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Saddam Still Alive, At Large: Aziz

Aziz reportedly said Saddam was alive

BAGHDAD, April 28 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Iraq's former deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz has said he saw Saddam Hussein and his two sons alive after the two air strikes mounted by coalition forces to kill him, according to press reports.

Three weeks following the fall of Baghdad, the Bush administration's public stance does not change. Saddam will turn up, either alive or dead under a pile of rubble, according to a senior U.S. defense official.

What is important is that Saddam no longer runs Iraq. However, administration officials know their stance is, at best, a brave face on an uncertain situation, USA Today reported Sunday, April 27.

U.S. and Iraqi officials believe that if Monday, April 28, - Saddam's 66th birthday - passes without any attack or statement from Saddam's loyalists, many Iraqis will be convinced that Saddam has gone forever.

April 28 has long been Iraq's most important public holiday, usually marked by a huge military show of force.

Word spread through Baghdad in recent days that Saddam or his loyalists planned a dramatic action to mark the day. "There are a lot of rumors about Saddam's birthday. We are on alert for Monday," says Hussein Ali Aboud, 34, a U.S.-trained Iraqi militia fighter.

Captured regime officials might withhold what they know about any weapons of mass destruction as long as they are uncertain of Saddam's fate, claimed USA Today.

Until Saddam is found, some of his friends and his foes in Iraq will continue to operate out of fear that he could make a comeback and settle scores with anyone who helped the “coalition”.

Exactly for such reasons, U.S. officials don't know whether they can trust Aziz, who surrendered to “coalition” forces last week.

Gen. Tommy Franks, the commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, said Sunday, April 27, in Abu Dhabi that he had seen no solid evidence that Saddam was alive but that Aziz was being "cooperative and talkative" under interrogation.

"What we don't know is the veracity of it. It will take time," he said.

Iraqi opposition leader Ahmed Chalabi said Sunday in a TV interview that he believes Saddam and his two sons, Uday and Qusay, are alive and on the run and hiding in separate places.

"We have a pretty good idea of how they are moving and where they were, and we've tried to again focus on how we can know where they will be, so that they will be apprehended," Chalabi said.

Some U.S. Defense official who said Aziz claimed to have seen Saddam also said interrogators have concluded Aziz is lying about some other matters that have come up in questioning.

Some of the 13 senior regime officials being questioned at an undisclosed location in the Gulf region may be holding back their best information in hopes of bartering for lenient treatment, said the senior Defense official, who receives detailed daily reports on the interrogations.

U.S. officials in Baghdad say their confidence has grown lately about the likelihood of new arrests.

Officials in Baghdad say the flow of intelligence about the missing leaders' whereabouts has accelerated in recent days, as the capture of a few top officials has persuaded Iraqis to reveal tips about others.

Hussam Mohammed Amin, head of Iraq's National Monitoring Directorate and chief Iraqi liaison with the United Nations weapons inspectors, was arrested Sunday. He is number 49 on the U.S. most-wanted list.

"Of course Saddam is alive," a colonel from Iraq's military intelligence says. "It's unquestionable that he (prepared) for this moment, because he prepared for every tiny detail. He might be in a simple house or even be driving a taxi," said the man, speaking in west Baghdad's Mansour neighborhood.

Destiny Of Iraqi Senior Officials

Dead or alive, Saddam is certainly in Iraq, according to U.S. officials

U.S. troops allow armed Iraqi militia to play the role of intelligence agents. Around 1,000 fighters have been deployed in Baghdad, compensating for U.S. forces' few Arabic speakers and their lack of knowledge of the capital's geography.

Trained, funded and transported by the U.S. military, the Free Iraqi Forces are attached to the Iraqi National Congress, the group that arrived in Baghdad about 10 days ago to begin operations after decades in exile, according to USA Today.

The Iraqi armed militia appears to have promptly persuaded the relatives of top officials that the leaders cannot stay on the run without seriously endangering their families.

Former vice president Taha Yasin Ramadan, for example, seems to have departed his two wives and 13 children out of Baghdad once the war erupted March 19.

Yet, some of his closest relatives remain in Baghdad. They increasingly fear retaliation attacks by those unable to find Ramadan and others.

"We are in a state of terror," says his sister, Khadija Ramadan, 49. "There are people who want revenge against us." She says a group of uniformed Free Iraqi Forces searched her house last week, looking for clues to her brother's whereabouts, and poked rifle butts into her daughters' backs.

The search for banned Iraqi weapons appears to be a higher priority for the U.S. military. But CIA analysts are concerned that the (alleged) weapons caches will remain hidden so long as those who know where they are fear Saddam is alive.

"It would be a huge signal to the Iraqi people with his confirmed demise," a senior U.S. intelligence official said. "That would prompt a lot of people to cooperate and own up to what they know on weapons of mass destruction."

A U.S. search crew has been digging for more than a week at a target in southern Baghdad that was hit by a salvo of U.S. cruise missiles and bombs on March 19, the opening night of the war. A clandestine military and intelligence recovery team has begun to pick through the rubble of the April 7 strike in the Mansour neighborhood.

Amid conflicting intelligence reports, the CIA and Bush advisers agree on one thing: Dead or alive, Saddam is almost certainly in Iraq. Senior Bush administration officials say they have received assurances from Syria that Saddam has not entered their country, and intelligence suggests he has not crossed any borders.

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