GOOD JOB COALITION WASHINGTON, Aug 21 — Ali Hasan al-Majid, a feared cousin of Saddam Hussein nicknamed “Chemical Ali” for his use of poison gas in attacks, has been captured by U.S. forces in Iraq, U.S. Central Command said on Thursday. U.S. forces in Iraq also announced they had arrested a senior Iraqi guerrilla commander who they said was carrying a list of 10 Iraqis marked for assassination. CONFIRMING A REPORT by NBC News, Central Command said al-Majid — no. 5 on a U.S. list of the 55 most wanted Iraqis and the “king of spades” in a U.S. Army deck of cards depicting fugitive members of Saddam’s government — was in custody, but provided no details. The Associated Press quoted an unidentified senior defense official as saying that al-Majid was captured on Sunday in the company of bodyguards, but not with other top Iraqis. The official did not say where or how he was captured. Al-Majid was a ruthless member of Saddam’s clan who played a leading role in the violent suppression of Iraq’s Kurdish and Shiite Muslim rebels and the seven-month occupation of Kuwait which began in 1990. U.S. officials at first thought that al-Majid was killed in April in an airstrike on a house in southern Iraq, near Basra. But Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters in June that interrogations of Iraqi prisoners indicated that he might be alive. Saddam’s paternal first cousin and a former army sergeant, al-Majid was considered one of the most powerful men in Saddam’s inner circle. ELEVATED FROM WARRANT OFFICER Before the 1968 revolution, al-Majid was a simple warrant officer responsible for delivering messages by motorcycle. Advertisement But he had been closely linked with Saddam since the 1960s when they were members of the then-underground Baath Party which ruled Iraq until the U.S.-led coalition invaded. Al-Majid also was part of the “Jihaz Haneen,” or “apparatus of yearning,” the secret intelligence organization Saddam formed inside the Baath to eliminate rivals and traitors and carry out assassinations. It played a key role in the July 17, 1968, coup that overthrew President Abdel-Salim Arif and thrust Saddam securely on the path to power. When Saddam took over from President Ahmad Hassan al-Bakr in July 1979, he promoted al-Majid to full general even though his military skills were negligible. By the mid-1980s, with the war against Iran raging, al-Majid was coordinating Iraq’s five intelligence and security services and joined the “Makhtab al-Khas,” or Special Bureau, through which Saddam and his tight-knit inner circle ran the intelligence apparatus. Saddam appointed him to the 17-member Regional Command of the Baath Party in 1984 and he sat on that decision-making body until Saddam’s Iraqi government was overthrown. RUTHLESSLY PUT DOWN KURD REBELLION The nickname “Chemical Ali” was given to him by foes after he ordered the use of chemical weapons to quell a rebellion by Kurds in northern Iraq. In a single attack, some 5,000 men, women and children were killed in Halabja in March 1988 when government forces bombed and shelled the town with gas. The attacks were part of the “Anfal” (spoils of war) campaign against Kurdish rebels who took advantage of Iraq’s 1980-88 war with Iran to step up their long campaign for autonomy in their northern heartlands. Human rights groups say al-Majid’s scorched-earth policy led to the murder or disappearance of some 100,000 Kurds and the forced removal of many more. Hundreds of Kurdish villages and communities were destroyed. Al-Majid also has been linked to the bloody crackdown on Shiites in southern Iraq after their uprising following the 1991 Gulf War. He was appointed governor of Kuwait during Iraq’s seven-month occupation in 1990-1991, which led to the first Gulf War. It was not immediately known whether al-Majid had been playing a role in organizing anti-American resistance in recent months. GUERRILLA COMMANDER ARRESTED Meanwhile, U.S. forces in Iraq announced that they had arrested a senior Iraqi guerrilla commander after stopping him at a checkpoint near the restive town of Baquba, northeast of Baghdad. Gen. Rashid Mohammad, a commander of the Fedayeen guerrilla force that had a key role during Saddam’s rule and has been blamed for many attacks on U.S. troops, was seized on Wednesday, said Lt. Col. William Adamson. Mohammad was carrying what Adamson described as an “assassination list” bearing the names of 10 Iraqis who have cooperated with U.S. forces. He did not identify those on the list. He said the Fedayeen commander also had a “shopping list” that listed items such as weapons, ammunition, computers, telephones and requests for funding in his wallet, Adamson said. U.S. officers blame Fedayeen fighters for scores of attacks on their troops in recent months, with the area around Baquba a particular hot spot. Since major combat ended on May 1, 63 U.S. soldiers have been killed in Iraq. News of the captures of al-Majid and Mohammad came on the heels of the arrest this week of former Iraqi Vice President Taha Yassin Ramadan. Kurdish forces of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) captured Ramadan on Monday in Mosul, the northern Iraqi city where Saddam’s two sons were killed last month by U.S. troops, and turned him over to U.S. authorities. ------------------------------------------------------------------ The noose tightens......can Saddam be far behind? DD
We thought we got him in a missile attack. Now we captured him...... Fewer and fewer bad guys on the ground is good news. Now if we can just get that pro USA Iraqi TV up and running. DD
They must've killed Biological Ali last time. The military thought he was in his house when it was bombed months ago. Just like Saddam was suppose to haved died in his bunker and at the restuarant. That was part of the good news propaganda where we trumpeted our kills, captures and discoveries of WMD. Even if it was proven false afterwards, there was no follow-up to any of the claims.
We got chemical Ali, this time I guess. This in itself is good as Ali was wrong to use that gas we sold him, even though Rumsfeld was not troubled by it at the time. Phewwww! No need to worry about the Iraqi resistance now For awhile there we was getting worried about things there. Did Bush interrupt his vacation and hold a press conference for this momentous event?
Don't feel too bad. You can still call out the administration for the 13 or so of the 55 regime members still unaccounted for.
LOL! Glynch is the reason I still come to the D&D area. I can' t get the picture out of my head of a bitter old man sitting on a porch, mad at the world. Every time there is news, even good news, the response is the same. Gotta love consistency.
Medical mar1juana growing hippy from San Fran maybe- The mad at the world bitter old man on the porch bit I can't quite picture.
I disagree. I commend our military forces -- and by extension, Bush -- for capturing this thug. They could have just murdered him like they did Saddam's sons.
GreenVegan, Interesting choice of words....murdered. But, I agree with the end result, they have my permission to murder Chemical Ali too. DD
I suspect when they captured Ali, he and his cronies didn't go after their captors with guns a blazing as did Saddam's sons, otherwise he'd be dead too.