Iraq |
Saddam Hussein’s final secrets revealed: Tapes from CIA vault show Iraqi strongman wanted to be a novelist |
2024-03-03 |
[NYPost] In the pantheon of bloodthirsty dictators, Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein has almost been relegated to the dustbin of history. He’s remembered as part of the now-quaint-seeming "axis of evil," for having psychopathic sons, Uday and Qusay, and a murderous cousin named "Chemical Ali," and perhaps most of all for not having weapons of mass destruction. The March 2003 invasion of Iraq was premised on the claim that Saddam had amassed chemical and biological weapons and was ready to use them. But there were none and the cavalry charge to Baghdad turned into a decade-long morass that cost more than $728 billion and led to the death of 4,492 US servicemembers. Now his final secrets are being revealed in a new book based in part on Saddam’s secret tapes which its author fought a legal battle to get. EXPLORE MORE "The Achilles Trap: Saddam Hussein, the CIA and the Origins of America’s Invasion of Iraq," by Steve Coll, uses details of what Saddam told CIA and FBI interrogators over cigars and the own Nixon-style recordings he made during his 24-year reign, which the CIA retrieved from his ruined palaces in Baghdad. They reveal the Saddam nobody knew and show how just how much the CIA misunderstood the butcher of Baghdad. For one, Saddam fancied himself a creative talent, writing four novels and financing a film when he was in power, and just as the Bush administration’s rhetoric heated up against him, he was more into writing than military affairs. In the days before his December 2006 hanging he turned to writing poetry. The author Coll, a veteran journalist, doesn’t pull any punches when it comes to the CIA’s massive "miscalculation" and "missteps" in invading Iraq. But he doesn’t let Saddam off the hook either, making it clear that the Ba’athist dictator bungled his side of things, both underestimating the US decision to invade and not doing enough to make it clear that he had no WMDs because of his own ego and poor sense of political strategy. "Why did Mr. Hussein sacrifice his long reign in power — and ultimately his life — by creating an impression that he held dangerous weapons when he did not?" Coll wrote in a New York Times ![]() ...which still proudly displays Walter Duranty's Pulitzer prize... essay tied to the launch of his book. Coll then explains that Hussein did secretly order the destruction of all his chemical and biological weapons, which is what the US and the UN told him to do — but then covered it up for fear of appearing weak to his own people as well as the West. "One of the mistakes some people make is that when the enemy has decided to hurt you, you believe there is a chance to decrease the harm by acting in a certain way," he told a subordinate, according to Coll’s book. "In fact, he said, ’The harm won’t be less.’" ("Hussein recorded his private leadership conversations as assiduously as Richard Nixon," Coll wrote.) It didn’t help that Hussein, however shrewd and ruthless he could be, was the product of a harsh rural peasant upbringing near the provincial city of Tikrit ...birthplace of Saddam Hussein... where violence was a part of daily life. Hussein’s father died before he was born and his stepfather, a formidable man with a wicked streak, was said to be hard on Saddam. Saddam in turn wrote in his autobiography that he was a scary little boy, intimidating other kids by brandishing a gun and once pistol-whipping someone on a bus who didn’t move over to make room. But his primitive toughness was no help when it came to dealing with the fog of perception and mixed messages coming from the West, or what Coll calls Saddam’s "tragic, decades-long conflict with Washington" that included a collaboration with the CIA during the 1980s, and the Gulf War of 1990 and 1991. His tragedy, which became the West’s as well since the invasion of Iraq led to the eventual rise of ISIS and empowered Iran, was naively thinking that Washington was more "omniscient" and competent than it really was, Coll argues. He thought the CIA "already knew" he had no dangerous weapons. Then again, he was a virulent anti-semite who also thought the CIA was totally run by Jews. He even banned his own spies from learning Hebrew in case they became sympathetic to Jews. Threaded in between the revelations of Hussein’s own self-destruction, however, Coll draws a sometimes sympathetic portrait of Saddam before his capture and hanging. He was discovered by US forces in December 2003 hiding in a "spider hole" near a farmhouse near Tikrit "The thing about Saddam as an adult is that he wasn’t really a crazy person," Coll told The Post. "It sounds weird to say but he was comfortable in his own skin." More about Saddam Hussein’s four novels and the poems he wrote before he was hanged can be seen at the link. |
