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Politics : Stop the War! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Doug R who wrote (9356)4/7/2003 5:41:22 PM
From: Techplayer  Respond to of 21614
 
U.S. Troops Making Saddam's Palace a Temporary Home
Posted - April 07, 2003 4:40pm

Baghdad, Iraq (AP) - The U.S. Army took the war to Saddam Hussein on Monday - to the heart of his capital city, to the dusty remains of his opulent palace, to his hot tubs and barbecue pit.

With little organized resistance, the Army's 3rd Infantry Division rolled through Baghdad, taking over major roads and settling into the New Presidential Palace. There, they found gold-painted faux French furniture, fabulous views of the Tigris River and a television in every room.

Homey, it's not.

"This used to be a nice place, they should make it like a Six Flags, or something," said Spc. Robert Blake, 20, of State College, Pa., and the 3rd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment.

Saddam has many palaces, and the Americans visited two on Sunday, including another about two miles away.

This one, constructed recently near his Baath Party headquarters, apparently was built as a residence and for entertainment, though it is unclear how much time the Iraqi president spent there. Troops found no personal effects, no "to-do lists" on the refrigerators, no needlepoint pillows on the beds.

What they found, instead, was a building that had all the ambiance of a luxury, five-star conference center. And they immediately put it to use as a mobile command center, setting up a prisoner of war collection point in the palace compound.

As Iraqis were captured in street fighting outside, they were brought to the palace for processing before being sent behind U.S. lines.

Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said troops were looking for intelligence - leads to other regime targets, documentation of weapons of mass destruction.

He said there were no immediate reports that such material was found.

But he gave at least one other reason why the palace was captured: to send a message that "we're in there ... that this regime is gone."

They left no doubt that they were "in there." Soldiers used Saddam's toilets (for many the first indoor plumbing they'd seen in four months), rifled through documents, helped themselves to ashtrays, pillows, gold-painted Arab glassware and other souvenirs.

At sundown, some troops plugged one of Saddam's televisions into a portable generator and watched a state-run broadcast. They scoffed at a segment on an old man, wearing a turban and clutching an assault rifle.

"That looks awfully like the Taliban to me," said one soldier.

Occasionally, some Iraqis would approach the walls of the compound. The Americans would fire warning shots, and the Iraqis would run away.

"I do believe this city is freakin' ours," boasted Capt. Chris Carter of Watkinsville, Ga.

The main building, of sand-colored brick, is topped with a dome of blue-and-gold ceramic tile, now covered with cement dust. There are two huge holes in the roof and the front of the building from U.S. cruise missiles or laser-guided bombs in the past; the blasts knocked off the facade, collapsed floors and scorched walls.

Where fire had not destroyed the interior, plaster trimming and false ceiling had collapsed. Shards of hundreds of glass chandeliers and mirrors lay on the ground, crunching under the boots of American soldiers.

On the top floor, there once was an indoor pool, with windows looking out on three sides of the building. What was left of an elaborate, mosaic ceiling littered what was left of the bottom of the pool - the water drained into basement and first floors, which were flooded.

Much of the building seemed like an empty hotel, never occupied.

The bedrooms, all large, each had bathroom with a Jacuzzi-like tub. There were hotel-quality beds and tables; most of the shelves and drawers were empty. A lone children's room had four beds.

In the industrial kitchen, everything had been put away and carefully cleaned. There was no food in the refrigerators or pantries.

The building boasted a sophisticated audio-video system, with several music channels and a closed-circuit television channel.

In one cabinet was an assortment of pirated movies, some with the titles in English. Saddam, or his guests, had a choice of movies like "Hanoi Hilton," "The Assassination of Trotsky," "Les Miserables" from the many Arab titles in the collection.

There were several copies of the Quran, with dozens of commentaries on its meaning, all in Arabic. There were also audio cassettes of the Quran and of Egyptian pop music.

Outside, curtains from the building were strewn across the lawn, along with decorative, wrought-iron gates that had covered bulletproof glass.

Behind the building, by the Tigris, there was a grill and an elaborate water garden with man-made pools and babbling brooks.

