Just 3 Media files upon the Saddam capture from yesterday and a
small comment at the end of this file.

  

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Extra text to 14 Dec
(More added on 21 December)

Just three files (two from the BBC, one from the CNN website) around the capture of Saddam Hussein yesterday near Tikrit in some farmhouse. Well, I feel emotional upon this too; this is a good development for Iraq. Oh oh, how much blood has that guy on his hands? 

So just these two files and let me not comment too much upon this right now, only that I will follow the evolution of the insurgency with great interest. With a bit of luck the so called Military Bloody Days continue nicely because after all I still want some little transformation of warfare and this story can only be written in deep emotion and in spectacular attacks.  

Iraqis celebrate Saddam capture

Sunday 14 December 2003.  

Spontaneous celebrations have been held in the streets of several Iraqi cities, following the news of Saddam Hussein's arrest. 

Hundreds of Kurds rushed from their homes in Kirkuk, northern Iraq, to celebrate the ousted president's capture. 

"We are celebrating like it's a wedding," said resident Mustapha Sheriff. "We are finally rid of that criminal." 

Similar scenes have been reported in the capital Baghdad, Nasiriya in the south, and the mainly Shi'ite southern port city of Basra. 

Residents in Kirkuk congratulated each other and fired guns into the air. 

Sceptical 

"This is the joy of a lifetime," said Ali Al-Bashiri. 

"I am speaking on behalf of all the people that suffered under his rule." 

Volleys of rifle fire also echoed across Baghdad as Iraqis drove around town honking their car horns and giving the V for victory sign, witnesses said.

Radio stations played celebratory music, and people drove through the streets of the capital shouting, "They got Saddam! They got Saddam!" according to reports. 

"I'm very happy for the Iraqi people. Life is going to be safer now," said 35-year-old Yehya Hassan, a resident of the city. 

"Now we can start a new beginning." 

Despite the celebrations in Baghdad, many residents remained sceptical. 

Mohaned al-Hasaji, 33, said: "I heard the news, but I'll believe it when I see it." 

"They need to show us that they really have him." 

'Relieved' 

Ayet Bassem, 24, said of her six-year-old: "Things will be better for my son," she said. 

"Everyone says everything will be better when Saddam is caught. My son now has a future." 

The Iraqi resistance could be destroyed and millions would rejoice at the news, said campaigners. 

Ali Albayati, head of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq's London office said: "The resistance look up to him. There are still people saying he will be back. 

"If he is captured, that will be the end of the whole thing. 

"This will improve peace in Iraq, without a shadow of a doubt. 

"There will be jubilation everywhere. We have been waiting for this for a long time." 

He said 90% of Iraq would be relieved by the news of the former dictator's capture. 

"A lot of people will have this fear in them, especially those who have been tortured or who have had loved ones tortured." 

__________________________

Ousted Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has been captured by US forces, says the US chief administrator in Iraq. 

"Ladies and gentlemen, we got him," Paul Bremer said at a news conference in the capital, Baghdad, prompting loud cheers from Iraqis in the audience. 

The former leader was found hiding in a cellar in a town about 30 kilometres south of his ancestral hometown Tikrit. 

British Prime Minister Tony Blair has welcomed the news, saying it "removes the shadow" hanging over Iraq. 

Saddam Hussein is the most wanted man on the list issued by US authorities but has not been seen since Baghdad fell to US forces in April. 

Video footage apparently showing a dishevelled-looking Saddam with a long black beard receiving a medical check-up in custody was shown at the press conference. 

'No resistance'

Saddam Hussein was found following intelligence indicating he was at one of two possible locations south of Tikrit, Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez, commander of coalition ground forces in Iraq. 

A large contingent of US forces conducted extensive searches of the area and found a small rural farmhouse.. 

A "spider hole" was detected within the house with an entrance camouflaged with bricks and dirt. 

When uncovered, US troops found the former Iraqi president in a hole barely six to eight feet (1.8m to 2.5m) deep. 

Colonel Sanchez said he offered no resistance. 

Two unidentified people said to be "close allies" of Saddam Hussein were also arrested and weapons and more than $750,000 cash were confiscated. 

Intensive search 

Iraqi Governing Council head Abdel-Aziz al-Hakim was quoted as saying that a DNA test had proved the man in custody was Saddam Hussein. 

