From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Fri Aug 16 2002 - 22:43:57 MDT
The mad hatter might feel at home in the Wonderland of Iraq. The 
day is already growing hot as lines of ramshackle buses and black-
windowed Mercedes jam the normally empty highway to Tikrit, 
the rural hometown of Saddam Hussein. It's April 28, Saddam's 
65th birthday. Crowds of military men with fat moustaches, sheiks 
in flowing robes and farmers in shabby pants spill onto the 
expansive parade ground Saddam has built for special occasions 
like this. High-ranking guests fill up chairs in a large 
pseudohistorical reviewing stand where Mussolini would have felt 
at home. 
As the guest of honor arrives, groups of schoolgirls, including a 
unit clad in the black face masks of suicide-bomber trainees, 
perform dances dedicated to Saddam's "pulse of life." Then an 
interminable line of marchers files through, maybe 10,000 strong, 
singing "Happy year to you, President Saddam Hussein, who 
brought victory to us." As a group of fist-waving farmers tramps 
past, one of its members, Abdullah, offers, "We volunteered to 
come to show how much we love our President." 
Trouble is, the man standing high above on that imposing podium 
is not Saddam Hussein. It's Ali Hassan al-Majid, the Saddam 
intimate foreigners have dubbed "Chemical Ali" for his role 
overseeing the 1988 poison-gas attacks that killed thousands of 
Iraqi Kurds. Al-Majid raises his right arm with palm open in the 
gesture Saddam uses, smilingly acknowledging the crowd's chants 
as if he were the ruler. "We sacrifice our blood, our souls for you, 
Saddam," the mob trills. 
Saddam is nowhere in sight for his Tikrit party or any of the other 
parades and cake cuttings orchestrated across Iraq during the six-
day birthday celebration. He is, more than ever, an invisible ruler, 
his authority wielded from the shadows, where he hides from 
potential assassins. The Potemkin parties were intended to deliver 
a message to any Iraqi citizen feeling restive, to any foreign 
government contemplating his overthrow. The all-powerful 
puppet master can make his whole nation sing his praises as a 
blunt reminder: I am still here. It won't be easy to get rid of me. 
The Bush Administration hopes the hollowness of that birthday 
scene is a symbol of the true state of the archenemy's regime: 
brittle and rotting from within, held together only by force and 
bribery. The White House has concluded that Saddam poses a 
clear and present danger that must be eliminated. "He is a 
dangerous man possessing the world's most dangerous weapons," 
President Bush has said. "It is incumbent upon freedom-loving 
nations to hold him accountable, which is precisely what the 
United States of America will do." 
Beyond Bush's advisers, objective monitors too are convinced that 
Saddam possesses hidden chemical and biological weapons and is 
working feverishly to build a still elusive nuclear bomb. He's a 
serial aggressor. Sept. 11 probably opened Saddam's eyes to 
powerful and unorthodox methods of attack. Terrorists want 
weapons of mass destruction, and he has them. "The lesson of 
9/11 for us," says a senior State Department official, "is you can't 
wait around." 
As Bush repeatedly telegraphs his intention to finish Saddam, the 
Iraqi leader is not exactly sitting on his hands. "He's not so naive 
as to ignore the seriousness of this threat," says Wamidh Nadhmi, 
a Baghdad political scientist in contact with the regime. "He 
knows it would be very difficult for Bush to retreat from his 
declared intent." There are signs Saddam is bracing for attack: 
beefing up his personal security, bucking up the ruling Baath Party 
and repositioning his military while playing at diplomatic delay 
with the U.N. He knows the issue for him is existential. 
Both Washington and Baghdad foresee confrontation ahead. 
Here's what it looks like from inside Iraq. 
Saddam's Mind 
The West has been trying to understand Saddam's psyche for 
years. A few intimate details have long been observed. Saddam 
never sleeps in his grand palaces but moves each night to a secret 
house or tent. He smokes Cohiba cigars supplied by Fidel Castro. 
