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Newly found Iraqi files raise heat on British MP**More than $10 million!
The Christian Science Monitor ^ | April 25, 2003 | Philip Smucker

Posted on 04/24/2003 3:31:45 PM PDT by aculeus

BAGHDAD - A fresh set of documents uncovered in a Baghdad house used by Saddam Hussein's son Qusay to hide top-secret files detail multimillion dollar payments to an outspoken British member of parliament, George Galloway.

Evidence of Mr. Galloway's dealings with the regime were first revealed earlier this week by David Blair, a reporter for the Daily Telegraph in London, who discovered documents in Iraq's Foreign Ministry.

The Labour Party MP, who lambasted his party's prime minister, Tony Blair, in parliamentary debates on the war earlier this year, has denied the allegations. He is now the focus of a preliminary investigation by British law-enforcement officials and is under intense scrutiny in the British press, where the story has been splashed across the front pages.

The most recent - and possibly most revealing - documents were obtained earlier this week by the Monitor. The papers include direct orders from the Hussein regime to issue Mr. Galloway six individual payments, starting in July 1992 and ending in January 2003.

The payments point to a concerted effort by the regime to use its oil wealth to win friends in the Western world who could promote Iraqi interests first by lifting sanctions against Iraq and later in blocking war plans.

The leadership of Hussein's special security section and accountants of the President's secretive Republican Guard signed the papers and authorized payments totaling more than $10 million.

The three most recent payment authorizations, beginning on April 4, 2000, and ending on January 14, 2003 are for $3 million each. All three authorizations include statements that show the Iraqi leadership's strong political motivation in paying Galloway for his vociferous opposition to US and British plans to invade Iraq.

The Jan. 14, 2003, document, written on Republican Guard stationary with its Iraqi eagle and "Trust in Allah," calls for the "Manager of the security department, in the name of President Saddam Hussein, to order a gratuity to be issued to Mr. George Galloway of British nationality in the amount of three million dollars only."

The document states that the money is in return for "his courageous and daring stands against the enemies of Iraq, like Blair, the British Prime Minister, and for his opposition in the House of Commons and Lords against all outrageous lies against our patient people...."

The document is signed left to right by four people, including Gen. Saif Adeen Flaya al-Hassan, Col. Shawki Abed Ahmed, and what the Iraqi general who first discovered the documents says is the signature of Qusay. The same exact signatures are also found on a vast array of documents from the offices of the president's youngest son. The final authorization appears to be that of Qusay, who notes the accounting department should "issue the check and deliver to Mr. George Galloway," adding, "Do this fast and inform me."

An Iraqi general attached to Hussein's Republican Guard discovered the documents in a house in the Baghdad suburbs used by Qusay, who is chief of Iraq's elite Guard units.

The general, whose initials are "S.A.R.," asked not to be named for fear of retribution from Hussein's assassins. He said he raided the suburban home on April 8 with armed fighters in an effort to secure deeds to property that the regime had confiscated from him years ago. He said he found the new Galloway papers amid documents discussing Kuwaiti prisoners and Hussein's chemical warfare experts, and information about the president's most trusted Republican Guard commanders.

The documents appear to be authentic and signed by senior members within Saddam Hussein's most trusted security circle, but their authenticity could not be verified by the Monitor.

The British newspaper The Guardian raised possible questions about the first round of documents, including the possibility that while the documents could be real, they might include false allegations from which Iraqi agents could profit internally.

Galloway - a colorful Scot who is sharp of suit and even sharper of tongue - made regular visits to Iraq, and was dubbed by conservatives in Britain as an "apologist for Saddam Hussein." He once told the dictator, "Sir, I salute your courage, your strength, your indefatigability."

In Parliament, Galloway, an MP since 1987 and a controversial figure, has championed the plight of Iraq, and blasted Blair for going to war in league with President Bush in his "crusade" against the Muslim world. He labeled Blair and Bush "wolves" for attacking Iraq, sparking a firm rebuttal from Blair, who called the remarks "disgraceful."

Galloway has vehemently denied he accepted any cash payments from the regime, initially, suggesting the documents may have been forged. The outspoken Labour Party member called earlier Daily Telegraph stories about his dealings a "smear campaign" against war opponents, and his lawyers have initiated legal proceedings against the newspaper.

Repeated efforts to contact Galloway, who is currently traveling in Portugal, were unsuccessful. No one answered at his House of Commons office, and his mobile phone was switched off.

David Blair, the British reporter who first broke the story, told the BBC: "I think it would require an enormous amount of imagination to believe that someone went to the trouble of composing a forged document in Arabic and then planting it in a file of patently authentic documents and burying it in a darkened room on the off-chance that a British journalist might happen upon it and might bother to translate it. That strikes me as so wildly improbable as to be virtually inconceivable."

