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New Report Provides Insights into Saddam Hussein Regime
American Forces Press Service ^ | Donna Miles

Posted on 03/24/2006 9:46:23 PM PST by SandRat

WASHINGTON, March 24, 2006 – Former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein was so convinced that the United States was unwilling to accept casualties that he never believed the country would invade Iraq, and was far more worried about an internal revolt, a new, unclassified version of a Defense Department report issued today reveals. The "Iraqi Perspective Project" views military operations in Iraq from March through May 1, 2003, through the eyes of senior Iraqi civilian and media leaders.

It depicts a country ruled by fear, deception and in some cases, delusion, where information was so compartmentalized that neither Saddam nor anyone within his regime had a clear understanding of their true military capabilities or the threats they faced, Army Brig. Gen. Anthony Cucolo III, director of U.S. Joint Forces Command's Joint Center for Operational Analysis, told Pentagon reporters today.

The two-year research effort, conducted by Cucolo's directorate, provides insights into what the enemy was thinking in the run-up to and early days of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Through dozens of interviews with senior officials and an extensive review of captured documents, the research team pieced together a study of the mindset of the Saddam regime, Cucolo explained.

Their product - the results of which are already being incorporated into professional military education programs - provides "a substantive examination of Saddam Hussein's leadership and its effects on the Iraqi military decision-making process," Cucolo said.

It also goes a long way toward revealing the inner workings of a closed regime from the insider's point of view, something that will prove highly valuable in developing lessons learned of the Iraqi conflict, he said.

The report reveals that Saddam never believed such a conflict would ever occur, Cucolo said. "Saddam believed that the United States was casualty-averse to an absolutely incredible degree," Cucolo said.

Saddam based that on several factors: the fact that he received only a diplomatic note after Iraqi Mirage fighters fired on the USS Stark in 1987, that the United States left Somalia after losing 19 troops, and its failure to commit ground troops early on in Kosovo, the team's research revealed.

In addition, Saddam believed that Russia and France would protect their own economic interests by blocking any United Nations Security Council authorization of an invasion, the report notes. "He was counting on other members of the international community to assist him in any way that he saw fit," Cucolo said.

In reality, Saddam was far more concerned about an internal revolt than a coalition invasion, Cucolo said. "That was the No. 1 security threat to this regime," he said. "In Saddam's mind, the uprising of 1991 was the closest thing to almost ending his regime. It was much more important to him than the Iran-Iraq War, Desert Storm and all the sanction periods, ... because according to his own calculations, he lost control of all but one province, Al Anbar."

Meanwhile, Saddam had a distorted view of his military capabilities, the report shows. Following an after-action review of Operation Desert Storm, Saddam corrected his senior military leaders' assessments, declaring Desert Storm a victory, project leader Kevin Woods told reporters. "Standing up to 33 nations, not backing down in the face of the world and the world's superpowers was seen as a great victory," Woods said.

Despite this assessment, the regime experienced serious weaknesses following that war, the report shows. Years of UN sanctions and coalition bombing had reduced the Iraqi military forces' effectiveness and usefulness. Other decisions further eroded this capability, from irrelevant guidance from political leaders to the appointment of Saddam's relatives and cronies into key leadership positions.

Despite these concerns, military and ministry leaders lied to Saddam about the true state of their capabilities, and he and his inner circle began to believe their own propaganda, the report reveals. Even Ali Hassan al-Majid, Saddam's cousin who became known as Chemical Ali after ordering the 1988 chemical attack on Kurds, was convinced Iraq no longer had weapons of mass destruction. Yet many of his colleagues never stopped believing in them, the report shows.

Cucolo acknowledged that some of the viewpoints and decisions revealed in the report seem unbelievable. "Some of Saddam Hussein's decisions may seem incredibly absurd to a Western military thinker, but if you take in the context of this closed regime, they make eminent sense to the Iraqis," he said. "And that is the value of this."

The report's findings provide something a standard after-action report from the "blue," or friendly, view simply can't: the "red," or enemy, perspective of the situation, he said.

Navy Adm. Edmund P. Giambastiani, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who originated the Iraqi Perspective Project when he served as commander of JFCOM, explained the benefit of that insight to Pentagon reporters during yesterday's news briefing.

"The goal of this effort was to determine how our own coalition operations were viewed and understood by the opposing side, and what insights such analysis offers for future operations," Giambastiani said. "This report provides insights into the nature of Saddam's regime, the regime's strategic calculus, operational planning, military effectiveness and execution of the Iraqi defense."

These insights weren't always what the researchers expected. "We learned things we didn't expect," he said. "There were some surprises there."

Results of the Iraqi Perspective Project are helping DoD develop important lessons learned from Operation Iraqi Freedom that provide what Giambastiani called "a balanced, holistic view of the battlefield cause and effect."