He dyes his graying hair black. He walks with a slight limp, 
allegedly from back trouble, but he looks remarkably fit when 
seen, usually sitting or standing, on TV. Invariably he now 
appears wearing immaculately tailored suits in place of the green 
army fatigues he once favored. Iraqis say he has not worn his 
uniform publicly since 1998, when, according to local legend, 
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan told him his image would 
vastly improve if he donned a statesman's suit instead. 
Saddam has limited knowledge of the West and surrounds himself 
with yes-men who tell him only what he wants to hear. But he 
shows an eager appetite for certain kinds of information. He 
constantly monitors CNN and BBC news programs, likes 
American thriller movies and admires Stalin and Machiavelli. He 
writes romance novels, supposedly without assistance: just last 
week a play based on a novel widely believed to have been 
written by Saddam, Zabibah and the King, opened at Baghdad's 
elegant new theater. It tells of a lonely monarch in love with a 
virtuous commoner who is raped on Jan. 17”the day in 1991 that 
the U.S. attacked Iraq to expel it from Kuwait, which Saddam had 
invaded the previous August”and killed by a jealous husband 
egged on by foreign infidels. The king decides he must follow the 
martyred Zabibah's advice: only strict measures keep the people in 
line. 
In all things about Saddam, contradictions abound. He is known to 
surround himself with paranoiac security. Yet when Saddam 
invited Mohammed Sobhi, an Egyptian actor performing in 
Baghdad last year, to one of his palaces, security seemed almost 
nonchalant. Sobhi and his troupe were ushered inside with nary a 
frisk. Saddam chatted easily, about Iraqi poetry, about the 
Palestinian problem. He allowed each guest to pose for a picture 
with him. The notorious dictator struck his Egyptian visitors as 
steady, smiling, relaxed, cheerful, sensitive, amiable, hospitable. 
He sounded confident that he had weathered a storm. "Saddam 
said every Iraqi feels inside him that he is a winner, with his pride 
intact," recalls Sobhi. "Saddam said, 'We did not lose anything. 
We refuse to be humiliated in front of the Americans.'" 
In the weeks before the Gulf War, the CIA presented George Bush 
Sr. with a psychological profile of Saddam that hasn't altered in its 
essentials since. Analysts concluded that Saddam was a stable 
personality and a rational, calculating decision maker. They had 
no evidence he suffered from mental illness. He was not exactly 
reckless but was comfortable wielding absolute power, using 
naked force and taking risks. He was wary and opportunistic and 
relied only on himself to make decisions. And his sense of 
mission could taint his judgment. 
Saddam's Iraq 
For Saddam, the Gulf War was not a defeat but a victory: though 
he was evicted from Kuwait, he remained in power. In the decade 
since, he has endured strict economic sanctions and has evaded 
U.N. inspections designed to eliminate his weapons of mass 
destruction. Today Iraq has emerged significantly from its 
isolation. 
Saddam's "Republic of Fear"”as Iraqi exile Kanan Makiya 
dubbed Iraq in the title of his 1989 book”looks remarkably tame 
these days. You can fly into Baghdad's Saddam International 
Airport on one of the embargo-busting planes from Jordan or 
Syria or Lebanon that make regular runs”even if you are greeted 
by blood-red down with america slogans daubed along the 
gangway in English. All the capital's buildings, bridges and roads 
damaged in the 1991 war and in follow-up American attacks in 
1998 have been rebuilt. Fancy shops selling the goods of 
globalization line the posh streets of the al-Mansur neighborhood, 
and even the poor man's market in the Washash neighborhood 
peddles plentiful fruit and cheap Chinese TVs. 
As goods of all kinds flood in, incomes are rising to pay for them. 
In 1998 Yusef, a Baghdad resident, drove a broken-down taxi and 
lived in a house that was bare after he sold the furniture to support 
his five children. Today Yusef is a partner in a fleet of GMC vans 
that carry people and merchandise to Amman, Damascus and 
Beirut. "Life is so much better," he says. "We have some money, 
we have a good house, my children are healthy." 
