Newsweek reports this week that Saddam Hussein was apparently convinced that American forces would never
invade Iraq and oust him from power, say U.S. officials familiar with the
accounts of captured members of the former dictator's regime.
In editions of the magazine on newsstands this week, Newsweek cites U.S. Defense and
Security sources who say that high-ranking former Saddam aides have told
U.S. interrogators that Saddam believed the only assault President George W.
Bush would ever launch against Iraq was the kind of low-risk bombing campaign
that the Clinton administration used in the former Yugoslavia.
Saddam was also
confident that France and Germany would pressure the Americans to retreat from
this course, leaving Iraq shaken but Saddam still in power.
Even after
American divisions assembled on Iraq's borders, Saddam, recalling the first
Gulf War, thought U.S. ground forces would only go after suspected
unconventional weapons sites, Scud missile launchers and military bases.
U.S. officials say that this account of Saddam's misunderstanding of
American intentions – he was surrounded by sycophants – could explain the
haphazard way in which the regime defended itself and fell apart early in the
American onslaught.
It might also shed light on why Saddam's Information
Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf ("Baghdad Bob") continued to deny the regime was in peril even as U.S.
forces entered Baghdad.
U.S. analysts are also taking more seriously stories detained Iraqi
leaders are telling about what happened to Saddam's weapons of mass
destruction. U.S. sources say that captured Iraqis insist Saddam's top
strategic objective was to persuade the United Nations to relax sanctions on
his regime.
So, after Saddam's son-in-law Hussein Kamel, head of his
unconventional weapons programs, defected to Jordan in 1995, Saddam ordered
intensified efforts to hide or destroy blueprints, "dual use" technology and
any remaining germs or chemicals.
Not only was material stashed or
obliterated, but records showing what had been destroyed were also pulped.
Some U.S. and British intel officials still say stockpiles of chemical or
biological agents will turn up.
But U.S. Defense analysts are paying more
attention to a "working hypothesis," based on stories told by Iraqi captives,
that no live WMD may ever be found.
Some U.S. officials even think Iraqi
defectors who surfaced before the war saying Saddam was still making WMD were
double agents dispatched by Saddam to spread disinformation to deter his
enemies. Others say this would have undermined his effort to have U.N.
sanctions lifted.
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
Bush Administration
George W. Bush
Saddam Hussein/Iraq
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