Taped voice blasts U.S. occupation
Those familiar with Saddam's voice believe it's him.
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- A purported recording of Saddam Hussein was played on Arabic television today -- the anniversary of the revolution that brought the former leader's party to power -- with the ex-dictator criticizing the new Governing Council and calling President Bush a liar.
The voice in the broadcast tape called for resistance to the U.S. occupation.
"How can the people benefit from employees named by the foreign occupiers," the taped voice said on the Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiya television networks. "What can those named by the foreign occupier offer to the people and the nation other than the will of the occupier?"
Apparently new
The tape, which reporters familiar with Saddam's voice said sounded authentic, appeared to be new since the Governing Council was established Sunday. But there was no way to independently authenticate the recording or to be sure of when it was made.
U.S. forces in Baghdad were on the lookout for new trouble related to the anniversary of the 1968 Baathist revolution, but by midafternoon, there were no reports of violence involving U.S. troops, and American patrols in the capital had noticeably dropped off.
Streets normally filled with American Humvees and tanks were strangely quiet, perhaps part of an effort to avoid confrontation. The U.S. military said it was treating the day like any other.
Rumors on street
About the only thing on Baghdad's streets today were rumors: one that Saddam would make some sort of personal appearance after weeks in hiding, and the other that he had finally been captured by U.S. forces. There was no evidence either rumor was true.
The 1968 coup led to Saddam taking power 11 years later. Iraq's new Governing Council, in its first act Sunday, swept aside the July 17 celebration and five other dates the Baath Party designated as official holidays.
The Pentagon's second-in-command was in Baghdad today to assess progress in rebuilding the fractured country.
Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defense, was meeting with the top American administrator of Iraq, L. Paul Bremer, and Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the senior U.S. commander of the approximately 160,000 American and coalition forces in Iraq.
"I look forward to seeing firsthand evidence of what it means for the Iraqi people to be liberated from decades of brutal repression," Wolfowitz said after stepping off an Air Force C-17 cargo plane after a 12-hour overnight flight from Washington.
Mass grave
Also today, the military announced the discovery of yet another mass grave, this one believed to be filled with as many as 400 Kurdish women and children allegedly executed by Saddam.
Soldiers of the 101st Airborne Division discovered the grave on the side of dried up riverbed in Hatra, about 65 miles south of the northern city of Mosul. A mass grave assessment team, including members of the military's criminal investigation unit, was sent to the site.
Some 25 sets of remains -- all women and children -- have been pulled from the grave, each with a bullet hole in the skull. The military said the size of the area leads them to believe it contains between 200 and 400 bodies.
Since the end of the war, dozens of mass graves have been discovered -- many of them containing hundreds of bodies. The United Nations is investigating the killing or disappearance of at least 300,000 Iraqis believed murdered by the regime.
Lashes out
The speaker on the tape played today lashed out at Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair, saying they tricked their people to justify the war.
"What will they say to their people and to mankind? What will the chorus of lies say to those that backed them?" said the voice. "What will they say to the world after they devised the scenario of lies against Iraq's people, leadership and culture?
"The lies were known to the U.S. president and the British prime minister when they decided to launch a war and aggression," said the tape.
Bush and Blair have come under increasing criticism at home over some of the intelligence used in the run-up to the war.
The voice said that the Governing Council was created "by the will of the foreigners, therefore it is the servant of the foreigner and not a servant of the people."
The Governing Council was selected by the U.S.-led coalition after months of consultations with Iraqi political groups. It brings together 25 prominent Iraqis from all walks of political and religious life, but it was not elected.
"Anything issued by the occupation is to weaken Iraq. The only solution ... is a jihad [holy war] to resist the occupation," said the voice.
Also today, the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority announced the start of bidding to provide mobile telecommunications services in Iraq. The authority said it would award up to three licenses, one for the north, one for central Iraq, and one for the south, and that the licenses would be good for two years.
Iraq's phone system was shattered by U.S. bombing during the war.
Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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