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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jerrel Peters who wrote (510300)12/15/2003 2:37:42 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
oh please don't be so pathetic
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To: Jerrel Peters who wrote (510300)12/15/2003 2:37:58 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
Jessica Lynch Captures Saddam

Ex-dictator Demands Back Pay from Baker

by Greg Palast
Sunday, December 14, 2003

Former Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein was taken
into custody yesterday at approximately 8:30pm
Baghdad time. Various television executives, White
House spin doctors and propaganda experts at the
Pentagon are at this time wrestling with the question
of whether to claim PFC Jessica Lynch seized the
ex-potentate or that Saddam surrendered after close
hand-to-hand combat with current Iraqi strongman
Paul Bremer III.

Ex-President Hussein himself told US military
interrogators that he had surfaced after hearing of the
appointment of his long-time associate James Baker
III to settle Iraq's debts. "Hey, my homeboy Jim owes
me big time," Mr. Hussein stated. He asserted that
Baker and the prior Bush regime, "owe me my back
pay. After all I did for these guys you'd think they'd
have the decency to pay up."

The Iraqi dictator then went on to list the "hits" he
conducted on behalf of the Baker-Bush
administrations, ending with the invasion of Kuwait in
1990, authorized by the former US secretary of state
Baker.

Mr. Hussein cited the transcript of his meeting on July
25, 1990 in Baghdad with US Ambassador April
Glaspie. When Saddam asked Glaspie if the US would
object to an attack on Kuwait over the small emirate's
theft of Iraqi oil, America's Ambassador told him, "We
have no opinion…. Secretary [of State James] Baker
has directed me to emphasize the instruction ... that
Kuwait is not associated with America."

Glaspie, in Congressional testimony in 1991, did not
deny the authenticity of the recording of her meeting
with Saddam which world diplomats took as US
acquiescence to an Iraqi invasion.

While having his hair styled by US military makeover
artists, Saddam listed jobs completed at the request
of his allies in the Carter, Reagan and Bush
administrations for which he claims back wages:

1979: Seizes power with US approval; moves
allegiance from Soviets to USA in Cold War.

1980: Invades Iran, then the "Unicycle of Evil," with
US encouragement and arms.

1982: Reagan regime removes Saddam's regime from
official US list of state sponsors of terrorism.

1983: Saddam hosts Donald Rumsfeld in Baghdad.
Agrees to "go steady" with US corporate suppliers.

1984: US Commerce Department issues license for
export of aflatoxin to Iraq useable in biological
weapons.

1988: Kurds in Halabja, Iraq, gassed.

1987-88: US warships destroy Iranian oil platforms in
Gulf and break Iranian blockade of Iraq shipping
lanes, tipping war advantage back to Saddam.

In Baghdad today, the US-installed replacement for
Saddam, Paul Bremer, appeared to acknowledge his
predecessor Saddam's prior work for the US State
Department when he told Iraqis, "For decades, you
suffered at the hands of this cruel man. For decades,
Saddam Hussein divided you and threatened an attack
on your neighbors."

In reaction to the Bremer speech, Mr. Hussein said,
"Do you think those decades of causing suffering,
division and fear come cheap?" Noting that for half of
that period, the suffering, division and threats were
supported by Washington, Saddam added, "So
where's the thanks? You'd think I'd at least get a gold
watch or something for all those years on US payroll."

In a televised address from the Oval Office, George
W. Bush raised Saddam's hopes of compensation
when he cited Iraq's "dark and painful history" under
the US-sponsored Hussein dictatorship.

Saddam was also heartened by Mr. Bush's promise
that, "The capture of Saddam Hussein does not mean
the end of violence in Iraq." With new attacks by and
on US and other foreign occupation forces, the former
strongman stated, "It's reassuring to know my legacy
of darkness and pain for Iraqis will continue under the
leadership of President Bush."

While lauding the capture of Mr. Hussein, experts
caution that the War on Terror is far from over, noting
that Osama bin Laden, James Baker and George W.
Bush remain at large.

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