TIME: The Secret
Collaborators
Monday, October 20, 2003
By MICHAEL WARE / BAGHDAD
Saddam Hussein didn't want to believe what his
intelligence networks were saying. Before the war last
spring, says a former colonel in the Iraqi intelligence
service, Saddam's analysts presented him with
classified reports predicting a decisive U.S. victory.
The documents described how the Iraqi security forces,
already outmatched, had been undermined by Washington's
success in recruiting Iraqi spies and double agents.
Internal intelligence reported to Saddam that Iraq's
defenses would probably collapse. "We diplomatically
suggested he should not stay here," the colonel says,
"because we couldn't tell him outright that he had to
step down." Even as U.S. troops moved into his capital,
Saddam struck a resilient pose, appearing on Iraqi TV
one day wading through a worshipful Baghdad crowd,
grinning broadly, pumping his fist in the air, stopping
to kiss a child.
Five days later, the Iraqi leader could no longer keep
up his staunch facade. His orders largely unheeded, his
soldiers declining to fight, Saddam went out for a look
at his falling capital, a secretary who accompanied him
recalls. Saddam stood on Zaitun Street, the boulevard
decorated with monumental statues of two muscular
forearms holding swords that cross above the roadway.
As he turned to leave, he paused. Using an Arabic
expression of utter disillusionment, he muttered, "Even
my clothes have betrayed me."
Indeed, the quick and relatively painless U.S.
overthrow of Saddam's regime was achieved not just by
military means but also by betrayal. Before a shot was
fired, the U.S. recruited and dispatched Iraqi
collaborators to uncover Saddam's plans and
capabilities, and hobble them. Deals were done;
psychological warfare was waged; money was paid; and
even blackmail was used. While the Bush
Administration's post-Saddam planning has proved
wanting, in this area of prewar thinking, Washington's
strategies paid off. By the time the first U.S. tanks
crossed the Kuwaiti border, top Republican Guard
officers had been won over, and the secret police had
been penetrated. Spies had infiltrated, and spotters
had been dispatched to help guide American bombs.
"You'd be surprised at what these guys achieved," says
a Pentagon official in Iraq, referring to the Iraqi
collaborators. Even if Saddam was the last to know,
many of those in his inner circle understood how deeply
the Iraqi security services had been penetrated. At a
funeral for two junior military officers midway through
the war, mourners asked the commanders present how
things were going. "They told us we were losing," one
mourner remembers, "that there was a kind of treason in
the army and the Republican Guard."
A side effect of the mass Iraqi desertions during the
war has been that remnants of the regime survived to
cause trouble in post-Saddam Iraq. Last week saw a fair
share of mayhem. Suicide bombers drove an
explosives-packed car into a Baghdad police station,
killing eight people, and a Spanish diplomat was shot
to death at the gate of his home in the capital.
Resistance to the American occupation has been such
that 188 U.S. troops have died in Iraq since President
Bush declared an end to major hostilities on May 1.
Still, the U.S.'s swift dispatch of Saddam undoubtedly
saved both U.S. and Iraqi lives. This is the story of
America's secret campaign to sabotage the regime from
within and of the Iraqis who waged it.
INFILTRATING IRAQ
Al-Jaburi had the right connections to serve as an
American spy. Stocky, fit and in his early 40s,
al-Jaburi--who prefers not to have his first name
published--served for almost a decade in the regime's
most feared agency, the Special Security Organization
(SSO). In the late 1980s, he was purged from the SSO
after Saddam accused his clansmen of plotting a coup.
In 1999 al-Jaburi defected to Jordan. There he joined
an opposition group, the Iraqi National Accord
(I.N.A.), which has a well-established relationship
with the CIA.
According to Ibrahim Janabi, one of the I.N.A.'s main
liaisons with the CIA in Amman, the CIA began ramping
up for war in October 2002. "They asked us to
contribute some tough, hardworking people to train for
missions inside Iraq," says Janabi. "So I gave them
al-Jaburi." The introduction, al-Jaburi recalls, was
made in a coffee shop in Amman on Oct. 18. Al-Jaburi
says CIA officers, with the aid of a lie detector,
questioned him for days on a range of topics, including
whether he was volunteering or being coerced to join.