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Iraq Judge Who Presided over Saddam Hussein's Trial Dies of COVID-19 |
2021-04-04 |
[ENGLISH.AAWSAT] A retired Iraqi judge who presided over the trial of Iraq’s late dictator Saddam Hussein has died after battling COVID-19, the country’s top judicial body said Friday. According to Iraq’s Supreme Judicial Council, Judge Mohammed Oreibi al-Khalifa, 52, passed away in a hospital in Baghdad where he was being treated for complications from the coronavirus (aka COVID19 or Chinese Plague) ![]() Oreibi graduated from the Faculty of Law at Baghdad university in 1992 and was appointed a judge in 2000 by a presidential decree. He shot to fame after he was named an investigative judge in the trial of Saddam and his regime in August 2004. He later took over as the lead judge in Saddam’s trial for genocide, which also included Saddam’s cousin Ali Hassan al-Majid, known as Chemical Ali, and five other defendants on charges related to their roles in the bloody 1987-1988 crackdown against Kurdish rebels, known as the Anfal campaign. The prosecution alleged that around 180,000 people died, many of them civilians killed by poison gas. Saddam was subsequently convicted and sentenced to death; he was executed on Dec. 30, 2006. Oreibi tolerated very few disruptions from Saddam and his co-defendants during the trial — even throwing the deposed Iraqi leader out of the courtroom several times amid fiery ...a single two-syllable word carrying connotations of both incoherence and viciousness. A fiery delivery implies an audience of rubes and yokels, preferably forming up into a mob... exchanges between them. In one session, after a shouting match between them, he ordered Saddam held in solitary confinement for several days. The statement from the judicial council lauded Oreibi for his what it said was courage in handling the trial of Saddam and the former regime. |
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Iraq to disband court that tried Saddam | |
2011-05-05 | |
BAGHDAD The Iraqi government said Wednesday it will disband the tribunal that condemned Saddam Hussein and other top regime officials to death and was heavily criticized by human rights groups.
The statement only said that the Cabinet approved a draft law to disband the court and that it has been sent to parliament, without giving any further details. The court spokesman, Raid Juhi, told The Associated Press that the decision was made because the court had finished its cases. The proposed law sets June 30 as a deadline to settle a few final minor cases, he added. A number of international human rights organizations and Iraqi Sunni politicians have been questioning whether the proceedings of the tribunal, which tried and sentenced dozens of former officials, complied with international standards for fairness. The first among the cases it handled was against Saddam who was hanged in late 2006 for his role in the deaths of more than 140 Shiite Muslims following an 1982 attempt on his life. It also tried and sent to the gallows Husseins cousin Ali Hassan al-Majid who gained his nickname Chemical Ali for ordering the use of mustard gas and nerve agents against the Kurds in response to their collaboration with the Iranians during the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War. Saddams half brother and former intelligence chief Barzan Ibrahim, former vice president Taha Yassin Ramadan and former head of Iraqs revolutionary court Awad Hamid al-Bandar were also all sentenced to death and executed. The court also tried and convicted 74-year-old Tariq Aziz, the only Christian in Saddams inner circle, for his role in the crackdown on the Shiite political parties now dominating Iraqs politics. Aziz faces a death sentence for his conviction in that case but it has yet to be implemented. Two other Saddam-era officials have also been convicted and sentenced to death. But the cases of Sultan Hashim Ahmad al-Tai, the former defense minister who led the Iraqi delegation at the cease-fire talks that ended the 1991 Gulf War, and Hussein Rashid Mohammed, a former deputy director of operations for the Iraqi armed forces, have angered Iraqs Sunni population who believe the sentences are too harsh. | |
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Iraq |
Iraqi Kurds rejoice over execution of Chemical Ali |
2010-01-27 |
