The News We Kept to Ourselves

More and more is coming out on the true brutality of Saddam’s regime.

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/11/opinion/11JORD.html
The News We Kept to Ourselves
By EASON JORDAN

TLANTA — Over the last dozen years I made 13 trips to Baghdad to lobby the government to keep CNN’s Baghdad bureau open and to arrange interviews with Iraqi leaders. Each time I visited, I became more distressed by what I saw and heard — awful things that could not be reported because doing so would have jeopardized the lives of Iraqis, particularly those on our Baghdad staff.

For example, in the mid-1990’s one of our Iraqi cameramen was abducted. For weeks he was beaten and subjected to electroshock torture in the basement of a secret police headquarters because he refused to confirm the government’s ludicrous suspicion that I was the Central Intelligence Agency’s Iraq station chief. CNN had been in Baghdad long enough to know that telling the world about the torture of one of its employees would almost certainly have gotten him killed and put his family and co-workers at grave risk.

Working for a foreign news organization provided Iraqi citizens no protection. The secret police terrorized Iraqis working for international press services who were courageous enough to try to provide accurate reporting. Some vanished, never to be heard from again. Others disappeared and then surfaced later with whispered tales of being hauled off and tortured in unimaginable ways. Obviously, other news organizations were in the same bind we were when it came to reporting on their own workers.

We also had to worry that our reporting might endanger Iraqis not on our payroll. I knew that CNN could not report that Saddam Hussein’s eldest son, Uday, told me in 1995 that he intended to assassinate two of his brothers-in-law who had defected and also the man giving them asylum, King Hussein of Jordan. If we had gone with the story, I was sure he would have responded by killing the Iraqi translator who was the only other participant in the meeting. After all, secret police thugs brutalized even senior officials of the Information Ministry, just to keep them in line (one such official has long been missing all his fingernails).

Still, I felt I had a moral obligation to warn Jordan’s monarch, and I did so the next day. King Hussein dismissed the threat as a madman’s rant. A few months later Uday lured the brothers-in-law back to Baghdad; they were soon killed.

I came to know several Iraqi officials well enough that they confided in me that Saddam Hussein was a maniac who had to be removed. One Foreign Ministry officer told me of a colleague who, finding out his brother had been executed by the regime, was forced, as a test of loyalty, to write a letter of congratulations on the act to Saddam Hussein. An aide to Uday once told me why he had no front teeth: henchmen had ripped them out with pliers and told him never to wear dentures, so he would always remember the price to be paid for upsetting his boss. Again, we could not broadcast anything these men said to us.

Last December, when I told Information Minister Muhammad Said al-Sahhaf that we intended to send reporters to Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq, he warned me they would “suffer the severest possible consequences.” CNN went ahead, and in March, Kurdish officials presented us with evidence that they had thwarted an armed attack on our quarters in Erbil. This included videotaped confessions of two men identifying themselves as Iraqi intelligence agents who said their bosses in Baghdad told them the hotel actually housed C.I.A. and Israeli agents. The Kurds offered to let us interview the suspects on camera, but we refused, for fear of endangering our staff in Baghdad.

Then there were the events that were not unreported but that nonetheless still haunt me. A 31-year-old Kuwaiti woman, Asrar Qabandi, was captured by Iraqi secret police occupying her country in 1990 for “crimes,” one of which included speaking with CNN on the phone. They beat her daily for two months, forcing her father to watch. In January 1991, on the eve of the American-led offensive, they smashed her skull and tore her body apart limb by limb. A plastic bag containing her body parts was left on the doorstep of her family’s home.

I felt awful having these stories bottled up inside me. Now that Saddam Hussein’s regime is gone, I suspect we will hear many, many more gut-wrenching tales from Iraqis about the decades of torment. At last, these stories can be told freely.

Eason Jordan is chief news executive at CNN.

Re: Saddam's terror regime

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Imdad Ali: *

Eason Jordan is chief news executive at CNN.
[/QUOTE]

goood going :)

i'm shaking in me socks :-)

Fabrications...

