Friday, April 26, 2024

Top 5 This Week

spot_img

Related Posts

Saddam, Syria Colluded Under U.N. Watch

An interesting synopsis of more information contained within the voluminous (1,000 page) Duelfer report, which gives still more credence to Bush and his decision to go to war in Iraq, but which, for that reason,  will never be reported in most of the mainstream media….

Fox News
Thursday, October 14, 2004
By Claudia Rosett

NEW YORK — For dirty deals done with Saddam Hussein, France and Russia may take the cake — but that’s just the beginning.

Packed into the Iraq Survey Group report from CIA chief weapons sleuth Charles Duelfer is news that there were some mighty big crumbs for many more countries that loudly defended Saddam during last year’s debates at the United Nations. For a taste, take Syria.

During the U.N. showdown over Iraq in 2002 and early 2003, Syria held a seat and had a vote on the U.N. Security Council. From that world platform, in February 2003 — a month before the U.S.-led coalition invaded Iraq — Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk Al-Shara pitched a high-minded plea that the only solution was not war, but yet more haggling by the UN: “We can achieve peace if we pursue it with determination and armed with political will.”

Meanwhile, Syria was pulling in big bucks for arming not the United Nation’s “political will” but Saddam himself.

The Duelfer report says that in that same month before the war, while Syria’s Al-Shara was arguing for “peace,” Saddam’s government was signing contracts with a Syrian company owned by a relative of Syria’s President Bashar Al-Assad. The contracts were to buy “portable air defense systems, Kornet antitank guided missiles, rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs), heavy machine guns, and 20 million machinegun rounds for delivery to Iraq,” according to a former high-ranking Iraqi official.

This burst of Iraqi-Syrian commerce was no freelance spree. It came under the auspices of a formal trade protocol, signed in 2000 between the regimes of Saddam and Assad — a flagrant violation of U.N. sanctions. Under this government-to-government agreement, Syria re-opened the Iraq-Syria pipeline, which became Saddam’s prime conduit for smuggling out oil, and over the life of the protocol helped bring Saddam about $2.8 billion in illicit income.

Joel Johannesen
Follow Joel
Latest posts by Joel Johannesen (see all)

Popular Articles