The news comes as violence continued in Iraq, with at least 17 people killed and 30 wounded after a powerful car bomb exploded at an Iraqi police station in Khalidiyah, about 35 miles (60 km) west of Baghdad.

US officials say it may have been a suicide attack. 

Saddam Hussein had been the object of intensive searches by US-led forces in Iraq but previous attempts to locate him had proved unsuccessful. 

People have started celebrating the capture of their former president in the streets of Baghdad and the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk by sounding their horns and firing into the air. 

The former Iraqi leader was last seen in television footage shot in April at a Baghdad market just before the city fell to US forces in the recent Iraq conflict. 

US authorities have offered a $25m reward for information leading to his capture. 

On 22 July his sons, Uday and Qusay, were killed in a raid by US forces in the northern city of Mosul. 

Intelligence 

In October, US officials said they had intelligence indicating Saddam Hussein was hiding in Tikrit.

They said he seemed to be moving around various safe houses with the aid of family members, often in disguise. 

Saddam Hussein was born in Tikrit and has a tight network of family and clan ties which permeated all of the regime's main military, security and political institutions while he was in power. 

Coalition authorities have said that the former Iraqi president could be tried at a war crimes tribunal, with Iraqi judges presiding and international legal experts acting as advisers.

__________________________

Bush to address Saddam's capture at noon EST

President works the phones all morning, domestic and international

From Dana Bash
CNN White House
Sunday, December 14, 2003 Posted: 11:44 AM EST (1644 GMT)

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- President Bush is scheduled to deliver a formal television address Sunday at noon EST about the capture of toppled Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, the White House said.

The president believes this is very good news for the Iraqi people. He's very happy for the Iraqi people," White House spokesman Scott McClellan said. 

"Saddam Hussein was a brutal oppressive dictator and responsible for decades of atrocities, and the Iraqi people can finally be assured that Saddam Hussein will not be coming back, they can see it for themselves." 

The president spoke by phone Sunday morning with British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar, two top allies in the war against Saddam, McClellan said. 

Bush also called Australian Prime Minister John Howard, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, and Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski. Bush is expected to speak with Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi on Monday. 

Mideast leaders called by the president included Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Abdullah, Jordan's King Abdullah, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. 

Additionally, Bush called Iraqi Civil Administrator L. Paul Bremer, Joint Chiefs Chairman Richard Meyers, and Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, to congratulate them on the successful mission. 

The president also talked by phone with Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tennessee, Sen. Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-South Dakota, and House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Illinois. He was not able to reach House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-California, according to a White House spokesman. 

Bush also called U.S. Army Gen. John Abizaid to congratulate him and his troops for carrying out the mission that led to Saddam's capture as well as Adnan Pachachi, the current president of the Iraqi Governing Council. 

The president was first informed about the operation at about 3:15 p.m. Saturday at Camp David by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. 

Rumsfeld started the phone conversation with Bush by cautioning the president that first reports are not always accurate. 

Then, according to McClellan, the president said to Rumsfeld that it sounded like he was about to hear good news. 

Rumsfeld then told Bush that Abizaid had called to say he was fairly confident Saddam had been captured. 

"Well that is good news," the president responded, according to his spokesman. 

The president and Rumsfeld discussed the need to be cautious with the information until it was confirmed because the captured man could be an impostor. 

Bush also said the information should be announced from "the theater" because it was a "military matter." 

Rumsfeld called the president back a short while later to express more confidence the man in custody was Saddam, because Abizaid said there were identifying marks on his body. 

The president then called to inform Vice President Dick Cheney and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, who then called Secretary of State Colin Powell, CIA Director George Tenet and White House Chief of Staff Andy Card. 

At about 5 a.m. ET Sunday, Iraq's Civil Administrator Paul Bremer called Rice to confirm it was in fact Saddam who was in custody. 

Rice then called Bush, who was now back at the White House and in the residence, at about 5:14 a.m. 

Later, the president and first lady Laura Bush watched a television broadcast from Baghdad when Bremer and U.S. Army Gen. Ricardo Sanchez announced Saddam's capture, and was "particularly moved to see the outbursts of joy from Iraqi journalists," McClellan said.

