On the appointed day, March 26, 1997, Mrs. Albright strode onto the dais and announced that "We do not agree with the nations who argue that if Iraq complies with its obligations concerning weapons envoy, was circulating
of mass destruction, sanctions should be
made
clear,
would remain. Almost
six
years
lifted."
Sanctions, she
had passed since Robert
a
Z&A
OUT OF THE ASHES
M. Gates, President Bush's deputy National Security adviser, had Saddam Hussein ruled Iraq, and that in the meantime "Iraqis will pay the price." Nothing, it seemed, had changed. There could have been no clearer message to Saddam that he had httle to gain in further cooperation with the UN inspectors. Even had he been of a mind to yield the secrets of the weapons he had so tenaciously concealed since 1991, Albright had told the world declared that sanctions would remain as long as
that
he would gain nothing by doing
Yet while stating that tion
Saddam s
weapons was unconnected
United States
still
so.
putative arsenal of mass-destruc-
maintenance of sanctions, the
to the
emphasized the importance of the weapons
inspectors' mission, the execution of which, paradoxically,
on
Iraqi cooperation
and
assistance. It
was up to the
depended
Iraqis to escort
where weapons or documents might be hidden. The Iraqis had repeatedly demonstrated their power to exclude the inspectors from any site if they so wished. The extensive program of remote cameras and other sensors monitoring former weaponsinspectors to sites
and laboratories could be removed with a simple
related factories
phone
call
from Baghdad. In that event, the only remaining sanction
United States and
for the
renewed bombing
allies
its
offensive.
would be
military action
But the threat of force was a diminish-
ing asset because, as the failure to secure support for
dam
—
in retaliation for the Arbil operation
had
bombing Sad-
vividly demonstrated,
every potential military confrontation highlighted declining support for the
By
United States both
1997, recalls a senior
tions crisis
in the
Middle East and around the world.
Unscom
condemning Iraq had
"all
United
States.
Saddam,
Security Council resolu-
the impact of traffic tickets." Thus, a
over Iraqi cooperation with
for the
official.
as
Unscom
carried significant risks
he well recognized, could choose
the timing of those crises. As 1997 went on, he had plenty of opportunity to
do
so.
The
inspectors
were
testing the hmits of the Iraqi
leader's patience. first arrived, Saddam had been forced to up much. His initial expectation that his Unscom problem would last only a few months and that the inspectors could easily be fooled or
Ever since the inspectors
give
bribed had soon been proved
false, as
we have
seen. Thereafter, the
EN DGAM E
265
Up until The summer of 1995, they had successfully concealed dieir most modem chemical capabilities the VX nerve agent as well as tlieir homegrown missile program and had waged a
Iraqis
fighting retreat.
—
almost the entire biological of Hussein that they
effort.
Kamel had brought
Then,
in
disaster.
had been successfully fooled by
inspectors set to
work
to
uncover
now knew
their Iraqi opponents.
"Not much
is
tlie
The
Security Council that
unknown about
proscribed weapons capabilities. However, what for cannot
officials
tlie full truth.
In April 1997, Rolf Ekeus reported to after six years of work,
August 1995, the defection
Unscom
is still
be neglected." Even a few long-range
would be a source of deep concern
if
Iraq's retained
not accounted
missiles,
he wrote,
those missiles were fitted with
the most deadly of chemical nerve agents, VX. "A single missile war-
head
filled
many
millions of lethal doses in an attack
with the biological warfare agent anthrax could spread
on any
city" in the
Middle
East. Ironically, publicity
about Saddam's secret arsenal, attendant on
him project a chill of fear over his neighweapons was psychological. In 1991, the Kurds had thought they were under chemical attack and had fled in panic when Saddam's troops dropped flour on diem from Ekeus's investigations, helped
bors.
The primary
helicopters. "I ical
lie
effectiveness of these
awake
at night
worrying about those terrible biolog-
weapons," a tremulous King Fahd of Saudi Arabia once told a
iting
Kuwaiti diplomat. To divest
Saddam of the
vis-
psychological advan-
Unscom would have to find or account for every single missile, all the VX, and every pound of anthrax, as well as the machines and materials used to make them.
tage he derived from his tiny but famous arsenal,
That was almost certainly an impossible undertaking, but even in making the attempt, the inspectors
would have
to penetrate
and defeat the
system of concealment created on Saddam's orders in the early sum-
mer of 1991. As with so much
else,
come to light The sudden appearance of the huge cache
the existence of this system had
thanks to Hussein Kamel.
of "chicken farm" documents together with the the
Unscom
rally
fact,
soon deduced by
sleuths, that certain categories of files that
would natu-
belong in such a collection of records were absent led them to the
inescapable conclusion that the missing documents must
still
exist
OUT OF THE ASHES under
tlie
protective guard of a concealment apparatus dedicated to
frustrating
Unscom. Hussein Kamel's cousin and fellow
defector,
Major Izz al-Din al-Majid of the Special Republican Guard, who had actually
had
missile parts buried in his
own garden
in
Baghdad, pro-
vided confirmation and a wealth of detail in interviews with
Unscom
officials.
As we have seen, concealment was trusted
members of
hands of especially
in the
elite security organizations:
the Mukhabarat,
the Special Republican Guards, and the Special Security Service.
Once upon vision of
a time, this arrangement had operated under the super-
Hussein Kamel, but after
to the capable
his departure, control
and hardworking Qusay, operating
with the immensely powerful private secretary.
had passed
in conjunction
Abed Hamid Mahmoud, Saddams
Not everyone, of course,
in the twenty-thousand-
man
Special Republican Guards, and the Special Security Organiza-
tion,
which comprised a
in the exercise.
Those
total
directly
few hundred, selected on the
of two thousand people, was involved
concerned numbered no more than a basis of absolutely
alty and, usually, a direct family relationship
unquestioned
loy-
with the leader.
At the end of 1995, Ekeus commissioned Nildta Smidovich, the
mustachioed Russian expert
who
to begin leading an inspection
"mechanism"
maddened
senior Iraqi
officials,
on the
specifically
for concealing missile parts, tools, and,
most impor-
documents. Since the weapons were being guarded by the
tant,
same that
so
team targeted
security organizations that protected
meant Smidovich and
his
team would
Saddam Hussein inevitably
close to the central nervous system of the regime
himself,
be getting very
itself.
In
March
and June 1996, Smidovich had tried to get into what became known as "sensitive sites" occupied by these security organizations and had
been blocked, or
hammer
by the guards. Ekeus managed to June 1996 with Tariq Aziz under
at least delayed,
out a compromise in
which the teams would be allowed into such ing month, the
team was blocked again
places.
at a
But the follow-
Special Republican
Guard camp, although they saw long, round objects looking the world like Scud missiles being hurriedly driven away.
had a ready explanation: The
The
for
all
Iraqis
admittedly suspicious "Scud-Uke
EN DBAM E objects" being
removed from the
pillars that coincidentally
site
resembled
267
were, they claimed, concrete
missiles.
As the Unscom teams continued their hunt, they found that time
and again diey were their descent to
just too late. Despite stringent efforts to
on a suspected
site
make
a total surprise, the Iraqis appeared
have been forewarned in the nick of time and the team would arrive
to see trucks speeding
intelligence
away
had managed
in the opposite direction. Either Iraqi
some way of listening in on the lastUnscoms Baghdad headquarters in the
to find
minute planning sessions
at
Canal Hotel or there was a mole inside the organization. Hussein
Kamel had unmasked Ekeus's individual
had never had access
translator as an Iraqi agent, but that
to information as sensitive as this.
The Unscom offices in the Canal had been modernized in 1994 and were equipped with the best American and that the Iraqis
in countersurveillance technology that
British intelligence could provide,
had succeeded
in planting a bug.
Russian scientist assigned to the teams ciously inquisitive about
staff
always
upcoming "no-notice"
fore, in strictest secrecy, a
commission
who
making
it
unlikely
There was, however, a
seemed
suspi-
inspections. There-
few of the senior members of the special
planned and executed a sting operation. With only
the suspect present, they discussed a purported
upcoming
surprise
inspection at a specific location. Sure enough, discreet observation at
the nominated visit.
The
site
Russian,
revealed the guards fuUy prepared for an
who appeared
to have
Unscom
been operating under the
auspices of his country's foreign intelligence service, the SVR, was sent
home amid conditions of deepest secrecy. The penetration of Unscom, using corruptible foreign intelligence agencies diat
Saddam had
dis-
cussed years before with Wafiq al-Samarrai, had been brought to fruition, at least for a while.
If Iraqi intelligence
had scored a coup
against
Unscom, the inspec-
tion
agency had
itself
tion.
Things had
come a long way since Rolf Ekeus had been forced to
turned into a formidable intelligence organiza-
give a personal guarantee for the cash advance from the
UN secretary
generals special fund that had launched the organization.
"We became extremely successful at penetrating the concealment mechanism," says one former Unscom official. "We had gotten
DUT OF THE ASHES
26S into
[i.e.,
developed the
we were
So
ability to intercept] their
only missing them by minutes.
thought that the
first
time
it
as the press
moved
Saddam s
palaces,
was suggesting. This was about the trucks moving around the things
we were
the Special Republican logs to see
may have
was obviously something more.
"This wasn't about biological weapons hidden in
that
Iraqis
might have been just luck, but the sec-
it
ond, third, and fourth time
The
communications.
Guard
who had been
after.
When we went
installations,
driving
into places like
we checked
the drivers'
what truck and where. Our people
knew almost by heart the names of the various people, drivers and so on, who were involved." The units involved in the concealment effort did not operate in isolation. As Rolf Ekeus, the man the Iraqi leader once referred to as the "miserable spy," said after he left Unscom in July 1997: "It is the Special Republican Guards we are interested in, the concealment force. But they are also the protection force for Saddam. He can build new palaces,
he can rebuild the weapons program, but he cannot replace
the Special Guards, because they are the key loyal force.
He
does not
have a replacement."
When
the inspectors did
manage
to penetrate the
and other equally important units
this
and other information germane
saw evidence of other dam:
in pursuit
compounds of
of trucking records
to their enquiries, they inevitably
tasks assigned to these loyal servants of Sad-
who had transAbu Ghraib prison, duty An inspector once opened a
of people to be arrested, logs of drivers
lists
ported prisoners to the grim confines of rosters for standing
door
in
guard
at
the palace.
one of these complexes only
ting at desks wearing headphones.
droppers.
The
to find a
roomful of people
They were the telephone
sit-
eaves-
inspector excused himself and closed the door.
Sometimes the interaction between Unscom
officials
and the
Iraqi
the command bordered on the surreal. Charles Unscom second-in-command, recalls one occasion when he and Roger Hill, who succeeded Nildta Smidovich as chief of the concealDuelfer,
high
ment team, were making an exploratory survey of a presidential site. They had a map but were finding it difficult to figure out the perimeters
of the
site.
beside them.
A
Suddenly a large black Mercedes purred to a rear
window
slid
down,
to reveal
halt
Abed Hamid Mah-
ENDGAME moud, the much-feared
269
presidential secretary. Extending a genial
greeting to the inspectors, Saddam's right-hand help. This
was not
it
grim, snarling face-offs with
minions, the two sides spent so that they
may seem. Despite TV images of Saddam s much time in each others company
as surprising as
Unscom personnel engaged in
man asked if he could
had inevitably become,
if
not friends, at least amiably
civil
with each other. Duelfer had even managed to strike up an amicable relationship with the previously their
shadowy Mahmoud, so he explained
problems widi the map. "Let me see if I can help," said the
Iraqi.
Removing a large cigar from his mouth, he peered at the map and supphed helpful directions. Then, in response to a rapid command, one of his bodyguards opened the trunk of the Hmousine and reached inside. Duelfer wondered what the Iraqi leadership kept in the trunks of their cars to see.
—Kalashnikovs? rocket launchers?—and craned
The bodyguard emerged with a tray of chilled Pepsis.
his
neck
After fin-
ishing their sodas, the Americans thanked their high-powered guide
and he drove off Minutes spot. This
Amer
later,
another large Mercedes purred to a halt
one was white. The window
Rashid, minister for
oil
ating with (and frustrating)
and the
Unscom.
slid
down
official
He
Rashid.
me
to reveal General
too inquired as to what the
Mahmoud had
map. "Nonsense," snorted
in interpreting the
"Abed can't read a map. He probably had it upside down. Let
look." Duelfer explained that they
cise
the same
responsible for negoti-
two inspectors were doing. They explained that Abed
been most helpful
at
were
placement of a particular boundary
still
puzzled by the pre-
line. "Let's
go see," said
Rashid.
The
line in question turned, out to
run along a thirteen-foot-high
wall with a deep, square pit just in front.
surveyed
it
to
check that they were
ping carefully around the
pit.
holes,
three step-
was where the
most of them grouped
firing
at
chest
squads did their work, the
providing temporary storage for dead bodies between
Any
all
No one brought up the fact that the wall
was heavily pitted with buUet height. Clearly, this
The Americans and Rashid
in the correct place,
pit
shifts.
reference to the wall's gruesome function would have been
"an intelligence question,"
i.e.,
raising a matter that lay outside
Unscom's mandate and expressly barred from discussion. So, with
OUT OF THE ASHES
270
the surveying completed, the two inspectors thanked Rashid and
went on
their way.
Rolf Ekeus
finally left
the organization he had created at the
1997. Richard Butler, the Australian diplomat special commissioner,
inspections.
approach.
promoted Scott
and related materials from
Ritter to run the concealment
tors, as a "shell
game."
He
after the shells (weapons, shells."
minded tactic.
Not
"Ritter
aggressive
Iraqi system of shifting the
site to site,
end of
replaced Ekeus as
The former marine was determined on an
He later described the
moving the
who
weapons
one jump ahead of the inspec-
declared that Unscom, rather than going
documents, all
should pursue "the
etc.),
man
the inspectors agreed with this single-
was obsessed with
this
notion that he was finally
going to find the document that exposed 'the architecture of concealment,'
" says
one
official in close
touch with the inspection
effort.
"But
other people wanted to find out what the Iraqis were actually doing,
and that meant looking
By
the
summer
for the
weapons themselves."
of 1997, the main effort of these others was con-
centrated on tracking the elusive remnants of the Iraqi biological
and
VX nerve
dam might
gas programs effort as well as the possibiUty that Sad-
still
have missiles and warheads with which to deliver
these potent agents. Central to their concerns was the lack of evi-
dence sile
to support Baghdad's claim that
warheads and
as
many
as
it
had destroyed the 25 mis-
150 bombs
it
had
filled
with anthrax
and botulinum toxin before the Gulf War. In addition, through the
been
sites
where Iraq
secretly held in 1991
remained unaccounted
insisted
all its
after sifting
forbidden missiles had
and 1992, Unscom announced that two
for.
Other bones of contention included seventeen tons of the "growth media" necessary for reproducing the
toxins, nine
pounds of anthrax, and the possible existence of sprayers
hundred
suitable for
the technically highly difficult task of distributing the anthrax in fine
enough
particles to
be absorbed
in victims' lungs, as well as the true
documentary history of the entire sixth "Full, Final,
gram
in
project.
When
Iraq submitted a
and Complete Declaration" on the
biological pro-
September 1997, Special Commissioner Richard Butler
described
it
as "not
even remotely credible."
The pressure from Unscom was matched by an increasingly defiant
EN DBAM E attitude
from
Unscom
helicopters seized the controls of the
order to prevent them from taking pictures of vehicles
in
leaving a suspect
site,
causing a near crash. In the same week, another
team was blocked from entering a officials at
1
June 1997, an Iraqi "minder" accompanying
Iraq. In
inspectors in one of the
machine
2V
on
site
instructions, said the Iraqi
the gate, "from the highest authority."
Following yet another censorious Security Council resolution
demanding
that Iraq cooperate with the inspectors,
in council with the
mand rize
and
clarify
else.
this
is
"We would
like to
summa-
our position as follows: Iraq has complied with and
all
relevant resolutions.
We demand with
fulfill its
sitting
uniformed notables of the Revolutionary Com-
Council, issued a stern statement:
implemented
Saddam,
.
.
.
There
is
absolutely nothing
unequivocal clarity that the Security Council
commitments toward
Iraq.
to respect Iraq's sovereignty
.
.
.
and
The
practical expression of
to fully
and
totally
lift
the
blockade imposed on Iraq."
With hindsight,
it is
clear that the Iraqi leader
had resolved to go on
the offensive. All he needed was an excuse. That was to
come soon
enough. In September, the obstruction of the inspectors grew
There was another helicopter incident on the
more blatant.
thirteenth.
On
the sev-
enteenth, a team hunting for details of VX production was kept outside the gate of the Iraqi Chemical Corps headquarters for hours while
files
were openly trucked away and other documents burned on the roof of the building.
A week later,
testing laboratory
inspectors
making a routine
encountered several
trying to escape through a back door.
microbiologist
and opened
who was
men
visit to
a food-
carrying briefcases and
Diane Seaman, an American
leading the team, seized one of the briefcases
Inside were kits for testing three deadly organisms as
it.
well as a logbook indicating that the lab had been conducting tests in secret for eight
months under the supervision of the Special Security
Organization.
By the end of October, the crisis was reaching a head. Insisting that Unscom had become no more than an espionage agency operating on behalf of the United States to prolong sanctions, Tariq Aziz announced
on October 29
that
no more Americans would be allowed
work on the inspection teams. Four days
later,
into Iraq to
he announced
that the
— OUT DF THE ASHES
272 U-2
by the United
high-altitude photo-reconnaissance plane lent
Unscom was operating as a spy plane for the Americans.