According to the documents Blair found in the Iraqi Foreign Ministry, Galloway received money from Hussein's regime, taking a slice of oil earnings worth at least $600,000 a year. A top-secret memo sent by Hussein's spy chief requested that Galloway get an even-greater cut of Iraq's exports under the UN-sponsored oil for food program.

The document said that Galloway was profiting from food contracts, and sought "exceptional" business deals.

The most recent documents obtained by the Monitor suggest that payoffs may well have been made by checks in lump sums. The Iraqi general, who is familiar with financial dealings of Hussein's inner circle, said that checks of several million dollars could have easily been cashed in a bank on the ground floor of one of the President's most important palaces in Baghdad.

In a more recent Telegraph report based on a memorandum from May 2, 2000, Hussein is said to have rejected a request from Galloway for more money, saying his "exceptional" demands were not affordable.

The letter, found in the foreign ministry files, refers to the date and reference number of the intelligence chief's memo, which asked for Hussein's decision on Galloway's alleged requests.

That memo would have come nearly a month after one of the six letters - obtained by the Monitor - from Qusay's cabinet detailing a payment on April 4, 2000. That payment also references Galloway's "courageous and daring stands towards the oppressive blockade and in support of our courageous and patient people who violently oppose all enemies of Iraq and its leaders..."

Another payment authorization on July 27, 1999, states the money is being given upon "agreement of Sayid Qusay Saddam Hussein (the president's son) who has supervision over the Republican Guard." It calls the $1 million payment a reward for Galloway's support in trying to repeal the "unjust blockade on our beloved country and for his firm stand against the prime minister of Britain, the criminal Blair."

The two earliest payments, in July of 1992 and October of 1993, are noted down on green stationary as having already been delivered. For example, the October payment states, "kindly be informed of the issuing of a gratuity by the esteemed leader President Saddam Hussein (may Allah protect and guide him) to Mr. George Galloway in the amount of $600,000." It says the money was handed over to him by the representative of the directorate of the Special Security Organization, Colonel Shawki. Thursday, the US Marines had surrounded the house of Colonel Shawki. His neighbors said he might have already fled to Syria.

The general who gave access to the documents - General "S" - was until a decade ago a general in the regular Iraqi army but was attached to the Republican Guard. He was subsequently jailed on three occasions. He claims the government punished him because he is a Shiite, by assassinating his wife, three daughters, and one brother.

General "S" was determined to make up for his losses. What he really wanted back, however, was the deeds to the three homes taken from him. He planted his own driver as a spy in the guards of Qusay and followed the presidential paper trail when it moved to the suburbs in March.

On April 8, when US forces prepared to storm the capital, he rounded up six men who had served in prison with him and set out for the house.

He took possession of items including computer printouts that give the names, biographies, and residences of Hussein's most trusted Republican Guard officers. Also in the files is information on chemists who worked in the Iraqi biological-weapons program.

He also, unexpectedly, found documents discussing Kuwaiti prisoners still in Iraq and the ones that noted specific payments of money to Galloway. There was also a document detailing the biographies of Qusay's most trusted assassins.

One of The Monitor's interpreters was a fellow inmate of the general in Hussein's political prison. When the interpreter visited him several days ago, the general mentioned the documents he held.

The general had been most interested in discussing the Kuwaiti file. When the Monitor's reporter and the interpreter arrived to speak with him, he mentioned the Galloway material in passing.

• Mark Rice-Oxley contributed to this report from London.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: galloway; georgegalloway; iraq; saddam
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To: Warhead W-88
Ritter is writing in The Guardian (posted elsewhere), basically casting doubt on these reports about al-Galloway.
161 posted on 04/24/2003 7:40:32 PM PDT by 1066AD
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To: 1066AD
I have been saying this for weeks. It is going to be SO much fun watching the money trail unravel. It is going to get really ugly.

Guaranteed France, Germany, Russia. And then how far into US left?
162 posted on 04/24/2003 7:58:50 PM PDT by DougF
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To: george wythe
"Scott Ritter BK,

If you did not get paid at least $10 million for your shilling, you would go down in history as the biggest fool of this century.

This backbencher MP got paid at least that much; I hope you were given at least a penthouse in NYC"


We know he got a $400,000 advance for something (a book??)...... but I agree..... I think he probably has a few million in a swiss bank account now.

