SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Moderate Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tsigprofit who wrote (2142)6/15/2003 11:21:51 AM
From: epicure  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20773
 
Iraqi anger brews over rough U.S. treatment

By Wafa Amr
FALLUJA, Iraq (Reuters) - Iraqi multi-millionaire Khalaf Shabib is not used to being manhandled into a tank, blindfolded and being made to wait for six hours with a plastic bag shoved over his head.

With tears rolling down his cheeks, the octogenarian told Reuters if U.S. forces continued to treat Iraqis that way they would turn violently against the occupying troops. Shabib, one of the wealthiest businessmen in Iraq, says he feels humiliated.

"I am sad and pained...because I was humiliated by the Americans. They treated me like an animal," he said.

"We are not their enemies but they are turning us into enemies. My eyes fill with tears when I remember how they treated me...Now I would be lying if I said I don't want the occupiers out."

Shabib said that on June 6, U.S. tanks surrounded his house at dawn while three helicopters hovered above. American soldiers stormed in, dragged him and his four sons out, tied their hands behind them, blindfolded them and covered their heads for hours.

He does not know what prompted the raid, but he thinks that someone had told the Americans he gave funds to Saddam Hussein's Baath Party.

"Maybe an Iraqi who hates me whispered in the Americans' ears and lied to them about me, so they came and captured me," he said.

Shabib said he owns several bus and transport companies as well as a number of jewellery stores. He also used to smuggle goods to neighbouring Arab states during the U.N. embargo.

He lives with his children and grandchildren, a total of 32 people, in a luxurious house in Falluja, 70 km (45 miles) west of Baghdad. Since the occupation began, Falluja has seethed with hostility to U.S. troops, who have deployed more forces to crack down on the violence in the Sunni Muslim city.

ROUGH JUSTICE

Many Iraqis are increasingly angry about what they say is unjustifiably rough treatment by U.S. soldiers during weapons raids. They say they understand the Coalition Provisional Authority's decision to crack down on possession of weapons, but say it first has to provide them with security.

"They stopped my car, pushed me out, threw me on the ground, tied my hands behind my back and left me in the intolerable heat for four hours. They took away my pistol then let me go," said a 50-year-old teacher who gave his name as Hassan. Like others in the city of 400,000, he says he wants Saddam back.

"They said pistols were not banned. Why did they take it away? They rid us of Saddam and bring us anarchy. Thank you but no, I want Saddam and my sense of security back."

Crime rates reached unprecedented levels in Iraq after the war. Iraqis accuse the U.S. troops of not doing enough to curb the violence and lawlessness, but U.S. officials say security is improving and they are restoring law and order.

A campaign to collect heavy weapons from Iraqis began on June 1, but the U.S. describes the number of guns handed in as "light".

At Shabib's home, the women and children ran away screaming while soldiers charged through the house, breaking doors and valuable vases, his wife said.

She said she fainted when she saw soldiers take her husband and sons away in a tank.

Iyad, Shabib's son who was also detained, said more than 20,000 U.S. dollars were taken by the soldiers, as well as 10 million Iraqi dinars. He said U.S. soldiers also confiscated 18 pistols, hunting guns, and automatic guns.

ILLEGAL ACTIVITIES?

U.S. military spokesman Colonel Rick Thomas said the army confiscated money only if it suspected it was earned from, or used to fund, illegal activities.

"We're certainly not taking individuals' money. We conduct searches based on information and if we have reason to believe the money was gained through illegal ways or used for illicit activities, it certainly is part of the confiscation, just as in the case of illegal weapons," Thomas said.

U.S. soldiers are on full alert in Falluja where several of their colleagues have been killed since Saddam's removal in April. Iraq's top U.S. administrator Paul Bremer said U.S. troops will defend themselves against attacks in Falluja and use force against the attackers if they have to.

Shabib said he and his sons were put inside a tank, driven around town and thrown into a field until noon in the sweltering heat.

"I am a sick and old man. I asked them to allow me to go to the toilet but they refused and finally when they took me indoors to interrogate me, I began bleeding and collapsed. They took me to hospital," Shabib said.

He said his sons were treated even more badly during their 10-day detention.

Iyad, 32, said he was a soldier in the Iraqi army, but did not fight during the war because he opposed Saddam.

"I refused to fight Saddam's war, and now they put me in jail and accuse me and my family of funding the Baath Party," he said. "What an irony."