States to
was presumably unaware
that
with the approval of his superiors with the
news
Israelis.)
A
intelligence
were sabotaging the work of the Unscom long-
effort, in
veyed by remote cameras resumed.
—sharing U-2 photo
These threatening statements were followed by
that the Iraqis
term monitoring
(Aziz
by this time Scott Ritter was routinely
few days
later,
which erstwhile weapons
sites
to ensure that forbidden
were
sur-
work had not
the remaining American inspectors were
expelled from Iraq.
As a U.S.
military riposte to this defiance
appeared to be increas-
ingly inevitable, the familiar features of an Iraqi crisis reappeared. again, Saddam's picture
declared somberly that this was "the gravest international Clintons] presidency."
Once
adorned the covers of news magazines. Time
On
television
and
crisis
of
[Bill
in print, biological warfare
experts solemnly described the massacres that could be perpetrated
with only a minute fraction of the Iraqi leader s presumed stockpile of anthrax. for a
Eminent columnists began sounding like Tikritis,
calling glibly
"head shot" against Saddam, while the nightly network news
played stirring scenes of the U.S. military gearing up for action.
dis-
The
atmosphere summoned up memories of the Gulf War, when White
House correspondents asked President Bush in all seriousness why he was not making greater efforts to kill the president of Iraq. The reality, however, was very different from those heady days. Most important, the coalition built by George Bush had almost completely disappeared. This time the Saudis
not even want to be asked to planes in rity
sia
bombing
Iraq.
made
let their territory
The United
it
clear that they did
be used by U.S. war-
States did not dare ask the Secu-
Council for the authorization to launch an attack for fear that Rus-
or France, both increasingly sympathetic to Iraq's position, would
cast a veto.
As
it
was, Washington was "stunned" by the indifference of
the Security Council to Saddam's expulsion of the American inspectors.
The most severe sanction the council was willing to pass was a ban
on international travel by Iraqi weapons
dam was
scientists,
the
last
people Sad-
likely to allow to leave the country.
The Clinton administration insisted that it had every right to bomb Iraq under existing resolutions, and prepared targeting plans. But here
ENDGAME again, President Clinton
The
and
his advisers
were faced with problems.
targets attacked in the first days of the
choose
—
power
plants, the
Gulf War had been easy to
presumed centers of
other mass-destruction weapons production, self.
Iraqi nuclear
and
Saddam Hussein him-
Subsequent inquiries had revealed that while the power-plant
bombings had done permanent damage ture, they
—al-Atheer
al-Hakam
for nuclear,
Saddam and all other
targeted, let alone destroyed.
important
had simply stayed away from obvious
had escaped unscathed. The for attacking this time
from rooting out
done with high
his
weapons
if
and
advanced by the White House Saddam was preventing Unscom
capabilities, the job
would have
to
be
But no one knew where these weapons and
systems were actually hidden at any particular time. facilities
were "dual
Some
of the sus-
use," with legitimate civilian
among other places, hospitals. The United States could
applications in,
hardly
targets
rationale
was that
explosives.
pected production
mil-
for biological production
had not even been officials
its
any great extent. The most important weapons
itary capabilities to
plants
to Iraq's civilian infrastruc-
had not brought down the regime or even hindered
bomb them.
As Clinton and
Saddam chose
to
his advisers
back
mulled over these awkward choices,
off, at least for
the
moment. Having tested
the strength of the U.S. alliance, he chose to accept mediation from
an old friend, Russian foreign minister Yevgeny Primakov. Primakov
pledged to press for the
lifting
of sanctions. In return, the Iraqi
leader agreed that American inspectors could return to Baghdad.
The Chnton administration greeted the news with reUef. By November 20, the immediate crisis was over. From Saddam s point of view, the confrontation had yielded eminently satisfactory results. The United States had declared that Unscom s right to inspect was an issue on which it was prepared to go to war,
and had then found
of useful
allies.
itself,
except for the British, entirely bereft
Unscom, from being a
turned into an advantage.
threat to the Iraqi leader,
had
He now had the initiative because he could
provoke a confrontation any time he chose, simply by refusing to cooperate. In
pursuing this strategy, Saddam had an unlikely ally (albeit one
with a different agenda), Scott
November 21
as
determined
Ritter,
who
returned to Baghdad on
as ever to search for
Saddam's
secrets.
DUT OF THE ASHES
274
regardless of the consequences
renewed
—which
Iraqi obstniction that in turn
as likely as not
would
would be
necessitate a forceful
U.S. response.
The
realization that the
had by
this
action in the
Ritter, just
hope of garnering more
Unscom
officials
appeared to
rest
"It wasn't just
Commissioner
to rein in the ener-
Madeleine Albright who didn't
whenever he
official indignantly.
that either."
canceled
was not
which he yielded. State Department and
Ritter starting a crisis
Department
him doing
international support,
to Ritter, Special
indignantly deny that Butler was following instruc-
from outside.
want Scott
ler
crises
now came under heavy pressure
getic inspector, pressure to
State
provoke
An aggreswhen they had drawn back from military
what was required. According
Richard Butler
tions
to
time dawned on the Clinton administration.
by
sive effort
at all
power
hands of President Saddam Hussein and Major Scott Ritter
in the
Ritter's
felt like it," says
one
"Richard Butler didn't want
For whatever reason,
for the time being But-
planned inspections.
Meanwhile, both the United States and Iraq were readying them-
The CUnton
selves for a fresh confrontation.
administration had con-
cluded that Saddam had gotten the better of die United States in the
November
crisis
and the Pentagon was dusting of its
casus belli would be the principle of access for
target
Unscom
lists.
The
to the eight
sprawling complexes comprising Saddam's somewhat gaudy palaces, security forces offices, ities
generically
and barracks,
referred
to
as
announced it was denying access to the bait
and embraced the
Saddam was
as well as other
"presidential
sites."
to these areas, the
sites as
government
When
facil-
Iraq
United States rose
the defining issue.
quite ready for a second round. In
November, the
government had admitted the foreign press en masse, a move that yielded ample dividends in the form of sympathetic descriptions of the plight of the Iraqi people after seven years of sanctions.
Now
up once again with journalists and TV crews from around the world. By mid-February, the number had reached
Baghdad began
to
fill
eight hundred. Their all-too-accurate depiction of hospitals without
medicines, schools without books, and mothers without food for their children had a searing impact on international public opinion.
John Paul
II
eloquently expressed the feelings of
Pope
many when he
EN DBAM E
Z75
declared, in an address to the Vatican diplomatic corps in January 1998:
"As
we prepare for a new round of bombings, we cry out in anguish
over seven years of United Nations sanctions against the Iraqi people,
which can only be understood
as biological warfare against a civilian
population. During the Gulf War, U.S. -led coalition forces deliberately targeted Iraq's infrastructure, destroying
food, water
and
sanitation to
its
civilian
its
ability to
provide
population and unleashing dis-
ease and starvation on an unimaginable scale. United Nations reports
claim that over sanctions.
1 million civilians
have died as a direct result of the
UNICEF reports that 4,500 children are dying each month.
As people of faith, we are ashamed that the actions of the UN, whose mission
is
to foster peace, can
be so deliberately directed toward the
sustained slaughter of innocent civilians."
make
Nevertheless, U.S. officials pressed on doggedly to
and gain the necessary support
for
William Cohen sought to rouse European poison that
kills" (actually ricin,
be extracted from oil.
In Iraq,
officials
by
or seven castor beans," also the source of castor
"six
Cohen noted
being added to the target
darkly, "they are
growing hundreds of acres
list.
if
bean
fields
were
A stream of high-ranking American offi-
touring the capitals of the Gulf states failed in
extract
stating that "a
the most toxic substance known) can
of castor beans," leaving his audience wondering
cials
the case
bombing. Defense Secretary
many
even the mildest endorsements for an American
cases to
attack.
The
most telling rejection came from Bahrain, the tiny island-state lying off the coast of Saudi Arabia, long a staunch American area for
Unscom
since
its
ally
and the staging
inception. President Clinton
had personally
spoken with the emir to ensure
his support.
Even
so,
the Bahraini
information minister issued a statement declaring that the United States could not attack Iraq
The Arab
leaders
from
his country.
had not come
to love
Saddam
in the seven
years since the Gulf War. Their chilly attitude toward the
American
pleadings was derived from the fact that no U.S. strike was likely to get rid of the Iraqi leader and also the growing public outrage
among
their subjects over the suffering of ordinary Iraqis. In
and 1991, the pubhc
in the
Gulf and the
rest of the
1990
Arab world had
been comparatively deprived of access to information. (The Saudi government withheld news of the invasion of Kuwait from its citi-
OUT DF THE ASHES
ZV6
zens for forty-eight hours.) They could hsten to the
Monte Carlo
for
news
that their rulers preferred to
local (tightly controlled)
BBC
or Radio
keep out of the
media, but such an audience was, in most
cases, limited. In the 1990s, however, the region
had been swept by
a communications revolution. Arab-language satellite
TV
channels
brought comparatively uncensored news into the homes of anyone with a dish.
The
The
uncontrollable Internet served the same function.
public, thus informed,
United States and
more bombs on
its
was resolutely against support
for the
perceived agent, Richard Butler, in raining
Iraqi children already
decimated by sanctions. Even
the most absolute of monarchs had to pay attention.
The
effect of
brought
home
William
Cohen,
changing patterns in communications was further the
to
and
administration
National
when Madeleine
Security
attempted to market their policy at a "town University.
The event was
citizens challenged
a fiasco.
Amid
Americas "moral
Adviser
hall
Albright,
Sandy Berger
meeting"
at
Ohio State
continuous heckling, angry
right" to
bomb
Iraq.
The
pro-
ceedings, humiliating for Albright, Cohen, and Berger, were televised internationally
by
CNN.
By coupling the
Iraqi
TV ran them in full.
issue of a putative secret Iraqi missile force
with biological weapons with the issue of the presidential ington had given a hostage to fortune. "All diese places," says
ments."
Unscom deputy
we
sites,
armed Wash-
ever believed was in
chief Charlie Duelfer, "was docu-
Any weapons were almost certainly hidden elsewhere. But the among press, public, and politicians that Saddam
impression took hold
was concealing the deadly palaces,
immune from
advised remark to the
missiles in the recesses of his infamous
the attentions of the inspectors. In an
New York
ill-
Times, Richard Butler suggested that
such missiles could be fired "at Tel Aviv," thereby igniting panic in the Israeli capital,
where long
lines quickly
and the government rushed
in
formed
to pick
up gas masks
6 million doses of anthrax vaccine from
the United States. But the United States
itself did
not really appear to
take the threat of an Iraqi biological or chemical missile strike very seriously. In
dam s
fist
Kuwait, which would presumably have been high on Sad-
of possible targets, U.S. citizens were advised by their
embassies that there was no cause for alarm and certainly no need to
equip themselves with gas masks.
EN DGAM E
277
In the months between the invasion of Kuwait and the outbreak of
House had been haunted by the fear of would allow Saddam to extricate himself
the Gulf War, the Bush White a "diplomatic solution" that
from Kuwait without undue
of face. In those days, the United
loss
aided by the Iraqi leaders intransigence, had ruthlessly
States,
quashed any
aimed
initiatives
at
such a solution. But by February
The French, who
1998, the world had changed.
any case had been
in
had argued
busily negotiating business relationships with Iraq,
there was
Little
point in an inconclusive military action that would not
get rid of Saddam.
Annan
that
Now they suggested that UN secretary general Kofi
travel personally to Iraq to seek a
way out of the
crisis
over the
presidential sites.
Annan thought
UN
can't go,"
this
an excellent idea. Washington did not. "You
ambassador
Richardson told Annan.
Bill
"It will
box
us in." But even the British thought the secretary general should be
allowed to go to Baghdad. Clinton agreed with reluctance.
The the
secretary general's trip
first
was a breakthrough
for
Saddam. For
time since the war, a world statesman was coming to
addressing him respectfully and seeking a favor. speedily agreed to a
the presidential
The
visit,
Iraqi leader
compromise under which Unscom could inspect
sites,
but only
when accompanied by
team of diplomats who would monitor the
activities
a newly
formed
of the obstreper-
ous inspectors. Thus, rather than asserting the principle of free and unfettered access to any
site that
Unscom needed,
the agreement cre-
ated a new and cumbersome procedure for this special category of site.
None
of this mattered to Annan. After he had
Saddam's
cigars, the secretary general
and "very well informed and
described his host as "calm"
... in full control of the facts."
Since the crushing of the 1991 uprisings,
been seen
in public.
Now,
smoked one of
in
Saddam had
rarely
the fullness of his triumph, he
embarked on a program of public appearances. On March 17, for example, he visited al-Dhour, a small town in the Sunni heartland. This locality held a special significance in the
because
it
was here,
his abortive
in 1959, that
he had
Saddam Hussein
swum
story
the Tigris following
attempt to assassinate President Qassim.
He took phone
calls
from
who
received him with shouts of praise and dancing," according to
local citizens
and accepted the "greetings of the masses,
OUT OF THE ASHES
2VB
crowd slaughtered sheep
Iraqi TV. Afterward the
while the leader waved from the back of an open
and
in the air again
in celebration
car, firing his rifle
again.
Annan s visit had endowed Saddam with a legitimacy he had not enjoyed in years was not lost on the Repubhcan Party leadership in Washington. Denouncing the administration's weak acquiescence to Annans "appeasement," the Republicans in Congress looked for a means to discommode both Clinton and Saddam simulThe
fact that
taneously and found
in
it
none other than Ahmad Chalabi.
Ever since the CIA had withdrawn funding from the Congress
at the
Iraqi National
beginning of 1997, the opposition group had fallen on
hard times. Chalabi claimed to be supporting the opposition group out of his
own pocket,
to the tune of no less than $5 million a
INC London
the
The
month, but
headquarters had taken on a semi-deserted look.
once-bustling
INC
center at Salahudin in Kurdistan had been
abandoned since the massacre and headlong flight of September 1996. As an
active opposition
movement widiin
Iraq, the
INC was
defunct.
Nevertheless, to powerful senators like Trent Lott and Jesse
and
their advisers, including the formidable cold-war veteran Richard
Perle, the articulate Chalabi
Speaking
as
was a godsend.
an "elected representative" of the Iraqi people
based on a vote by the three hundred delegates
meeting
in Salahudin
committee that the
back
in
in
INC
some abuse
to the "warrior" Scott Ritter,
United States should deploy
mind was
at the inaugural
leveling
its
far larger
he proposed
The northern zone he
than the area controlled by the Kurds,
including the major cities of Mosul and Kirkuk and Iraq's northern fields.
The southern
at
forces to establish "military
exclusion zones" in northern and southern Iraq.
had
claim
INC was "confronting Saddam on the ground" and
CIA and paying tribute
that the
(a
October 1992), Chalabi told a Senate
had the support of "thousands of Iraqis." After the
Helms
area included Basra and the southern
The INC would take over the administration of these areas, die United States, and would eventually establish
itself as
oil
oil fields.
assisted
by
the provi-
sional
government of Iraq. The whole undertaking would be financed
either
from
Iraqi assets frozen in U.S.
banks since 1991 or by the sale
of oil from the southern zone. This ambitious scheme went
down
well with the Senate majority
EN DGAM E party.
279
A Democrat who had the bad taste
embezzlement charges lapse of the Petra
to bring
up the
issue of tlie
against Chalabi in Jordan following the col-
Bank
in
1989 was roundly abused by the former
banker's supporters, along with a suggestion that even the mention of this
event "had the earmarks of a plant from the White House or the
CIA." In the following months, support for the Iraqi opposition and Chalabi in particular blossomed in Congress, which voted $5 million to establish a "Radio
that
Free Iraq" along the
had been beamed
into Eastern
lines of the
Radio Free Europe
Europe during the cold
war.
Another $5 million was voted for the "Iraqi democratic opposition," with the proviso "that a significant portion of the support for the democratic opposition
should go to the Iraqi National Congress, a group
that has demonstrated the capacity to effectively challenge the Sad-
dam Hussein regime with representation from ish
Sunni, Shia, and Kurd-
elements of Iraq." Thus, while
many of its former
leading Iraqi
the Kurdish leaders Barzani and Talabani nization extinct, the
INC,
members
—including
—considered Chalabi
as a weapon in the
going from strength to strength on Capitol
s
orga-
RepubHcans' armory, was
Hill.
For the
the debate that preceded the Gulf War, Iraq had
first
time since
become
a partisan
issue in U.S. politics.
This being the case, the administration had to fight back. Officials briefed journalists on the
all
too evident weakness of the opposition,
word that the CIA was hard work on a whole new covert scheme of "sabotage and subversion" undermine Saddam. Kurdish and Shiite agents would be enlisted including the INC. Others leaked
destroy "key Iraqi pillars of economic and political power, like
at
to to
utility
Whoever was responsible for this "plan" had evidently forgotten Abu Amneh, the mercenary bomber and self-proclaimed veteran of the last CIA covert action against Saddam. Nor did the mooted scheme indicate much knowledge of con-
plants or broadcast stations."
temporary conditions inside
Iraq,
where the
utility plants
were
faifing
By the sumpower plants in Baghdad were regularly out of action for twelve hours and more a day. On a more practical level, the administration made efforts to
without the need of any outside intervention by the CIA.
mer of 1998,
the hottest in
reach out to
Saddam s enemy
fifty
years in Iraq, even the
to the east, Iran.
