Saddam's
desperate offers to stave off war
Washington
dismissed Iraq's peace feelers, including elections
and weapons pledge, put forward via diplomatic
channels and US hawk Perle
In the few weeks before its fall,
Iraq's Ba'athist regime made a series of increasingly
desperate peace offers to Washington, promising
to hold elections and even to allow US troops
to search for banned weapons. But the advances
were all rejected by the Bush administration,
according to intermediaries involved in the talks.
As US and British troops massed in the Gulf, Iraqi
intelligence sent out a range of compromise feelers
through a number of channels in the apparent hope
of forestalling the invasion or at least buying
time.
The messages were sent through
Syrian intelligence, and French, German and Russian
diplomatic channels, and as the countdown to invasion
ticked away, through retired CIA officials and
a Lebanese-American businessman who met the Washington
hawk, Richard Perle, in a London hotel.
The first approach appears to
have been made last December through the CIA's
former head of counter-terrorism, Vincent Cannistraro.
"I was approached by someone
representing Tahir al-Tikriti - the Iraqi intelligence
chief also known as [General] Tahir Habbush -
who said Saddam knew there was a campaign to link
him to September 11 and prove he had weapons of
mass destruction," said Mr Cannistraro. "The
Iraqis were prepared to satisfy those concerns.
I reported the conversation to senior levels of
the state department and I was told to stand aside
and they would handle it," he said. He later
heard the Iraqi offer had been "killed"
by the Bush administration.
In the next three months, several
more approaches from Iraq were made through third
countries, US intelligence sources said. At one
point, a meeting between CIA officials and Iraqi
agents was arranged in Morocco but, according
to the US sources, the Iraqi side did not show
up.
Iraqi intelligence was also offering
privately to allow several thousand US troops
into the country to take part in the search for
banned weapons.
Baghdad even proposed staging
internationally-monitored elections within two
years.
"All these offers had at
bottom the same thing - that Saddam would stay
in power, and that was unacceptable to the administration,"
Mr Cannistraro said. "There were serious
attempts to cut a deal but they were all turned
down by the president and vice president."
According to the Knight-Ridder
news agency, the Iraqis sought a direct route
to the Washington hawks in February. They found
a Lebanese-American businessman, Imad el-Hage,
who boasted he had a direct line to the Pentagon.
Mr Hage told yesterday's New York
Times that he was initially approached by General
Habbush's chief of foreign intelligence operations,
who turned up in Mr Hage's Beirut office and promptly
collapsed, apparently from stress.
When Mr Obeidi recovered, he urged
Mr Hage to tell his Washington contacts Iraq was
ready to talk about anything, including oil concessions,
the Middle East peace process, and banned weapons.
The Iraqi official said the "Americans could
send 2,000 FBI agents to look wherever they wanted",
according to Mr Hage.
A week later Mr Hage travelled
to Baghdad and talked to Gen Habbush himself.
The general repeated the invitation to allow Americans
to search for weapons and added an offer to hand
over a suspected terrorist, Abdul Rahman Yasin,
who had been convicted in the US for the 1993
attack on the World Trade Centre. The regime would
hold elections within two years, and the intelligence
chief even offered to fly to London to discuss
the issue in person.
Mr Hage relayed these offers via
an intermediary to the Pentagon, but there was
no official response. The Lebanese-American businessman
persisted, and arranged a meeting with Mr Perle,
a member of the Pentagon's advisory board.
It is understood that Mr Hage
and Mr Perle met on March 7 in the lobby of the
Marlborough hotel in Bloomsbury. They then went
to an office nearby where over two hours Mr Hage
outlined the Iraqi offer to Mr Perle.
Mr Perle was travelling in Europe
yesterday and unavailable for comment. However,
he told the New York Times he had been told by
the CIA not to pursue contacts with the Iraqis.
A US intelligence source insisted
that the decision not to negotiate came from the
White House, which was demanding complete surrender.
According to an Arab source, Mr
Perle sent a Saudi official a set of requirements
he believed Iraq would have to fulfil. Those demands
included Saddam's abdication and departure, first
to a US military base for interrogation and then
into supervised exile, a surrender of Iraqi troops,
and the admission that Iraq had weapons of mass
destruction.
According to Mr Hage, Gen Habbush
rejected any proposal involving Saddam's abdication,
offering future elections instead.
But even after the war got under
way, the Iraqi intelligence chief appears to have
sought new compromises.
This
time the conduit was Robert Baer, another former
CIA official. There was talk of a meeting between
Mr Baer and GenHabbush in Ramadi, outside Baghdad,
in early April. "It was a promise to hold
free elections supervised by France and the US,"
Mr Baer said. But the proposed meeting never happened.
Two daysearlier, on April 9, the house it was
supposed to take place in was bombed by US planes
with six precision-guided bombs.
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