I read till the second paragraph. The line "...is fueling speculation, but
is not proof....." was enough for me to know that we'll be invading Syria
soon. Hell we invaded Iraq and we had PROOF!!!!!


[EMAIL PROTECTED]


 -----Original Message-----
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]  On
Behalf Of M Laborde
Sent:   Monday, August 16, 2004 1:56 PM
To:     'RollTideFan-The University of Alabama Athletics Discussion List'
Subject:        [RollTideFan] [Non-Bama] Saddam agents on Syria border helped
movebanned materials

Saddam agents on Syria border helped move banned materials


By Rowan Scarborough
THE WASHINGTON TIMES


Saddam Hussein periodically removed guards on the Syrian border and replaced
them with his own intelligence agents who supervised the movement of banned
materials between the two countries, U.S. investigators have discovered.
    The recent discovery by the Bush administration's Iraq Survey Group
(ISG) is fueling speculation, but is not proof, that the Iraqi dictator
moved prohibited weapons of mass destruction (WMD) into Syria before the
March 2003 invasion by a U.S.-led coalition.

    Two defense sources told The Washington Times that the ISG has
interviewed Iraqis who told of Saddam's system of dispatching his trusted
Iraqi Intelligence Service (IIS) to the border, where they would send border
inspectors away.
    The shift was followed by the movement of trucks in and out of Syria
suspected of carrying materials banned by U.N. sanctions. Once the shipments
were made, the agents would leave and the regular border guards would resume
their posts.
    "If you leave it to border guards, then the border guards could stop the
trucks and extract their 10 percent, just like the mob would do," said a
Pentagon official who asked not to be named. "Saddam's family was
controlling the black market, and it was a good opportunity for them to make
money."
    Sources said Saddam and his family grew rich from this black market and
personally dispatched his dreaded intelligence service to the border to make
sure the shipments got through.
    The ISG is a 1,400-member team organized by the Pentagon and CIA to hunt
for Saddam's suspected stockpiles of WMD, such as chemical and biological
agents. So far, the search has failed to find such stockpiles, which were
the main reason for President Bush ordering the invasion of Iraq to remove
Saddam.
    But there is evidence of unusually heavy truck traffic into Syria in the
days before the attack, and with it, speculation that some of the trucks
contained the banned weapons.
    "Of course, it's always suspicious," the Pentagon official said.
    The source said the ISG has confirmed the practice of IIS agents going
to the border. Investigators also have heard from Iraqi sources that this
maneuver was done days before the war at a time of brisk cross-border
movements.
    That particular part of the disclosures has not been positively
confirmed, the officials said, although it dovetails with Saddam's system of
switching guards at a time when contraband was shipped.
    The United States spotted the heavy truck traffic via satellite imagery
before the war. But spy cameras cannot look through truck canopies, and the
ISG has not been able to determine whether any weapons were sent to Syria
for hiding.
    In an interview in October, retired Lt. Gen. James R. Clapper Jr., who
heads the U.S. agency that processes and analyzes satellite imagery, said he
thinks that Saddam's underlings hid banned weapons of mass destruction
before the war.
    "I think personally that those below the senior leadership saw what was
coming, and I think they went to some extraordinary lengths to dispose of
the evidence," said Gen. Clapper, who heads the National Geospatial
Intelligence Agency. "I'll call it an 'educated hunch.' "
    He added, "I think probably in the few months running up prior to the
onset of combat that I think there was probably an intensive effort to
disperse into private homes, move documentation and materials out of the
country. I think there are any number of things that they would have done."
    Of activity on the Syrian border, Gen. Clapper said, "There is no
question that there was a lot of traffic, increase in traffic up to the
immediate onset of combat and certainly during Iraqi Freedom. ... The
obvious conclusion one draws is the sudden upturn, uptick in traffic which
may have been people leaving the scene, fleeing Iraq and unquestionably, I'm
sure, material as well."
    He also said, "Based on what we saw prior to the onset of hostilities,
we certainly felt there were indications of WMD activity. ... Actually
knowing what is going on inside a building is quite a different thing than,
say, this facility may well be a place where there may be WMD."
    The Iraq Survey Group, which periodically briefs senior officials and
Congress, is due to deliver its next report in September. In addition to
interviewing hundreds of Iraqis, the ISG has collected and cataloged
millions of pages of documents, not all of which have been fully examined.
    Although Syria and Iraq competed for influence in the region, they
shared the same Ba'athist socialist ideology and maintained close ties at
certain government levels. The United States accused Syria during the war of
harboring some of Saddam's inner circle.












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