Posted on 11/15/2003 4:35:40 PM PST by saquin
AMERICAN and British intelligence are in secret negotiations to seize Saddam Husseins right-hand man. General Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, Saddams former deputy, is believed to be at the pinnacle of a pyramid of terrorists, mercenaries and supporters of the old regime waging war on allied forces in Iraq.
Exclusive interviews with Paul Bremer, who runs the US-led coalition provisional authority, Dr David Kay, head of the Iraqi survey group that is searching for Saddams weapons, and senior military and intelligence officers in Iraq have revealed that the Americans have stepped up their efforts to seize al-Douri and stem the flow of terrorist attacks.
The hunt for al-Douri, number six on the list of Americas 55 most wanted and who is reported to have suffered from leukaemia and heart problems, has intensified as the insurgency has grown in the past two weeks. The number of attacks has grown to 33 a day, compared with 15 daily in September. The Americans believe they have leverage.
Al-Douri is about to die. His supporters are begging us for treatment, said Colonel Steven Boltz, a senior US army intelligence officer in Baghdad.
The Iraqi general has announced his terms: medical treatment, a full pardon for any crimes against humanity committed in Iraq or Kuwait and a firm promise that he will not be extradited to Kuwait.
The Americans were not willing to arrange a deal that would favour him, but discussions were opened through a Kurdish member of the Iraqi governing council and are now being pursued directly with US and British intelligence officers.
Al-Douri would be a major get, said Kay. He would know where the weapons of mass destruction are hidden, where Saddam is.
Asked if the coalition had current credible intelligence that Saddam was still in Iraq, Boltz looked at his commanding officer and then said simply: Yes.
Following the capture or killing of most of Saddams senior officials, including his sons, Qusay and Uday, the loss of al-Douri would not only further isolate the ousted dictator but would also remove his key link with the financiers of the attacks on allied forces in Iraq.
Bremer said the mounting attacks on allied forces and Iraqi police were motivated by money, not ideology. More than three-quarters of direct and indirect attacks on allied forces were paid for, he said.
Al-Douri is likely to be using cash from more than $1 billion looted by Saddam loyalists from the Iraqi Central Bank. According to an intelligence source, he is believed to be in charge of those funds and therefore of a network of about 2,500 local militants, plus perhaps 1,000 foreign fighters, drawn from the ranks of Al-Qaeda and Ansar al-Islam, an Islamist terror group operating in Kurdish territory.
In the wider hunt, Kay insisted that the search for weapons of mass destruction was going well. Contrary to what you read in the press, senior detainees are talking, Kay said and they are providing leads on terrorists, foreign fighters, future attacks and chemical weapons. He revealed that America had built a state-of-the-art base to interrogate prisoners near Baquba, north of Baghdad.
Two top Iraqi scientists, codenamed Charlie and Alpha, are helping the coalition to learn more about Iraqs anthrax programme, Kay said. The Iraqis had made shocking innovations in the milling and drying processes needed to weaponise anthrax. Almost every week there is a new discovery that boggles your mind, Kay said.
He had recently learnt that Saddam had paid the North Koreans a $10m deposit for long-range missiles that could be adapted to carry chemical or biological weapons. Apparently the missiles were never delivered but North Korea kept the money.
Sabotage by Iraqi intelligence agents during the fall of Baghdad and a shortage of translators with intelligence clearance have slowed the search for Saddams weapons. The Iraqi survey group has uncovered more than 9Å miles of documents relating to weapons of mass destruction and most still have not been translated, Kay explained. A lack of translators also hampers some interrogations with Iraqi scientists.
Some of the best weapons sources appear to have been the casualties of war. The head of Saddams nuclear enrichment programme was accidentally shot dead at a US military checkpoint last spring, Kay said.
Bremer blamed Syria for acting as a conduit for foreign terrorists, mostly Al-Qaeda, to attack allied forces: Weve got rat lines running from Sudan and Yemen through Damascus and across the Syrian border into Iraq. It is pretty hard to imagine that Syrian intelligence doesnt know this is going on.
Closing the Iraq-Syria border is proving difficult, even though America has deployed more troops and unmanned aerial vehicles. Were sitting down pretty hard on the Syrian border, Bremer said, adding that foreign fighters still slipped across the desert frontier. We will have open borders for a long time. It is just a fact.