If not for the distant sound of tank and machine-gun fire, you could almost say it was idyllic.



To: Doug R who wrote (9356)4/7/2003 5:44:19 PM
From: Techplayer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21614
 
Saddam fled from Baghdad three days ago ?
Tuesday April 08, 2003 (0023 PST)


LONDON: A former chief of protocol of Saddam Hussain, Haitham Rashid Wihaib, claimed that the Iraqi President fled from the capital three day ago, that is around April 2.

As American forces tightened their grip on Baghdad, senior US officials, according to reports here, said that intelligence on Saddam Hussain's whereabouts had "dried up".

But they also say that in all probability he is alive and possibly hiding in a network of tunnels believed to stretch over a 50 mile area in and around Baghdad. He also says no central command is left now for providing direction to the forces. This is also the view of military analysts HT talked with.

"I spent nearly 20 years working for Saddam, latterly seeing him daily while running his private office and daily appointment diary," Wihaib claims in a write-up in a daily.

"I also got to know his doubles. And the Saddam Hussain we saw shaking hands of his subjects in that extraordinary walkabout on Friday, was definitely a doopelganger."

He says that the stunt, of walking on the streets, was ordered by Saddam's son Qusay to convince the Allies that his father was still in Baghdad and a last ditch attempt to show the Iraqi people their "leader was brave and prepared to fight from the capital".

Wihaib alleges that Saddam in reality is not brave. "He is mad and desperate and is readying himself for exile." The former potocol cief claims to know that once Saddam learnt Americans were closing on Baghdad, "he fled to his home town of Tikrit." This could be the reason for the two divisions of Republican Guards being stationed there, as told to HT by Col Christopher Langton of the Institue of Internationl Strategic Studies, a few day ago.

Wihaib claims that Saddam left in a series of anonymous taxis and battered pick up trucks in a convoy which would have looked like any other group of fleeing Iraqis.

Last year Saddam' aides allegedly rented 500 houses in Tikrit. He used to move from property to property, hardly spending more than a few hours at each place.

Wihaib says, "Saddam has taken his two murderous son and a handful of key advisors still loyal to him. In Baghdad each local commander has been told to act as he sees fit."

The prediction by Wihaib is that "probably by next weekend he will either be dead or captured or will have fled his ravaged country." He has already moved his vast wealth to Geneva and other sympathetic West Asian countries.

He also confirms the earlier reports that Saddam's first wife, Sajida and their three daughters and grandchildren are already staying with the Iraqi amabassador in Syria. His lastest wife Iman, 27, Wihaib, says has been sent to Jordan last week.

But, warns Wihaib that Saddam would be captured only in a surprise attack. He has instructed his bodyguards to shoot him if the ememy ia about to capture him.

Saddam fled Baghdad 3 days ago: Ex-aide
Press Trust of India
London, April 6

As US Forces tightened their grip on Baghdad, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, along with his two sons, fled the capital three days ago for his home town of Tikrit, 175 km to the north, media reports said.
"I have been informed that once he had firm evidence that the Americans were closing in on Baghdad, he fled to his home town of Tikrit," claimed Haitham Rashid Wihaib, Saddam's former Chief of Protocol in The Mail.

The dictator who used to being ferried around in a vast fleet of heavily armoured Mercedes left by way of anonymous taxis and battered pick up trucks in a convoy which would have looked like any other group of fleeing Iraqis.

"He has taken his two sons Uday and Qusay, and a handful of key advisors still loyal to him. In Baghdad, each local commander has been told to act as he sees fit," Wihaib said.

Wihaib, who claims to have spent nearly 20 years working for Saddam, said he also got to know Saddam's doubles.

"And the Saddam Hussein we saw shaking the hands of his subjects in that extraordinary walkab out on Friday, was definitely a doppelganger, thinner than the real thing and without his rolling walk.

"This was a stunt ordered by his son Qusay in an attempt to convince the Allies that Saddam was still in Baghdad and a last ditch bid to show the Iraqi people their leader was brave and prepared to fight from the capital.

"But Saddam is not brave. He is mad and desperate and, unlike them, is readying himself for exile."