For
years, the "dual
OUT OF THE ASHES
2SD containment"
policy,
by which the Iranians were accorded equal
tus as pariahs with the Iraqis,
had precluded any
sta-
effective collabora-
between Tehran and Washington. But by 1998, the cold war between Washington and Tehran showed signs of winding down, tion
aided by appeals
Mohammed Accordingly,
better
for
from the
relations
May
1997.
the leader of the Iranian-
for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq,
to receive earnest appeals to visit Washington.
overtures, presumably with the in
cleric
Khatami, elected president of Iran in
Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim,
backed Supreme Council
be
liberal
Tehran.
The
Hakim
began
rejected these
encouragement of the powers
that
Iranian authorities were not about to help solve
Washington's Iraq problem without receiving something tangible in return, such as U.S. blessing for shipment of Central Asian oil across
Iranian territory.
At the same time, the State Department moved to rebuild old alliances.
Before August 1996, northern Iraq had been a "military
exclusion zone" denied to Iraqi forces. Ruminating on various possible
means of challenging Saddam, the to restore the status
State
Department now took
quo in Kurdistan. Accordingly,
1998,
Massoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani were
for a
peace meeting, lodging
at the
in early
invited to
Key Bridge
steps
September
Washington
Marriott Hotel. In
return for a firm guarantee of American military protection against
Saddam, the two leaders agreed
to swallow their
mutual enmity once
again and unite in a reformed Kurdish government, with elections to
foUow. Barzani agreed to share the tolls
and Talabani agreed
money from
that Arbil should
the border-crossing
be jointly controlled by the
two groups. As Barzani and his delegation came and went through the Marriott lobby during the negotiations, they were surveyed with vocal
enmity by Jaliwar al-Sourchi who, by coincidence, had booked himself into the
same
hotel while in Washington on a business
trip.
As he mut-
tered imprecations against his tribal enemies, the blood feuds of the distant
mountains of Kurdistan seemed suddenly very
Chalabi greeted the
initial
near.
news of the Kurdish agreement with
exultation. "Things are really moving,"
he said the day
after the
agreement was announced. But these high hopes were dashed when the Kurdish leaders
flatly
refused to have anything to do with him.
Even an imperious summons from the
office of
Senator Jesse Helms
EN DBAM E for the pair to
come
ZB
1
meeting with Chalabi could not sway
to a joint
them. The discussion with Helms s messenger became acrimonious, with ugly words such as "embezzler" being tossed about.
appear that the
To add
INC would be
to Chalabi
s
It
did not
returning to Salahudin anytime soon.
vexation, the
CIA
leaked word that the agency's
inspector general was investigating the agency's prior handling of
both the
INC and the Accord operations,
including the use of funds.
This did not sway Chalabi's partisans in Congress, however,
who by
October had passed the "Iraq Liberation Act," authorizing $97 million for the
where
arming and training of the Iraqi opposition. Precisely
this training
was
to take place
and who would be trained was
not specified.
Meanwhile, reviewing the recent
crises over
Unscom, U.S.
officials
concluded that the confrontations with Saddam had been a disaster. In late April, President Clinton secretly
there would be no
more attempts
at
decreed
that, for the
time being,
mihtary action to force the Iraqis
to allow access to presidential sites or
anywhere
else to the
Unscom
Even when tests on a missile warhead excavated from one where Iraq had secretly destroyed weapons in 1991 indicated that it had once contained VX, thus giving the lie to Iraqi denials that it had ever succeeded in "weaponizing" the lethal chemical, the administration showed little appetite for an immediate face-off. In Baghdad, Saddam was stepping up the level of his rhetoric by demanding a speedy conclusion of the Unscom mission and threatening grave but unspecified retaliation if sanctions were not lifted. Unscom was still going about its work, seeking elusive documents and inspectors.
of the
sites
other evidence of Iraqi perfidy.
On
August
5,
however, the Iraqi gov-
ernment announced that it was ending all cooperation with the inspectors,
thus ending their searches.
The White House,
true to the April
decision to swear off military confrontations over the issue,
had
little
reaction.
By now, Washington knew for certain that Saddam had been erately seeking a provocation.
An
delib-
electronic intelligence interception
of a conversation between Tariq Aziz and Russian foreign minister Pri-
makov revealed Aziz
angrily complaining that "the
Americans are not
reacting" to the action against the inspectors. If the fact that the recent intrusive searches
had been to the advantage of Saddam was now clear
OUT OF THE ASHES
ZBZ
Madeleine Albright, the point was
to high-level officials such as
vant to Scott Ritter.
with his work by high-level
complaining that "the
no arms control
at
irrele-
On August 27, he resigned, citing the interference
all.
illusion of "
Washington and London and
officials in
With
this
arms control
is
more dangerous than
and subsequent denunciations of the
administration s weakness in the face of Saddam s defiance, the articulate
ex-marine swiftly became as
much a hero as Ahmad Chalabi to the
Republicans, anxious as they were to malign Clinton administration
poHcy on
Iraq.
Ritter lost
no time
the threat from at least
magnitude and imminence of
in asserting the
Saddam s hidden
Saddam had
arsenal, declaring that
three nuclear weapons ready for use as soon as he laid his
hands on the necessary This was too
material (uranium 235 or plutonium).
fissile
much for many of his former colleagues on the inspection
teams. Gary Dillon, leader of the "action team" deployed by the International
Atomic Energy Agency
(tlie
IAEA)
to
work on the
nuclear aspects of Iraq's weapons programs, asked Ritter
specifically
how he had
"From a nordiem European The response from the nuclear
learned of these three nuclear devices. intelligence source," replied Ritter.
experts was laughter.
"For little
United States pushes the
political reasons, tlie
IAEA
discrepancies in Iraq's nuclear accounting so that the
kept open, explains one '
official closely
short of lobotomizing or killing
nuclear program facilities
and
is
finished.
We
wound on
can be
involved in the operation, "but
the Iraqi nuclear scientists, the Iraqi
have closed down
all
their nuclear
as the
ful relationship
Unscom
martyr, Ritter
now inflicted
the organization. In an interview with the Israeli
newspaper Haaretz, he spoke
in glowing
terms of his close and
fruit-
with Israeli intelligence, as well as detailing such hith-
erto closely held itor Iraqi
to find
activities."
Having achieved fame another
all
file
Unscom
secrets as the organization's ability to
communications.
On
the
same day
his
mon-
Haaretz interview
appeared, the Washington Post reported that Ritter, with his superiors'
approval,
had been
Unscom's U-2 spy plane
in the habit of bringing film taken
to Israel for processing
and
analysis.
few months before, the United States had been seeking to support in asserting Unscom's right to inspect
at will.
by
Only a
rally
Arab
Given
this
ENDGAME admission of collusion with
Israel,
prospect of any Arab support for
As they maneuvered, both
November
1,
Saddam upped
2B3
however well intentioned, the
Unscom were
sides
clearly fading away.
were using Unscom
the ante by suspending
as a tool.
On
cooperation
all
with Unscom's long-term monitoring program, meaning that the inspectors could no longer check to ensure that sites already visited
were not being used famihar pattern. that they forth
work on weapons. Events now followed a States and Great Britain announced bomb Iraq. Statements of defiance poured
for
The United
were ready
to
from Baghdad. At the very
actually in the air
on
their
way
last
minute, with U.S. warplanes
to attack Iraq, the Iraqi
offered to resume "full co-operation" with Unscom.
government
The bombers
returned to their bases, but only for a brief period.
The Clinton Administration and Saddam Hussein,
appeared,
it
were both intent on fomenting the much postponed bombing attack.
Richard Butler's inspectors returned to Baghdad and went
about their searches. Most of these passed off without incident, but
some occasions provided just enough non-cooperation to justify Butlers subsequent report that Saddam had once again failed to live up to his commitments. Reliable reports at the time suggested that Butler had composed his report in close consultation with Washington. Indeed the vociferous Scott Ritter went on record the Iraqis on
with the claim that the inspections had been a "set-up," designed to "generate a conflict that would justify a bombing."
Saddam
part, in insisting that Butler stick to the letter of the
negotiated by Rolf Ekeus in June 1996 and send no inspectors to sensitive sites such as
appears to have been no
less
for his
agreement
more than four
Baath Party headquarters,
eager to have the
bombs
fall.
In Washington, of course, everything was overshadowed by the
ongoing impeachment proceedings against President Clinton.
he duly ordered the long heralded bombing his
strike
When
on December
16,
Republican opponents reacted with angry suspicion, claiming with
some
justice that the attack
had been timed
to serve as a distraction
from the presidents problems at home. However, apart from the postponement of the House of Representatives' debate on impeachment by one day, the attack on Iraq was of little political benefit to the commander in chief
OUT OF THE ASHES
ZB4-
The bombing elicited furious protests from France, and Egypt, while angry crowds demonstrated behalf of the Iraqi people. Palestinians set
in the
fire to
Russia, China,
Arab world on
the American flags
they had been given to wave in honor of President Clinton's
Gaza only a few days before. Nor was the
Saddam
attack effective in
visit to
humbling
or ehminating his alleged arsenal of weapons of mass
destruction. Ninety seven targets overall
were attacked, of which only
nine were reported by the Pentagon as fully destroyed.
Of
eleven
chemical and biological weapons production facilities targeted, none were destroyed. The Special Repubhcan Guards and other bastions of the regime associated with weapons concealment were similarly slated for destruction, but their peacetime barracks results in
even assuming they had not evacuated
and
they did in January 1991, the
offices as
terms of facilities destroyed appear to have been meager.
The Pentagon expressed most
surprise at the lack of antiaircraft
were the massed ranks of
fire,
but
Iraq's
sion
news cameras from around the world on the roof of the interna-
effective defenses
tional press center in
Baghdad. Under such
States could not risk high-profile "collateral
attack
on the Amariya shelter
women and
that
televi-
scrutiny, the
United
damage" such
as the
had incinerated four hundred
children eight years before. In
Baghdad
itself,
people
greeted the renewed offensive with weary resignation. "Iraqis," as
one of them remarked, "fear that a game
is
being played over which
they have no interest. They feel they are always the victims, whether it is
sanctions or bombs."
wailed
at nightfall,
The
streets
emptied
as the air-raid sirens
but wedding parties continued
at the al-Rashid
hotel and the Iraqi dinar in contrast to previous crises, retained
its
value against the dollar. "Operation Desert Fox," repeatedly threat-
ened and postponed
for
more than
a year,
had turned out be only a
shabby and diminished echo of the storm unleashed on Iraq
in the
distant days of January 1991.
man who had defied Saddam's nuclear weapon so many years before, was living in
Dr. Hussain al-Shahristani, the
orders to build a
Tehran. His dedicated work on behalf of Iraqi refugees
with considerable moral authority
among
endowed him
the Iraqi Shia and a wide
range of contacts inside Iraq, especially in the south.
Two days into the
bombing he wrote one of the present authors an urgent message. "A
ENDGAME
2B5
number of people have contacted us from inside asked
Iraq,"
he wrote, "and
the Americans are really going to continue this [bombing]
if
campaign
to
weaken Saddam
free themselves
rise
up and
from the regime. The memory of betrayal during the people s minds, and they do not want to repeat
last intifada is vivid in
that tragic experience." attitude clear
where people can
to a point
by closing
The its
Iranian government
had made
its
own
border with Iraq in order to prevent any
assistance to a potential uprising.
Following seventy hours of bombing. President Clinton gave
He
Shahristani and his people their answer.
confident
we have
Saddam Hussein
achieved our mission"
also
"I
al-
am
called off the attacks.
pronounced himself the winner. "God rewarded
you," the Iraqi leader told his subjects in a cast across the
declared victory
—and
—
TV address that was broad-
Arab world, "and delighted your hearts with the crown
of victory." Iraqi spokesmen insisted that there would be no further
cooperation with Unscom, while in Washington, President Clinton
promised tions in
to "sustain
what have been among the most intensive sanc-
UN history." It was an ominous prospect.
Amid
the furor over Scott Ritter s resignation in the
1998, another resignation passed with day, the Irish
little
Quaker who had been sent
attention.
to
Baghdad
summer
of
Denis Hallito supervise
the oil-for-food arrangement under which revenues from exports of Iraqi oil
were entrusted
to the custody of the
United Nations to buy
food and other humanitarian supplies, was leaving Baghdad in gust.
As he
left,
he directed a
bitter blast at the
dis-
poHcy that caused
"four thousand to five thousand children to die unnecessarily every
month due
to the impact of sanctions because of the
water and sanitation, inadequate
diet,
breakdown of
and the bad internal health
situation."
In her
March 1997 speech
inite continuation
at
Georgetown announcing the indef-
of sanctions. Secretary of State Albright had
described the oil-for-food deal just then coming into effect as being
"designed to ease the suffering of civilians throughout Iraq." As
happened, the month
after she spoke,
little
so
UNICEF conducted a survey
of some fifteen thousand children under
showed
it
five across Iraq.
The
results
difference between the cities and the countryside. Just
under a quarter of the children were underweight
for their age.
OUT OF THE ASHES
ZS6 more than
Slightly
one
in ten
for-food
were chronically malnourished. Almost
was acutely malnourished. In March 1998,
program had been
had been survey.
a quarter
after the oil-
in effect for twelve
months and indeed
UNICEF
did another similar
vastly increased in value,
The percentage of underweight
a statistically insignificant margin.
down by Those with chronic malnutrition children had gone
had declined by eight tenths of a percentage
point, while the acutely
malnourished infants and toddlers had actually increased by a tiny fraction.
Commenting on
these chilling
the authors of the
statistics,
report noted in bold type that "It would appear that the 'oil-for-food'
program has not yet made
a measurable difference to the
young
children of Iraq."
For
hungry and dying children
Halliday, the
in a land
where
overeating had been the major prewar pediatric problem were only
the most obvious effect of the United Nations blockade. Sanctions, he said,
were
biting into the fabric of society in less visible but almost
equally devastating ways.
They had,
for example, increased the
num-
ber of divorces (up to 3 million Iraqi professionals had emigrated, leaving their
womenfolk behind
to
head the household) and reduced the
number of marriages because young people could not afford to
marry.
Crime had increased. An entire generation of young people had grown up in isolation from the outside world. He compared them, ominously, to the orphans of the fanatical Taliban
what
tliey
Afghan war who had spawned the cruel and
movement. These young
Iraqis
were
intolerant of
considered to be their leaders' excessive moderation. "What
should be of concern
is
die possibility of more fundamentalist Islamic
thinking developing," concluded HaUiday. "It a possible spin-off of the sanctions regime.
is
not well understood as
We are pushing people to
take extreme positions."
Following the suppression of the great insurgencies of 1991, Sad-
dam Hussein had announced
his intention of sitting
back and wait-
ing to take advantage of his enemies' mistakes. In the ensuing years,
those mistakes had been plentiful.
Saddam himself had survived make the Iraqi peo-
unscathed. But the biggest mistake of all was to ple pay the price of besieging Saddam.
One
day, the bill will
come
due.
Postscript
The United States fought the Gulf War to prevent change. dam
Hussein, for so long a useful regional
natural order of things
ally,
by invading Kuwait on August
thereby threatening Western control of Middle Eastern
And
armies, fleets, and
so,
—
back
to
resume its
August
its
1,
former
1990.
bombers were sent
Once
this
still
Iraq, so
2,
1990,
reserves.
to turn the clock
by the
conflict
and shorn of
united and potent enough to
continue countering revolutionary Iran.
ment of
oil
was accomplished, Iraq would
role, albeit crippled
most dangerous weapons, but
Sad-
had upset the
Any changes
in the govern-
Washington hoped, would be confined
to the
smooth removal of Saddam himself by means of a military coup. Pending a turnover of leadership, Saddam would be contained, administration officials liked to
were
to
be locked
say, "in his
in with him, out of sight
box."
The
as
Iraqi people
and out of mind,
for the
duration of his rule.
But the clock could not be turned back. Whatever the hopes of the victors, the war had brought inevitable and irreversible changes.
Western public opinion, suddenly educated strous aspects of Saddam's regime,
as to the
more mon-
would no longer permit the brutal
repression of the Kurdish minority, thereby forcing the United States to sponsor a
The
semiautonomous Kurdish
Iraqi opposition could
Washington and other alhed
statelet in
northern Iraq.
no longer be spumed and derided
capitals as before.
in
They were therefore
OUT OF THE ASHES
2SS
recruited as supporting players in the CIA's covert program to organize a coup.
Weak inside
Iraq
itself,
the exiled opposition groups yet
served as an increasingly vocal and embarrassing reminder that
American policy toward Iraq was having the
effect of preserving the
status quo.
Most important, Saddam himself
consistently refused to play his
assigned role. Altliough weakened by war and rebellions, he did not victim to a putsch
fall
showed great
skill
by
his Baathist peers.
in manipulating divisions
and Kurdish communities
in Iraq to his
The resourceful dictator among the Sunni, Shia,
own advantage. At his moment
of greatest danger in March 1991, the Sunni officer corps in Baghdad
demonstrated that they preferred Saddam to the rebels tured northern and southern Iraq.
who had cap-
Nor was Saddam prepared
to
acquiesce in the decision to destroy his strategic nuclear, chemical,
and
biological
retreated only
weapons programs. Resisting with
when
tary action, as in the
so,
cunning, he
faced with the real direat of renewed allied mili-
summer of 1991,
the defection of Hussein
Even
artful
Saddam
or betrayal from inside, as with
Kamel four years
later.
stayed on the defensive until 1996.
