Saddam and Osama were C.I.A. assets
Richard Menec
Saddam and Osama were C.I.A. assets
Mon Aug 23, 2004 02:20
64.140.158.20

Saddam and Osama were C.I.A. assets
Posted on Wednesday, August 11 @ 05:27:19 CDT
Topic: baretruth
From: Sarah Blum, who received it from Richard Menec
http://pnews.org/portal/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=90

"The Baath first came to power in 1963, in a coup organised by the CIA. They overthrew the regime run by Abd al-Karim Qassim, a nationalist army officer. The coup, and the reasons why the CIA supported it, are described by journalists Andrew and Patrick Cockburn. ........Richard Menec


"In early 1963, Saddam had more important things to worry about than his outstanding bill at the Andiana Cafe. On February 8, a military coup in Baghdad, in which the Baath Party played a leading role, overthrew Qassim. Support for the conspirators was limited. In the first hours of fighting, they had only nine tanks under their con- trol. The Baath Party had just 850 active members. But Qassim ignored warnings about the impending coup. What tipped the bal- ance against him was the involvement of the United States. He had taken Iraq out of the anti-Soviet Baghdad Pact. In 1961, he threat- ened to occupy Kuwait and nationalized part of the Iraq Petroleum Company (IPC), the foreign oil consortium that exploited Iraq's oil. In retrospect, it was the ClAs favorite coup. "We really had the ts crossed on what was happening," James Critchfield, then head of the CIA in the Middle East, told us. "We regarded it as a great victory." Iraqi participants later confirmed American involvement. "We came to power on a CIA train," admitted Ali Saleh Sa'adi, the Baath Party sec- retary general who was about to institute an unprecedented reign of terror. CIA assistance reportedly included coordination of the coup plotters from the agency's station inside the U.S. embassy in Baghdad as well as a clandestine radio station in Kuwait and solicitation of advice from around the Middle East on who on the left should be eliminated once the coup was successful. To the end, Qassim retained his popularity in the streets of Baghdad. After his execution, his sup- porters refused to believe he was dead until the coup leaders showed pictures of his bullet-riddled body on TV and in the newspapers."

The above comes from "Out of the Ashes, The Resurrection of Saddam Hussein", by Andrew and Patrick Cockburn, published by Verso, 2000.
http://pnews.org/portal/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=90
==============================================

Daily World Press - 2641 newspapers from world - 192 countries

WORLD NEWS INDEX - (RESEARCHER'S BOOKMARK)

 


Main Page - Monday, 08/23/04

Message Board by American Patriot Friends Network [APFN]

APFN MESSAGEBOARD ARCHIVES

messageboard.gif (4314 bytes)