The supply of medicine from abroad, bought with money the U.N. 
allows Iraq to earn from limited exports of oil, has improved 
substantially over the past year. Electricity now runs 24 hours a 
day, at least in Baghdad. There is plenty of money too for 
Saddam's fantastic construction projects: giant mosques, more 
palaces and enough statues of him, goes the joke, to have one for 
each of Iraq's 24 million people. These grandiose projects are 
widely resented as a waste of money better spent on desperately 
needed housing. But the new mosques, at least, address a surging 
religious faith among dispirited Iraqis seeking escape from the 
bitter realities of daily life. 
For years, Saddam ruthlessly milked the suffering of the Iraqi 
people to erode the global determination on maintaining the U.N. 
sanctions. Now he has shifted gears to meet a different objective: 
to keep those same long-suffering Iraqis from rebelling against 
him. So the taps have opened: more of the money from his legal 
oil sales and illicit oil smuggling, once reserved for the purpose of 
bribing regime loyalists, is now being spread around to the 
populace. 
Saddam has always had to buy his friends. "The only ones who 
love Saddam," says an Iraqi businessman, 32, whom we'll call 
Ahmed, "are his family. Everyone else, even his closest circle, 
must be paid to love him." Saddam rules with an exquisite 
combination of terror and reward. "He will make you a millionaire 
or kill you," says Francis Brooke, an American adviser to the Iraqi 
National Congress (I.N.C.), the London-based, U.S.-funded, main 
Iraqi-opposition group. "Both are effective levers." Sometimes the 
two are applied almost simultaneously, as when an individual 
tortured in prison is welcomed home with a new Mercedes. 
In his book Saddam's Bombmaker, the defector Khidhir Hamza, 
who ran Saddam's atom-bomb program until he fled in 1994, 
writes frankly of the seductive power of Saddam's largesse. His 
way of maintaining power has always involved carrots and sticks. 
Club memberships, chauffeured cars, lavish houses, foreign travel 
and Johnnie Walker scotch are the means by which Saddam keeps 
the allegiance of those he needs to protect him and advance his 
interests. Torture, imprisonment and execution are the lot of those 
who fail or offend. 
The tales of Saddam's brutish violence are legion. Abu Harith (not 
his real name) spent his life in Saddam's inner circle. He still 
looks the part: he has the characteristic paunch, the moustache, 
the Rolex, the confident walk of a senior officer. He spent a year 
in the foreign directorate of the Defense Ministry, then transferred 
into Jihaz al-Amin al-Khas, or Special Security Organization 
(SSO), the elite intelligence outfit responsible for Saddam's 
personal security, the construction and hiding of weapons of mass 
destruction and other sensitive tasks. In the 1990s, Abu Harith ran 
a front company in Jordan purchasing computers, chemical-
analysis equipment and special paper for forging passports; then 
he moved on to Dubai to oversee a lucrative oil-smuggling 
enterprise. 
Abu Harith can't feel his fingertips or his right leg anymore. His 
joints ache, and his fingers are puffy. These, he says, are the 
aftereffects of being poisoned by the guards of Saddam's son Uday 
in 1998. One day that October, he was out walking with a young 
female cousin when Uday, cruising in his car, spotted her and 
ordered his guards to snatch her for his evening's entertainment, as 
is his notorious practice. Abu Harith fended them off. That night 
Uday's thugs grabbed him at his house and sped him to Uday's 
farm, where he says he was tied to a palm tree for two days and 
repeatedly beaten. Uday branded him with a hot iron on his back 
and shoulder. Then one of the guards injected Abu Harith's arm 
with something that hurt; he still has a lump there. He was driven 
back to Baghdad and dumped near his home. When he fled to the 
Kurdish-controlled north, his suspicions were confirmed: he had 
been given thallium, a heavy metal used in rat poison that kills 
slowly through internal bleeding. Kurdish officials got him to 
Turkey, where he received medical attention. 
Colonel Hamadi (not his real name) was commander of a tank 
unit in Iraq's Third Army before he was arrested for links”which 
he denies”to an opposition party. He was held for 10 months. 
Saddam's military intelligence, he says, tortured him several times 
a week. "Sometimes they hung me from a ceiling fan to make me 
confess to something that was not true," says the colonel. When he 
was released last spring, he fled to northern Iraq, where the 
country's Kurdish minority functions almost autonomously from 
Baghdad under the protection of the U.S.-British no-fly patrols. 