Then he
sent his tanks into the Kurdish capital of Arbil and proved to his satisfaction that the
that
United States was unwilling to intervene. From
moment on he felt free to provoke repeated confrontations with December 1998, the United States finally carried
his enemies. In
out
its
oft-repeated threat and launched a heavy military strike.
After four hundred cruise missiles had hit Iraq,
from the smoke and ashes with
power apparently undiminished. United States has been quite wound. The enforcement of economic sanctions has been
Unable to willing to
Saddam emerged
his
strike effectively, the
the only instrument of policy toward Iraq pursued with consistency this weapon was deemed a "demonstrable success" in keeping Saddam weak, the real wounded were to be found among the Iraqi people. By 1998, four to five thousand children were dying every month because of sanctions. Alarmed that Saddam was turning the suffering of his people to his own propaganda advantage, the United States encouraged the introduction of the oil-for-food program. But by December 1998,
and vigor by successive U.S. administrations. While
after this
program had been
in operation for almost
two
years, half
pasTSCRiPT of all Iraqi children were
still
zsg
malnourished. 'More food was arriving,
but widespread lack of clean water, a functioning sewage system, or electricity
Despite
meant
had returned
that Iraq
this exercise in
what Pope John-Paul
cal warfare" against the Iraqi people, the
weakened the regime s
grip
has called "biologi-
II
economic blockade has not
on power. ReUance on the
has, if anything, strengthened the
have proved ineffective
to a preindustrial age.
in forcing
governments
official ration
control. Sanctions
Saddam Hussein
to
comply with
United Nations resolutions and led to a tragedy of which the West-
em
world
is
largely unaware.
No one
died as a result of sanctions so ies
far,
put the number of casualties
half a million. This
is
far
really
among
children alone at well over
higher than the death
War and indeed approaches the benchmark set in Rwanda and Cambodia. Arguments against
knows how many have
but reputable international bod-
toll
from the Gulf
modern
for
sanctions, of course, leave
holocausts
open the problem
man against whom they are ostensibly aimed. The question "What do we do about Saddam?" is posed with increasing desperation during each new crisis between Iraq and the United States. Those who ask it usually want to be told that there is a simple formula for getting rid of the Iraqi leader. There are many who are willing to claim that, given enough willpower in Washingof the continued rule of the
ton, his departure
coup or
would not be so
guerrilla warfare.
alhes passed
up
But
lowed by a ground its
in practice the
arrange by military
United States and
its
Saddam Hussein in armies stopped on the borders of Iraq. Nobody
their
chance of getting
1991 when their now shows any enthusiasm
lend
difficult to
assault
for a
rid of
renewed U.S.
—even
if
military buildup fol-
Saudi Arabia was prepared to
support for such a venture.
The more realistic question that should be asked is not how to Saddam but how to limit his ability to do harm. This has been the justification for Unscom and its weapons inspectors. They prevented Saddam Hussein from rebuilding his nuclear, chemical, get rid of
and biological weapons programs (beyond the embryonic which they may presently bors.
exist)
and using them against
state in
his neigh-
But the main victims of Saddam Hussein have always been
ordinary people.
It is
they
who have
suffered through two wars.
OUT ar THE ASHES
290 They have seen
their country destroyed. Ironically,
it is
they
who
are
the primary target of sanctions.
Any visitor to Iraq knows that Iraqis blame sanctions and those who enforce them for much of their present misery. It is no less clear that bitterness
dam's downfall will
and hatred of
come
at
the hands of his
dent of outside intervention aware.
He knows
in
fact of
own
people, indepen-
which he himself
is
well
and hatred of the masses who
for a
his portraits
March 1991 has not gone
reckoning.
—a
that the rage
few delirious days defaced
their ruler also runs deep. Sad-
and lynched
his
henchmen
away. Sooner or later there will be a
Notes Chapter
1
Saddam at the Abyss
:
page 5 Statements: Foreign Broadcast Information
NES) 91
Survey (FBIS,
page 7 Informed opinion: see Colin Powell, York:
Random House,
page 7 "What
Near East
My American Journey, (New
1995), p. 461.
politics?":
is
Service,
043, p. 33.
Interview vidth Dr. Hussain al-Shahristani,
Tehran, 4/10/98.
page 7
"I
consider myself to have died then": Interview with Abdel Karim
Kabariti,
Amman,
3/9/98.
page 7 Invasion decision from God: Guardian, London, 6/10/91. page 8 Tariq
Aziz:
Interview by
Amman, February page 8
Khairallah:
Andrew Cockbum with Zeid
Wafiq al-Samarrai, however, thinks that
uinely an accident, recalling that the weather was bad to tear the roof off his headquarters. Interview,
page 8 "Only two Dossier:
Rifai,
1992.
divisional
commanders":
it
was gen-
enough
that day
London, 3/10/98.
Pierre
Salinger,
Secret
The Hidden Agenda Behind the Gulf War (London: Penguin
Books, 1991),
p. 15.
make
page 8
"if I
page 9
"stay motionless":
a peace proposal": Ibid., p. 187.
Faleh Jabber,
in
Iraq Since the Gulf War,
Prospects for Democracy, Fran Hazelton, editor (London:
ZED
Books,
1994), p. 104.
page 9 "Las Vegas": Michael Gordon and Bernard E. als'
War (New York: Back Bay Books,
Trainor,
The Gener-
1995), p. 215.
page 9 Racetrack: Patrick Cockbum, Independent, London,
1/17/91.
NOTES
ZgZ page 10
"Our main hobby": Interview
page 10
fear of nuclear strike: This point
by several
Iraqis in late January.
was no
unlikely to happen, there
page 10
Baghdad, 1/16/91.
in
was made
By the time
to Patrick
Cockbum
was clear that
it
this
was
fuel for the refugees to return.
elephants: Personal observation, Patrick
Cockbum, Baghdad,
2/17/91.
page 10
Saddam with
page 10
"We knew
the troops: Patrick
all
Cockbum, Baghdad,
1/16/91.
about these weapons": Interview with Brigadier
Mi, London, 3/13/98.
page 11
"their ancient reputation for savagery
Mesopotamia 1914-1917,
Loyalties:
.
.
.":
Sir
Arnold Wilson:
Vol. 1, (Oxford: University Press,
1930), p. 136.
page 13
Captain Shirwan: Interview, Salahudin, Kurdistan, June 1991.
page 13
mer
United States avoided researching senior
"We
page 13 rai,
CIA
No
casualties: Interview with for-
Washington, 2/8/98.
didn't lose a single officer": Interview with
London,
page 13
official,
Wafiq al-Samar-
6/2/98.
casualties
from Tulaiha: Interview with Hassan Hamzi,
Tulaiha, July 1991.
"We were
page 15
anxious to withdraw": Faleh Jabber in
Why the Intifada
Fran Hazelton, editor (London: Zed Books, 1993),
Failed,
page 16
The
page 19
Outbreak of Kurdish
hotels: Patrick
Cockbum,
intifada:
Knowledge, What Forgiveness?: York: Farrar, Straus
& Giroux,
Jonathan Randal, After Such
Encounters with Kurdistan (New
1997), pp. 40-41.
page 19
"Haji Bush," Ibid., p. 45.
page 20
Hillah: Interview with
page 20
"At
Silence
My
p. 107.
interviews in Baghdad, 4/22/91.
Hussain al-Shahristani, Tehran, 4/10/98.
first we were a httle crazy": Kanan (New York: Norton, 1993), p. 73.
Maldya, Cruelty and
WW
page 21
Fatwa and bodies:
page 21
"Nobody knew what was going
ibid.,
pp. 74-75. on": Interview with Sayid Majid
al-Khoie, London, 6/2/98.
page 21
Jabber, op.
page 22
"They swear by the Koran": Interview with Saad
cit.,
pp. 108-109. Jabr,
London,
3/12/98.
page 22
Iranian behavior: Interview with Hussain al-Shahristani, Tehran,
3/10/98.
page 25
Intercepted message: Interview with Wafiq al-Samarrai, Lon-
don, 3/10/98.
NOTES
"one thousand dead in Basra": Inteiview and personal observa-
page 25 tion
293
by Patrick Cockbum
in Basra, 4/22/91.
Scenes in Kerbala and Najaf:
page 26
Cockbum,
Visit to
Kerbala and Najaf, Patrick
4/15/91. Interview with General
Rahman
governor of Kerbala, and Abdul
Abdul Khaliq Abdul
Aziz,
al-Dhouri, governor of Najaf.
Both
men emphasized Iranian involvement, showing some ammunition
and a
TNT charge that they said were of Iranian origin.
page 26
Al-Khoie meeting with Saddam, and Mohammed's interrogation:
Interview with Sayid Majid al-Khoie, London, 6/2/98.
Mohammed Taqi
recounted these events to his brother, Sayid Majid, before he was killed in
what
his family
is
convinced was a government-arranged car accident
between Najaf and Kerbala on July 21, 1994. page 27 Al-Khoie presented by the government; Observed by Patrick
Cockbum, Baghdad, 4/15/91. page 27 The place can be identified because
at
one point the
film
shows a
road sign saying "Rumaytha."
page 28 Zibari,
page 28
"Only when you Kurds took Kirkuk": Interview wdth Hoshyar
London,
6/3/98.
Thousands of Kurdish volunteers: Interview with Massoud
Barzani, Salahudin,
page 29
May
1991.
Bullets: Interview with
Cockbum, London,
Wafiq al-Sammari by Andrew and Patrick
3/10/98.
page 29 "mistakes": Interview with Saad al-Bazzaz, former editor of
al-
Jumaniya, by Patrick Cockbum, London, 3/16/98.
Chapter page 31
2:
"We
"We Have Saddam Hussein Still Here"
didn't
have a
"Unfinished Business:
page 32 Naval
ABC
News, Peter Jennings Reporting,
The CIA and Saddam Hussein,"
June 1993, "Pushing
Them
USAF
out the Back Door," United States
Institute Proceedings.
advance on Baghdad: Michael R. Gordon and Bernard E. Trainor,
The Generals' War (New York: Back Bay Books, 1995),
page 33
6/26/97.
Escape of Republican Guard: Colonel James G. Burton,
(retired),
page 33
single":
"The White House was
terrified":
p.
452.
Interview with Ambassador
Charles Freeman, Washington, 3/31/98.
page 33
"no poUtical overtones": Telephone discussion with James Aldus,
5/28/98.
NOTES
ZS A Saddam
page 34
top of target
at
Untold Story of the Persian Gulf
list:
Rick Atkinson, Crusade: The
War (New
York:
Houghton
Mifflin,
1993), p. 272.
page 34
"focus of our efforts": Washington Post, 9/16/90.
page 34
"We
do
don't
assassinations":
ing, "Unfinished Business:
ABC
News, Peter Jennings Report-
The CIA and Saddam Hussein,"
6/26/97.
page 36
Agent report on
page 36
Schultz forbids contacts: Senate Foreign Relations Committee
report, "Civil
War
shelter: Atkinson, op.
cit.,
in Iraq," (Washington, D.C.:
p. 276.
Government
Printing
Office), 5/1/91.
page 36
"stupid stuff:
Interview with Peter Galbraith; Washington,
D.C.; 5/30/98.
page 37
"get rid of Saddam": Senate Foreign Relations Committee, op.
page 38
"I
did have a strong feeling":
Gordon and Trainor,
op.
cit.,
cit.
p. 517.
(Authors' emphasis in quotation.)
page 39
"the Iranian occupation": Ibid., p. 516.
page 39
CIA gives
arms:
named; interviewed
in
Former American diplomat who asked not
to
be
Washington, D.C., 5/29/98.
page 40
"never our goal": Gordon and Trainor, op.
page 40
"flimsy construction":
cit.,
p. 517.
Interview with Ambassador Freeman,
3/31/98.
Mary McGrory, Washington
President compared to Lincoln:
page 40
Post, 3/26/91.
page 40
White House meeting: Washington
page 41
"Saddam
will crush":
page 41
"Not that
I
at
Washington
Post, 3/27/91.
Post, 3/29/91.
know of: Question and answer
session with reporters
Bethesda Ward Hospital, Maryland, 3/27/91. Transcription from the
public papers of George Bush, www.csdl.
"Why
page 41
TAMU.edu/BushLib/
are you so worried about the Shia": Interview with Sayid
Majid al-Khoie, London, 6/2/98.
page 42
"Do
page 43
Pickering, Gates: Los Angeles Times, "U.S. Sanctions Threat
Takes
I
think": presidential press conference, 4/16/91.
UN by Surprise," 5/9/91, p. AlO.
page 50
"smart but not wise": Interview with Abdul Karim al-Kabariti,
3/9/98.
page 52
Fadlallah a follower of al-Khoie: Olivier Roy, The Failure of
Political Islam
(London: Penguin, 1995),
p. 57.
N
Chapter
3:
OTES
29 5
The Origins of Saddam Hussein
A week to travel to Basra: Hanna Batatu, The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
page 58
University Press, 1978), p. 16
page 59
thirteen days to Basra:
Norman
F.
Dixon,
On
the Psychology of
Military Incompetence (London: Jonathan Cape, 1976), p. 103.
page 59
Rebellion in Najaf: Batatu, op.
page 61
"To
page 62
British defeat at Kut:
depend on the
19.
cit., p.
tribe": Ibid., p. 21.
David Fromkin,
A
Peace to
End All
Peace
(London: Andre Deutsch, 1989), pp. 200-203. page 62 British cemetery in Kut now a swamp: Personal observation by Patrick
page 63
Cockbum,
April 1998.
"the antithesis of democratic government": H.V.F. Winstone,
Gertrude Bell (London: Jonathan Cape, 1978), pp. 215-216. page 63 three quarters of the population were tribal: Fromkin, op. pp.
cit.,
449^50.
page 63
"a flabby serpent": Batatu, op.
page 63
"The bottom seems
cit.,
p. 14.
dropped
to have
out":
General Aylmer Hal-
dane, The Insurrection in Mesopotamia (Cambridge: Allborough Publishing, 1992), p. 37.
page 63
"Since you took Baghdad": Winstone, op.
page 64
63,000
rifles:
Oxford University Press, 1992),
page 64
"The bottom seems
Gertrude
p. 222.
p. 195.
to have
dropped
out": Selected Letters
edited by Lady BeU, (London: Ernest Bell, 1927), Vol.
Bell,
489. She was writing
page 64
cit.,
Elie Kedourie, Politics in the Middle East (Oxford:
"The Arab
is
on June
14, less
than three weeks before the uprising.
most treacherous": Haldane, op.
page 64
Shia-Sunni unity: Batatu, op.
page 65
"They now know what
real
of
II, p.
cit.,
cit.,
p. 36.
p. 23.
bombing means": David McDowall,
A Modem History of the Kurds (London: B. Tauris, 1997), "I am very doubtful": Haldane, op. cit., p. xiii.
p. 180.
page 65
Lawrence and poison
page 65
T.
page 66
"There
page 67
Death of royal
page 67
"Iraq today": Said K. Aburish,
E.
and the Arab page 67
is still":
Elite
Iraqi poets
Batatu, op.
gas: Ibid., p. vi. cit.,
family: Ibid., op.
pp. 25-26. cit.,
A
p. 801.
Brutal Friendship: The West
(London: Victor GoUancz, 1997),
winning
don, 6/24/98. Poets
prizes: Interview with
who wrote
that the
advantage qualified for larger prizes.
p. 135.
Faleh Jabber, Lon-
comparison was to Saddam's
NOTES
296 page 69
"To
Gavin Young, Iraq: Land of Two Rivers
talk like a Tikriti":
(London: Collins, 1980),
p.
98
"One of my uncles": Fuad M attar, Saddam Hussein: The Man Cause and the Future (London: Third World Center, 1981), p. 228
page 69 the
page 70
safer in prison than
page 70
Escape from
page 70
"They gave him a
page 71
"My headmaster
jail:
on the
streets: Ibid., pp.
31-32
46
Ibid., p.
pistol": Ibid., p. 31.
told me": Interview with Dr.
Hakim, "The Mind of Saddam Hussein,"
WGBH,
Abdul Wahad
al-
Frontline, Boston,
2/26/91.
page 71
Saddam pays blood money: Interview with Faleh
Jabar,
London,
6/25/98.
page 71
"A Baathi would have looked
page 72
"a very superficial wound": Interview with Dr. Tahsin Muallah,
WGBH, Frontline, was
cit.,
p. 1014.
Boston, 2/26/91.
page 73
"It
page 73
Saddams
page 73
"We helped him
like
in vain": Batatu, op.
you see
in the movies":
escape: Mattar, op.
cit.,
Independent, 3/31/98.
pp.
33^3.
go": Interview with
Abdel Majid Farid, Lon-
don, 6/2/98.
page 74
Saddam and
page 74
"A great
the bar in Cairo:
New
victory": Interview with
York Times, 10/24/90.
James
Critchfield; Washington,
D.C.; 4/10/91.
page 74
"CIA
page 75
Qassim's body: Kedourie, op.
page 75
"military aristocracy": Interview with Faleh Jabber, 6/24/98.
page 76
"exactly as
train":
Aburish, op.
we used
to
cit. cit.,
run
p. 320.