One question probed what he would do if he found his
brother fighting against him. "I'd kill him," al-Jaburi
says he answered. On Nov. 22, al-Jaburi says, he signed
a contract guaranteeing him monthly payments of $3,000,
with $9,000 paid in advance. Two days later he boarded
a small jet bound from Jordan to Washington.
His class of 13 recruits, containing Iraqis and
Lebanese, was flown from Washington to a secluded
facility of temporary buildings hours away, al-Jaburi
recalls. They were told they were in Texas. For two
months they trained with some 20 instructors in
physical fitness, intelligence gathering, report
writing and surveillance. At a separate naval facility,
recruits learned about explosives--how to sabotage
armored vehicles, tanks, oil pipelines, electricity
pylons and railways.
In February, al-Jaburi says, he flew to Kuwait, staying
in a villa with his CIA handlers. They equipped him
with $50,000 in American currency, a GPS locator,
satellite phones and a forged Iraqi identity card
showing completion of military service so that he could
move around Iraq unhindered. Al-Jaburi says he left for
Iraq on March 11, guided across the border by smugglers
arranged by Kuwaiti intelligence. "I'd been in the SSO,
so I knew how dangerous this was going to be,"
al-Jaburi says. "But I also knew I had to do it."
The bulk of the $50,000 the CIA had provided al-Jaburi
was for buying accomplices. He started with "Ahmed"
(not his real name), an SSO officer in the main
presidential compound whom al-Jaburi already knew. "I
told him everything," says al-Jaburi. "I told him I'd
listed his name with the CIA, and I had $5,000 for
him." Ahmed proved an easy sell, replying, "What do you
want from me?" The SSO man described where the
Republican Guard had been posted in Baghdad and its
environs, and revealed that it had been ordered to pull
back into the city if attacked. In fact, after the U.S.
bombed the Guard's positions early in the war, many of
its officers abandoned their men, who then deserted en
masse. Ahmed also identified the location of heavy-gun
emplacements and missile batteries around the capital,
targets the Americans hit with great effect during the
air campaign.
Faced with the task of scouting the locations Ahmed had
listed, al-Jaburi turned to an old friend and contact,
A. Mashadani. Al-Jaburi had recruited Mashadani, a
major in the mukhabarat, Iraq's main intelligence
agency, soon after joining the I.N.A. For two years
Mashadani, who had access to some of the mukhabarat's
best secrets, had been feeding the CIA--through
al-Jaburi--information on Iraqi missiles, antiaircraft
systems and troop movements. Mashadani weighed the
risks of helping al-Jaburi now. He had watched the
execution of a colleague accused of spying for Iran.
"Iran wasn't going to save that guy, or anyone," he
says. "But we felt the U.S. could get rid of Saddam."
Using a mukhabarat sedan to which he had access as an
officer in the organization, Mashadani and al-Jaburi
visited as many of the locations Ahmed had identified
as they could. Standing at the site, al-Jaburi would
discreetly activate his GPS locator, which searches the
sky for satellites to triangulate its position, and
then note the coordinates. At an appointed hour each
night, he would use his satellite phone to contact the
CIA and relate what he had found out. This required
caution. Just possessing a satellite phone could result
in death under Saddam's regime.
From the beginning, al-Jaburi's primary mission had
been to scope out Saddam International Airport, one of
the keys to taking Baghdad. Ahmed had a way in. He had
a friend, "Mahmoud," who he says commanded the SSO's
3rd Battalion and was in charge of airport security.
Ahmed knew Mahmoud had cursed Saddam privately, so he
took him out for drinks, drawing him out on his views.
The airport commander was sufficiently negative about
Saddam to warrant a three-way drinking date with
al-Jaburi. At a third session, al-Jaburi asked Mahmoud
to cooperate and offered him $15,000. The commander,
al-Jaburi says, agreed to help.