I do wish this whole story line would get more publicity in the MAJOR media outlets..... not even FOX is focused on this, much less any newspapers. I guess they are waiting for "confirmation" of sorts. Dunno.
163 posted on 04/24/2003 8:51:47 PM PDT by bart99
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To: All
And we are wondering what all those boxes of cash recently found in safe houses around baghdad were used for? hehe....... now we know.
164 posted on 04/24/2003 8:59:42 PM PDT by bart99
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To: So Cal Rocket
From what I understand, Treason is the only capital offense in the UK.

Going the Gallow way :).

165 posted on 04/24/2003 9:20:46 PM PDT by Cachelot (~ In waters near you ~)
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To: aculeus
Breathlessly awaiting check recipt of payments to the Democratic National Committee.
166 posted on 04/24/2003 9:28:34 PM PDT by SkyPilot
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To: dennisw
It is a really funny photo.

Must be some of us evil Neo Cons in Iraq!:)
167 posted on 04/24/2003 9:45:42 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Being a Monthly Donor to Free Republic is the Right Thing to do!)
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To: BOBTHENAILER
Any heavy hitting rat in congress that retires between now and the next election to spend more time with his/her/its family has seen the early translations.

He/she/it was told to get out of Dodge and be quite the rest of their life or the nation will be reading about their involvement in the Iraqi Oil for Food Scam.
168 posted on 04/24/2003 9:48:40 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Being a Monthly Donor to Free Republic is the Right Thing to do!)
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To: Miss Marple
I bet that since 9/11, Saddam and his thugs have spent at least a billion $ trying buy cover and delay to keep their regime in power.

The money so far in this expose is small to what was probably spent in desperation by these thugs to stay in power.

Having said that, I could take 10 million $'s and use it with right and left wing non profits to make life miserable for our president, conservatives and anyone against the Islamofacists.

A billion $'s could buy a lot of support in the UN, the EU, Nato and in our congress and on our streets.
169 posted on 04/24/2003 9:54:01 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Being a Monthly Donor to Free Republic is the Right Thing to do!)
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To: lainde
Whiney Congressits are cheap. These three clymers were probably bought out for 100,000 or less.

To buy out a Whiney liberal senator like the Da$$hole, the Clintoon, the Kennedy, the Leaky Leahy, you would need at least a quarter of a million.
170 posted on 04/24/2003 9:56:37 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Being a Monthly Donor to Free Republic is the Right Thing to do!)
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To: whinecountry
I had rather someone meet them in a park in DC and show and tell them what evidence was available. Then ask them to resign or the Dime gets dropped on them.

The left wing mediots will ignore this story, spike it and when forced to admit to it, they will try to play it down.

So screw the left wing mediots, who may be just as involved at the top levels. Use the evidence to convince the rats that early retirement to spend time with their families is best for them.
171 posted on 04/24/2003 10:00:41 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Being a Monthly Donor to Free Republic is the Right Thing to do!)
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To: FairOpinion
I remember that picture all too well as my left wing, communist and islamofacist congressit was the forgotten third congressit.

His name is Mike Thompson. He never met a communist or Islamofacists that he didn't love, respect and want to help if they paid for help.
172 posted on 04/24/2003 10:03:08 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Being a Monthly Donor to Free Republic is the Right Thing to do!)
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To: MEG33
bttt
173 posted on 04/24/2003 10:49:54 PM PDT by ellery
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To: aculeus
It's fascinating to me to see reporters wandering around a newly-liberated country, such as in Afghanistan and now Iraq, finding such portentious documents lying around, and then watch the fallout.
174 posted on 04/25/2003 12:04:18 AM PDT by GretchenEE (We export freedom)
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To: aculeus
It is beyond my reckoning to grasp how a man can be an MP and do what Galloway is accused of doing. But then, I never understood Benedict Arnold either.
175 posted on 04/25/2003 12:08:58 AM PDT by GretchenEE (We export freedom)
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To: aculeus
WOW to think all of these payments were in cash. A drop in the bucket considering what we know now in money just lying around in American Currency.

Ritter was paid well, to not find WMD and to stop the war.
176 posted on 04/25/2003 12:44:02 AM PDT by swheats
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To: swheats
BTT
177 posted on 04/25/2003 12:49:04 AM PDT by nopardons
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To: Warhead W-88
Sadly, Scott has not gone away, he is spinning and sweating:

http://www.casi.org.uk/discuss/2003/msg02183.html

Galloway's a crook - how convenient
These dramatic revelations come just when Britain needs an outspoken voice of dissent more than ever
Scott Ritter
Friday April 25, 2003
The Guardian
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/iraq/comment/0,12956,943205,00.html
I was shocked to read about the allegations, ostensibly based upon documents discovered in Iraq,
that George Galloway was somehow compensated financially by the Iraqi government for championing
its cause. I was shocked because, if these allegations prove to be true, then the integrity and
credibility of a man for whom I have great respect would be dramatically undermined.