Comment on the last (CNN) article: It was wonderful to observe at what foreign (& European) 'leaders' the Holy President made his phone calls to. The list of countries is as follows: 

1) Great Brittany (his pal Tony)
2) Spain (his pal Jose Maria)
3) Australia (an older friend called John Howard who is thinking that 'evil struck on 9/11')
4) Italy (his pal Silvio, both countries suffered 'military losses' and they have 'common ground') 5) Poland (Mr. A. Kwasniewski, Poland is a part of the 'new Europe' according to the US secretary of defense who asked Poland for help in the finding of the WMD stuff.) 

So this is very interesting, it just looks like one of those 'Self organizing systems' that give such a perfect list of countries 'where to blast' to 'evil terrorists'. Just like I always look with interest how countries react upon (big) blasts inside their borders this is a very interesting list too.....  

  

Title: Just five greetings from this US administration.  
          

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A bit more text added (on 21 December 2003), this describes in more detail what actually and factually did happen the short time between the finding of just one (big bellied & fat) person and the capture of Sammy. Now one week later I am still surprised as hell why this capture did happen on Military Bloody Day number six (while no attacks against coalition forces happened on that particular day!) Article found on MSNBC:  

 

Inside Red Dawn: Saddam Up Close

Out of the hole: Saddam struggled and spat, until a commando slugged him. Behind one of the most intense manhunts in history

By Evan Thomas and Babak Dehghanpisheh 

Dec. 29/Jan. 5 Newsweek issue - The Special Forces commando had already pulled the pin. He was primed to toss the grenade into the "spider hole," a Vietnam-era nickname for lethal hiding places. But the man cowering inside did not use the pistol resting in his lap. He raised both hands in submission and, speaking in English, announced, "I am Saddam Hussein, I am the president of Iraq and I'm willing to negotiate."

As the story was later told, one of the Special Forces operators looked down at the disheveled, bearded, seemingly dazed man and replied, "President Bush sends his regards." And coming out of the hole, Saddam accidentally bumped his head. But a knowledgeable U.S. official told NEWSWEEK that it didn't quite happen that way. In fact, as Saddam was being handcuffed, he began to struggle with his captors. He spat at the soldiers. One of the commandos decked him, either with a punch or a rifle butt. (The military later tidied up the story of his capture for popular consumption.)

So ended one of the biggest and most maddening manhunts in history. The Americans had tried and failed to kill Saddam Hussein with laser-guided 2,000-pound bombs at the beginning and toward the end of the invasion of Iraq last spring. He had slipped out of Baghdad as American forces were advancing on the Iraqi capital in early April and vanished. Offers of a $25 million reward and all the secret listening devices of American technology had failed to find the Butcher of Baghdad. In the end, the capture of the man known to the military as High Value Target 1 (HVT-1) or Black List 1 (BL-1) required drudgery, patience and a bit of luck.

There had been no shortage of Sad-dam sightings between April and December. At the Fourth Infantry Division, based north of Baghdad, Saddam was known as "Elvis." After the $25 million reward was posted on July 3, "there were so many Elvis sightings we could hardly keep up," said Maj. Stan Murphy, 41, an intelligence officer with the First Brigade of the Fourth Infantry Division. Residents of Tikrit, Saddam's hometown, told NEWSWEEK that they had always known Saddam was hiding in their midst. Abu Ahmed, a former general in the Republican Guard who asked that only his nickname be used, said a friend spotted Saddam praying at his father's grave on Nov. 24, the first day of Eid Al Fitr, a Muslim holiday. Another Iraqi Army officer who had joined the newly reconstituted police recognized Saddam and a driver in an orange-and-white taxicab at a checkpoint in Tikrit. "So you've joined the new police," Saddam said. The former officer, feeling ashamed, answered, "We have to make a living." Saddam dug $300 out of his pocket and hand-ed it to him. Fearing reprisals against his family, the policeman said nothing to the Americans.

The Iraqi code of loyalty and silence frustrated American intelligence. In July, Major Murphy jotted four names and some notes on a few sheets of paper and handed them to his subordinates on the Fourth I.D.'s intelligence staff. "Make sense of it," he ordered, meaning look for patterns and links in the fragmentary intelligence. Murphy told his staff to focus on "enablers," —trusted members of the former regime outside the top-55 list. These men, in turn, relied on the arbaeen (or "forty"), a second- or third-tier group outside Saddam's closest bodyguards. The arbaeen are errand runners (whom Saddam would send out to find a late-night cigar), cooks, joke tellers and assorted yes men. Drawn from a half-dozen families, the arbaeen formed a secret web that allowed Saddam to move from place to place a step ahead of the Americans.