But Hamadi left his family behind. His father was recently 
arrested. "If you are against them," says the colonel, "every one of 
your relatives is in danger." 
Inside Iraq, Saddam's constituents can express despair about such 
oppression only quietly. An entire population has developed a 
sixth sense about keeping genuine feelings buried deep. "I can 
never say what I think," Layla, 38, a former office worker, says 
from the privacy of her home. With those they trust, Iraqis do 
grumble about Saddam and his excesses, about the way his ruling 
circle assesses 7% "for the family" on every business deal. But 30 
years of Saddam have instilled in Iraqis a reflexive habit of 
survival. They seem too tired, too disillusioned, too frightened of 
one another to plot serious conspiracies. And they have total 
disdain for the opposition exiles scheming abroad. 
If Saddam's hold on power is as tenuous as some officials in 
Washington claim, that is not visible in Baghdad. The government 
has lost control over the Kurdish north but has tightened it 
somewhat in the Shi'ite-dominated south and still firmly grips the 
Sunni center. The country has been weakened, the army 
especially, but Saddam remains the strongest of the weak. His 
control over the intelligence and security services appears 
unshakable. Officers' families are hostages, and the regime is very 
good at creating a community of guilt, in which everyone has 
committed crimes from corruption to execution and fears 
judgment by a more democratic successor government. 
Especially since the Sept. 11 attacks, for which he feared 
immediate American retaliation, Saddam has taken measures to 
tighten his protection. The inner circle of guardians, known as al-
Himaya, is made up exclusively of close relatives. Says a senior 
U.S. official: "They're the ones standing with weapons in the 
background of photos you see of Saddam." The next circle is the 
Murafiqoun, also related by blood or from unimpeachable 
families, who are in charge of broader personal and family 
security and crowd control for Saddam. The outermost circle is 
the elite SSO, run by son Qusay. 
For years Saddam's elder son, the wild, thuggish Uday, was 
considered the heir apparent. But Uday's penchant for excess was 
too much even for Saddam after the son, in a fit of pique, 
murdered a beloved bodyguard of Saddam's in 1988; Uday was 
jailed for several months. He has largely recovered from a 1996 
assassination attempt that has left him barely able to walk. 
Though he is still a feared man, he has clearly been eclipsed by 
Qusay, 36. Qusay, say observers in Baghdad and Washington, is a 
force to be reckoned with. Sober, hardworking and deferential to 
his father, he is considered as cruel and ruthless as Saddam, 
though lacking his father's charisma. He never appears in public, 
but his accumulating strength is evident. He has been "elected" to 
a leading position in the Baath Party. 
Qusay's SSO is increasingly the crucial force, in charge of both 
internal security and internal intelligence. Members of the SSO 
are recognized even by the military as having near absolute 
power; soldiers call these civilian watchdogs "the Masters." Says 
Falah al-Nakib, a senior member of the Iraqi National Movement, 
a rival of the I.N.C.: "Every corps commander has one of them in 
his office watching what he's doing every minute." 
Saddam appears to be preparing for war. I.N.C. officials and 
Kurdish intelligence sources say that for the past two months, 
government agencies have been conducting preparatory exercises, 
sending top officials to designated safe locations, for example, 
and protecting official archives. The sources claim that the 
commanders of the army have been reshuffled and that various 
military units have been moved around the country. The I.N.C. 
says its sources report that military factories are being dismantled 
so that key components can be hidden from bombing. 
But ex-Colonel Hamadi says the army he left behind last year was 
in sorry shape, demoralized, underpaid and ill equipped. Of the 33 
tanks in his sector, he says, 15 were out of commission. In a land 
of oil wells, there was even a shortage of tank lubricant. 
Washington officials say sanctions have worked well to 
undermine Saddam's 424,000-man army. Only the 100,000 or so 
Republican Guards are still considered serious fighters. So a 
cataclysmic collapse of the army under pressure from U.S. attack 
is possible. But experts inside and outside Iraq count 15,000 to 
25,000 Saddam loyalists in Qusay's SSO and the Special 
Republican Guard, the elite of the elite, who would put up a 
tougher fight. 
