Elonka wrote: ] Agreed, something doesn't smell right. I searched around at ] google.com/news, and everything just seems to come back to the ] above story in a Melbourne paper. It doesn't seem to be off ] one of the trusted "wires", so may be being squashed for other ] reasons. Maybe it's false, maybe it's supposed to be secret, ] maybe it's flat out propaganda, and maybe it's just that the ] wires won't pick it up until they can verify it from multiple ] or verifiable sources. ] ] I did find some related stuff at a site called Debka, which ] referred to Saddam's chief bodyguard as "Hamdi Hamouda" (close ] to the Melbourne paper's spelling of "Abu Hamdi Mahmoud"). I ] can't rate the Debka site's reliability very high, but that ] article is here: ] ] http://www.debka.com/article.php?aid=245 ] ] There's also reference to a "sacked" bodyguard named Jassem ] Abdullah, who's been claiming to know the location of secret ] caches for the last few weeks. That article (again, I can't ] rate it highly for reliability) is here: ] ] http://www.debka.com/article.php?aid=247 ] ] One very frustrating thing about researching Arabic news, is ] the fluidity of how names are spelled and arranged. Sometimes ] a name might be spelled "Binalshibh" and sometimes "bin ] al'shib", and so forth. So there may be more information ] about Jassem/Hamdi/Hamouda and others, that I just haven't ] found yet. I definitely think it's a lead worth following ] though! Good stuff Elonka. Yes, it is a lead worth following. I hope its being followed by weapons inspectors as we speak. If I may rant for a sec.. This post is the type of thing that really makes me smile. Not solely because of its content, but rather because I can see people sharing their news research via this system in a very effective mannor as it grows and matures.. There are many people doing this type of thing in their spare time, and our efforts are not cordinated or shared. ie: Right now would be a great time for some who speak Arabic to chime in with different ways to type out people's names, including in their native language. That would allow others to do more detailed searches that would turn up articles that would normally not be found, that could then be passed thru an translator. I'm sure there are a number of people who have been following this same lead who have turned up additional information. Open Sources Intelligence, community driven. RE: Herald Sun: Saddam's bodyguard warns of secret arsenal [02feb03] |