To: tsigprofit who wrote (2142)6/15/2003 8:52:49 PM
From: epicure  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 20773
 
'Iraq might be Bush's Watergate'
Sunday, June 15 @ 09:14:10 EDT
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Tom Brazaitis, Cleveland Plain Dealer
On March 21, 1973, at a meeting in the Oval Office, John Dean warned President Richard M. Nixon, "We have a cancer close to the presidency that's growing."

Dean's warning went unheeded and Nixon's presidency was consumed in scandal. For his own role in the Watergate cover-up, Dean, Nixon's White House counsel, spent four months in prison. Three decades later, Dean says Americans are witnessing "the first poten tial scandal that could make Watergate pale by comparison."

Writing for the Internet publication FindLaw, Dean says President George W. Bush must answer for launching a war against Iraq on the basis of numerous unequivocal statements that Saddam Hussein harbored weapons of mass destruction when, in fact, no such weapons have been found.

"If Bush has taken Congress and the nation into war based on bogus information, he is cooked," Dean says. "Manipulation or deliberate misuse of national security in telligence data, if proven, could be a high crime' under the Constitution's impeach ment clause. It would also be a violation of federal criminal law, including the broad federal anti-conspiracy statute, which renders it a felony to defraud the United States, or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose.' "

Dean stops short of calling for Bush's impeachment, but warns that "after Wa tergate, all presidents are on notice that manipulating or misusing any agency of the executive branch improperly is a seri ous abuse of presidential power."

To refresh your memory on what the president said about Iraq's WMD, here are just a few of many citations in Dean's case against Bush:

"Iraq has stockpiled biological and chemical weapons, and is rebuilding the facilities used to make more of those weapons." - Radio address, Oct. 5, 2002

"We know that the regime has produced thousands of tons of chemical agents, in cluding mustard gas, sarin nerve gas, VX nerve gas." - Cincinnati, Ohio speech, Oct. 7, 2002

"Intelligence gathered by this and other governments leaves no doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever de vised." - Address to the nation, March 17, 2003

Although he rejected pleas to give United Nations inspectors more time to search for biological, chemical and nuclear weapons before launching the war, Bush now asks for an indefinite extension of time to find the weapons he had assured the world were stockpiled in Iraq.

Before "rolling out" its plan to invade Iraq (to use the advertising term adopted by Andrew Card, Bush's chief of staff) members of Bush's national security team debated various selling points.

In an interview in Vanity Fair magazine, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz let slip, "The truth is that for reasons that have a lot to do with the U.S. government bureaucracy we settled on the one issue that everyone could agree on, which was weapons of mass destruction, as the core reason."

Dean says there is still a chance that the alleged WMD will be found, which would fit this president's pattern of lowering ex pectations, then exceeding them. But Dean puts forth three other possible scenarios: 1) that the stockpiles of weapons were smuggled out of Iraq and are now in the hands of terrorists, 2) that U.S. intelli gence agencies badly misread the situa tion, or 3) that "the intelligence was satis factory but that it was manipulated so as just to present to the American people and to the world those things that made the case for the necessity of war."

A Washington Post story last week quotes an unidentified senior intelligence official accusing the CIA of "extremely sloppy handling of a central piece of evi dence in the administration's case" against Iraq. A senior CIA analyst goes further by saying the case "is indicative of larger problems" involving the handling of intel ligence used to justify the war. "Informa tion not consistent with the administra tion agenda was discarded and information that was [consistent] was not seriously scrutinized," the story quotes the analyst as saying.

So far, the American public does not seem disturbed by the suspicion that the country went to war on false pretenses. Large majorities tell pollsters that getting rid of Saddam Hussein was reason enough to launch a pre-emptive strike.

As for the president stretching the truth, at least some members of the public be lieve that Bush's so-far-unverified claim that Saddam was sitting on thousands of tons of chemical and biological weapons pales next to Bill Clinton lying under oath about an extramarital affair.

In an e-mail making just that compari son, reader Ken Ross of Brecksville wrote, "Regardless of the efforts to discredit our president, parents and grandparents will be ever thankful to him and the military for having the courage to take the neces sary action to dispose of Saddam and his regime that posed such a grave threat to the future of the free world."

Pass the freedom fries.

Brazaitis, formerly a Plain Dealer senior editor, is a Washington columnist.

tbrazaitis@starpower.net

Reprinted from The Cleveland Plain Dealer:
cleveland.com.