Saddam's Intentions 
Saddam has always been obsessed with building. The Pharaonic 
size of his enterprises”vast palaces, gigantic mosques, even the 
idea of an atom bomb”reflect his self-image as history's hero. He 
never forgets he was born in Tikrit, home nine centuries ago to the 
great Saladin, the Islamic victor in the Crusades. Saddam's latest 
Baghdad palace features columns topped with huge replicas of his 
own head bearing Saladin's helmet. He shaped the minarets on the 
grand new Mother of All Battles mosque to resemble the Scud 
missiles he fired at Israel during the Gulf War. These things give 
concrete expression”literally”to his central ambition: to be 
remembered and revered as the leader who restored Iraq and the 
Arab world generally to their rightful glory. He considers himself, 
says Charles Duelfer, the former deputy executive chairman of the 
U.N. weapons-inspection team in Iraq, "the incarnation of the 
destiny of the Arab people." 
Like his hero Stalin, Saddam sees weapons of mass destruction as 
the great equalizers that give him the global position he craves. A 
nuke plus a long-range missile make you a world power. Deadly 
spores and poisonous gases make you a feared one. These are the 
crown jewels of his regime. He sacrificed the well-being of the 
Iraqi people and billions of dollars in oil revenues to keep the 
unconventional weapons he had before the Gulf War and to 
engage in an open-ended process of acquiring new ones. During 
the cat-and-mouse game of U.N. inspections that ended in 1998, 
he seemed determined to hold on to some of everything, as if to 
keep all options open. The weapons clearly are critical to his 
ambitions. But no one, perhaps not even Saddam, seems to know 
what he will do with them. 
He appears to have not so much a strategy as a concept of 
grandeur. He is never satisfied with what he has. He operates by 
opportunity more than by plan and takes devastating risks if the 
gambles might expand his power. He believes in the ruthless use 
of force. When he thought Iran was weak, he invaded. When he 
thought he could get away with taking Kuwait, he invaded. Such 
conventional warfare is probably not available to him anymore. 
But intimidation is just as good, maybe better. Weapons of mass 
destruction could help him coerce the oil-rich Gulf and other Arab 
states to act in his favor. 
Of course, blatantly using such weapons against his greatest 
enemies, the U.S. and Israel, would expose him to a nuclear 
reprisal that would almost surely end his rule. But if he could 
punish either country and survive, he might do it. He has not 
contracted out his aggressions up to now. But he might risk 
supplying terrorists with his deadliest weapons if he saw a way it 
might redound to his power. 
Meanwhile, Saddam is working hard to undercut international 
support for a U.S. attack on him by deploying his diplomatic 
weapons. He has found a rich issue to exploit in the Palestinian 
crisis and has made it a constant theme. His offer of $25,000 to 
the family of every suicide bomber and every Palestinian family 
made homeless by the Israeli assault last month on a refugee camp 
in the West Bank city of Jenin has won wide admiration at home 
and in the larger Arab world. He is showing muscle in the oil 
market with his 30-day moratorium on Iraqi oil sales to protest 
Israel's aggression. He has burnished his reputation as the one 
Arab leader who says no to Washington and stands up against 
Israel. 
At the same time, he has conducted an astute, quiet campaign to 
integrate Iraq's economy with those of neighboring countries and 
to convince Europe that the sanctions are wrong and pointless. He 
made a rapprochement with Kuwait and Saudi Arabia at the Arab 
summit in March that he hopes will quiet any regional enthusiasm 
to join an anti-Saddam coalition. He is playing a fresh chess 
match with the U.N. on weapons inspections. If he can get more 
favorable terms, he'll probably let them resume. That would 
undercut European eagerness for a war on Iraq. 
While others would find the situation desperate, Saddam has 
always managed to make his way through. If the U.S. indeed 
attacks, his paramount strategy will be to weather the assault, 
hoping that it will prove inadequate and the world will turn 
against the Americans before they succeed in taking him down. 
Until that day comes, if it comes, Saddam will rule on from the 
shadows that protect him from a lifetime's worth of enemies. For 
him, as long as he's alive, every birthday that passes is another 
glorious victory. 
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