Tikrit":
Interview with
Kamran
Karadaghi, Iraqi journalist, London, 1997.
page 76
Saddams
health and taste for Portuguese rose: Interview with
Wafiq al-Samarrai, London, 3/10/98.
page 76
"He
page 78
Trial
will
go back": Interview with Kamran Karadaghi, 6/6/98.
of "conspirators":
WGBH, Frontline,
Transcript
of videotape
shown on
Boston, 2/26/91.
page 78
Body returned
page 80
"that
in a truck: Iraqi source,
mummy":
Mattar, op.
page 80
DIA
report: Independent,
page 81
CIA
aid to
cit.,
name withheld by request.
pp. 130-135.
London, 12/12/92
Saddam: Interview with Wafiq al-Samarrai, London,
3/10/98.
page 82
"War
doesn't
mean
just tanks": Pierre Salinger, Secret Dossier:
The Hidden Agenda Behind the Gulf War (London: Penguin Books, 1991) p. 31.
page 82 Iraq's
Iraq's
debt in 1990: Barry Rubin a«d Amatzia Baram, editors,
Road to War (New York:
page 83
297
OTES
N
St.
Martins Press, 1993), pp. 70-83.
"The ground bursts open": Samir
al-JChalil,
The Monument:
Art,
page 83
and Responsibility in Iraq (London: Andre Deutsch, 1991) p. 2. "We agreed with the American side": Salinger, op. cit., pp. 239-41.
page 83
"You are a force for moderation":
page 84
"When
Vulgarity,
Karim
Amman,
page 84
"bum
page 84
"The Saudis want
page 85 Aziz,"
Chapter page 89
New
to
Rubin and Baram,
weaken
original plan:
op.
cit.,
p. 12.
us": Salinger, op. cit., p. 65.
Milton Viorst, "Interview with Tariq
Yorker, 6/24/91.
Saddam Fights for Hrs Long Arm
4:
Experiences
of
Andrew Cockbum with page 90
3/9/98.
half your house":
Saddams The
Amman": Interview with Abdul
the king got back to
al-Kabariti,
Ibid., p. 65.
Dr.
Hussain
al-Shahristani:
Interviews
by
Dr. al-Shahristani, Tehran, 4/10/98, 4/16/98.
Information on the nuclear program: "The Implementation of
United Nations Security Council Resolutions Relating to Iraq." Report
by the Director General, International Atomic Energy Agency General Conference, August 12, 1996.
page 92
Gas attack on Tehran: Interview with Wafiq al-Samarrai, Lon-
don, 3/13/98.
page 93
"the United States will not tolerate": Statement by Press Secre-
tary Fitzwater
on President Bush's
letter to President
Saddam Hussein
of Iraq, released by the White House, 1/12/91.
page 93 Leslie
page 94
Boomer's revelation: Interview with General Walter Boomer by
Cockbum, Saudi "which
Arabia, 9/90.
shall carry out": Security
Council Resolution 687, para-
graph 9(b)(1).
page 96
"Temporary measure": Interview with Wafiq al-Samarrai, Lon-
don, 3/12/98.
page 98
"I
thought
it
should be over quickly": Interview with Ambas-
sador Rolf Ekeus; Washington, D.C.; 2/9/98.
page 98
"We were very, very skeptical Ekeus open-minded approach": CIA official; Washington, D.C.; 2/6/98. .
.
.
's
Interview with former senior
page 102 Meeting with Tariq Aziz and Hussein Kamel: Interview with Rolf Ekeus, 2/9/98.
page 102 High-level committee: Presentation by Ambassador Richard
Buder
to the
UN
Security Council, 6/3/98.
NOTES
293 page 103 Digging up garden: page 105 CIA
on Saddam s plan
official
with former senior
Ibid.
CIA
official;
weapons program: Interview
for
Washington, D.C.; 2/16/98.
page 106 Group with placards: Independent, London, 9/26/98. page 110
".
.
the Commission
.
is
approaching": Report to the Security
Council, S/1994/138, 10/7/94.
page 111 Rockville, Maryland: Washington
Post, 11/21/97.
page 112 Spertzel, growth media, Aziz explanation: Interview with Rolf Ekeus; Washington, D.C.; 6/16/98.
Chapter page 114
5: "iRAqiis
No
Will Pay the Price"
food in the garbage: Observation by Patrick Cockbum,
7/25/91.
page 115 World Bank equates Iraq with Greece: Anthony Cordesman and
Ahmed
Hashim, Iraq: Sanctions and Beyond (Boulder, CO:
S.
Westview, 1997),
page 115
p. 127.
Iraqi chicken: Interview with
Services,
Doug
Broderick, Catholic ReHef
Baghdad, 9/7/91.
page 115 Oil revenues: Peter Boone, Haris Gazdar, and Athar Hussein, "Sanctions Against Iraq:
Economic and
The Costs of Failure" (New November 1997), p. 8.
page 115 2000 percent food price Survey, volume
page
1
15
page
1
16 Scene
York: Center for
Social Rights,
increase:
XV (Boulder, CO:
Middle East Contemporary
Westview, 1991),
Selling rags as clothes: Personal observation at
p. 437.
by authors, July 1991.
church and aid worker comment: Personal observation
by authors and interview with Doug Broderick of Catholic Relief Services,
Baghdad, July 1991.
page 120 Nuha
al-Radi:
Nuha
al-Radi,
Baghdad Diaries (London: Saqi
Books, 1998), pp. 59-60.
page 122 Blunt
scissors:
"Unsanctioned Suffering:
ment of United Nations Sanctions on nomic and
Social Rights,
page 122 600 percent
page 123
Ahtisaari:
inflation:
Human
Rights Assess-
(New York: Center
for
Eco-
1996).
Independent, London, 4/22/91.
"Report of the United Nations Mission to Assess
Humanitarian Needs saari,
May
Iraq"
in Iraq,"
March 10-16,
1991, led by Martti Ahti-
Undersecretary General for Administration and Management,
excerpts in Middle East Report,
May-June 1991,
page 123 Aga Khan: Independent, London, 7/20/91.
p. 12.
DTES
N
299
page 123 Rations provide 53 percent of basioneeds: "Unsanctioned Suffering," op.
cit.,
p. 986.
page 123 "The system page 124
Kroll:
page 125 Episode
dam s
is
highly equitable": Ibid., p. 18.
Los Angeles Times, 3/23/91, in
Amman
office: Leslie
p.
A-12.
and Andrew Cockbum, "Sad-
Best Ally," Vanity Fair, August 1992.
page 125 Forty-two merchants executed: Cordesman and Hashim, op. cit.,
p. 141.
page 125 "because of the lack of machinery": Interview by Patrick Cock-
bum v^th
Khalid Abdul
page 125 40 percent
Munam
Rashid, 10/17/95.
in agriculture:
Boone, Gazdar, and Hussein, op.
cit.,
p. 25.
page 126 Price of grain:
Ibid., pp.
17-18.
page 128 Amputations: Middle East Contemporary Survey, op.
cit.,
pp.
337-339.
page 129 Blank check: Leslie and Andrew Cockbum, op.
cit.
page 132 Sewage system: Information supplied by Abdullah Mutawi of the Center for
Economic and
both the Harvard and
Social Rights,
CESR trips in
New
York,
who was on
1991 and 1996.
page 132 Deaths from drinking contaminated water: Interview with Dr.
Nada al-Ward,
WHO,
Baghdad, 6/20/98.
page 132 "quarter of the children are suffering from malnutrition": Independent, London, 10/14/85.
page 132 Baghdad study of children: The Lancet, 346, 12/2/95. The study was done by Sarah Zandi and Mary Sith Fawzi on August 23-28, 1995. page 135 "semi-starvation tion in Iraq Since the
diet":
"The Health Conditions of the Popula-
Gulf Crisis" (Geneva:
WHO,
March
1996,) p.
8.
page 136 Dr. Obousy: Interview by Patrick Cockbum with Dr. Deraid Obousy, Baghdad, 4/19/98.
page 137 576,000 dead children:
page 137 90,000 dying every
New
year:
York Times, 12/1/95.
"Unsanctioned Suffering," op.
cit.,
p. 20.
page 138 Madeleine Albright:
CBS News,
60 Minutes, 5/12/96.
page 138 Greece and Mali: Greece comparison from Cordesman and Hashim, op.
cit.,
p.
127 Mali comparison from The Lancet, 346, 12/2/95.
page 139 Prince Khalid:
New
York Times, 12/14/95.
aaa
n
Chapter
otes
Uday and the Royal Family
6:
page 142 Scene
and Andrew Cockbum,
in National Restaurant: Leslie
"Saddam s Best
August 1992.
Ally" Vanity Fair,
page 143 Saddam pictured darning: Fuad Matar, Saddam Hussein: The
Man, the Cause, and the Future (London: Third World Center,
1981),
p. 251.
page 143 "The higher tionships
For an excellent chart showing the
nobility":
among Saddam Hussein,
rela-
the Ibrahims, and the Majids, see
Faleh A. Jabber, "Batailles des clans de ITrak," Le
Monde Diplomatique
(September 1966).
page 144
Hassan al-Majids
Ali
health: Interview
by Andrew and Patrick
Cockbum with General Wafiq al-Samarrai, London, page 145 "What
this
is
4/12/98.
exaggerated figure": Jonathan Randal, After Such
&
Knowledge, What Forgiveness? (New York: Farrar, Straus
Giroux,
1997), pp. 212-214.
page 145 Hussein
at Kerbala:
Hussein Kamel's
real
crime
apart from the mass execution of rebels, was to destroy city.
There are two shrines
Imam tyrs
Hussein and the other
of the Shia
about
in Kerbala,
faith,
who
hundred yards
five
his
site is
now a public
much
of the old
one containing the tomb of
brother al-Abbas, the founding mar-
The
shrines are
apart. In 1991, the Iraqi army, led
by Hussein
died in battle in a.d. 680.
Kamel, systematically destroyed
The
at Kerbala,
all
the buildings between the shrines.
garden.
page 146 Teetotaler Hussein Kamel: Interview with Abdul Karim Khabariti, former Jordanian foreign
page 146 "did not go 8/12/98, reported
to the office":
on
and prime
minister,
Amman,
al-
9/3/98.
Hussein Kamel, press conference,
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts,
page 147 Barzan: Interview with Barzan Ibrahim
8/14/98.
al-Tikriti,
al-Hayat,
translated in Mideast Mirror, 8/31/95.
page 147 "only
legitimacy": Ibid.
page 149 "treacherous and perfidious people": Saddam Hussein, message to the Iraqi people,
FBIS, 8/30/92,
page 150 Saddam apologizes
p. 16.
for land reforms:
Le Monde Diplomatique,
September 1996. page 150 Faleh Jabber: "Why the
Intifada Failed: Faleh Jabber," Iraq
Since the Gulf War, Fran Hazelton, editor (London:
ZED
Books,
1994), p. 115.
page 151
He
page 151
"I
spoke about
did
my SATs":
when he was sixteen: Matar, op. cit., Leslie and Andrew Cockbum, op. cit.
this
p. 16.
NOTES page 151 Outings Ue Glass,
ABC
to the torture
3D
1
chamber: Infefmation suppUed by Char-
News, from interview with General Hassan al-Naquib,
3/21/91.
page 152 Uday goes
into action: Interview, General
Wafiq al-Samarrai,
London, 3/12/98.
page 154 Latif Yahia the double s account of the and Karl Wendl,
/
Was Saddam's Son (New
Jajo IdlUng: Latif Yahia
York: Arcade, 1997), pp.
162-173.
page 155 King Hussein to Idng,
Amman,
as counselor: Interviews with
former close adviser
2/21/93.
page 156 Abdul: Interview with "Abdul," Washington, D.C., 8/20/98.
page 161
Terrorist
bombs
Baghdad: Middle East Contemporary Sur-
in
vey, vol. XVIII, 1994, p. 327, citing Babel, 2/2/94.
Chapter
7:
Intrigue
page 164 Kuwait
crisis,
the Mountains
in
CUnton address: "Clinton ups Heat on
Iraq,"
Chicago Tribune, 10/11/94.
page 165 Offhand remark by CHnton: Thomas Friedman,
New
York
Times, 1/15/95.
ABC
page 166 Key Bridge Marriott: "Unfinished Business: The
page 167 "the
News, Peter Jennings Reporting,
CIA and Saddam
Hussein," 6/26/97.
capability": Ibid,
page 169 "The way the names were depicted": Interview with former
CIA
official;
Washington, D.C.; 3/19/98.
page 170 Fallout from the Ames
case:
Tim Weiner, David
Johnston, and
Neil Lewis, Betrayal: The Story of Aldrich Ames, an American Spy
Random House, 1995), pp. 285-287, and David Nightmover (New York: HarperCollins, 1995), pp. 310-311. (New
York:
page 171 "What page 174 CIA
I
wanted them
recruits Nuri;
to do":
ABC
News, op.
"work separately":
Wise,
cit.
Ibid,
page 175 PKK: The acronym comes from the Kurdish name "Partei Karkaren Kurd," which translates
page 176 CIA support
for
Spokesman Books, 1977)
as
Barzani:
Kurdistan Workers' Party.
CIA: The Pike Report (London:
p. 197.
page 177 Saddam speech, 3/16/91: FBIS-NES-91-052, page 177 Kurdish
politics:
Dowall (London:
I.
A Modem
p. 28.
History of the Kurds by David Mac-
B. Tauris, 1997)
is
an indispensable guide to the
fractured history of the Kurds. For the shifting alliances discussed
above, see pp. 343-354.
N DTE S page 177 "They are obsessed": MacDowall, op.
INC
page 178
militia
p. 385.
cit.,
numbers: Middle East Contemporary Survey,
ume XVIII, 1994, p. 348. page 179 May 1994 fighting: MacDowall,
op.
cit.,
vol-
p. 386.
page 182 Chalabi borrows money: Interview with former INC London, 3/12/98; interview with former CIA
official,
official,
Washington,
6/20/98.
page 183 "The INA was page 183
as leaky as a sieve": Interview with
former CIA
Washington, D.C.; 8/20/98.
official;
"I
liked Bob":
Interview with Hoshyar Zibari; Washington,
D.C.; 3/19/98.
page 186
"I told
him": Los Angeles Times, 2/15/98.
page 186 "Wafiq, who we had been paying": Interview with Hoshyar Washington, D.C.; 3/19/98.
Zibari;
page 188 Nuri
Chapter
flies
B:
to Washington:
Deaths
in
ABC
page 193 Kamel
BBC
collects
cit.
the Family
page 193 "Ten days before we decided conference, 8/12/95,
News, op.
to travel":
Hussein Kamel, press
Survey of World Broadcasts, 8/14/95.
money:
He
later confided this to
Rolf Ekeus.
Interview with Rolf Ekeus; Washington, D.C.; 6/16/98.
page 194 "We knew he had crossed the border": Interview with Abdul
Karim
al-Kabariti,
page 195 "Don't
let
Amman,
3/9/98.
His Majesty shake hands": Ibid.
page 196 "My daughters spend time with them": page 196 King's interview: Associated
Ibid.
Press, 8/14/95.
page 196 "sinking
ship": Jim Hoagland, Washington page 197 "Between him and the Kurds": Barzani
Post, 8/17/95.
interview, al-Hayat,
translated in Mideast Mirror, 8/31/95.
page 198 Tanous: Interview with a source close ment,
Amman,
to the Jordanian govern-
10/16/95.
page 198 "boiling with hatred": Interview with Rolf Ekeus,
New
York,
Quoted in One Point Safe by Andrew and Leslie Cockbum (New York: Anchor Doubleday, 1997), p. 215. page 199 "We are incompetent": Interview with Rolf Ekeus; Washington, 4/24/97.
D.C.; 6/16/98.
page 200 Ekeus's negotiations with the after the defection of
Special
Commission
Iraqis
immediately before and
Kamel: Report of the Executive Chairman of the
to the
UN
Security Council, S/1995/864, 10/11/95.
N page 200 Purging of
UN
files:
DTES
Presentation by Anjbassador Richard Butler to
Security Council, 6/3/98.
Udays Fedayeen: Independent, London;
page 201
seen by diplomats traveUng on the road between
page 201 "there
8/31/95.
They were
Amman and Baghdad.
not a single street": Hussein Kamel, press conference,
is
BBC
Survey of World Broadcasts, 8/14/95. page 201 "People held parties": Independent, London; 8/16/95.
page 201 Telephone 8/14/95.
link to Jordan:
The correspondent of
covered that he could
BBC
Survey of World Broadcasts,
the Egyptian news agency
call direct
between the two
page 201 Saddam denounces Kamel:
BBC
MENA
dis-
capitals.
Survey of World Broadcasts,
8/14/95.
page 202 "His family has unanimously decided": station
Iraqi TV, 8/12/95.
The
broke into normal programming to make the announcement.
page 202 Kamels
ilhterate letter: International
page 203 Saddam's
raid
Udays
on
10/12/95. Despite the raid
Herald Tribune, 9/18/95.
garage:
Independent,
London;
on the Olympic committee building,
lights
The burning car story could not be checked, but nobody admitted to seeing the smoke from the continued to shine in
its
offices at night.
burning buildings.
page 203 Health of Saddam Hussein: Interview with Wafiq al-Samarrai, London, 3/12/98.
page 203 "O
lofty
page 203 "Victory page 203
mountain!" is
BBC
Survey of World Broadcasts, 8/14/95.
sweet": Independent, 10/14/95.
