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Politics : Foreign Policy Discussion Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hawkmoon who wrote (3986)2/14/2003 6:51:35 AM
From: D. Long  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15987
 
I think he's taking a dirt nap, Hawk. That's why there's no video, and why the audio is "dirty." Like Bill said, I think its Zwahiri and the Egyptian bunch running the show and making fakes.

You're right though. Not too hard using available software to modify a recording to conform to a predetermined voice wave pattern, and "dirty it up" to cover. Hell I've done silly crap like that with Cooledit and a mic on my home PC.

Derek



To: Hawkmoon who wrote (3986)2/14/2003 11:09:22 AM
From: michael97123  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15987
 
from kens thread from ghostrider

Debka reporting high level Iraqi defection. Only source so far.
First Defection from Top Rank of Saddam Regime
Exclusive from DEBKA-Net-Weekly 97 Feb.14

Adib Shaaban, the right hand of Saddam Hussein’s powerful son Uday, has defected.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly reports exclusively that this key member of Saddam Hussein’s administration, who was charged with his son’s most sensitive missions, traveled to Jeddah at the beginning of this week, saying he needed to put through some gold transactions ahead of the war.

From Jeddah, he flew to Beirut and… disappeared.

US intelligence sources report that Shaaban never really went to Beirut. He made his way under cover to Damascus Monday and was picked up by an unmarked plane for an unknown destination.

As Uday’s closest aide, he also managed a chain of official publications, including the authoritative Babel, and was in on the Saddam regime’s deepest secrets.

Uday commands the secret army known as Saddam’s Fedayeen, the backbone of Baghdad’s defenses and custodian of the weapons of mass destruction that were not smuggled out to Lebanon.

Uday is also the chief of the ruling Baath Party’s covert service.

Shaaban must therefore be a veritable treasury of Saddam Hussein’s secrets. In American hands, Uday’s chef de bureau would be even more valuable than the proverbial smoking gun.