Of course CNN is lying. Saddam was the greatest Muslim ruler since the time of the Prophet (PBUH). Those ungrateful Iraqis don't know what they are missing. This whole world should come under Saddam's magnanimous rule.

I am forced to agree with the three characters who replied before me, because I cannot compete with their towering intellectual abilities. I might just join the Ba’ath party now.

But seriously, it shows the level of denial some people are in, when they are not willing to believe that Saddam was a brutal dictator. You can only lead a horse to water, you cannot force it to drink.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Imdad Ali: *
it shows the level of denial some people are in, when they are not willing to believe that Saddam was a brutal dictator. You can only lead a horse to water, you cannot force it to drink.
[/QUOTE]

You too are in the same world of denial. because Saddam didn't become the monster dictator in last 12 years, he became a dictator 30 years ago and with the help of America.

Perhaps CNN and this author should read the history when Rumsfield hugged Saddam and sold american weapons and helped him dictate Iraqis.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Imdad Ali: *
Of course CNN is lying. Saddam was the greatest Muslim ruler since the time of the Prophet (PBUH). Those ungrateful Iraqis don't know what they are missing. This whole world should come under Saddam's magnanimous rule.

I am forced to agree with the three characters who replied before me, because I cannot compete with their towering intellectual abilities. I might just join the Ba’ath party now.

But seriously, it shows the level of denial some people are in, when they are not willing to believe that Saddam was a brutal dictator. You can only lead a horse to water, you cannot force it to drink.
[/QUOTE]

Imdad, I dont think that any one can deny that Saddam is/was a brutal dictator. I certainly do not deny that. Most people(Muslims) have a problem with the credibilty of US and its media.
Lets look at the facts;
1. US claimed that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction. With most of Iraq under coailition forces control, they have not found enough evidence to support that claim.
2. US(Bush administration) claimed that Saddam has links with Al-Qaeda. Even CIA has released reports that refute that claim.
3. US claims that Saddam starved his own people to build his palaces, the fact of the matter is that most of the palaces were built before the gulf war I. Also, I will like to point out that most of the iraq's economic problems were caused by the brutal sanctions imposed primarily by US and UK.
Just by naming a war "Operation Iraq freedom" does not make it so.
I will paraphrase some of the text from a book that I just finished reading "Iraq in the eye of the storm" by Dilip Hiro.
US economy largely depends on oil. Iraq has the biggest oil reserves in the world. If most of them are tapped, it can produce enough oil that will make it the world leader (26-30% of the world need.). Hence, by occupying Iraq and awarding the contracts to US firms, US has essentialy freed itself from OPEC.
You can say that it is the by product, I say it was one of the main reasons for this war.
Think about it...........

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Today they brought down the statue, tommorow they will tear down the mosque. As one Iraqi yelled out to the American troops: You are here to rape our women and give drugs to our children.
He couldnt have been any he could not have been any more accurate. The way the americans deserted the Afghanis, I wouldnt be surprised if the poor Iraqis have a similar fate.

Yup that saddam was one bad evil dude.

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This was also kept from the mainstream media, ZNN and others.
Saddam maybe brutal but there is no denying the fact that he was once the sweetheart of the same America that now is hunting for him. Its a pitty how national interests of this country change with the passing times.

**Exclusive: Saddam key in early CIA plot **

By Richard Sale
UPI Intelligence Correspondent
From the International Desk
Published 4/10/2003 7:30 PM
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U.S. forces in Baghdad might now be searching high and low for Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, but in the past Saddam was seen by U.S. intelligence services as a bulwark of anti-communism and they used him as their instrument for more than 40 years, according to former U.S. intelligence diplomats and intelligence officials.

United Press International has interviewed almost a dozen former U.S. diplomats, British scholars and former U.S. intelligence officials to piece together the following account. The CIA declined to comment on the report.

While many have thought that Saddam first became involved with U.S. intelligence agencies at the start of the September 1980 Iran-Iraq war, his first contacts with U.S. officials date back to 1959, when he was part of a CIA-authorized six-man squad tasked with assassinating then Iraqi Prime Minister Gen. Abd al-Karim Qasim.