British poll: Philip Willard Ireland, Iraq:
Development (London: Jonathan Cape, 1937),
page 204 Medical checkup: Washington page 205 Ekeus
still
visiting
A
Study in
Political
p. 332.
Post, 2/24/96.
Kamel: Interview with Rolf Ekeus; Washing-
ton, D.C.; 6/16/98.
page 205 "The al-Kabariti,
girls will
Amman,
have to stay here": Interview with Abdul Karim
3/9/95.
page 206 "Higher Council": Anthony H. Cordesman and Ahmad
S.
Hashim, Iraq: Sanctions and Beyond (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1997), pp. 68-69.
page 207 Suck him
dry:
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts,
page 208 "the leadership took a
decision":
Washington
8/14/95.
Post, 2/24/96.
page 209 Saddam demands brothers divorce wives: Interview with Abbas Jenabi, Associated Press, 10/1/98.
page 209 Divorce: Independent, London; 9/24/96, Agency.
citing
Iraqi
News
N
DTES
page 210 "We have cut off the treacherous branch": Le Monde Diplomatique, 9/96.
page 210 "Had they asked me": Cordesman and Hashim,
Chapter
9:
27.
cit., p.
"Bring Me the Head OF Saddam Hussein"
page 213 Amneh's
tape:
by Patrick Cockbum
The
in
existence of Abu
INC
official,
INC
London,
tape was revealed
in the
Ghanim
building: Interview with 9/4/98.
INC
bombing: Interview with a senior
page 214 "Bureaucrats
Amnehs
The Independent, London, 3/26/98.
page 214 Arrest of bombers of Jawad, senior
op.
Amneh
Involvement of
official,
in
3/14/98.
CIA": Interview with former
CIA
official;
Washington, D.C.; 6/18/98.
page 216 Banner with Churchill quotation: Described Post, 9/15/96,
though without naming the
right individual,
famous
in the
official.
in the
Washin^on
Mattingly was a forth-
agency for an incident earlier
in his
when he had been serving as acting CIA station chief at the U.S. embassy in Turkey. The ambassador was a somewhat eccentric individual named Strausz Huppe. One morning the ambassador read in the career
paper that Kurt Waldheim, the former Nazi serving
as
UN
Secretary
General, was coming to Ankara. At the morning staff meeting, he
launched into a tirade on the subject of Waldheim s
iniquities, climaxing
with a question to Mattingly: "Mattingly, can you
Idll
Mattingly immediately shot back: "Yes,
page 217 "There should be a official;
can.
But
I
him?" To which won't."
Interview with a former senior
CIA
Washington, D.C.; 2/6/98.
page 217 "He would be senior
rule":
sir, I
CIA
official;
in a
meeting": Interview with a former very
Washington, D.C.; 2/28/98.
page 217 "Deutch mistrusted people": Interview with a former senior
CIA
official;
Washington, D.C.; 3/5/98.
page 218 Tighter and more focused: Washin^on
Post, 9/15/96.
page 218 "Deutch recruited subordinates": Interview with a former senior
CIA
official;
page 219 "we were
CIA
official;
page 219
Turld's secret trip:
Anthony H. Cordesman and Amad
and Beyond (Boulder, CO: Westview,
"I wasn't
mer CIA
former senior
Washington, D.C.; 2/10/98.
Iraq: Sanctions
page 219
Washington, D.C.; 2/6/98.
significantly affected": Interview with a
official,
S.
Hashim,
1997), p. 194.
given any briefings": Telephone interview with a for9/17/98.
page 219
"It is
my
305
OTE S
N
CIA
understanding": Interview„with a former
official,
Arlington, 3/19/98.
page 221 "Not even the chief of
staff:
Telephone interview with Harold
Ickes, 9/18/98.
page 221 "He was much more gung ho": Interview; Washington, D.C.; 9/21/98.
page 221 "Deutch came back from a meeting": Interview; Washington, D.C.; 4/6/97.
page 222 Naji murder: Andrew and Leshe Cockbum, One Point Safe
(New York: Anchor Doubleday, page 223 Al-Khazrajis statement:
Summary of World
1997), p. 200.
BBC
al-Haijat, 4/4/96, as translated in
Broadcasts, 4/4/96.
page 223 Al-Khazraji dumped by CIA: Interview with an
Iraqi opposition
source; Washington, D.C.; 2/19/98.
page 224 Telephone eavesdropping system: Sean Boyne, "Inside Security Network," /ane 5 Intelligence Review,
Iraq's
vol. 9, no. 7, 7/1/97.
page 225 Accord press conference: Press statement on behalf of Dr. Alawi, Secretary General of the Iraqi National Accord, issued
by the
INA, 2/18/96 (one of the few press announcements remaining on the
INA Website
as of
September 1998).
CNN:
page 225 Alawi on
3/2/96. Posted
on
CNN
Website
at 11:55 P.M.
EST, 3/2/96.
page 225 "unqualified success": Washington page 225 Cockbum
article in the
Post, 9/29/96.
Independent: Patrick Cockbum, "Clin-
ton Backed Baghdad Bombers," Independent, London, 3/26/96.
page 225 Antiterror conference: page 226 Nuri leaves page 226
"all
Ibid,
Al-Quds, 7/18/96, 7/22/96.
Iraq:
penetrated by Iraqi security": Interview with Abdul Karim
al-Kabariti,
Amman,
page 226 News of
3/9/98.
Iraqi penetration
drawn
This account
is
sources and
confirmed by
is
largely
and Chalabi s
from
CIA
Washington:
other Iraqi opposition
sources,
page 227 Alawi interview: Washington see, for
INC and
trip to
Post, 6/23/96.
Picked up by wires,
example, Arab Press Service Organization, 6/23/96.
page 228 June 20: A press release from the "Attempted Coup in Iraq," 7/11/96, dates the Other sources suggest they began
page 228 Names of those Jawad, an exceptionally opposition, to
Amnesty
six
days
Iraqi first
National Accord, arrests to
June 20.
later.
Drawn from a letter from Ghanim well-informed member of the non-Accord
arrested:
International, 11/3/96.
NOTES
3D6 page 229 Accord press
release:
"Attempted Coup
in Iraq:
Update, Death
During Interrogation," 7/12/96.
ABC
page 230 Deutch s statement:
CIA and Saddam
"Unfinished Business: The
Chapter
D:
1
News, Peter Jennings Reporting, Hussein," 6/26/97.
Saddam Moves North
page 231 "take a whack
at his prestige":
CIA official; Washington,
Interview with a former senior
D.C.; 2/6/98.
page 233 Hamilton Road and importance of Gali London,
Ali Beg: Independent,
7/6/96.
page 233 Vickers machine gun: Interview with former Ambassador
Bill
Eagleton, one of the most knowledgeable Americans on the subject of the Kurds,
who encountered
embassy
Baghdad
in
page 233 Luxurious
Zibari;
in the 1950s,
villas:
page 234 "they either
the Sourchi while stationed in the U.S.
tell
Personal observation, August 1991.
Zayed
go away,
to
or":
Interview with Hoshyar
Washington, D.C.; 9/7/98.
page 234 "My father was expecting Massoud Barzani
to
come
to lunch":
Interview with Jahwar al-Sourchi, London, 9/8/98.
page 234 Sourchi homes Patrick
leveled, ducks
Cockbum s visit to
page 235 "Many people
wandering through wreckage:
Kalaqin, 9/15/96.
talk
about Massoud": Interview with Kamran
Karadaghi, London, 9/7/98.
page 236 Talabani betrays Iranian Kurds: David MacDowall, History of the Kurds (London:
credit, Talabani also tipped off the
page 236 Warning
to the
page 237 Peshmerga
B. Tauris, 1997), p. 451.
I.
KDPI
that the Iranians
NSC: Independent,
numbers:
An
were coming,
9/6/96.
estimate
by
exceptionally
informed Iraqi opposition observer Ghanim Jawad
London,
A Modem To do him
in
well-
an interview in
9/8/98.
page 237 Attack "backed by howdtzers": Independent, London, 8/22/96. page 238 "We request the U.S." Independent, London, page 239 Talabani "promised
full
9/6/96.
cooperation": Robert Pelletreau, al-
Hayat, 8/2/98.
page 240 Ahmad Allawi began page 243
"It
is
to hear reports: Interview, 9/7/98.
very possible that a
lot
of
INC
people were
killed":
ABC
News, Peter Jennings Reporting, "Unfinished Business: The CIA and
Saddam Hussein,"
6/26/97.
page 243 Clinton statement: Chicago Tribune,
9/1/96.
N page 243
Perry,
"My judgment
page 243 Fear of being seen
DTES
is":
Intematiomil Herald Tribune, 9/9/96.
as Iran's ally:
Washington
page 244 "We have choked Saddam Hussein
Post, 9/8/96.
in the south": International
Herald Tribune, 9/9/96.
page 244 Deutch s testimony: Washington
page 244
KDP secures
bers of the Islamic
Post, 9/20/96.
release of Islamic prisoners: Interview with
Movement
mem-
of Kurdistan, Arbil, 9/14/96.
page 245 Public record of Dole s encounter with Saddam: The
Iraqis
had
malignly released a transcript after the invasion of Kuwait.
page 245 Al-Kabariti Kabariti,
Amman,
page 246 Press
calls
the Americans: Interview with Abdul Karim
criticism:
Washington
Post, 9/9/96.
page 246
Official to
Washington
page 246
"veracity":
Telephone interview with
page 247 Scene
al-
3/9/96.
at
MCC
Post: 9/10/96.
Ahmad Chalabi,
Interviews by Patrick
building:
9/23/98.
Cockbum,
Zaklio, 9/14/96.
page 247 Mines advisory group: Interview with members of the advisory group by Patrick Cockbum, Diyana, 9/16/96.
Chapter
1
1
:
Uday Takes a Hit
page 253 Account of the ambush: This account interview by Patrick
Cockbum
based on a detailed
with Ismail Othman, a
member
of the
London in the summer of 1997. Radio Monte Carlo, Randah Habib
group that organized the ambush,
page 253 Jordanian diplomat:
Amman,
is
in
in
12/13/96.
NES
page 253 "sHghtly wounded": FBIS, (AFP), 12/16/96, quoting Iraqi
96 242. Agence France Presse
News Agency.
page 253 Stock market crashes: FBIS, 12/15/96. page 254
Journalists slaughter sheep:
page 254 Saddam orders care page 254 Two thousand tion),
FBIS,
NES
Baghdad Radio,
for others:
arrests:
12/15/96.
AFP, 12/16/96.
Voice of Rebellious Iraq (Shiite opposi-
96 242, 12/15/96.
page 254 Sabawi and Watban: Al-Sharq al-Awsat, 12/14/96. page 254 Uday suspects
his father: Interview
with a well-connected Iraqi
source; Washington, D.C.; 11/20/98.
page 258
"It
was you and Hussein Kamel": Al-Wasat, London, 3/12/97.
page 260 Battle
at al-Kreeat:
There
is
a dramatic
and somewhat
story about the fight at al-Kreeat in the Jordanian
fanciful
magazine Sawt
al-
NOTES
308
Marah on February 19, 1997. It says that it began after five gunmen had made a renewed attempt to Idll Uday in the Ibn Sina hospital. It failed, and four of them were killed. The fifth was traced to al-Kreeat, which was attacked by a
special force led
by Uday!
says that seventy
It
defenders were killed or captured, as well as four soldiers.
page 260 Saddam s bedside speech: Al-Wasat, London, 3/12/97. page 261 Barzan
Chapter
1
2:
page 263 "price
Al-Quds al-Arahi, London, 9/23/98.
resigns:
is
Endgame worth
page 265 "Not much
CBS News,
it":
60 Minutes, 5/12/96.
unknown": Report by the Secretary General,
is
4/11/97, S/1997/301.
page 265 King
Falid: Interview with a
Western diplomatic source; Wash-
ington, D.C.; 10/10/97.
page 266
concealment
First
inspection:
Unscom
Report,
10/11/96,
S/1996/848.
page 267 Concrete
page 267 Russian ton, D.C.;
pillars: Ibid.
spy: Interview with
November
page 268 "miserable
former Unscom
official;
Washing-
1997.
spy":
Saddam Hussein,
speech, 7/17/97, reported
FBIS, 7/22/97.
page 268
"It is
the Special Republican Guards": Interview with Rolf Ekeus;
Washington, D.C.; 6/16/98.
page 270
Shell game: Haaretz, 9/29/98.
page 271
Helicopter,
highest
authority:
Unscom
Report,
10/6/97,
S/1997/774.
page 271 Saddam s statement from RCC: Iraq page 272 Ritter gives U-2 photos to
page 272 "gravest
of
crisis
Israel:
TV News,
Washington
6/22/97.
Post, 9/29/98.
Clintons] presidency": Time magazine,
[Bill
11/24/97..
page 272 "head quoted
shot":
in Ti^ne
New
York Times columnist Thomas Friedman,
magazine, op.
cit.
page 272 "stunned": Washington
Post, 3/1/98.
page 274 Ritter pulled back: Washington
Post, 8/27/98.
page 275 Castor beans: Jim Hoagland, Washington page 275 Bahrain: FBIS, 2/21/98.
page 276 Town
hall
meeting: 2/18/98. Text released by Department of
State, 2/20/98.
page 277 "You
Post, 2/11/98.
can't go":
Washington
Post, 3/1/98.
DTES
N
page 277 Annan statement: Washington page 278 Saddam on
309 Post, 2/24/98.
tour: Iraqi TV, 3/17/98, as reprinted in the online
newsletter Iraq News.
page 278 "appeasement": Senator Trent
Lott,
Washington
Senator John D. Ashcroft (Republican from Missouri) prevailing
mood
of his party
when he
And
as long as
have a voice, America
I
the
declared that "U.S. foreign pohcy
ought not to be subjected to Kofi Annan or written Nations.
Post, 2/26/98.
summed up at the
United
not sacrifice
will
another ounce of her sovereignty to the architects and acolytes of a one-
world government" (Washington Post, 3/4/98).
page 278 Chalabi testimony: Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Subcommittee Hearings on the Middle East,
page 279 Embezzlement question to Iraq's
Hope," Washington
3/2/98.
a plant: Jim Hoagland,
"From Pariah
Post, 3/5/98.
page 279 Congress votes money: H.R. 3579 Sec. 2005, 4/30/98, Iraq News,
5/1/98.
page 279 Kurdish leaders considered London,
Talabani,
INC
6/6/98. Interview with
defunct: Interview with Jalal
Hoshyar
Zibari,
Washington,
3/16/98.
page 279 Sabotage
plan:
New
York Times, 2/26/98.
page 282 Three nuclear weapons: Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Services
Committees Hearings,
9/3/98.
page 282 Haaretz, 9/29/98. page 283 Scott
Ritter:
Interview with Ritter in the
New
York Post,
12/17/98.
page 284 Message from
Andrew Cockbum,
al-Shahristani: E-mail
from Dr. al-Shahristani to
12/18/98.
page 285 UNICEF: Nutritional
status survey at
primary health centers
during polio national immunization days (PNID) in Iraq, March 14—16, 1998.
Made
available to authors
by
UNICEF
office in
Baghdad. The
—24.7 percent; chronimalnourished—27.5 percent; acutely malnourished— 9.0 percent. March 1998: Underweight— 22.8 percent; chronically malnourished 26.7 percent; acutely malnourished— percent. actual figures were: April 1997:
Underweight
cally
9.1
Postscript page 289 Half of 12/13/98.
all
Iraqi children
still
malnourished: Washington Post,
Index Ames, Aldrich, 169, 217
Abbas shrine-tomb story of
Abd
of,
murder
al-Ilah,
Amman, Jordan CIA activities and, 224-25
Najaf, 16, 61 of,
60-61
66
Iraqi activities
Abdul-Hussein Mashadi, Muhie, 77
Abu Amneh al-Khadami, 211-14,
225,
279
Abu Ghraib villa, Abu Nidal, 80
Iraq, 100, 103,
199
Amn al-Amm, 88 Amn al-Khass, 18, founding
of,
and, 124-25, 133-34
35, 193,
229
146
Anderson, Frank, 31-32, 45, 48, 51, 53, 167, 169, 170-71,
Afghanistan, 39, 170, 172
.Aldus,
viewed from, 222-24
commerce
nuclear weapons program and, 103
Accord. See Iraqi National Accord
Ahtisaari, Martii, 55,
Iraqi
Annan,
123
217
277-78
Kofi,
Anthrax, 93, 111,265,270
James, 33, 44
89
Aide, Adel, 154
Arafat, Yasser, 7,
Alawi, lyad, 46-47, 167-68, 215-16,
Arbil, Iraq, 28, 180, 190, 232, 239,
219, 220, 223-24, 227-28, 230 Albright,
CIA
Madeleine
covert actions and, 168, 171
inspection teams and, 274, 276, 282
on sanctions against 263-264, 285 Albu Nasir tribe, 143
Iraq, 137-38,
17-18, 26,
165
Mohammed, 77
Aziz, Tariq
281, 238 invasion of Kuwait and, 7-8, 9, 84-85
Islamic fundamentalism and, 79-80
21
civilian
dad, 34
205
inspection teams and, 199, 271-72,
60-61
Ahmad, 240 Iraq,
al-Assad, Hafez,
Auchi, Nazir, 146
60,61
Amara,
See Iraqi mihtary
Arnold, Steven, 33
Ayesh, of, Najaf, 16,
story of assassination of,
Amariya
al-Salaam, 75
Iraqi.