Bremer said that his personal goal was to transfer authority to an elected sovereign government by the end of 2004.
Meanwhile, terrorist attacks are expected to continue. US intelligence believes that last months bombing of the Red Cross headquarters was unintentional and that the actual target was an Iraqi police station some 100 yards down the road.
Remember the post 9-11 anthrax was highly milled and that we didn't think Iraq had that refined capability.
May it have a NO VACANCY sign out front!
[excerpt]
So whoever was responsible for last fall's bioterrorism wouldn't have needed to add silica to his anthrax powder at all. But he -- or she, or they -- might have had use for it while manufacturing that powder to begin with. Before they were kicked out of Iraq for good, U.N. weapons inspectors concluded that Saddam's military biologists were no longer relying on mechanical milling machines to render dried-out paste-colonies of anthracis bacteria into fine dust, but had instead refined a spray drying technique that produced the dust in a single step. And the suspected key ingredient in this Iraqi innovation, interestingly enough: pharmaceutical-grade silica, a common industrial drying agent.
4) But last fall's anthrax was milled mechanically, so it can't have come from Iraq, right?
We don't know that it was milled, really. Published reports conflict on this point, and those news accounts that do suggest the anthrax was milled invariably attribute the intelligence to federal investigators impressed by the super-granulated quality of the Leahy sample. In fact, evidently concerned that the Leahy letter might thus tend to confirm the Barbara Hatch Rosenberg conspiracy theory at its most rococo (i.e., that someone walked the anthrax straight out of a CIA lab), certain "government sources" have lately begun putting out word that the stuff was actually too good to be American. Two weeks ago, an item in Newsweek described a "secret new analysis" said to be circulating through high-level Washington, according to which analysis the Leahy letter's powder was "ground to a microscopic fineness not achieved by U.S. biological weapons experts." Researchers have found evidence of "intense milling," Newsweek explained: individual, free-floating anthracis spores, something our own government's scientists have "never seen" before.
But that's absurd. Individual, free-floating anthracis spores are what those scientists look at every day. And it's hardly a secret. During a December 15 Centers for Disease Control-sponsored conference on post-exposure prevention of inhalation anthrax -- you can find the transcript on CDC's website -- Dr. Louise Pitt of USAMRIID discussed in considerable detail how her colleagues at Ft. Detrick do their anthracis research. The spores, she said,
"are diluted to the desired concentration in sterile distilled water, water for injection. Our aerosols are extremely well characterized and defined. The particle size of the aerosol has a mass-meeting-aerosol diameter between .8 and 1.4 microns. That means that the aerosols that we are generating are basically single-spore aerosols. There's very, very little clumping of two spores. They are single-spore aerosols."
And remember, Ft. Detrick does not employ a mechanical milling process. Because, as it happens, people like Dr. Pitt have discovered much easier ways to make what our experts persist in calling the Leahy letter's "weapons-grade" anthrax: If they want it in a mist, they dilute the spores in water, as USAMRIID does. And if they want their anthrax dry, in a powder, they run it through what is essentially a very fancy flour sifter, a device commercially available throughout the world. This practice, too, has been specified in the open literature. A "Risk Assessment of Anthrax Threat Letters" published last year by Canada's Defence Research Establishment Suffield (DRES), for instance, was based on a bacterial specimen prepared in the "routine manner." Agar-grown cultures were dried into a "clumpy, undistinguished mess." And the mess was then filtered with a sifter, separating the largest chunks and leaving behind a final powder containing "a high proportion of singular spores."
Under a microscope, of course, singular spores, both milled and unmilled, look exactly the same.
This together with the Weekly Standard revelation on the same weekend would be great!
If they could capture him, that is!
There was a little item on the Foxnews report from David Piper , a correspondant in Baghdad reporting a flyer found around the City saying that the Baathists had kicked Saddam out of the party altogether and were calling for a dialogue with the Coalition Forces !
Very interesting tid bit. Just was on this thread but didn't post anything. Things heating up it sounds like.
The defense department needs to give Fox some Bandwidth to Fax the Memo to Fox HDQTRS!
Why those dirty dogs!
Not really! I am certain that Daschle will vehemently deny any allegation that Iraq was responsible (after all... politics is more important!!!).
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