At sundown on March 23, with the war raging in the
south and Baghdad under nightly bombardment, the
airport commander drove al-Jaburi, in a military
uniform, and Mashadani, bearing his mukhabarat ID, into
the airport compound. In an SSO car, the trio
crisscrossed the tarmac, mapping every building and
bunker, counting every soldier and weapon they could
see. Following the CIA's instructions, they repeated
the exercise three times over three nights to confirm
their sketches. By the time they had finished, U.S.
battle planners had a detailed picture of the situation
at the airport, from the weak points in the Iraqi
defenses to the safest landing zones for American
choppers.
On March 26 an exhausted al-Jaburi took a break to
visit his family in his hometown near Tikrit. The next
day his brother, an engineer at the Bayji oil refinery,
was summoned to the plant to remove documents before
the Americans got there. Al-Jaburi decided to go too,
hoping to get papers of use to the U.S. It was a trap.
Saddam's secret police surrounded al-Jaburi's car. He
learned later that they had acted on a tip from one of
his relatives eager to collect a reward.
Taken to Baghdad's notorious Abu Ghraib prison, the
last stop for many of the regime's opponents, al-Jaburi
was sure he was going to die. His jailers, he said,
placed a hood over his head and hung him from the
ceiling by his arms, which were bound behind him. They
hit him repeatedly with wire cords and clubs, smashing
his feet.
Meanwhile, Mashadani was informed by his superiors that
they had a special duty for him. At the meeting place,
a mukhabarat facility, he says, "I found my duty was
facing a lot of hands with guns." For six hours,
Mashadani was grilled about his dealings with
al-Jaburi. "All the senior bosses were coming to my
interrogation," he says. "Everyone went crazy that a
mukhabarat officer had been meeting a spy." At
daylight, his jailers took him to see the beaten
al-Jaburi. Both say they admitted nothing.
For four days, al-Jaburi says, his jailers tortured
him: beating him, shocking him, smashing his hand.
Mashadani gives a similar account. At one point,
interrogators dragged al-Jaburi's mother and wife into
the prison for questioning. Al-Jaburi could hear them
wailing through the cell door. The sessions went on for
six to eight hours at a time. Al-Jaburi says he was
grilled about other spies, information he had relayed
before his capture, GPS coordinates he had sent. He
says his CIA training prepared him to give away nothing
of importance. But he feared that time was running out.
With the regime collapsing, Saddam's execution squads
were working double time, plucking five to 10 men from
their cells every hour. "It was like a slaughterhouse,"
says al-Jaburi.
As the war's front changed, al-Jaburi and Mashadani
were moved from Abu Ghraib to prisons in Fallujah and
then Ramadi. On April 11 the last guard at the Ramadi
jail fled the advancing Americans, and locals came to
set the two men free. Half-crippled and waving a white
flag, they staggered up to an American unit. "I told
them that we had just got out of prison and that we
worked for the CIA," says al-Jaburi. A military-police
humvee whisked them to Baghdad airport, which was under
U.S. control. A CIA officer appeared with open arms.
"Don't touch my back," al-Jaburi yelped, the wounds
from his interrogation still fresh. He remembers the
officer saying, "You are the heroes of the airport, the
keys to Baghdad. Your future is assured."
ENTICING THE GAMBLERS
As an underground operative of the opposition Iraqi
National Congress (I.N.C.), Wael Abu al-Timman spent
years hiding from Saddam's henchmen. Now, with the war
fast approaching, al-Timman was recruiting them. His
instructions from the I.N.C., which worked closely with
the U.S. before and during the war, were to find men
not only willing to provide information about Iraqi
defenses but also willing to see to it that the Iraqi
forces failed to fight. Having served as a captain in
the Republican Guard, al-Timman, who was based in
Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq but traveled often to
Baghdad, turned to his old comrades. He was astonished
by how many were willing to switch allegiances. "They
knew it was their last chance [to join the likely
winners]," he recalls. "We called them the gamblers."