In July 1958, Qasim had overthrown the Iraqi monarchy in what one former U.S. diplomat, who asked not to be identified, described as “a horrible orgy of bloodshed.”

According to current and former U.S. officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, Iraq was then regarded as a key buffer and strategic asset in the Cold War with the Soviet Union. For example, in the mid-1950s, Iraq was quick to join the anti-Soviet Baghdad Pact which was to defend the region and whose members included Turkey, Britain, Iran and Pakistan.

Little attention was paid to Qasim’s bloody and conspiratorial regime until his sudden decision to withdraw from the pact in 1959, an act that “freaked everybody out” according to a former senior U.S. State Department official.

Washington watched in marked dismay as Qasim began to buy arms from the Soviet Union and put his own domestic communists into ministry positions of “real power,” according to this official. The domestic instability of the country prompted CIA Director Allan Dulles to say publicly that Iraq was “the most dangerous spot in the world.”

In the mid-1980s, Miles Copeland, a veteran CIA operative, told UPI the CIA had enjoyed “close ties” with Qasim’s ruling Baath Party, just as it had close connections with the intelligence service of Egyptian leader Gamel Abd Nassar. In a recent public statement, Roger Morris, a former National Security Council staffer in the 1970s, confirmed this claim, saying that the CIA had chosen the authoritarian and anti-communist Baath Party “as its instrument.”

According to another former senior State Department official, Saddam, while only in his early 20s, became a part of a U.S. plot to get rid of Qasim. According to this source, Saddam was installed in an apartment in Baghdad on al-Rashid Street directly opposite Qasim’s office in Iraq’s Ministry of Defense, to observe Qasim’s movements.

Adel Darwish, Middle East expert and author of “Unholy Babylon,” said the move was done “with full knowledge of the CIA,” and that Saddam’s CIA handler was an Iraqi dentist working for CIA and Egyptian intelligence. U.S. officials separately confirmed Darwish’s account.

Darwish said that Saddam’s paymaster was Capt. Abdel Maquid Farid, the assistant military attaché at the Egyptian Embassy who paid for the apartment from his own personal account. Three former senior U.S. officials have confirmed that this is accurate.

The assassination was set for Oct. 7, 1959, but it was completely botched. Accounts differ. One former CIA official said that the 22-year-old Saddam lost his nerve and began firing too soon, killing Qasim’s driver and only wounding Qasim in the shoulder and arm. Darwish told UPI that one of the assassins had bullets that did not fit his gun and that another had a hand grenade that got stuck in the lining of his coat.

“It bordered on farce,” a former senior U.S. intelligence official said. But Qasim, hiding on the floor of his car, escaped death, and Saddam, whose calf had been grazed by a fellow would-be assassin, escaped to Tikrit, thanks to CIA and Egyptian intelligence agents, several U.S. government officials said.

Saddam then crossed into Syria and was transferred by Egyptian intelligence agents to Beirut, according to Darwish and former senior CIA officials. While Saddam was in Beirut, the CIA paid for Saddam’s apartment and put him through a brief training course, former CIA officials said. The agency then helped him get to Cairo, they said.

One former U.S. government official, who knew Saddam at the time, said that even then Saddam “was known as having no class. He was a thug – a cutthroat.”

In Cairo, Saddam was installed in an apartment in the upper class neighborhood of Dukki and spent his time playing dominos in the Indiana Café, watched over by CIA and Egyptian intelligence operatives, according to Darwish and former U.S. intelligence officials.

One former senior U.S. government official said: “In Cairo, I often went to Groppie Café at Emad Eldine Pasha Street, which was very posh, very upper class. Saddam would not have fit in there. The Indiana was your basic dive.”

But during this time Saddam was making frequent visits to the American Embassy where CIA specialists such as Miles Copeland and CIA station chief Jim Eichelberger were in residence and knew Saddam, former U.S. intelligence officials said.

Saddam’s U.S. handlers even pushed Saddam to get his Egyptian handlers to raise his monthly allowance, a gesture not appreciated by Egyptian officials since they knew of Saddam’s American connection, according to Darwish. His assertion was confirmed by former U.S. diplomat in Egypt at the time.