The report represents the most extensive project of its kind to understand the views of an enemy military force since a similar project conducted just after World War II, Giambastiani noted. That effort involved a comprehensive review of recovered German and Japanese documents, along with interviews of key military and civilian leaders during the war.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: hussein; insights; iraq; regime; report; saddam
Iraqi Perspective Project
1 posted on 03/24/2006 9:46:25 PM PST by SandRat
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To: 2LT Radix jr; 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; 80 Square Miles; A Ruckus of Dogs; acad1228; AirForceMom; ..

A view into Saddam's Regime


2 posted on 03/24/2006 9:47:03 PM PST by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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To: SandRat

Bump to the top


3 posted on 03/24/2006 9:54:07 PM PST by zot (GWB -- four more years!)
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To: SandRat
This may give some perspective to the story that the Russian ambassador laid out the American plan for invasion. Saddam was convinced we wouldn't do it. The Russians attempted to make him understand that, yes, we would.

They showed him what he was up against, only falsifying the start date. This may have been a part of our misinformation. We launched a week before we told the Russians we would launch. I could well be wrong, but I'm asking myself if the leak to the Russians wasn't an official leak, intended to give Saddam a final chance to step aside. We were trying to get him to retire to Belarus or someplace in the final days, but he didn't think we were serious.
4 posted on 03/24/2006 10:18:28 PM PST by marron
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To: marron
It's fascinating, really, to consider your theory.

You seem to be saying that, sure, someone gave dear ol' Saddam all of our plans for the invasion, including strength force, military capability, the number and kind of aircraft, tanks, etc, etc, but it's somehow evident that it's no big deal since whoever did this was off by a week as to the invasion date.

This counts as "disinformation" in your book, in other words?

5 posted on 03/24/2006 10:33:24 PM PST by Reactionary (The Moonbats Need an Enema)
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To: SandRat

Duplicate:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1602649/posts


6 posted on 03/25/2006 12:18:09 AM PST by endthematrix (None dare call it ISLAMOFACISM!)
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To: SandRat

BTTT


7 posted on 03/25/2006 3:05:04 AM PST by E.G.C.
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To: SandRat

It depicts a country ruled by fear, deception and in some cases, delusion, where information was so compartmentalized that neither Saddam nor anyone within his regime had a clear understanding of their true military capabilities or the threats they faced,

SOP for a dictatorship.


8 posted on 03/25/2006 5:11:45 AM PST by Valin (Purple Fingers Rule!)
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To: SandRat
"Saddam believed that the United States was casualty-averse to an absolutely incredible degree," Cucolo said.

Can't blame Saddam for thinking that, what with George 1 afaraid to finish him off, and golfing buddy Clinton being such a wuss. Thanks guys, enjoy your next round together...
9 posted on 03/25/2006 5:13:49 AM PST by over3Owithabrain
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To: Reactionary; SandRat

If I'm wrong, and it wouldn't be the first time, this is an espionage coup of the first order on the part of the Russians. Who was their source? Information as detailed as they are saying it is would be known only to a few, so it shouldn't be difficult to narrow it down. Our counter-intel people should be all over this.

I would expect arrest and prosecution, normally. At the least we should see some kind of fallout for a security breach this serious, even potentially catastrophic in wartime. They should be polygraphing everyone and his dog.

If there is no arrest, no massive investigation, then I will suspect that the information was given to the ambassador purposely, with the intention that it be delivered to Saddam, in order to convince him that we were indeed coming for him. In the last days before the war, an effort was made to convince him to give it up, and for him and his sons to depart the country. Russia was no doubt our intermediary in those discussions.

We've all seen reports that Saddam right up the end thought we wouldn't actually invade.

I would be curious how much of this information was really secret. Anyone carefully combing the press would know a lot, and they may have given him detailed information, but detailed information that had somehow already made it into the press, that they might assume Saddam would know already.

If my crazy theory is crazy, and this is a real security breach, though, then someone should clearly hang for this.

Since I've already gone this far, bear with me a little longer. We've all seen stories that the Russians convinced Saddam to move his WMD across the border into Syria. They, supposedly, sent their own agents to oversee the evacuation of this material.

This means that these weapons were not available to Saddam to use against our troops.

Saddam's own generals believed they had chemical weapons right up to the end. But they didn't; the Russians (according to reports) had moved them out of the country.

We tend to see this as Russian perfidy, and it may be. It may also be Bush's greatest coup of the war, getting these weapons away from Saddam before our troops entered the theater, and doing it right under Saddam's nose.

If this is true, then Bush's relationship with Putin is a bit more complex than we realize.

If I'm wrong, then again, CIA is incompetent and missed the WMD operation, and we've got a mole in Central Command at the very highest level. In CIA, I'd believe it. In Central Command, a little harder to believe.


10 posted on 03/25/2006 5:03:14 PM PST by marron
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To: marron

I don't like the fact that the Russkies got the information but I harbor no ill will towards them for it. The same cannot be said of the treasonous, backstabbing, scumbag, in CENTCOM that gave the information to them. The words here are the only ones that I can use on FR in this situation and WITHOUT getting banned for life from FR for using.


11 posted on 03/25/2006 5:19:22 PM PST by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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