Once the U.S. began bombing Baghdad, al-Timman's
mission changed. He raced from one bomb site to the
next, noting the physical damage and assessing
casualties, keeping an eye out for leadership figures
among the dead and wounded. At an appointed time each
night, using a satellite phone, he called in his
assessments to an I.N.C. contact, who passed them on to
the Americans, who could then decide whether to hit old
targets again or move on to others. "I considered it
the most important thing I could do because it would
bring an end to the war sooner," al-Timman says. On
April 7 he milled with bystanders as rescuers dug
through the rubble of several destroyed houses in the
Baghdad suburb of al-Mansur. The Pentagon, thinking
Saddam was inside, had struck the buildings. But the
rescuers told al-Timman that Saddam had just been there
briefly to inspect the damage and offer condolences for
those killed. Al-Timman made sure that Saddam's body
was not among those retrieved, then phoned in what he
had learned so the hunt for Saddam could continue.
THE BLACKMAIL CARD
The operations chief for the I.N.C. goes by the name of
Abu Ranin. His job before the war was to crack the
mukhabarat. His tactics were hardball. The I.N.C. had
done surveillance on Iraqi missions around the world,
making educated guesses about who was an intelligence
agent. From these lists, the I.N.C. narrowed down its
targets. "We chose them for their weaknesses, setting
out to get something on them and force them to work for
us," says Abu Ranin, who was then based in Jordan.
In a West European capital, Abu Ranin says, he
collected evidence on a mukhabarat station chief who
was selling government property on the black market.
When Abu Ranin threatened to alert Baghdad, he says,
the officer rolled over. Abu Ranin would not say what
information the man provided. Abu Ranin's greatest
coup, he says, was in Romania. As he tells the story,
he discovered a mukhabarat officer in Bucharest who had
two useful qualities: he oversaw the regime's East
European agents, and he had a weakness for prostitutes.
Posing as a wealthy businessman based in Europe, Abu
Ranin befriended the officer. He rented a villa and
threw a private party with five prostitutes and ample
alcohol. The mukhabarat officer brought four
colleagues. Abu Ranin secretly audiotaped their drunken
boastings and cajoled them into a few snapshots with
the women. Blackmail, however, proved unnecessary. When
his guests were distracted, Abu Ranin grabbed the
officer's cell phone and downloaded its address book.
Over ensuing weeks, Abu Ranin called the names in the
address book and concluded that he had the identities
of 65 agents--either Iraqis based abroad or their
contacts in foreign intelligence services, particularly
Syrian and Palestinian. He then traipsed around the
Middle East, arranging meetings with the Iraqi agents
on various pretenses. Once, for example, he posed as a
diamond trader looking to sell gems. Instead of showing
up for the assignations, he would hide near the meeting
place and surreptitiously photograph the agents. When
his dossier was complete, he forwarded it up the I.N.C.
chain of command. Exactly what use was made of his
work, Abu Ranin isn't certain, but the data would have
offered scores of prospects to the Americans working on
turning Iraqi agents. And as the story of al-Jaburi,
Ahmed and Mahmoud illustrates, one spy can beget
another who begets another and so on.
A SINKING SHIP
As war approached and the Iraqi collaborators
intensified their work, the underpinnings of Saddam's
regime began to quiver noticeably. In the offices of
Saddam's son Qusay, commander of the Republican Guard,
"a lot of officers told us the coalition had called
them or their families, telling them to surrender and
offering money," says a former staff member who asks to
be called Mohammed. It was the same at the mukhabarat.
"Many told us they had been offered money or guarantees
of safety or promises of positions of authority in the
new government," says a member of the staff in the
mukhabarat director's office. More telling was the
number of officials who did not report the calls. "We
know the Americans called virtually all the senior
officers and a lot of the lesser ranks right down to
lieutenants, but most of them did not come and tell
us," says Mohammed.