Iraqi Kurds have expressed joy over the execution of 'Chemical Ali' -- a key player in the Baath regime's war machine, which killed thousands of Kurds. Ali Hassan al-Majid al-Tikritieh, Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's first cousin and one of his most trusted men, nicknamed 'Chemical Ali,' was executed in Baghdad on Monday. The punishment was meted out for Majid's part in the 1988 chemical weapons attack on the northeastern Iraqi village of Halabja, which killed over 5,000 Kurds. In the attack, government warplanes showering Halabja for five hours with mustard gas and nerve agents in the most deadly chemical weapons attack on civilians in history. "I have heard the news of the execution [of] the criminals whose hands [are] stained with blood. This is a happy day for the Kurdish people," Reuters quoted Iraqi Kurd Saman Faruq as saying. Behnam Karim, another local, said, "As a Kurdish citizen I am very happy because of the decision. But I wish the decision can define Halabja's crime as a genocide." The verdict was issued earlier in the month, prompting jubilation in Halabja, where people were seen cheering and playing music on the streets. However, the former intelligence chief, who also held the interior and defense ministry portfolios, considered the massacre a feather in his cap. The ruling for the attack on Halabja was the fourth death sentence Majid received. In December 2008, he received another death sentence for war crimes committed during the 1991 Shia uprising in southern Iraq, where about 100,000 people were massacred. |
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Iraq |
Chemical Ali executed |
2010-01-25 |
![]() Iraq's government spokesman says Saddam Hussein's notorious cousin "Chemical Ali" was executed Monday about a week after being sentenced to death for the poison gas attacks that killed more than 5,000 Kurds in 1988. News of the hanging came shortly after three suicide car bombs struck downtown Baghdad. It was not immediately clear whether the attacks were linked the execution of Ali Hassan al-Majid. Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh confirmed the execution took place. Al-Majid - widely known as "Chemical Ali" for the gas attacks - was convicted on Sunday for ordering the poison gas to be dropped on the Kurdish town of Halabja in 1988 as part of a campaign against a Kurdish uprising. It was the fourth death sentence against him for crimes against humanity. |
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Iraq |
Car bomb kills at least 36 in Baghdad |
2010-01-25 |
At least 36 people were killed and 71 injured Monday in multiple bomb explosions in the hotel district of central Baghdad, a ministry official said. Three massive car bombs shook the Iraqi capital in quick succession. The first blast went off in the car park of the Sheraton Hotel and the second was in front of Babylon Hotel. The third blast took place shortly after when a minibus drove into the Al Hamra Hotel compound and blew up 160 feet short of the main entrance, eyewitnesses said. The bomb left a crater 30 feet wide and 12 feet deep. The Iraqi army were trying to remove families that were trapped inside near-by houses and extract wounded from the second floor of the hotel. Monday's explosions came less than six weeks from a March 7 general election which both U.S. forces and Iraqi politicians had warned could be a focus for violence. The latest violence also occurred less than two weeks after security forces sealed off Baghdad after being tipped-off that bomb-laden cars had been parked in the city. Insurgents, weakened in the past year, have in the past six months changed tactics and mounted successful high-profile attacks on "hard" targets such as government buildings, rather than so-called soft targets in civilian areas. The blast came just before Saddam Hussein's cousin, "Chemical Ali" Hassan al-Majid, was excecuted. |
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Iraq |
Chemical Ali will be hanged within days |
2010-01-18 |
![]() "We will receive Chemical Ali from the Americans in the next few days and he will be executed very soon afterwards," Iraq's deputy justice minister, Busho Ibrahim, was quoted as saying by The Guardian. A former spy chief and first cousin of Saddam, "Chemical Ali" was sentenced to death on Sunday for ordering the attack on Halabja, which is regarded by many as the greatest crime committed during the 35 years of Baathist rule. It was the fourth death sentence the 68-year-old has received. Considered Saddam's right-hand man and bearing a strong resemblance to the former dictator, Ali Hassan al-Majid was a member of the decision-making Revolutionary Command Council and was regularly called upon to suppress rebellions. He was infamous for his role in northern Iraq. Majid earned his nickname in 1988 when he ordered an airborne poison gas attack on the Kurdish town of Halabja that killed over 5,000 people, including many women and children. On March 16, 1988, Iraqi jets swooped over the small town and for five hours sprayed it with a deadly cocktail of mustard gas and the nerve agents Tabun, Sarin, and VX. International outrage meant that Majid did not dare leave Iraq for the following 15 years. Finally, in early 2003, as war with the US looked increasingly likely, he visited Syria and Lebanon in an attempt to drum up regional support for Iraq. In March 2003, Chemical Ali was appointed to head the southern region -- one of four senior commanders reporting directly to Saddam Hussein. A month later, British officials said they believed he had been killed in a coalition air strike in the southern city of Basra. But in June, then US secretary of defense Donald Rumsfeld conceded that he did not know whether he was dead or alive. Two months later, US military officials announced that they had captured him. Majid is currently being held at the Camp Cropper detention center on the outskirts of Baghdad. |
