Watchman comment: I find it very interesting that when some CIA agents retire they seem to sing a different tune. It seems the Bush/Cheney cabal had some of them fooled also. The interrogation of Saddam Hussein is a case in point. Everything we knew about Saddam seemed to be wrong. I also found it interesting that Bush wanted a briefing on Shia cleric called Muqtada al-Sadr because I was the Muqtada al-Sadr and Mehdi Militia analyst at Camp Vicotry in Iraq.
I had been up for 27 hours and was flat-out
exhausted, but the news sent jolts of adrenaline through me like I’d never
experienced before.
A Special Forces team hunting the man we called
High Value Target No 1 had pulled someone from a hole in the ground. He
answered the description.
And my bosses at the CIA were grilling me, the
expert.
Could this burly, unkempt man
truly be Saddam Hussein, the ruthless dictator of Iraq? The most
wanted man in the world?
It was December 13, 2003, and I’d been in Iraq for
eight weeks – a CIA analyst looking for leads that might take us to Saddam and
his notorious henchmen. That was when I was called to see Buzzy Krongard, the
CIA’s executive director.
The war to topple the regime had been going for
nearly nine months, yet when it came to Saddam, all we’d turned up were ‘Elvis
sightings’, as we called them. Until, that is, troops searching a farm near
Saddam’s home village of Tikrit found a large bearded man concealed in a tiny
underground bunker.
Now a group of senior officers were quizzing me in
Krongard’s office; how, they asked, would I make a definitive identification? I
told them about the tribal tattoos on Saddam’s right hand and wrist, the bullet
scar on his left leg and that his lower lip tended to droop to one side,
something I picked up from studying videotapes.
Krongard interrupted me: ‘We need to make sure this
is Saddam and not one of those body doubles.’
The myth – and it was a myth – that Saddam maintained
multiple lookalikes was a source of wry amusement to those of us who worked in
intelligence, but I decided silence was the better part of valour and started
compiling a list of questions only the dictator could answer.
The military was flying the putative Saddam to
Baghdad airport that night and it was decided we’d make the identification
there.
At midnight, after a long wait, the convoy was
ready. Men in night-vision goggles drove us at 100mph down the Airport Road, a
no-go zone at night. At the airport, a side road led to a series of low-slung
blockhouses that once housed Saddam’s Special Republican Guard. Inside, I found
pandemonium and another wait until finally a GI said, ‘OK, guys. You’re up.’
Suddenly the door opened and I immediately found
myself sucking in air. There he was, sitting on a metal folding chair, wearing
a white dishdasha robe and blue quilted windbreaker.
There was no denying that the man had charisma. He
was big – 6ft 1in – and thickly built. Even as a prisoner who was certain to be
executed, he exuded an air of importance.
I spoke first through a translator. ‘I have some
questions I’d like to ask you, and you are to answer them truthfully. Do you
understand?’
Saddam nodded. ‘When was the last time you saw your
sons alive?’
I expected Saddam to be defiant, but I was taken
aback by the aggression of his reply: ‘Who are you guys? Are you military
intelligence? Mukhabarat [civilian intelligence]? Answer me. Identify
yourselves!’
I noted his tribal tattoos and that his mouth
drooped. Now I needed to see his bullet wound.
There was so much we wanted to know. How had he escaped
from Baghdad? Who had helped him? He would not say, answering only the
questions he wanted to.
‘Why don’t you ask me about politics? You could
learn a lot from me,’ he barked. He was especially vocal on the rough treatment
he’d received from the troops who brought him in, launching a long diatribe.
I was incredulous. Here was a man who didn’t think
twice about killing his own people complaining about a few scratches. He lifted
his dishdasha to show the damage to his left leg. I saw an old scar. Was it the
bullet wound, I asked him. He assented with a grunt – the final piece of proof.
We’d got him.
Capturing Saddam was all very well, but now we had
to get to the truth about his regime, and in particular the weapons of mass
destruction (WMD) that had been the pretext for the invasion. His response was simply
to mock us.
You found a traitor who led you to Saddam Hussein.
Isn’t there one traitor who can tell you where the WMDs are?’ He warmed to the
subject, saying Americans were a bunch of ignorant hooligans who did not
understand Iraq and were intent on its destruction.
‘Iraq is not a terrorist nation,’ he said. ‘We did
not have a relationship with (Osama) bin Laden, and did not have weapons of
mass destruction... and were not a threat to our neighbors. But the American
President [George W Bush] said Iraq wanted to attack his daddy and said we had
‘weapons of mass destruction.’
Ignoring his goading, we asked Saddam if he’d ever
considered using WMDs pre-emptively against US troops in Saudi Arabia. ‘We
never thought about using weapons of mass destruction. It was not discussed.
Use chemical weapons against the world? Is there anyone with full faculties who
would do this? Who would use these weapons when they had not been used against
us?’
This was not what we had expected to hear. How,
then, had America got it so wrong?
Saddam had an answer: ‘The spirit of listening and
understanding was not there – I don’t exclude myself from this blame.’ It was a
rare acknowledgment that he could have done more to create a clearer picture of
Iraq’s intentions.
