-Caveat Lector-

http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,55967,00.html

Dear Saddam, How Can I Help?
By Brian McWilliams
Oct. 28, 2002

On the afternoon of July 17, a self-proclaimed expert in biochemistry
composed an e-mail message to Saddam Hussein.

The message, sent from an MSN Hotmail account on a computer in China,
recommended the use of methyl bromide, an agricultural pesticide, as
an effective chemical weapon against the U.S. Army.

"For weapon use, have function: no color, no smell, will let person
dead in a few second," wrote the e-mail's author, who provided the
phone number and address of a distributor in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia,
from which the toxic chemical could be purchased "in cylinder or in
can."

The chilling electronic missive was among hundreds evidently sent to
Iraq's president last summer from people around the world.

As America veers toward confrontation with Iraq, these e-mail messages
provide a raw, uncensored view of global opinion -- and of the
potential challenges awaiting U.S. efforts to disarm or overthrow
Saddam, Iraq's leader since 1979.

It's not clear whether Saddam uses e-mail or even knows how to operate
a personal computer. But scores of people write to him each week at
[EMAIL PROTECTED], the e-mail address listed on the official homepage
of the Iraqi presidency since at least October 2000.

Messages sent to the account, Iraq's version of
[EMAIL PROTECTED], run the gamut from fawning solicitations for
autographed photos and media interviews to obscene death threats.

The e-mails sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] were obtained earlier this
month by first clicking on a link, labeled "Check your e-mail in
Uruk," on the homepage of Iraq's state-controlled ISP, Uruklink.net,
then guessing the login name and password -- both of which were the
same, five-letter word.

Uruklink's Web-based e-mail service has been unavailable for the past
three days. The version of webmail software used by the Iraqi ISP is
known to have several security holes -- but the patches available for
them do not appear to have been applied.

Among the hundreds of messages marked as unread in Saddam's inbox were
several junk e-mails and messages infected with computer viruses.
Numerous e-mails -- including some from Americans -- offered advice
and assistance to Saddam.

Consider, for example, a flurry of messages apparently sent to Saddam
by an employee of a Saudi Arabian oil company in July and August. The
e-mails contained cryptic reports in broken English about the location
of U.S. oil pipelines, as well as warnings about the movement of
submarines, aircraft and other military equipment and personnel in the
Middle East.

"I will try to give you (An Sha Allah) a good way to protect your
Muslims," said the message. (The phrase In sha' Allah, from the Quran,
means "God willing.")

Meanwhile, an Internet user from Washington state, who conceded that
he would "probably end up on some FBI watch list for writing this,"
told Saddam in an e-mail dated Aug. 1 that he opposed military action
against Iraq.

The author of the message advised Saddam to be diligent "with regards
to your own personal security. The CIA is notoriously crafty and
extremely adept at overthrowing governments and their respective
leaders."

In another message, a resident of Vienna, Austria, told Saddam in a
July 27 message that Americans are "arrogant," and that should the
United States attack Iraq, "you need only send a ticket and I will
come to Iraq to fight the Americans. I am a good shot, and I am
serious about my offer."

Saddam's inbox also contained several solicitations from American
companies hoping to do business with Iraq -- despite U.S. prohibitions
and United Nations trade sanctions.

On Aug. 16, the CEO of a California wireless technology-maker e-mailed
Saddam to request a meeting. According to the CEO's message, the two
could discuss "technology improvements and exporting of rich
technology abroad."

In a press release dated Sept. 13, the company said it has developed
"4G" wireless technology capable of being used "as a weapon to ignite
large sections of the atmosphere and incinerate all living creatures
within its pre-selected coordinates." The press release also called
for the resignation of President Bush.

In a telephone interview, the CEO said he attempted to contact Saddam
to obtain permission to place a wireless communications antenna in
Iraq. "No way would we ever give the weapon-of-mass-destruction
technology to Mr. Hussein," the executive said.

On Aug. 14, the proprietor of a Las Vegas company e-mailed Saddam
"looking for someone to talk to about selling my fire retardant for
the army over there. We have a great product for the army."

The business owner replied to an e-mailed interview request, and was
informed how his message had been read. The man confirmed it had been
sent from his address, but that it had been a joke by a friend. He
also stressed that he would never sell products to Iraq.

