Posted on 07/29/2006 5:44:49 AM PDT by shrinkermd
Among the captured documents of the Iraqi Intelligence Services is a memo written in Arabic that describes pre-war intel from an Iraqi source working in Syria. Dated July 13, the memo itself was written after the invasion, but it describes the movement of trucks from Iraq into Syria just before the American invasions. Document ISGQ-2005-00022470 has notations reading "DOD" that indicate the Pentagon has already reviewed the data:
ISGQ-2005-00022470 PAGE (1) MR. HOGGER (KURDISH NAME) REGARDS, KINDLY REVIEW THOSE PAGES AND PLEASE FORWARD THEM TO MRS.MONA FOR FURTHER REVIEW AFTER TRANSLATION THANK YOU SIGNED ABO ABDULLAH JULY 13TH
ESQUIRE, THE DIRECTOR OF COORDINATION AND FOLLOW UP OFFICE
July.13th
Subject: we have information about the location of Mass Destruction Weapons
On Moharram 10th (Arabic calendar), prior to US/allied invasion to Iraq, fifty (50) Iraqi trucks entered Syria as convoys (or groups), I met some the drivers of those trucks, they got no idea about the content of their trucks.
The loads basically came from some where in Baghdad, Iraqi intelligence were escorting the loads. During their tripe, those truck drivers were stopped and asked frequently by the intelligence officers about whether or not they got any idea about the content of their loads, the divers replied we have no idea, then the officers would say thank you.
Upon their arrival to Deayr Ezoor city/ Syria, the drivers were ordered to get down, elements from Syrian intelligence got into the trucks, they took the trucks to big barracks for downloading.
After that; Iraqi drivers got their trucks back, they got $200 as a reward.
The drivers told me that it was their second time to bring such secret shipment; the first shipment was Moharram 1st.
I have a friend in Syria working in Syrian company, the man has ½ of the company, and the other ½ belongs to a Syrian businessman.
This Iraqi person, a former counselor at Iraqi embassies, has strong connections with Iraqi embassy in Syria, he knows all Iraqi intelligence men there, and he has no idea that I am working with the Iraqi opposition in Syria.
I used to visit him daily during that period to listen to the important news.
When the trucks arrived to Syria, I visited him, told him Iraqi weapons got inside Syria, he replied who told you, I said I have my own resources, he replied dont tell any one about that because actually it is inside.
For those unfamiliar with the Muslim calendar, 10 Mohorram would equate to March 14th for 2003 -- or a little over a week before our invasion of Iraq. The opposition source told the Kurds that the trucks arrived in Dayr az Zawr, a Syrian city on the Euphrates in the expansive eastern section of Syria. A look at a map shows Dayr az Zawr in the middle of nowhere, with plenty of space to hide stockpiles from 50 trucks.
After unloading the trucks -- taking care to separate the Iraqi drivers from their vehicles while doing so -- the Syrians returned the trucks to the drivers and paid each of them $200, a rather princely sum for an Iraqi in 2003. And that was the second such convoy that IIS officers conducted into Syria; the first had been on Mohorram 1, or March 5th.
While this is not quite a smoking gun, it provides yet another piece of evidence pointing to a massive operation to hide Iraq's WMDs. Saddam Hussein must have thought that if the Coalition could not find the WMDs, they would have to withdraw and allow him to assume power once more. It would explain why he allowed so much of his army to disappear rather than fight; he expected to command them again within a few weeks. In fact, Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri told Time Magazine that Saddam had made a mistake allowing the army to fight at all:
Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, Saddam's top lieutenant with a $10 million bounty on his head, struck a defiant tone in an intervew appearing on Time magazine's Web site in which he wrote out answers to questions sent in May through intermediaries. Time said it wasn't clear when his answers were written.
Al-Douri, the highest-ranking figure from Saddam's regime still at large and the "king of clubs" on the most wanted list, said Saddam blundered by having his army confront the U.S.-led invasion force instead of holding it in reserve to fight a guerrilla war, but he said the old army has bounced back.
This movement of the weapons also appeased Russia, which helped Saddam build them. The Russians did not want the US to discover the weapons stores and pressed Saddam to get them somewhere else, and fast. American intel has long claimed to have seen these convoys streaming across western Iraq into Syria, and this provides a more complete picture as to what they did when they arrived.
Posted by Captain Ed at 01:59 PM | Comments (25) | TrackBa
I have seen this in several places. It is good that this gets exposure, but so late it will not do a lot of good politically. People are too sick of the war to be energized by this.
There is NOT a chance our liberal media will give this any serious coverage. The MSM in their support of Democrats have to some degree actually become anti-American.
Mmmm...tripe.
The first deductions about what the convoys streaming across the vast western desert in Iraq toward Syria were hauling, were correct. Hammering along day and night, fully loaded west bound, dead-heading on the back haul.
Even the destination was known - the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon.
From there, the vast preponderance of the weaponry was spirited out of the country and dispersed, to reduce still further the possibility it would ever be traced down.
Yep - but this has made not a shred of differnce to those who opposed the war. Facts matter not to them.
Freerepublic thread by jveritas who was the translator.
We did not translate the documents fast enough to get to this while we might have done something to Syria. In the early stages of the war there was more interest and belief that WMDs were in Iraq.
And I would say, "It's not a matter of DWELLING ON THE PAST Mr. President, it's a matter of PRESENTING THE FACTS". Sheesh, Repubs have no clue to the fierceness (and seriousness) of this political fight, they act like girly-men. Our sons and daughters are risking and sometimes paying with their lives in this war and these people treat it like some sort of game.
Anybody, with a braincell and shred of common sense knew the weapons were removed. We gave Saddam plenty of notice we were coming. Golly, what did they think those trucks were delivering, falafel bread?
That is BS. If they had proof early they would shout from the rooftops.
I swear I remember Colin Powell talking of trucks seen by satalitte before the war started moving across the border. I still believe there were WMDs. We gave him alot of time to get rid of them.
yup
But, what do we do with the fact that Syria has these weapons? The administration is certainly not engaged in an effort to make the case for invading Syria to recover them.
But Syria having them is no better than Saddam having them, and maybe worse.
The remarkable thing is that none of them appear to have been furnished to Hezbollah. You have to wonder why not.
There must be some conversations going on between the US and Syria that we're completely unaware of.
Ya think?
Debka probably reported it, but they weren't the source. It was first announced by Sharon himself, citing Israeli intelligence sources, and it was reported in the Israeli press.
I recall those reports being discussed here. If the Debka story was also discussed here, I missed it.
Debka still sucks.
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