Reading extensively about Iraq's culture and customs, Murphy realized that unraveling the web would be exceedingly difficult. He was particularly struck by the story of a father commanded by his tribe to execute his son. The son had informed on two Iraqis later ambushed in an American raid. The tribe gave the father an ultimatum: kill the son or the whole family would be killed. The father chose option A.

Murphy's staff began making a chart connecting various families and tribes, showing blood ties and financial links. Murphy's initial list of four enablers ballooned to 9,000 names before the staff whittled it back down to some 300 names. One in particular was of interest. Military officials would publicly refer to the man only as "the source," though Col. James Hickey of the Fourth I.D.'s First Combat Brigade Team described him as "a middle-aged man with a very large waistline." The fat man was a kind of chief of staff who coordinated security and logistics as Saddam moved between hiding places. But where was the fat man?

Several raids in July at residences once occupied by the source failed to nab him. A long lull followed. Then, on Dec. 4, five raids were carried out around Tikrit but missed the target. An operation the next day in Samarra turned up $1.9 million. Another raid on Dec. 7 missed him in Bayji. But then on Friday, Dec. 12, the source was finally run to ground in Baghdad. Bundled into a helicopter and rushed up to Colonel Hickey's headquarters near Tikrit, the fat man was subjected to an intense interrogation on Saturday, Dec. 13. At 5 p.m. he cracked and "blurted Saddam's location," according to Hickey.

Examining satellite photos, Hickey and his men designated a house and a farm south of Tikrit as Wolverine 1 and Wolverine 2. A sizable force—Special Forces, armor, artillery, engineers, Apache attack helicopters, some 600 men all told—headed out on Operation Red Dawn, named after a 1980s movie about American guerrilla fighters battling a Soviet invasion. The objectives were quickly seized, but no Saddam. Intelligence told the soldiers to keep looking—for a hidden bunker, an "underground facility."

Special Forces commandos crept down a farm path toward a small adobe hut in a palm grove. The backup troops from the Fourth I.D. could see the infrared beams from the weapons of the commandos reflecting off tree branches. At 8:10 p.m. the radio crackled. "We found a hole," announced a Special Forces soldier. And a few minutes later: "We have an individual in the hole." The soldiers had little trouble identifying Saddam after they had handcuffed him and knocked him down in the spitting incident. They had been instructed to look for body marks—moles and an old gunshot wound from Saddam's participation in a failed assassination attempt against an Iraqi ruler back in the 1950s.

Saddam's hole was spartan—enough space to lie down, a dim light and a ventilation fan. But his hut was reasonably well stocked with Mars bars, insect repellent, canned meat and fruits, and $750,000 in hundred-dollar bills. Two packages of boxer-style underwear and a package of Lanvin socks still lay on the floor when reporters were given a tour a few days later. By then Saddam, his head covered with a hood, had been whisked off to a Baghdad jail cell to await interrogation by the CIA—and the judgment of his long-oppressed countrymen.

© 2003 Newsweek, Inc.

  

Comment: The one thing I just so not understand is why exactly so many people in other Arab Mideast countries are so mad upon those photo's of Saddam getting some medical exam. There was constantly shouting that this was a big humiliation of him (and also of all other Arabs).

I do not get this kind of reaction, the real humiliations were with Saddam himself: Sevenhundred and fifty thousand US dollar and stuff like candy bars and hot dogs... The money of the enemy and the food of the enemy! 
(May be food detail is wrong, but the American money is not.) 

 

Title: Just five greetings from this US administration.  
          

Funny detail: After I published the above list of 'five self selected' countries I found in the news that in Poland and Italy extra measures have been taken in a desperate attempt to avoid nasty stuff. 
So secret services of Australia, Spain, Italy, Great Brittany and Poland why are you political leaders so heavily befriended with this US administration? Don't you know that this particular US administration very likely is not telling the detailed truth around that attack under the name of 911? 

Do these five governments have some 'mental thing' or so? (Just like my own Dutch government surely has.) Why play such dangerous games because after all this is a War against Terror and when you do not understand the rules of the game you could find yourself back into trouble...

With your deeds and with your non-deeds you have selected yourself!

 

End of extra text.

 

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