Posted on 12/02/2003 2:40:46 AM PST by GulliverSwift
I just saw something on MSNBC that Saddam Hussein's top deputy may have been captured or killed.
Here's an older article about the search for him:
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US launches massive search in northern Iraq for Saddam's deputy
KIRKUK, Iraq (AFP) - The US military launched a massive search operation around Iraq (news - web sites)'s northern oil centre overnight in its intensifying hunt for Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)'s deputy, Izzat Ibrahim al-Duri, a senior police official said.
"It's the biggest search operation ever launched around here," the official in Kirkuk told AFP, asking not be identified.
"They're searching for Izzat Ibrahim al-Duri and other top officials of the former regime following intelligence reports he was in the region," said the official.
The operation was concentrated on the town of Hawijah, 45 kilometres (nearly 30 miles) to the west of Kirkuk, and the village of Rashad, 60 kilometres (nearly 40 miles) to the south, he added.
Duri is Saddam's longtime deputy and alleged paymaster of many attacks on US-led coalition troops. He is the highest-ranking official of the former regime still at large, apart from the ousted president himself.
Earlier this month, US commanders posted a 10-million-dollar bounty on Duri's head and sent in warplanes to destroy two of his homes near the town of Samarra further south that they charged had been used to mount attacks.
Top Saddam Deputy Possibly Caught, Politician SaysDec. 2 BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Izzat Ibrahim, a top lieutenant of Saddam Hussein and one of the most wanted men in Iraq, may have been killed or captured in a U.S. raid in the city of Kirkuk, a member of the Governing Council said Tuesday. "There was a major action against a highly suspicious objective last night in Kirkuk and it is very possible that Izzat Ibrahim has been captured or killed," Mowaffaq al-Rubaie said, adding that he had been in contact with U.S. forces. There was no immediate comment from the U.S. Army. The U.S. military said last month that Ibrahim was directly involved in attacks on U.S. troops, and put a $10 million price on his head. U.S. forces said they detained Ibrahim's wife and daughter in the town of Samarra. November was the deadliest month for American troops since the start of the war that ousted Saddam, with at least 74 killed in action. Occupying forces also suffered their deadliest single attack during the month, a car bombing in the southern town of Nassiriya that killed 19 Italians and nine Iraqis. A reward of $25 million is still outstanding for information leading to the capture or death of Saddam.
Dec 2 2003 |
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Dictator's loyal pal is leading attacks on US troops |
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By Keith Mcleod |
RUTHLESS hardliner Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri is now the most wanted man in Iraq after Saddam Hussein himself. US intelligence sources believe Saddam's henchman orchestrated many of the attacks on Allied soldiers since the war ended, including yesterday's assaults on two US convoys in the northern city of Samarra.
Soldiers killed 46 Iraqis many of whom were wearing the black uniforms of the Fedayeen militia during the co-ordinated strikes.
Middle East expert for military magazine Jane's Defence Weekly, Hazhir Teimourian, said: ''My sources in the Kurdish regions to the north say al-Douri has tried to flee the country but has been thwarted.
''He obviously feels he has no alternative but to attack American and softer civilian targets.''
Al-Douri, 61, was Saddam's most trusted aide during 30 years of dictatorship.
He was one of the key plotters of the 1968 revolution in Iraq that brought the Baath Party to power.
He held the key role of deputy commander-in-chief of the armed forces and was also vice-chairman of the revolutionary command council.
Al-Douri was one of Iraq's most aggressive hawks during the eightyear war with neighbouring Iran, which cost hundreds of thousands of lives with no gain for either side.
Within months of that war ending in 1988, he turned his attention to Kurds in northern Iraq.
Thousands of men, women and children were killed in a chemical attack on the town of Halabja.
At the start of the 1991 Gulf war, as a chilling warning to other Kurds not to rise up against Saddam, al-Douri told them: ''If you have forgotten Halabja, we are ready to repeat the operation.''
The son of an ice seller, al-Douri was born in 1942 near Tikrit, Saddam's home city.
He joined the Baath Party and quickly moved up the ranks.
After planning the 1968 coup, he served as both agriculture and interior minister.
In the latter role, he gained a fearful reputation as the regime'senforcer. Ordinary Iraqis who were seen as any kind of threat were arrested in the middle of the night and tortured under his reign of terror.
Despite his distinctive ginger hair, unusual for an Iraqi, and suffering from leukaemia in recent years, al-Douri has proved an elusive target for his enemies, though he has had a few lucky escapes.
He narrowly survived an assassination attempt at Karbala in 1998. And, in 1999, while in Viennagetting treatment for his cancer, he was almost arrested on war crimes charges. He fled Austria just before being served with a warrant.
Al-Douri, whose daughter was married to Saddam's son Uday, was given responsibility for the Mosul military zone in the north when the war started earlier this year.
Last week, his wife and daughter were arrested by US forces.
Teimourian added: ''Everyone thought thecancerwould kill al-Douri but he seems to have recovered.
''It is difficult for him to run because, with his distinctive looks, Syria wants nothing to do with him.
''He is and always has been a thug andayes-man to Saddam. He has held high office but these were really nominal positions since all decisions were made by Saddam or his sons.
''He owes everything to his dogged loyalty to Saddam.
''Even when Uday humiliated al-Douri's daughter in a very public way in ending their marriage, he remained loyal to the regime.''
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Also, take note of this snippet from another article on the guy - in light of the months we heard from the libs that IRaq was secular and couldn't possibly work with Islamicist terrorists...:
Duri, now 61, was the prime mover behind the ousted regime's adoption of Islamist rhetoric through the 1990s and stands accused by the coalition of playing a leading role in the persistent attacks on its troops.
If I remember right it there have been articles about that said the Iraqi VP who played go-between with Iraq and al Qaeda.
I have serious doubts they were all iraqis.
DEBKA has just posted this tidbit.
Iraqi police officer: Saddam Husseins top deputy Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri was killed in US search operation in the town Hawijah 30 miles west of Kirkuk and Rashad 40 miles to the south. Saturday
Looking for comfirmation!!!!!
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