When it came to war, most of Saddam's armies either
chose flight over fight or were neutered by commanders
who had agreed to accommodate the coalition. Colonel
Ali Jaffar Hussan al-Duri was not one of them, but his
ultimate superior was. Once the fighting had begun,
Hussan's division of the al-Quds army, an official
Iraqi militia, received what he called "an incredible"
order to send half the men home on leave. He challenged
the edict with his brigadier, who was equally bemused.
They attempted to verify it, but communications had
been cut. So they dismissed half the unit and watched
the other half vanish soon after. "One top commander, a
traitor, can make the whole army disappear," Hussan
says, ashamed of his comrades' performance. With the
U.S. briefed on the locations of many of Saddam's
forces, the Americans devised novel ways to intimidate
troops who might have stood their ground. "They broke
into our [field] radio and told us they knew our
precise locations," says a junior Republican Guard
officer.
In Baghdad, Mohammed, of Qusay Hussein's office, was
ordered a few days before the capital fell to tour the
antiaircraft batteries in the area that had, by and
large, stopped firing. When Mohammed asked soldiers
sitting in their bunkers why their guns were silent,
they answered, "Our general told us not to shoot."
Mohammed told them Saddam had ordered that any crew
failing to fire that night would be executed. In the
morning he returned, bellowing at the units to explain
why they had not fired at the U.S. jets. "Because
straight after you left yesterday, the general came
around," one man replied. "He told us not to listen to
you guys."
DAY-AFTER GRUMBLES
Not all the secret agents got away with subversion.
"Sultan," a captain in the SSO, says he became
suspicious of a man claiming to be a mukhabarat
official who was telling colleagues that the Iraqi army
was losing and that the Americans were everywhere.
Sultan suggested the man come and speak to his unit.
"We took him to real mukhabarat officers. They sniffed
him out immediately and took him," says Sultan proudly,
sipping tea in a back-street cafe in Tikrit.
The suspected spy probably met the same fate as an
undercover I.N.C. man called Lieutenant Ali, a close
friend of al-Timman's. He was caught when the man who
smuggled him to Baghdad from Kurdistan sold him out to
the regime. After the war, al-Timman learned that Ali
was imprisoned for weeks before being taken to Ramadi,
where he was propped against a wall and shot on April
9, the day Saddam's statue came down in Baghdad's
Firdos Square.
Some undercover agents who helped the U.S. are
dissatisfied with the price they have paid.
Disillusioned by their prospects in the new Iraq and
threatened by an increasingly bold resistance movement,
they feel abandoned by the Americans, for whom they
risked their lives and betrayed their country. A
mukhabarat colonel who spied for the I.N.C. now sits in
a bare office. He has a nominal position with a minimal
income and no real authority. He is bitter, claiming he
was promised more. "If they don't give the Iraqi groups
power, we can liberate ourselves from the Americans and
engulf Iraq in fire," he threatens.
Al-Jaburi and Mashadani, the CIA's heroes of the battle
for the airport, feel left out in the cold as well.
Al-Jaburi says he was paid $75,000 for his efforts,
Mashadani $60,000--good money in a country where the
average yearly income is $2,500, as well as in the
U.S., where the per-capita income is $23,000. Still,
the two men feel that they are highly exposed and that
the U.S. is not doing enough to protect them.
Al-Jaburi's name has appeared on a death list--obtained
by TIME--kept by the remnants of the Fedayeen Saddam
militia. Two of his relatives were shot dead while
driving his car. He complains that the U.S. has not
given him a license to carry a gun to protect himself.
Without such a permit, Iraqis with arms are subject to
arrest at U.S. checkpoints.
"The Americans are good-hearted. When they love you,
they really love you," says al-Jaburi, "but when you
finish your job, they forget you." Replies an officer
of the CIA, who would not comment on the contributions
of any particular Iraqi: "The people who have worked
for us have been well treated. If there's some
unhappiness, I suspect that it is from people who are
either exaggerating their role or inventing promises
that were never made." The greatest pledge the U.S.
made to these people, of course, was that it would take
down Saddam. That it did, with their considerable
assistance.
--With
reporting by Timothy J. Burger/Washington