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Iraq |
Chemical Ali sentenced to hang for Halabja massacre |
2010-01-17 |
![]() The cousin of the former dictator earned his nickname in 1988 when he ordered an airborne poison gas attack on the Kurdish town of Halabja, killing more than 5,000 people, including many women and children. Ali Hassan al-Majid is to be hanged for what is believed to be the single biggest gassing of civilians in history. It is his fourth death sentence for crimes committed as Saddam's defence minister, interior minister, intelligence chief and governor of occupied Kuwait. "I am so happy today," said Nazik Tawfiq, 45, a Kurdish woman who lost six of her relatives in the attack. She came to court alone to hear the sentence, and fell to her knees and began to pray upon hearing the verdict. "Now the souls of our victims will rest in peace." Saddam himself was never tried for the Halabja massacre, something many Kurds regret. He was executed three years ago by the ruling Shia government for massacring Shias in the south of Iraq. "This judgment is a victory for all Iraqis, humanity and the Kurds because Halabja is the biggest crime of modern times," said Majid Hamad Amin, minister of the martyrs and displaced in the Kurdish regional government. "Halabja is not only a Kurdish case but it is an issue for all Iraqis and the rest of the world." On March 16, 1988, Iraqi jets swooped over the small town and for five hours sprayed it with a deadly cocktail of mustard gas and the nerve agents Tabun, Sarin and VX. International outrage meant that al-Majid did not dare leave Iraq for the following 15 years. Only as war with the US looked increasingly likely in early 2003 did he visit Syria and Lebanon in a bid to whip up regional support for Iraq. Soon though he became the King of Spades in the pack of cards of most wanted Iraqis issued by the US military during the invasion and was arrested in August of that year. Initially it was thought he had been killed by coalition bombing of his villa in Basra, but US officials were later forced to admit that he was still alive. |
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Iraq |
Tariq Aziz gets 15 years for crimes against humanity |
2009-03-12 |
![]() Aziz, who was the face of Saddam's regime for years, looked shocked when the sentence was given out at his trial in Baghdad and asked to sit down. He has been suffering ill health for some time. He was found guilty on four counts of crimes against humanity, including complicity in murder and torture in connection with the execution of 42 Iraqi merchants who had been accused by Saddam of being involved in increasing food prices at a time when the country was struggling under international sanctions. They were rounded up in July 1992 and executed soon after a quick trial. Prosecutors in the trial said that the former Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister was complicit in the deaths because he was a member of the ruling Revolutionary Command Council that rubber-stamped Saddam's decision to have the merchants arrested. Aziz was one of those named on a US list of "most-wanted" regime members that was published in the form of a deck of cards. He was number 43. But the man often seen in public with a cigar in his mouth, and who tried to defend Saddam on the world stage, gave himself up soon after the fall of Baghdad in April 2003. In court he wore a blue jacket, black shirt and his trademark thick, black-rimmed glasses. After he was sentenced he kept his eyes closed as other defendants stood up to hear their sentences. Watban Ibrahim al-Hassan and Sabawi Ibrahim, director of public security - both half-brothers of Saddam - were sentenced to death on the same charges. Ali Hassan al-Majeed, better known as Chemical Ali - who has already been given three death sentences from previous cases - was also given a 15-year prison sentence for the death of the merchants.Three other defendants received sentences of life in prison, 15 years and six years. Issam Rashid Hweish, formerly of the Central Bank in Baghdad, was acquitted owing to lack of evidence. |
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Iraq |
Tariq Aziz gets 15 years in stir |
2009-03-11 |
