Susan (NC)– who also posts on Today in Iraq as ‘Dancewater’– put a great post up there last night reminding us that December 20, 2005 is the 22nd anniversary of the famous Rumsfeld-Saddam handshake in Baghdad that sealed the rapid improvement in US-Iraq relations of those months.
Susan also linked to this recent article by Norman Solomon, in which Solomon noted the following:
- Christmas came 11 days early for Donald Rumsfeld two years ago when the news broke that American forces had pulled Saddam Hussein from a spidery hole. During interviews about the capture, on CBS and ABC, the Pentagon’s top man was upbeat. And he didn’t have to deal with a question that Lesley Stahl or Peter Jennings could have logically chosen to ask: “Secretary Rumsfeld, you met with Saddam almost exactly 20 years ago and shook his hand. What kind of guy was he?”
Now, Saddam Hussein has gone on trial, but such questions remain unasked by mainstream U.S. journalists.…
As it happens, the initial trial of Saddam and co-defendants is focusing on grisly crimes that occurred the year before Rumsfeld gripped his hand. “The first witness, Ahmad Hassan Muhammad, 38, riveted the courtroom with the scenes of torture he witnessed after his arrest in 1982, including a meat grinder with human hair and blood under it,” the New York Times reported Tuesday. And: “At one point, Mr. Muhammad briefly broke down in tears as he recalled how his brother was tortured with electrical shocks in front of their 77-year-old father.”
- The victims were Shiites — 143 men and adolescent boys, according to the charges — tortured and killed in the Iraqi town of Dujail after an assassination attempt against Saddam in early July of 1982. Donald Rumsfeld became the Reagan administration’s Middle East special envoy 15 months later.
On Dec. 20, 1983, the Washington Post reported that Rumsfeld “visited Iraq in what U.S. officials said was an attempt to bolster the already improving U.S. relations with that country.” A couple of days later, the New York Times cited a “senior American official” who “said that the United States remained ready to establish full diplomatic relations with Iraq and that it was up to the Iraqis.”
On March 29, 1984, the Times reported: “American diplomats pronounce themselves satisfied with relations between Iraq and the United States and suggest that normal diplomatic ties have been restored in all but name.” Washington had some goodies for Saddam’s regime, the Times account noted, including “agricultural-commodity credits totaling $840 million.” And while “no results of the talks have been announced” after the Rumsfeld visit to Baghdad three months earlier, “Western European diplomats assume that the United States now exchanges some intelligence on Iran with Iraq.”
A few months later, on July 17, 1984, a Times article with a Baghdad dateline sketchily filled in a bit more information, saying that the U.S. government “granted Iraq about $2 billion in commodity credits to buy food over the last two years.” The story recalled that “Donald Rumsfeld, the former Middle East special envoy, held two private meetings with the Iraqi president here,” and the dispatch mentioned in passing that “State Department human rights reports have been uniformly critical of the Iraqi President, contending that he ran a police state.”
Full diplomatic relations between Washington and Baghdad were restored 11 months after Rumsfeld’s December 1983 visit with Saddam. He went on to use poison gas later in the decade, actions which scarcely harmed relations with the Reagan administration.
So yes, Mr. Rumsfeld, what kind of a man was he?
(Big thanks to Susan/Dancewater, and to the whole gang that keeps Today in Iraq such a great source.)
Susan, Helena,
“Secretary Rumsfeld, you met with Saddam almost exactly 20 years ago and shook his hand. What kind of guy was he?”
What about April Glaspy meeting Saddam July 25, 1990. (Eight days before the August 2 1990 invasion? Where she hided from that date till now? Why did she hid herself, or she forced to hid and change her name and her identity ”this is common practise in US” where she is now?
comment about the Iraq debate between Brink Lindsey and John Mueller in Reason a while back:
“On recklessness, Iraq’s behavior in the past has been not reckless, but extremely cautious, with Saddam always seeking to assure the outcome before committing forces. That’s why he broached the subject of the Kuwait invasion with April Glaspy [sic.] in 1990 (before he did it), and why his assessment of his war against Iran in the 1980s would work. In both cases, he thought the U.S. was on his side (and in fact we indicated we were). Dictators also need wars to maintain and fuel crisis mode management and media control. Iraq has not been reckless in projecting power, but actually quite rational and thoughtful. That Saddam mistakes our messages doesn’t make him irrational, just part of a larger global crowd trying to figure out what the U.S. really wants.”
Any one can find here to tell us missing story..?