In February 1963 Qasim was killed in a Baath Party coup. Morris claimed recently that the CIA was behind the coup, which was sanctioned by President John F. Kennedy, but a former very senior CIA official strongly denied this.

“We were absolutely stunned. We had guys running around asking what the hell had happened,” this official said.

But the agency quickly moved into action. Noting that the Baath Party was hunting down Iraq’s communist, the CIA provided the submachine gun-toting Iraqi National Guardsmen with lists of suspected communists who were then jailed, interrogated, and summarily gunned down, according to former U.S. intelligence officials with intimate knowledge of the executions.

Many suspected communists were killed outright, these sources said. Darwish told UPI that the mass killings, presided over by Saddam, took place at Qasr al-Nehayat, literally, the Palace of the End.

A former senior U.S. State Department official told UPI: “We were frankly glad to be rid of them. You ask that they get a fair trial? You have to get kidding. This was serious business.”

A former senior CIA official said: “It was a bit like the mysterious killings of Iran’s communists just after Ayatollah Khomeini came to power in 1979. All 4,000 of his communists suddenly got killed.”

British scholar Con Coughlin, author of “Saddam: King of Terror,” quotes Jim Critchfield, then a senior Middle East agency official, as saying the killing of Qasim and the communists was regarded “as a great victory.” A former long-time covert U.S. intelligence operative and friend of Critchfield said: “Jim was an old Middle East hand. He wasn’t sorry to see the communists go at all. Hey, we were playing for keeps.”

Saddam, in the meantime, became head of al-Jihaz a-Khas, the secret intelligence apparatus of the Baath Party.

The CIA/Defense Intelligence Agency relation with Saddam intensified after the start of the Iran-Iraq war in September of 1980. During the war, the CIA regularly sent a team to Saddam to deliver battlefield intelligence obtained from Saudi AWACS surveillance aircraft to aid the effectiveness of Iraq’s armed forces, according to a former DIA official, part of a U.S. interagency intelligence group.

This former official said that he personally had signed off on a document that shared U.S. satellite intelligence with both Iraq and Iran in an attempt to produce a military stalemate. “When I signed it, I thought I was losing my mind,” the former official told UPI.

A former CIA official said that Saddam had assigned a top team of three senior officers from the Estikhbarat, Iraq’s military intelligence, to meet with the Americans.

According to Darwish, the CIA and DIA provided military assistance to Saddam’s ferocious February 1988 assault on Iranian positions in the al-Fao peninsula by blinding Iranian radars for three days.

The Saddam-U.S. intelligence alliance of convenience came to an end at 2 a.m. Aug. 2, 1990, when 100,000 Iraqi troops, backed by 300 tanks, invaded its neighbor, Kuwait. America’s one-time ally had become its bitterest enemy.

:hehe:

Saddam is bad
Bin Lade is bad
According to the US Bashar Al-Asad is bad
Khatami is bad
everyone is bad

the only greatest leader out there in the eyes of the US is the one who is a JEW. Sharon on the other hand should be awarded the Peace Prize.

Everyday the US will come up with someone else, how fast have they forgotten Bin Laden, I will give them a few days to forget Saddam, then off to someone else.

So, 11 posts and no one's made a point yet? Is there one? I think it's safe to say the entire world has known for some time that Saddam was a bad mofo, no one could hide that..
[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Imdad Ali: *
But seriously, it shows the level of denial some people are in, when they are not willing to believe that Saddam was a brutal dictator. You can only lead a horse to water, you cannot force it to drink.
[/QUOTE]
If this was supposed to be the point in posting this I don't think you made it. Go over your notes from Rush's show again and come back later with some points for us to knock down.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by spoon: *
Go over your notes from Rush's show again and come back later with some points for us to knock down.
[/QUOTE]

:D

We all know Saddam was a dictator.

Tell us something new.

Something like Bush's IQ has surpassed 10.

Or the earth is flat and the sun is cold.

Get a life. A real one that is.