Attar, Leilah,
24
Imam
shrine-tomb
Allawi,
Abd
Army,
al-Atheer plant, Iraq, 91, 273
Ali, Brigadier, 17, 18, 23, Ali,
241-43, 244-45 Aref,
bomb
shelter,
Bagh-
nuclear weapons production and,
101-2, 106, 109, 111, 112, 199, 201
3
1
2
I
N
Baath Party, 5
DEX Basra, Iraq, 59, 61, 127, 152
assassination attempt against
Qassim
and, 71-72
British capture of, 59,
Iran-Iraq
declining importance
of,
150
Iraqi counterattack on, 25,
economic sanctions and, 149
GulfWarand, 9 Hussein Kamel and,
Saddam
uprising against
249-50
al-Battat, Safa,
Bearden, Milt, 170
Iraqi military insurgents and, 18
al-Bejat clan, 11,68,69, 143
Kurdish revolt and, 19
Bell,
purge of leadership
77-78
of,
referendum on Saddam and,
Gertrude, 63-64
Berger, Sandy, 221, 276
203^
Biological weapons, 92-93, 111-13,
Saddam's coups to seize power and,
74-75
181, 200, 270. See also Blix,
Saddam's early involvement with,
11,
Uday and, 152 Unscom inspections and, 283 uprising against Saddam and actions
Boomer, Walter, 93
Boumedienne, Houari, 76 Broderick, Doug, 115, 116, 137 Brooke, Francis, 54-55
against, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22, 26,
Bubiyan (Kuwaiti
27
Bull, Gerald,
island), 83,
85
91
Bush, George
Babel (newspaper), 128, 158-59, 160-61, 247
appeal to the Iraqi people from, 12-13, 19, 37-38
Babel TV, 210
Badr Brigade, 22, 47, 183-84 Baghdad, 61
Grand Saddam Mosque proposal
for,
CIA covert operations against Saddam and, 31-32, 34 Gulf War cease-fire and, 14, 22, 32-33
129-30 impact of economic sanctions on,
114-23
Kurds and, 42, 175, 184, 231 military operations during the
Jumhuriya Bridge bombing and rebuilding
Nerve gases
Hans, 103
Botulism, 111,270
70, 71-72, 73
in, 4,
127, 159
terrorism bombings
in,
211-14,
225-26
Ahmed
6,
9-10
Hassan, 69, 70, 75,
76-77
sanctions against Iraq and, 43, 44, 103, 124
Unscom visit to
and, 107
Kuwait
by,
165
Butler, Richard, 270, 274, 276,
Cairo, Saddam's exile Carter, Jimmy,
Barzani, Massoud, 12, 18-19, 28, 52,
in,
283
73-74
54
Catholic Relief Services, 115, 116
172, 177, 178, 180, 186, 187, 197,
CBS News,
280
Central Intelligence Agency. See
Barzani, Mustafa, 176, 177, 236
Barzani family, 159, 177 Barzoft, Farzad,
Gulf
War and, 33-34
Saudi Arabia and, 9
U.S. bombing of, 3^, Baghdad Pact, 74 Bahrain, 275 Baker, James, 9, 52, 57 al-Bakr,
15-16,
Batatu, Hanna, 71
146, 201
57
67,
43
in,
43
17, 21,
Congress (INC) and,
Iraqi National
61-62
war and, 80
83-84
Chalabi,
137-38
Ahmad,
background
CIA
of,
55,
CIA
186-90
50-51
activities and,
51-53, 165-67,
INDEX 171-74, 181-82, 185-90, 214-16,
Cohen, WTlliam, 275, 276
227, 278-79
Communist
Iraqi National
Congress (INC) and,
56-57
Party, Iraqi, 48, 150,
239^0
3
166
Cosenza, John, 250 120-21, 127-28, 286
peacemaker between Kurdish tions, 179-80
Chemical weapons, 91, Nerve gases
fac-
93. See also
Critchfield, James,
al-Dalaimi,
74
Mohammed Mazlum,
192,
255
Cheney, Richard, 32
Dalaim
Churchill, Winston, 216
al-Dawa, 79-80, 254
CIA
Defense IntelUgence Agency (DIA)
Chalabi and the
INC
and, 51-53,
165-67, 171-74, 178, 181-82,
185-90, 190, 214-16, 227, 278-79 covert operations against
Saddam
and, 31-32, 34, 37, 45, 165,
166-67, 168-71, 230
tribe, 149, 167, 192,
171-74
244 Iran-Iraq
war and, 80
Deutch, John M. appointment to CIA, 216-18
INC
and, 227
covert actions in Iraq and, 230
Devine, Jack, 216
economic sanctions against Iraq and, 44, 55-56
al-Dhour, Iraq, 72, 73, 277-78 al-Dhouri, Izzat Ibrahim, 28, 144
Hussein Kamel's defection and, 197
al-Dhouri, Omar, 229
invasion of Kuwait and, 35-36
al-Dhouri, Riyadh, 229
Iran-Iraq war and, 34—35
al-Dhouri tribe, 144, 149
Accord and, 174-75, 182-83, 229-30
Iraqi National
weapons production and, 105
Jordan and, 218-20, 224-25
rise to
by,
Dillon, Gary,
282
Diyala province, 132-33
al-Dohra power
station,
Baghdad,
3, 4,
127
Dohuk,
Kurds and, 176, 248 propaganda used Saddam's
255
covert actions in Iraq and, 220-21,
Chalabi and
decision to send officers to Iraq and,
Iraqi
1
Crime, and economic sanctions,
Kurdistan and, as
3
53-55
Iraq,
28
Dole, Robert, 245
power and, 74—75
Dubdub, Mohammed, 152
terrorism bombings and, 211-14
Duelfer, Charies, 268-69, 276
Unscom
Dulles, Allen, 67
inspections and, 98, 100
Clientism, 215
Economic
Clinton, Bill
covert actions in Iraq and, 220-21,
226 Deutchs appointment
Egypt, 73-74, 153, 284 to the
CIA
and, 216
inspections and, 272-73,
281-85
CNN,
Patrick,
of,
96-97
collection of evidence and,
108-10
confrontation between Iraqi officials and, 105-7
departure
of,
268, 270
Hussein Kamel and, 197-99, 205, 206
225, 276
Cockbum,
Ekeus, Rolf, 265
background
economic sanctions and, 165 Kurds and, 164-65, 184, 237, 243
Unscom
sanctions. See Sanctions
against Iraq
225
Cohen, David, 217, 220
Unscom team 238
and, 97-98, 99-102,
cease-fire in, 14, 22,
Electricity
economic sanctions and,
1
15, 126,
13-14
127 U.S.
32-33
desertion of Iraqi soldiers during,
bombing and, 4
Iraqi invasion of
Euphrates River, 58, 59, 63
Kuwait and,
Iraqi denial of defeat in, Fadlallali,
Mohammed
Hussein, 52
Fahd, king of Saudi Arabia, 265 al-Fahd,
Fahd Alimed, 83
Faisal
I,
king of Iraq, 64-66, 203
Faisal
II,
king of Iraq, 66, 67
Faluja, Iraq,
bombings 90-91
U.S.
in,
3^,
5-6
6,
9-10,
Haaretz (newspaper), 282 Haass, Richard, 37, 40, 56
al-Habubi family, 16-17
228
Fao peninsula, in Iran-Iraq war, 81 Farid, Abdel Majid, 73, 74 FBI, 168, 190, 248-50 FBIS (Foreign Broadcast Information Service),
45
Feisel, Prince Turld bin, 40, 41, 47, 52,
219
al-Hakim, Abdul Wahad, 71
Mohammed
al-Hakim, 184,
Baqir, 21, 47,
280
al-Hakim, Yusuf, 17
al-Hakim
family,
al-Hakam
plant, Iraq, 112,
22
273
Halabja, nerve gas attack on, 49, 97
Firqat Fida'iyyi Saddam, 162
Haldane, Aylmer, 63, 64
Food, and economic sanctions, 115,
Halliday, Denis, 135, 136, 285,
Foreign Broadcast Information Service
40
Harki Galbraith, Peter, 36, 37, Gallucci, Bob, 98,
Nizar, 109,
263
Hamoudi, Ali, 255, 256, 257 Hamzi, Hassan, 13
France, 24, 62, 284 33,
41-42
106-7
232
tribe,
Harris, Arthur ("Bomber"), 65
Harvard School of Public Health, 55, 131-32
Gasoline availability
economic sanctions and, 127
Hashemite
family,
64
Hawlery, Hashim Qadir, 249
bombing and, 4
Gates, Robert M., 43, 44, 114, 263-64
al-Hazaa, Omar, 257-58, 261
Germany, and nerve
al-Hazaa, Ra'ad, 257, 258, 259
gas,
91
280-81
Glaspie, April, 84
Helms,
Gorbachev, Mikhail, 98, 99
Helms, Richard, 31-32 Hill, Roger, 268-69
Gore,
Al,
286
153
Hamas, 226
Hamdoon,
(FBIS), 45
Freeman, Chas.,
Hamed Youssef,
Hamadi,
117-18, 122
U.S.
3, 5,
6-14
165
Grand Saddam Mosque, Baghdad, 129-30 Great Britain, 79, 83, 92 Alawi and, 167-68
Kurds and, 247-48 occupation of Iraq by, 61-67 support for U.S. policy from, 29
Gulf War Bush's appeal to the Iraqi people during, 12-13, 19, 37-38
Jesse, 278,
Hillah, Iraq,
Homer,
20
Charles, 13
Hospitals
economic sanctions and, 132-34, 135-37 U.S.
bombing and, 4
Hussein shrine-tomb
of, Najaf, 16, 61, 145,
197 story of
murder
of,
60-61
3 Hussein, king of Jordan, 7
Hussein Kamel's defection to Jordan
shootiil^ of J^j° ^Y' 153-55 survival and resurgence of,
1
5
261-62
and, 194-96, 210, 218
Hussein Kamel's return to Iraq and,
IAEA
Atomic Energy
(International
Agency), 86, 100, 103, 282
208
Saddam s
role as counselor to
family,
Ibniliim,
Ahmad, 194
Ibrahim, Barzan (half-brother), 68, 77,
155
Saddam s
assassination attempt
Qassim and, 72
against
Hussein,
155,
262
Hussein Kamel and, 146, 147, 202, 207 nuclear weapons program and, 88, 89
Ahmed, 162
Hussein, Khalid, 262
Ibrahim, Hardan, 76, 144
Hussein, Qusay (son), 141, 151, 256,
Ibraliim,
concealment of secret arsenal and,
attempt on Uday's Hfe and, 254 supervision of security by, 147-48
266
coup attempt against Saddam and, family background and, 156, 158
Hussein Kamel's return to Iraq and,
209 supervision of security by, 148, 204
Hussein, Raghad (daughter). See
Kamel, Raghad
of,
192
144, 161, 194, 261
attempt on Uday's
and, 254
life
Uday's criticism
of,
192, 211
Uday's shooting
of,
202, 203
Ibrahim al-Hassan, 68, 144 Ibrahim family, 143-44, 147
Hussein, Rina (daughter). See Kamel,
Ickes, Harold,
221
Immigration and Naturalization Ser-
Rina Hussein, Hala (daughter), 143 Hussein,
Uday's criticism
Ibrahim, Watban (half-brother), 68,
228-29, 237
Saddam rise of,
background
of,
67-71
escape story
of,
72-73
marriage
of, 68,
vice,
INC. See
Baath Party and
70-73
Iraqi National
Congress
InteHigence agencies, Iraqi
dam
142^3, 153
and, 11
Iraqi National
Accord
activities and,
226-27
Hussein, Sajida (wife), 151
Hussein Kamel's return
248
elimination of potential rivals of Sad-
U.S. policy and, 218-19
to Iraq and,
Kurds and, 185-86 support for uprisings against
Saddam
and, 24-25
207 marriage to Saddam, 68, 142-43, 153
Uday
Sabawi (half-brother), 68,
144, 261
261
Hussein,
Uday
attempted
(son),
of,
193, 225,
251-60
142-44
business dealings
education
140-41, 150-51
killing of,
background
of,
161, 162-63,
killing
of Uday and, 255
Hussein Kamel's defection and, 197,
220 individuals fleeing Saddam's regime
and, 173-74 invasion of Kuwait and, 35-36
253
of,
InteHigence agencies, U.S.
attempted
and, 155
Jordan and, 218-20
151-52
Hussein Kamel's IdUing and, 209
Kurds and, 36-37, 242-43
people's fear of, 141-42, 156-57
Soviet development of biological
rising
power
of,
157-63, 192-93
Saddam's curbing
of,
202-3, 204
weapons and, 98-99 and, 267-68
Unscom
3
1
6 Atomic Energy Agency
International
(IAEA), 86, 100, 103, 282
157,
Iran
attempted
killing
of
Olympic Committee, 151, 153, 202 Iraq Petroleum Company (IRC), 74
Iraqi
Uday and,
259-60
Israel, 10, 106, 196, 226,
282
lyud, Abu, 8
Clinton and, 184, 280 Islarnic revolution in,
79-80
Jaafari,
Kurds and, 176, 183-84, 235-39 oil
revenues
66
of,
79
in,
Jafr, Jafr
Saddam and
sup-
port from, 22
nerve gases
Jenabi, Abbas, 159, 209, 262 Jenabi, Ali, 139
Jeremiah, David, 168
Saddam
in,
Dia, 89, 90, 95, 100
Kamel Hannah, 153-55
Jawad, Ghanim, 240-42
war CIA and, 34-35 Kurds and, 12
Iran-Iraq
to
Jajo,
Jash (Kurdish militia force), 19, 28, 149
Iran-Contra episode, 35
monument
186
Jabr al-Sabah, sheikh, 84
overthrow of Shah uprisings against
Mohammed,
Jabber, Faleh, 150
after,
82-83
81-82, 92-93
John Paul
II,
pope, 274-75
Jordan, 29, 148
purges of Iraqi military during, 8
CIA activities
Saddam Hussein
Hussein Kamel's defection
and, 6
Saudi Arabia and, 40, 80, 82
Uday and, 152-53 Communist Party,
Iraqi
Iraqi Football Association, Iraqi Journalists Union,
202
254
to,
194-96, 205-7 Iraqi activities
48, 150, 166
and, 218-20, 224-25
viewed from, 222-24
support for U.S. from, 204, 218-19 Juburi tribe, 149, 167
Jumhuriya Bridge, Baghdad,
4, 127,
159
Iraqi military
Iran-Iraq war and, 80
Justice
Department, 190
Kurds and, 42 revolt
among,
after the invasion of
Kuwait, 14-18
Saddam's
al-Kabariti,
Abdul Karim, 50, 83-84,
219, 221, 245
visits to,
during invasion of
Hussein Kamel's defection to Jordan and, 194, 197, 205-6, 206-7
Kuwait, 10-11 U.S. support for potential rebels
among, 38-41
Hussein Kamel's return to Iraq and,
208 Accord and, 226 of, 233-35
Accord (al-Wifaq) background to, 45-46
Kalaqin, Iraq, destruction
CIA
Kamel, Hakim, 209-10
Iraqi National
and, 174-75, 182-83, 226,
229-30
Kamel, Hussein, 22, 26, 144, 152, 220,
covert activities Iraqi National
CIA
of,
225-30
Congress (INC), 255
and, 165-67, 171-74, 178, 190,
258 concealment of secret arsenal and,
265-66 defection to Jordan by, 76, 193-96
278-79 founding
Iraqi National
of,
56-57
Kurdistan and, 239-40, 248 terrorism bombings in
Jordanian relations with, 194—96,
205-7
213-14 U.S. support
Baghdad and,
Ekeus and Unscom and, 197-99, 205, 206
for,
57
killing of,
209-10
INDEX uprising against
Kurds and, 180 nuclear weapons program and, 89,
of,
161, 163
in, 16, 18,
21
261
Republican Guard and, 146, 196, 201 return to Iraq by, 207-9
Saddams denunciation Saddam's rise to power
Khairallah Tulfah
Saddam's early years and, 68, 69, 71,
of,
201-2
and, 145-48,
72
Saddam's marriage to daughter Khairallah Tulfah, Adnan,
Kamel, Raghad, 143, 144 attempt on Uday s divorce
live
and, 253-54
to Jordan by, 191, 193, 196, 204,
of husband
of,
210
Khatami,
al-Khoie,
marriage to Hussein Kamel, 145, 147 return to Iraq by, 207, 209
Mohammed, 280
attempt on Uday's
223
Grand Ayatollah abu
al-Qas-
sim, 20-21, 23, 24, 26-27, 52
al-Khoie,
Kamel, Rina, 143, 144
Mohammed Taqi,
26
al-Khoie, Sayid Majid, 21, 23, 41, 52,
life
and, 253-54
259 Khomeini,
209
of,
Hussein Kamel's defection and move
Ayatollali
Iran-Iraq
war and,
6, 80, 81,
92
to Jordan by, 191, 193, 196, 204,
revolution in Iran and, 79-80
205
uprising against
of husband
marriage
of,
of,
210
147
return to Iraq by, 207
of,
marriage
by, 72,
147
80
at,
66 of, 19,
Mohammed,
16
Kay, David, 100-101, 105-6
(Kurdish Democratic Party),
(Kurdish Regional Government),
Kroll Associates, 124
Kubba, Laith, 49-50, 51, 55, 56, 166 Kufa, Iraq, 60 uprising against
Saddam
in, 16,
18-19, 177-79, 189, 213-14,
18-19, 177-79, 189, 213-14,
235-39, 245-46
(Kurdistan Democratic Party of
Iran),
236
Kelly, John, 49, 83,
18
Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP),
235-39, 245-46
KDPI
28,
278
175, 179
return to Iraq by, 208-9
KDP
182,
KRG
147
Karadaghi, Kamran, 236
Kassim,
of,
Kurdish revolt and capture
209-10 of,
39
Khorramshahr, battle discovery of oil
defection to Jordan by, 191, 204
Saddam
Saddam and posters
of, 21, 22, 24, 25,
Kirkuk, Iraq
Kamel, Saddam, 144 film portrayal of
153,
al-Khatin Hospital, Baghdad, 135-36 Khazraji, Nizar, 14-15,
205
divorce
8, 70,
155-56 Khalid bin Sultan, Prince, 138-39
209
of,
Hussein Kamel s defection and move
kiUing
of,
68, 142, 144
150
killing
7
Khairallah, Luai, 156, 194, 251, 258,
pressures of exile and, 204—6
killing
Saddam
1
Khamenei, Ayatollah, 52
102
power
3
Kurdish Regional Government (KRG), 175, 179
84
Kerbala, Iraq Iraqi counterattack on, 23, 26, 29, 52,
145 Shia Islam and, 59, 60
Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran
(KDPI), 236
Kurds
Bush and,
42, 175, 184, 231
Clinton and, 164-65, 184, 237, 243
N Kurds
Hussein Kamel s return to Iraq and,
(cont.)
