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April
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April 22,
2003
Something Smells About
This War
Was
There a Deal Between Saddam and Bush?
by SAM HAMOD
Saddam didn't blow any bridges, didn't use any
of the 100s of airplanes he had, didn't set any major oil wells
on fire, his troops left thousands of weapons, rounds of ammunition,
tanks, armored vehicles behind and never used them in battle.
Something is strange in this "war." I wonder, was
there really ever a war, or was there a deal between Bush and
Saddam, where he would leave most things intact, his army wouldn't
resist that much and he would get away to some safe place where
he would live out is life and the only people who would suffer
would be the innocent Iraqis who would fight against the Americans
and those who would be bombed in Basra, Baghdad, Um Kussar, Najaf,
Karbala, Mosul, Kirkuk and other small places.
The whole war smells in another area.
How is it that the thieves who invaded the Museum of Antiquities
had keys, knew where many treasures were secretly hidden and
stole only the genuine pieces, not the copies of originals that
were in other museums?
Remember that Bush and Rummy had been
told by museum curators that the Museum of Antiquities and the
Museum of the Qur'an had to be protected at all costs if the
US invaded and conquered Baghdad. The collector, Perstein and
friends had paid a visit to Bush and Rummy only weeks before
the war began; could the American troops have been ordered to
let the looters take what they wanted and told not to interfere
with them?
It seems like that; no good officer,
in his right mind, would allow such a museum to be looted so
blatantly as was those important museums, repositories for all
mankind.
How is it that Sahaf, the Information
Minister was talking less than a mile from American assault troops
in Baghdad and made no effort to run for cover sooner? How is
it that he suddenly disappeared when it was time to leave; then
mysteriously turned up in Syria the next day?
How is it that Saddam was giving a speech
on the hood of a car when the American troops were on the other
side of Baghdad? What was going on? How is it that attacks on
Saddam "missed" so often, killing others close by and
after Saddam had left the area?
What happened to the defense plans Saddam
had for the troops to stay in Baghdad and wait for the Americans
to come to them, so that there would be urban warfare where the
American weapons would be neutralized? Why did Saddam's troops
let themselves get caught in the open again, dug in so they could
be attacked by the American planes?
Why was it that the Shi'a in Najaf could
gather and stand off the American troops, but no other group,
including Iraqi Army groups could stand their ground?
The whole thing smells as if there is
something rotten in this whole "war."
None of us know for sure at this time,
but in time, it is bound to come out. Just as with 9/11 and the
planes, the aftermath, the Patriot Act and the "panic"
the government caused with their orchestrated fear, something
smells to high heaven.
I'm putting my money on a deal having
been made; a deal to the detriment of the Iraqi people, but to
the benefit of Saddam and GW Bush, Rummy and the Halliburton,
Bechtel, Brown and Root crowd (who stand to make billions on
the "reconstruction" of Iraq).
Sam Hamod
is an expert in world affairs, especially the Middle East and
Islam; he is the former editor of Third World News (Wash,DC),
a professor at Princeton and also served as the Director of The
Islamic Center of Washington,DC and as an advisor to the US State
Department. He may be reached at shamod@cox.net
Today's
Features
Carl
Estabrook
Oblivious Americans: They Distort,
We Subside
Ramzy
Baroud
What Else Hasn't Israel Told America?
Steven
Sherman
About That Cuba Letter
Wayne Madsen
Bush's "Christian" Blood Cult
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