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To: cyncooper; Howlin; backhoe

Short on details, but what's here is interesting...


8 posted on 03/11/2005 6:45:57 PM PST by MizSterious (First, the journalists, THEN the lawyers.)
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To: MizSterious; Dog
Rolf Ekeus, the Swede who led the UN's efforts to track down the weapons from 1991 to 1997, said that the offer came from Tariq Aziz, Saddam's foreign minister and deputy.

This guy left in '97 and says it was offered and he didn't accept it. But it establishes a precedent. If they offered it once, they offered it many times. And some probably accepted. (surprise!)

Which begs the question...if there were no WMD, why the attempt at bribes (if not outright bribes)? I know you guys have thought of that, but I just raise the point again.

16 posted on 03/11/2005 6:52:51 PM PST by cyncooper
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To: MizSterious; cyncooper; Howlin; backhoe
Short on details, but what's here is interesting...

Posting all or part of the story might help on the details front, so here goes. In this case, the details reveal this is not a new story, and the bribe offer took place sometime between 1991 and 1997.

Saddam's $2m offer to WMD inspector
By Francis Harris in Washington
(Filed: 12/03/2005)

Saddam Hussein's regime offered a $2 million (£1.4 million) bribe to the United Nations' chief weapons inspector to doctor his reports on the search for weapons of mass destruction.

Rolf Ekeus, the Swede who led the UN's efforts to track down the weapons from 1991 to 1997, said that the offer came from Tariq Aziz, Saddam's foreign minister and deputy.

Mr Ekeus told Reuters news agency that he had passed the information to the Volcker Commission. "I told the Volcker people that Tariq [Aziz] said a couple of million was there if we report right. My answer was, 'That is not the way we do business in Sweden.' "

A clean report from Mr Ekeus's inspectors would have been vital in lifting sanctions against Saddam's regime. But the inspectors never established what had happened to the regime's illicit weapons and never gave Iraq a clean bill of health.

The news that Iraq attempted to bribe a top UN official is a key piece of evidence for investigators into the scandal surrounding the oil-for-food programme. It proves that Iraq was offering huge sums of cash to influential foreigners in return for political favours.

Nile Gardiner, of the Heritage Foundation in Washington, who has followed the inquiries, said: "It's the tip of the iceberg of what the Iraqis were offering. For every official like Ekeus who turned down a bribe, there are many more who will have been tempted by it."

Saddam and his henchmen siphoned off an estimated £885 million from the humanitarian scheme, allegedly paying some of that to 270 foreign politicians, officials and journalists.

169 posted on 03/14/2005 3:48:28 PM PST by Wolfstar (If you can lead, do it. If you can't, follow. If you can't do either, become a Democrat.)
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