evacuation to
Guam
of individuals
209-10 on Saddam Hussein and referendum
from, 248-50 gassing and execution
of, 12, 36, 49,
campaign, 203
purge of Baath Party leadership and,
91 Iran and, 176, 183-84,
Iraqi National
78 Saddam's refiance on, 68, 148, 150
Congress (INC) and, 57
Iraqi sanctions on,
nationalism
235-39
185-86
Iraqi intelligence on,
175-77
in,
al-Majid, Izz al-Din, 103, 199, 207, 209,
232-35
266
41^2
revolt of, 18-19, 28-29,
al-Majid,
Sourchi tribe and, 233-35 U.S. protection
of, 59,
61-62
Kuwait. See also Gulf War visit to,
Hussein Kamel's defection to Jordan and, 201-2 Hussein Kamel's return to Iraq and, 208-9, 210
165
Marik, Warren, 172, 179-80, 215-16
Iran-Iraq war and, 80, 82 Iraqi oil revenues and,
Kuwait, Iraqi invasion
Kamel Hassan, 209, 210 143^4, 147, 192
al-Majid family,
231-32
for,
Kut, Iraq, British capture
Bush's
suppression of the Kurds by, 144-45 al-Majid, Hussein, 143
67
of,
power centers
also
DEX
79
of, 3,
6-14. See
Gulf War
Matti, William,
229
Mattingly, Bob,
216
Maude,
desertion of Iraqi soldiers during,
13-14
62 Meguid, Hussein Abdel, 73-74 Sir Stanley,
Merfalen, Mark, 250
Iraqi denial of defeat in, revolts against
Saddam
5-6
after,
Military, Iraqi. See Iraqi military
14-18
Saddam s reasons for, 84—85 Saddam s visit to soldiers during, 10-11
Military Coordination Center
(MCC),
232, 247 Miller,
Clement, 81
Mines Advisory Group, 247 Missiles, Iraqi, 93-94. See also
Lally, Rich,
101
Lawrence, T.E., 64, 65 Libya, 119
79,
Long Days, The Lott, Trent,
Nuclear
weapons production Mitchell, Don, 171-72 Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, shah of Iran,
Lake, Tony, 171, 189, 221
(film), 72,
147
176
Mohssan, Abu Abdul, 220 Mossad, 106
278
Mosul, Iraq, 61, 62, 182, 228, 278
222
MacDowall, David, 177
Mu'alla, Tahseen,
MacGaffin, John, 170
Mubarek, Suzanne, 153 Mujaheddin, 170, 172
Mack, David, 50
Mahmoud, Abed Hamid,
14, 266,
268-69 129, 145, 256, 258, 261
on rebels
(secret police), 22, 35, 47,
226
al-Majid, Ali Hassan ("Chemical Ali"),
attacks
Mukhabarat
by,
27
dismissal of, 192, 193
Hussein Kamel s defection to Jordan and, 195-96, 201-2, 207, 209
coup against Saddam and, 228-29 Jordan and, 222, 224
Kurds and, 244, 245 nuclear weapons program and, 88, 89, 103,
266
al-Mustaqbal, 225
N al-Nahdah (opposition group), 255-60, Najaf, Iraq,
59
Union of Kurdistan (FUK),
18-19, 177, 179, 189, 235-39,
245^6
52 shrine-tomb of Imam Ali
16,
at,
16-18,
in,
20-21
Ahmed, 245
Gamal Abdel,
73,
Abd
(Palestine Liberation Organiza-
97
Poison gas. See Nerve gases
Power stations economic sanctions and, U.S. bombing and, 4
war and, 81-82 production of, 91-92
Iran-Iraq
12, 36, 49,
guerrillas, 18-19, 28, 41,
Thomas, 43
Pickering,
tion),
al-Razzaq, 75-76
Nerve gases
Kurds and,
Peshmerga
FLO
74
National Security Council, 184 al-Nayif,
243
Petra Bank, 50-51, 56, 279
Nassariyah, Iraq, 14-15, 23-24, 247 Nasser,
278
Perry, William,
232, 237, 241
Muwaffaq, 229
al-Nassari,
Perie, Richard,
Persian Gulf War. See Gulf War
Muayad Hassan, 222
al-Naquib, Hassan, 151, 166, 172 al-Nasiri,
Felletreau, Robert, 237-38, 239, 242,
243
17-18, 26, 60, 61 uprising of the Iraqis
New
Price, Ted, 168-70,
91
York Times, 109, 214, 276
126, 127
217
Primakov, Yevgeny, 273, 281
Nixon, Richard M., 98
Project 1728, 102, 107, 199, 201
Nuclear weapons production
FUK (Patriotic Union of Kurdistan),
CIA
and, 89-90
18-19, 177, 179, 189, 235-39,
economic sanctions Hnked
94-95,
to,
245-46
109-10, 113, 264
impact on daily Ufe
of, 1
psychological advantage
14-23 of,
265
Saddam's desire to maintain, 104—5 al-Shahristani's research and,
U.S.
1
Palestin©i,iberation Organization
Patriotic
Iraqi counterattack on, 23, 26-27,
Iraqi
3
(FLO), 97
262
Naji,
DEX
bombing
86-89
and, 32, 90-91
Muammar, 119 Abd al-Karim, 7, 67, 69 Saddam and assassination attempt
Qaddafi,
Qassim,
against,
71-72
epic film depicting, 72, 147
Nun, Adnan, 174-75,
183, 188, 212,
213, 214, 222, 226
Obousy, Deraid, 135-36
al-Qaysi, Ryadh, 109
Quayle, Dan, 40
al-Quma,
battle
at,
183
Qushtapa camp, Kurdistan,
241^2
Oil exports British occupation of Iraq and, 66 economic sanctions and, 29-30, 115 Iran-Iraq war debts and, 82 Kuwait and, 79 oil-for-food proposal and, 134-35
Olympic Committee, 157, 202
Iraqi, 151, 153,
al-Radi,
Nuha, 120
Radio broadcasts, 54 support for possible Iraqi coup
45-46 U.S.
bombing of Iraq
Operation Desert Fox, 284
Rafsanjani,
Operation Provide Comfort, 42
Ramadi,
Othman,
Ismail,
255-60
and, 10
Radio Free Iraq, 279
Akbar Hashemi, 81 228
Iraq, 192,
Rania, Iraq, 19
in,
9
N
3 ZD
DEX Saddam's Commandos, 162
Rashid, Amer, 109-10, 112
nuclear weapons inspection and,
al-Sadr,
Mohammed
Bakr, 80
Sadmddin Aga Khan,
199-200, 269
Hussein Kamel's defection and, 204 Rashid, Khalid Abdul Rashid, Klialid Abdul
Munam, 125 Monem, 127
Safire, William,
al-Salihaf,
Prince, 123
42
Mohammad
al-Said, Nuri,
202
Said,
65-66
Rashid, Latif, 50
Saladin, 69, 85
Rasul, Kosorat, 242
Salahudin, Iraq, 172-73, 232, 239,
al-Rawi, Walid, 16, 25
245
Razaq al-Hashemi, Abdul, 87
RCC.
See Revolution
Salem, Niyaz, 246
Command Coun-
Rendon, John, 53-54, 55, 56, 165 Republican Guards
exile in Syria of,
meeting between CIA and, 35 nerve gas and, 92, 93, 201 nuclear weapons program and, 110-11
invasion of Kuwait and, 7
war and, 81 counterattacks on
on
Iran-Iraq
failure to intercept,
22
29 Samawa,
Iraq, 21,
24
Samaw'al, Ata, 228, 229
249
Command Council (RCC)
Revolution
and, 152
uprising of the Iraqis and, 14-15, 25,
uprising of the Iraqis and, 15, 18 P.,
casualties in Kuwait, 13
Uday
rebellious
towns and, 23, 26, 29
Rettig, Jennifer
180-81, 182,
of,
186, 188
coup attempt against Saddam and Hussein Kamel and, 146, 196, 201
Schwarzkopfs
205
Kurds and defection
Bush's briefing on, 32
Iraqi
Samarra, Iraq, 29 al-Samarrai, Wafiq, 6, 14
cil
Sanctions against Iraq
referendum on Saddam and, 204
agriculture and, 125-26
Saddams
Albright on, 137-38, 263-264
rise to
power and,
71, 75,
77
Unscom
inspections and, 271
Richardson,
Bill,
278
Richter, Steve, 217, 220, Rifai, Zeid,
free
227
market and, 124—25
imported food and medicine under,
123-24
7-8
Ritter, Scott, 99, 270, 272,
273-74, 278,
international support for,
observers on effects
282, 285
"Road to Baghdad, The" 33
(secret plan),
Royal Air Force (RAF), Great Britain,
65,66 Rumailah oil
Bush and, 43, 44, 103 Chnton and, 165
of,
55-56
123,
oil-for-food proposal and,
286
134-35
return to Islamic beliefs and, 128-30,
286 for, 43-45, 55 weapons production linked to, 94—95, 109-10, 113, 264 Sarin, 82, 97. See also Nerve gases
U.S. support
field,
85
al-Rustamiya treatment plant, Baghdad, 131
Saudi Arabia Sa'adi, Ali Saleh,
74
Iran-Iraq
war and,
40, 80, 82
Sadat, Anwar, 74
Jordan and, 218-19
Saddam City, Baghdad, 140, 257 Saddam Hussein. See Hussein, Saddam
relations
between Iraq and,
47,
89
Shia uprising in Iraq and, 39-40
U.S. policy in Iraq and, 33, 39-40,
U.S. support al-Sayef,
Special Republican Guards, 199
9
for,
coup attempt against Saddam and
Buha'a Hussein, 133
Schevardnadze, Edvard, 99
Hussein Kamel's defection and, 196,
Schwarzkopf, Norman, 22, 24, 41
201 nuclear weapons program and, 103,
Scowcroft, Brent, 34, 40, 57
266, 268, 284
Seaman, Diane, 271
111-12
Spertzel, Richard,
Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, 32, 67 Intelligence Committee, 171-72 Sewage system economic sanctions and, 127, 130-32 U.S. bombing and, 4 Shah of Iran (Mohammad Reza Pahlavi), 79,
176
Stahl, Lesley,
137-38
Department economic sanctions against Iraq and, 44
State
Iraqi treatment of
Kurds and, 12-13,
36-37, 166, 240
support for Iraqi opposition and,
49-50, 280
al-Shahbander, Samira, 153 al-Shahristani, Hussain, 86-89, 184,
284-85
Straub, Chris, 171-72
Sulaimaniya, Iraq, 28, 29
Hamid, 14 Shanshal, Abdul Jabber, 152
Sunnis
Shakar,
economic sanctions and, 148-^9
Mohammed Abdullah,
al-Shawani,
al-Sheikhly, Salah,
historic conflicts
hms
223-24, 229-30
Shia
Special Commission. See United
Nations Special Commission
243, 272
221-22
between Shia Mus-
and, 59-61
Kurds and, 12
Mushms, 11-12 63-64
British occupation of Iraq and,
economic sanctions and, 149 Grand Ayatollah al-Khoie and, 20-21
between Sunni Muslims and, 59-61
Saddam and, 11, 79-80, 192 Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, 21, 47, Syria, 48,
280
73
historic conflicts
Saddam
uprising of the Iraqis and, 13, 15, 16
Shirwan, Azad, 13 Shultz, George, Sinjari,
Talabani,
36
50
Jalal, 12,
Iranian support
for,
235-39
Kurdish revolt and, 18-19, 28, 177,
Karim, 246
60 Minutes
Tabun, 82, 97. See also Nerve gases Taha, Rihab, 112
and, 12
178-79, 180, 189
(television program),
137-38
Smidovich, Nikita, 98, 99, 109-10, 266,
268
State
Department and, 36-37, 280
Tarmiya nuclear
facility, Iraq,
Soldiers, Iraqi. See Iraqi military
Tawarah, Nayef, 206-7, 208
al-Sourchi, Hussein Agha, 233-34,
Tenet, George, 168, 171, 218
Thalhum
234 al-Sourchi, Jahwar, 234, 235, al-Sourchi, Zayed, 23^-34,
280
235
al-Tikriti,
Union weapons and, 98-99 9, 81, 92,
249-50 130-31
Tikrit, Iraq, 11, 62, 67,
68-69, 228
Haji Sadoun, 71
al-Tikriti, Salih
Omar Ali,
220
biological
support for Iraq and,
(poison),
Tigris River, 4, 58-59,
Sourchi clan, 232-35 Soviet
100
Tamoff, Peter, 168
148
Tome, Butrous
Eliya,
229
46, 47, 48,
N
322 Townsend, Charles, 61-62 Tulaiha, Iraq, 13-14
DEX Saddam's reaction
to,
96
al-Samarrai's defection and,
110-11
Turkey British occupation of Iraq and, 63,
65
Kurds and, 36, 57, 177, 178, 232, 243
Voice of America, 10, 83
al-Tuwaitha, Iraq, 100
Voice of Free Iraq, 45-47
Twetton, Tom, 216
VX nerve
agent, 91-92, 108, 111, 201,
265, 270, 271, 281
Uday Hussein. See Hussein, Uday al-Ulum,
Mohammed
UNICEF,
131, 275,
Balir,
166
285-86
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, 137
United Nations Special Commission
(Unscom) Annan's
visit
and, 277-78
weapons and, 111-13, 181 Chnton and, 272-73, 281-85 collection of evidence by, 107-10 biological
confrontation between Iraqi officials and, 105-7, 271-76 creation of, 95-96
economic sanctions and. See Sanctions against Iraq
Ekeus and, 97-98, 99-102 goals of, and success, 138-39
Wahlroos, Viktor, 132
Warba
(Kuwaiti island), 83, 85
Post, 109, 227, 246, 282 Water purification systems economic sanctions and, 130-32 U.S. bombing and, 4
Washington
Weapons production. See Nuclear weapons production al-Wifaq. See Iraqi National Accord
Wilson, Arnold, 62-63
Woolsey, James, 169-70
World World World World
Bank, 115
Health Organization, 135, 137
War War
I,
61
II,
66, 91
Worthington-Evans, Laming, 65
Wren, "Big Ron," 172
Hussein Kamel's defection and,
197-99
Yahia, Latif, 154
inteUigence organization and, 267-68
Yediot Aharanot (newspaper), 196
between Iraqi high command and, 268-70 Iraqi plan for concealment of
Zangana, Raja, 255, 257
interaction
weapons from, 102^, 137-38, 200, 238, 265-67 Iraqi policy of calculated concessions
and, 96-97
Zibari, Hoshyar, 183, 185, 186, 187,
188, 234, Zibari clan,
237
232
al-Zubaidi, Saad, 126
al-Zubeidi,
Mohammed Hamza,
27
(continued from front flap )
price"*
S')
long as
Out of the
'^slies
Saddam Hussein remains makes chillingly clear
in power.
how
just
terrible that price has been. "Robert M. Gates, Deputy National Security Adviser (May
7, 1991).
Patrick Cockburn has been a senior Middle
East correspondent for the Financial Times and the
London Independent
since 1979.
Among
the
most experienced commentators on Iraq, he was
one of the few
journalists
remain
Baghdad
to
during the Gulf War.
He
is
in
currently based in
Jerusalem for the Independent.
Andrew Cockburn is
the author of several
books on defense and international affairs.
He
has also written about the
Middle East
for
The
New
Yorker and coproduced the 1991 tary
on Iraq
lives in
titled
"The War
We
PBS documen-
Left Behind."
He
Washington, D.C.
Jacket design © 1999 by Marc Cohen Jacket photographs: large © Sygma, inset
©
Gamma-Liaison Author photographs: top © 1999 by Ariel Jerozolimski, bottom © 1999 BY Leslie Cockburn
Md^vpcrCollinsPHblishers http://www.harpercollins.com
ISBN 0-06-019266-6 52600
780060"192662