But I was also shocked because of the timing of these allegations. Having been on the receiving end
of smear campaigns designed to assassinate the character of someone in opposition to the powers
that be, I have grown highly suspicious of dramatic revelations conveniently timed to silence a
vocal voice of dissent.

The charges made against Galloway are serious and they should be thoroughly investigated. Do these
charges have any merit? I will continue to operate under the assumption of innocence until proven
guilty. I hope the charges against George Galloway are baseless but, to be honest, I simply don't
know.

But I do know a few things about George Galloway and the cause he championed with regards to Iraq.
I know that he helped found the Mariam Appeal, a humanitarian organisation established in 1998
initially to raise funds on behalf of an Iraqi girl who suffered from leukaemia and who, because of
economic sanctions, was unable to receive adequate medical care. I met Mariam in 1999, when she was
a guest of the Bruderhof Society here in the US, a religious movement that eschews individual
wealth and promotes a simple, communal life. She was getting treatment for the onset of blindness
caused by medical neglect related to her leukaemia treatment.

Mariam is a real person, not some political stunt. Her suffering was genuine. So, too, was the joy
of her maternal grandmother, who accompanied Mariam to the US when she realised that while Mariam
might be blind, she was going to live, thanks in no small part to the work of people like George
Galloway, whose dramatic intervention got Mariam out of Iraq and into the hands of those who could
care for her.

I know that Galloway helped set up the British-Iraqi friendship association. I know because he
invited me to come to London and speak at the association's inaugural meeting. The message I heard
him deliver that night was one of human kindness and compassion. He spoke out against the suffering
of the Iraqi people under the effects of a decades-long economic embargo. I heard him decry the
dictatorship of Saddam Hussein. But I also heard him lambast the policies of his own country, and
those of the US, which were subjecting the innocent people of Iraq to such suffering.

Establishing the friendship association was a politically incorrect thing to do at the time.
Galloway's political opponents could, and did, make political hay from such actions, deriding them
as "pro-Saddam". In the months to come, I'm sure many British people will flock to organisations
espousing friendship between Britain and Iraq, now that it is the trendy thing to do. Galloway was
a friend of the Iraqi people back when they most needed the friendship and understanding of the
British people.

I know that Galloway was a leading, and highly vocal, critic of the war with Iraq. He challenged
Tony Blair's policies and statements about the justification for the war, namely the allegations
made by Britain and the US concerning Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programmes and its failure
to comply with its security council-mandated obligations to disarm. I know because I share
Galloway's views about the unsustained nature of the British-American case against Iraq.

He spoke out vociferously against Blair's policies on Iraq, demanding evidence concerning Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction more substantial than the plagiarised dossier and forged documents
produced by Whitehall. The case for war, as flimsy as it was in the months before Operation Iraqi
Freedom began, has been shown to date to be utterly without merit, as no stockpiles of hidden
weapons of mass destruction have been uncovered by the US and British military forces occupying
Iraq.

If it turns out that there are no weapons of mass destruction or programmes related to their
production and concealment in Iraq, Blair and his government must be held accountable by the
British people for actions carried out in their name. If British policy was sustained on the back
of a lie, then those who perpetrated that lie must be called upon to explain themselves. Now, more
than ever, the British people need a voice of opposition, because it is from the ranks of the
opposition that the matter of policing bad policy will be raised.

To allow George Galloway to be silenced now, when his criticisms of British policy over Iraq have
been shown to be fundamentally sound, would be a travesty of democracy. Rather than casting him
aside, the British people should reconsider his statements in the light of the emerging reality
that it is Blair and not Galloway who has been saying things worthy of investigation.

· Scott Ritter was formerly chief UN weapons inspector in Iraq

WSRitter@aol.com

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003

_______________________________________________
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178 posted on 04/25/2003 5:28:15 AM PDT by Gunrunner2
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To: Gunrunner2
Scotty boy sounds like he is real scared of something coming out about him.

Now Soddamite is toast we can expect him to shop all his buddys. If he is dead he will have left instructions to finger all his helpers, if he is alive it's straight vengeance for not saving him.

How long before all Chiraq's dirty deals surface and mny mny others.
179 posted on 04/25/2003 6:12:06 AM PDT by crazycat
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To: Glenn
Maybe we willhear the medivel expression from the Queen....OFF WITH HIS HEAD!!!!!!
180 posted on 04/25/2003 7:08:39 AM PDT by marty60
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