![]() The sentence was the first against Aziz, a fluent English speaker who was the public face of Hussein's government before turning himself into U.S. authorities a month after his government fell in April 2003. It comes less than two weeks after the 73-year-old Aziz was acquitted by the same court, Iraq's highest, in another case. Two of Hussein's half-brothers, Watban Ibrahim al-Hassan and Sabawi Ibrahim al-Hassan, were sentenced to death for their role in the executions. "Long live Iraq! Long live Iraq! Down with the occupiers!" Sabawi al-Hassan shouted as the verdict was read in the courtroom. The men were among eight on trial for the killings of the Baghdad traders, accused at the time of racketeering while the country was under devastating U.N. sanctions imposed after Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990. They were tried in a summary trial, then executed without being given the chance of appeal or defense. Abed Hammoud, Hussein's secretary, was sentenced to life in prison. Mizban Khidr Hadi, a top Baath Party official, was imprisoned for 15 years. A six-year term was handed down to Ahmad Hussein Khudier, the head of the presidential office. Essam Rasheed Huwaish, then governor of the Central Bank, was acquitted. Majeed already has three death sentences against him, the first in the case that gave him the moniker by which he is popularly known, "Chemical Ali." In June 2007, a court convicted him of genocide for ordering the deaths of tens of thousands of Kurds in the 1988 Anfal campaign, when Iraqi forces fired poison gas on villages. Aziz was a well-known figure in Iraq, serving as foreign minister, then deputy prime minister. But he was never thought to wield real power within Hussein's inner circle. His family has complained that he is in poor health, suffering from heart and respiratory problems, along with high blood pressure and diabetes. |
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Iraq |
Iraqi court acquits former top aide to Saddam Hussein |
2009-03-03 |
![]() Aziz, who will turn 73 next month, remained in custody, facing charges in two other cases. Only hours after his acquittal, he appeared before another judge to defend himself against charges that he was involved in a massacre of Kurds in 1983. Even so, the verdict - the first in a case against him - was viewed as a sign of judicial fairness and independence for a controversial tribunal that has been deliberating the most heinous crimes of the Saddam era. Aziz, who served as foreign minister of Iraq during the invasion of Kuwait in 1990 and as Saddam's deputy prime minister during the U.S. invasion in 2003, was acquitted of culpability in a brutal crackdown against Shiite protesters that followed the assassination of a revered cleric, Grand Ayatollah Mohammed al-Sadr, in 1999. The court convicted Ali Hassan al-Majid, a former aide known as "Chemical Ali" for ordering poison gas attacks against the Kurds in the 1980s, for his role in those killings, sentencing him to death for a third time. Two other Saddam aides, Saif al-Din al-Mashhadani and Uglah Abid Siqir al-Kubaysi, both senior Baath party officials who appeared on the infamous deck of playing cards from the U.S. government for Iraq's most wanted officials, were also acquitted in the case. |
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Iraq |
Iraq's Tareq Aziz, Chemical Ali face new trial |
2009-01-27 |
Sixteen Saddam Hussein-era Iraqi officials, including former deputy prime minister Tareq Aziz and Saddam's cousin Ali Hassan al-Majeed -- nicknamed Chemical Ali -- faced a new trial on Monday for repressing Shi'ite Kurds. The trial is the seventh being held against senior Saddam officials for crimes committed before the Iraqi dictator was ousted in a 2003 U.S.-led invasion. Saddam was hanged after his conviction in the first trial, for ordering the killing of Shi'ite villagers after an assassination attempt. The latest trial will examine the repression of a community known as Feyli Kurds, who come from the mountainous border area between Iraq and Iran, and, unlike most Iraqi Kurds, are Shi'ite Muslims rather than Sunnis. Thousands of Feyli Kurds were driven from the country under Saddam, who declared them to be Iranian citizens and forced them across the border. Others were repressed, imprisoned and tortured in the 1970s and 1980s. The trial is being presided over by Raouf Rashid Abdul-Rahman, the Kurdish judge who sentenced Saddam to die. Majeed -- nicknamed Chemical Ali for using poison gas to kill 5,000 Kurds in a 1988 attack -- has already been sentenced to death twice. The first death sentence was for his role in the mass killings of Kurds in the 1980s and the second for a bloody crackdown against Shi'ites in the 1990s. His execution has been delayed by political wrangling. Aziz, a fluent English speaker who served as the public face of Saddam's regime in the west, is also standing trial in a separate case over the deaths of dozens of merchants executed for price fixing when Iraq was under U.N. sanctions. |
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