http://www.smh.com.au/cgi-bin/common/popupPrintArticle.pl?path=/articles/2003/12/21/1071941612613.html

Washington's claims that brilliant US intelligence work led to the capture
of Saddam Hussein are being challenged by reports sourced in Iraq's Kurdish
media claiming that its militia set the circumstances in which the US merely
had to go to a farm identified by the Kurds to bag the fugitive former
president.

The first media account of the December 13 arrest was aired by a
Tehran-based news agency.

American forces took Saddam into custody around 8.30pm local time, but sat
on the news until 3pm the next day.

However, in the early hours of Sunday, a Kurdish language wire service
reported explicitly: "Saddam Hussein was captured by the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan. A special intelligence unit led by Qusrat Rasul Ali, a
high-ranking member of the PUK, found Saddam Hussein in the city of Tikrit,
his birthplace.

"Qusrat's team was accompanied by a group of US soldiers. Further details of
the capture will emerge during the day; but the global Kurdish party is
about to begin!"

The head of the PUK, Jalal Talabani, was in the Iranian capital en route to
Europe.

The Western media in Baghdad were electrified by the Iranian agency's
revelation, but as reports of the arrest built, they relied almost
exclusively on accounts from US military and intelligence organisations,
starting with the words of the US-appointed administrator of Iraq, Paul
Bremer: "Ladies and gentlemen: we got 'im".

US officials said that they had extracted the vital piece of information on
Saddam's whereabouts from one of the 20 suspects around 5.30pm on December
13 and had immediately assembled a 600-strong force to surround the farm on
which he was captured at al-Dwar, south of Tikrit.

Little attention was paid to a line in Pentagon briefings that some of the
Kurdish militia might have been in on what was described as a "joint
operation"; or to a statement by Ahmed Chalabi, head of the Iraq National
Congress, which said that Qusrat and his PUK forces had provided vital
information and more.

A Scottish newspaper, the Sunday Herald, quoted from an interview aired on
the PUK's al-Hurriyah radio station last Wednesday, in which Adil Murad, a
member of the PUK's political bureau,

said that the day before Saddam's capture he was tipped off by a PUK
general - Thamir al-Sultan - that Saddam would be arrested within the next
72 hours.

An unnamed Western intelligence source in the Middle East was quoted in the
British Sunday Express yesterday: "Saddam was not captured as a result of
any American or British intelligence. We knew that someone would eventually
take their revenge, it was just a matter of time."

There has been no American response to the Kurdish claims.

An intriguing question is why Kurdish forces were allowed to join what the
US desperately needed to present as an American intelligence success -
unless the Kurds had something vital to contribute to the operation so far
south of their usual area of activity.

A report from the PUK's northern stronghold, Suliymaniah, early last week
claimed a vital intelligence breakthrough after a telephone conversation
between Qusrat and Saddam's second wife, Samirah.



xponent

Difference Maru

rob


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