Was he playing with us, twisting the truth to spare
his pride.
I asked about his notorious use of chemical weapons against the Kurdish city of Halabja during the Iran-Iraq war. He became furious. ‘I am not afraid of you or your president. I will do what I have to do to defend my country!’
Then he turned to me and sneered: ‘But I did not
make that decision.’
We decided to close the briefing. As Saddam left
the room, he glared at me. I have annoyed quite a few people in my life, but no
one has ever looked at me with such murderous loathing.
My superiors were delighted at the progress we were
making, yet something nagged at me about the exchange. My gut told me that
there was some truth in what Saddam had said. He was incensed about Halabja.
Not because his officers had used chemical weapons – he showed no remorse – but
because it had given Iran a propaganda field day.
It was not the only thing that would surprise me.
For example, in my years studying Saddam, I never doubted the received wisdom
that his stepfather in Tikrit beat him. Many eminent psychiatrists who had
analysed him from afar said this was why Saddam was so cruel and why he wanted
nuclear weapons.
Yet, in the course of my further interrogations,
Saddam turned our assumptions upside down, saying his stepfather was the
kindest man he had ever known: ‘Ibrahim Hasan – God bless him. If he had a
secret, he would entrust me with it. I was more dear to him than his son,
Idham.
I asked about the CIA’s belief that Saddam suffered great pain from a bad back and had given up red meat and cigars. He said he didn’t know where I was getting my intelligence, but it was wrong. He told me he smoked four cigars every day and loved red meat. He was also surprisingly fit.
The CIA profile of Saddam suggested he was a
chronic liar, yet he could be quite candid. Our perception that he ruled with
an iron grip was also mistaken. It became clear from our interrogations that in
his final years, Saddam seemed clueless about what had been happening inside
Iraq. He was inattentive to what his government was doing, had no real plan for
the defence of Iraq and could not comprehend the immensity of the approaching
storm.
Saddam was quick, too, to deny involvement in 9/11.
‘Look at who was involved,’ he said. ‘What countries did they come from? Saudi
Arabia. And this [ringleader] Muhammad Atta, was he an Iraqi? No. He was
Egyptian. Why do you think I was involved in the attacks?’
Saddam had actually believed 9/11 would bring Iraq
and America closer because Washington would need his secular government to help
fight fundamentalism. How woefully wrong he had been.
During our talks, we often heard muffled
explosions. Saddam inferred things were not going well for the US forces and
took pleasure in the fact. ‘You are going to fail,’ he said. ‘You are going to
find that it is not so easy to govern Iraq.’ History has proved him right. But
back then, I was curious why he felt that way.
‘Because you do not know the language, the history,
and the Arab mind,’ he said. ‘It’s hard to know the Iraqi people without
knowing its weather and its history. The difference is between night and day
and winter and summer. That’s why they say the Iraqis are hard-headed – because
of the summer heat.
He chuckled and added: ‘Next summer, when it is
hot, they might revolt against you. The summer of 1958 got a little hot. In the
1960s, when it was hot, we had a revolution. You might tell that to President
Bush!’
It was several years and several more postings to
Iraq before I could explain the realities of Iraq to the President, face to
face. By now, Saddam had been tried and executed, finally dispatched in late
2006.
But in late 2007, I was summoned to give a detailed
presentation to George W. Bush at the Oval Office. What kind of a man had
Saddam been, he asked me?
I told him that he was disarming at first and used
self-deprecating wit to put you at ease.
The President looked as if he was going to lose his
cool. I quickly explained that the real Saddam was sarcastic, arrogant and
sadistic, which seemed to calm Bush down.
He looked at Vice-President Dick Cheney and their
eyes locked in a knowing way. As I was leaving, he joked: ‘You sure Saddam
didn’t say where he put those vials of anthrax?’ Everyone laughed, but I
thought his crack inappropriate. America had lost more than 4,000 troops.
Several months later, I was asked to go back to the
White House. This time, the President looked annoyed and distracted and asked
for a briefing on the Shia cleric called Muqtada al-Sadr, pictured below, the leader of the
Mahdi Army, then engaged in dangerous insurgency against the coalition. This
was not on the agenda.
Trying to gain a few seconds, I said: ‘Well, that
is the $64,000 question’ Bush looked at me and said: ‘Why don’t you make it the
$74,000 question, or whatever your salary is, and answer?’ What an a***hole!
In his 2010 memoir, Bush wrote: ‘I decided I would
not criticise the hardworking patriots of the CIA for the faulty intelligence
on Iraq.’ But that is exactly what he did. He blamed the agency for everything
that went wrong and called its analysis ‘guesswork’ while hearing only what he
wanted to hear.
I do not wish to imply that Saddam was innocent. He
was a ruthless dictator who plunged his region into chaos and bloodshed. But in
hindsight, the thought of having an ageing and disengaged Saddam in power seems
almost comforting in comparison with the wasted effort of our brave men and
women in uniform and the rise of Islamic State, not to mention the £2.5
trillion spent to build a new Iraq.
© John Nixon, 2016
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