|
U.S.
soldiers show the cover of the spider hole used by Saddam Hussein on a a farm
near Tikrit, northern Iraq.
http://www.thestate.com/images/common/spacer.gif
Army nabs Saddam's cronies
JIM
KRANE
Associated Press
f
http://www.thestate.com/images/realcities/realcities/7497/56210600762.jpg
t
http://www.thestate.com/images/palette/thestate/panel_arrow_0.gifMore
photos
http://www.thestate.com/images/common/spacer.gif
U.S. soldiers show the cover of the spider hole used by Saddam Hussein on a a
farm near Tikrit, northern Iraq.
EFREM
LUKATSKY,
Associated Press.
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Saddam Hussein's capture is already reaping dividends for the
U.S. military, providing intelligence that allowed U.S. soldiers to capture
several top regime figures and uncover rebel cells in the capital, a U.S.
general said Monday.
The
U.S. military hopes Saddam will clear up allegations that he had chemical and
biological weapons and a nuclear weapons program, said U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Mark
Hertling of the 1st Armored Division.
"I certainly think some of that will come out," Hertling said in an
interview with The Associated Press. "I think we'll get some significant
intelligence over the next couple of days."
Since Saddam's capture on Saturday, U.S. Army teams from the 1st Armored
Division have captured one high-ranking former regime figure - who has yet to be
named - and that prisoner has given up a few others, Hertling said. All the men
are currently being interrogated and more raids are expected, Hertling said.
The intelligence that led the military to the men came from the first transcript
of Saddam's initial interrogation, and a briefcase of documents Saddam carried
with him at the time of his arrest, Hertling said.
"We've already gleaned intelligence value from his capture," Hertling
said. "We've already been able to capture a couple of key individuals here
in Baghdad. We've completely confirmed one of the cells. It's putting the pieces
together and it's connecting the dots. It has already helped us significantly in
Baghdad."
The intelligence has also given the U.S. military a far clearer picture of the
guerrillas' command and control network in the city, and has confirmed the
existence of rebel cells whose existence was previously only suspected, Hertling
said.
From the initial batch of successes, Hertling said it was apparent that Saddam
still played some role in leading the anti-U.S. insurgency.
"I'm sure he was giving some guidance to some key figures in this
insurgency," Hertling said.
Hertling said the 1st Armored Division had also received intelligence from other
sources on attacks Monday in Baghdad. The division received tips earlier in
December that a spate of car bombings would start in mid-December.
"We have some intelligence that things are going to happen," Hertling
said.
Hertling said he hopes Saddam will divulge secrets on everything from mass grave
sites to the whereabouts of missing regime figures and "past sins of the
regime we may not even know about."
"We certainly can gather intelligence he has on the organization of the
insurgency, who their leaders are, how the cells are performing, how they're
being commanded and controlled, who's funding them and what their connections
are to crime," Hertling said.
|