Time Magazine
Sunday, Dec. 14, 2003

Saddam Hussein was captured on Sunday without a fight. But since then,
according to a U.S. intelligence official in Iraq, the fallen dictator has
been defiant. "He's not been very cooperative," said the official, who read
the transcript of the initial interrogation report taken during the first
questioning session.

After his capture, Saddam was taken to a holding cell at the Baghdad
Airport. He didn't answer any of the initial questions directly, the
official said, and at times seemed less than fully coherent. The transcript
was full of "Saddam rhetoric type stuff," said the official who paraphrased
Saddam's answers to some of the questions. When asked "How are you?" said
the official, Saddam responded, "I am sad because my people are in bondage."
When offered a glass of water by his interrogators, Saddam replied, "If I
drink water I will have to go to the bathroom and how can I use the bathroom
when my people are in bondage?"

The interrogators also asked Saddam if he knew about the location of Captain
Scott Speicher, a U.S. pilot who went missing during the first Gulf War.
"No," replied the former Iraqi president, "we have never kept any prisoners.
I have never known what happened."

Saddam was also asked whether Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.
"No, of course not," he replied, according to the official, "the U.S.
dreamed them up itself to have a reason to go to war with us." The
interrogator continued along this line, said the official, asking: "if you
had no weapons of mass destruction then why not let the U.N. inspectors into
your facilities?" Saddam's reply: "We didn't want them to go into the
presidential areas and intrude on our privacy."

The official is doubtful that the U.S. will get a significant amount of
intelligence from Saddam's interrogations. "I would be surprised if he gave
any info," he said. Other high-ranking regime members, he said, have by and
large remained mum. "Tariq Aziz [former deputy prime minister] hasn't really
spoken," he said, "and Abid Mahmoud [Saddam's former personal secretary]
hasn't really given any information."

The raid on the farm in al-Dawr, a village 15 miles from his hometown of
Tikrit, initially came up empty, the official said. There was no Saddam
Hussein in sight. Then one man on the property, apparently realizing the
game was up, pointed out a bricked-in wall inside the basement of a small
house on the property. Saddam is in there, he told the special forces
operators from Task Force 121, who took down the farm with the aid of
soldiers from the 1st Brigade of the Fourth Infantry Division.

Saddam was bricked into his hiding place, he added. "They couldn't get him
out at first and had to dig, from either side of the hole," said the
official. The soldiers finally made a large enough passageway to drag him
out. When he came out, he looked bedraggled, said the official: "He looked
like a homeless man at the bus station."

Along with the $750,000 in cash, two AK 47 machine guns and pistol found
with Saddam, the U.S. intelligence official confirmed that operatives found
a briefcase with Saddam that contained a letter from a Baghdad resistance
leader. Contained in the message, the official said, were the minutes from a
meeting of a number of resistance leaders who came together in the capital.
The official said the names found on this piece of paper will be valuable
and could lead to the capture of insurgency leaders around the Sunni
Triangle.

The official said it may soon be clear how much command and control over the
insurgency Saddam actually had while he was in hiding. "We can now
determine," he said, "if he is the mastermind of everything or not." The
official elaborated: "Have we actually cut the head of the snake or is he
just an idiot hiding in a hole?"

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