Joke or not, such deals with Iraq are legally risky -- if not outright
illegal.

A 1990 U.S. executive order prohibits transactions between American
companies and Iraq, according to Joseph Wilson, former deputy chief of
the U.S. Embassy in Iraq and an adjunct scholar with the Middle East
Institute. The U.N. sanctions imposed in the wake of Iraq's 1990
invasion of Kuwait further restrict trade of "militarily useful items"
with Iraq, Wilson said.

An excerpt from a U.N. document known as the Goods Review List (PDF)
containing a list of chemicals, biological agents and other prohibited
items was repeatedly e-mailed to the Iraqi president's account from
several Uruklink users over a one-week period in mid-August. A file
attached to the messages was infected with what appeared to be a
variant of the Yaha computer worm.

The presence of strict U.N. controls didn't stop the chairman of one
London company from e-mailing Saddam on Aug. 9 with an offer to
mediate Iraq's purchase of unspecified products from western Europe.

"Please consider this letter as secret ... I ensure you absolute
secrecy," the e-mail stated.

A Buenos Aires businessman repeatedly e-mailed Saddam in early August
offering technology "stolen from the National Transportation Safety
Board of United States" and designed to "enlarge the security of
flight in helicopters."

According to the author of the message, the technology was worth $40
million.

International interest in e-mailing Saddam was apparently piqued in
October 2001, when Iraq's leader sent a long-winded personal response
to a message from Chris Love, a Pennsylvania resident who had pleaded
with Saddam to seek peace with the United States.

Saddam's 3,300-word message, which included the first detailed
condolences by Iraq's leader following the Sept. 11 attacks, garnered
considerable media coverage. Love said in an interview that he was
even forced to stop answering his phone and to disable his e-mail
account after receiving a barrage of interview requests.

According to Wilson, Iraq has a "well-oiled propaganda machine" and
messages like Love's "kind of play into Saddam's hands. He likes
nothing more than to be able to parade some misguided people as proof
that Americans don't support their government."

Nine months after Sept. 11, however, as President Bush began turning
up the heat on Iraq, Americans also wrote to criticize Iraq's ruler.

A man who identified himself as a former U.S. paratrooper and Persian
Gulf War veteran e-mailed on June 25 that he regretted that "a
political solution decision was made before my friends and I had a
chance to completely wipe your cartoon character of a leader off the
face of this earth."

One AOL user sent Saddam a one-word message: "Imminent." Attached to
the Aug. 6 e-mail was a photograph of an atomic mushroom cloud.

An Internet user from London chided Saddam for hoarding Iraq's oil
wealth for himself while the country's citizens die of starvation.
"You really are a most cynical regime," wrote the author of the
e-mail, which was dated Aug. 10.

Comments about Iraq's oil resources figured into several of the
messages. An Australian resident suggested in July that Saddam cut off
oil to neighboring Turkey, which the message's author said was
America's No. 2 ally after Israel. The e-mail said Iraq could also
tighten the screws on Turkey "if they cooperate with America" by
threatening to use biological and chemicals weapons on Turkey.

Though some analysts say Iraq's U.N.-mandated Persian Gulf War
reparation payments -- which currently stand at more than $43 billion
-- have mortgaged the future of Iraq's economy, a financial services
firm in Canada was apparently still hopeful.

In a July 1 e-mail addressed to "Iraqi Presidency," the chairman of
the company proposed a "future relationship" with Iraq.

The company, located in Montreal, specializes in "the movement and
leveraging of financial instruments" as well as "conversion of
currencies" and "offshore activities," according to the e-mail.

One pragmatic AOL user urged Saddam on July 28 to cooperate fully with
U.N. inspectors as the best way to avoid war.

"Please allow the weapons inspectors into your country so that the
illegitimate leader of my country, the U.S.A., who perpetrated a coup
and stole the election, will not have an excuse to attack your
country. If you would do that it would take away his power and weaken
him and make you look like the bigger man," she wrote.

Another Internet user, who identified himself as a 20-year-old Mormon
from Utah, wrote that he prayed for the day when Iraqis have plentiful
food, medicine, clothing and other necessities.

But the author of a July 19 message said he was frustrated about his
inability to help bring about such changes.

"To me it is all politics. Wars and disputes are not about right and
wrong, nor are they about good versus evil, but they are about power,"
he wrote.

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