Saddam Said Useful in U.S. Interrogation
By MATT KELLEY
The Associated Press
Sunday, February 1, 2004; 1:58 AM
BAGHDAD, Iraq - American officials have received useful information from direct interrogation of Saddam Hussein, a senior military official said Sunday.
The official would not say what the information was, but he said it allowed interrogators to confirm some suspicions and reject other information.
Speaking to reporters on condition of anonymity, the official said both documents and the results of questioning of Saddam have allowed the military to hunt for some people involved in attacks on U.S. troops.
He said military officials believe there are 14 cells of Saddam sympathizers in the Baghdad area and that many of them had already lost their leaders in U.S. raids.
The official commented shortly after Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz flew to Iraq to visit troops that he says were justified in ousting Saddam because the former leader violated U.S. resolutions ordering him to disarm.
The Pentagon's second-in-command arrived in Baghdad from a troop visit in Germany where he said flawed intelligence about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction should be investigated, but that the inability of inspectors to find such weapons did not mean the war was unnecessary.
"It's exciting to be back," he said after landing near Baghdad, referring to a visit three months ago in which a hotel where he was staying was attacked.
The Wolfowitz visit to Iraq was not disclosed in advance of his arrival for security reasons.
He complimented both military and civilian men and women working to stabilize the country. "They're making the world safer for our children," Wolfowitz said.
He said he looks forward to meeting with commanders and troops in the field and is particularly interested in assessing how a massive rotation of military forces is going.
David Kay, the former chief inspector in Iraq, said last week he believes deposed Iraqi President Saddam probably did not have the stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons that President Bush claimed as justification for the invasion in March.
"You have to make decisions based on the intelligence you have, not on the intelligence you can discover later," Wolfowitz said, while visiting the headquarters of the Army's 1st Infantry Division in Germany.
The division is preparing to ship out beginning next week for Iraq, where it will replace the 4th Infantry Division in the dangerous north-central part of the country.
Wolfowitz said he retains confidence in American intelligence agencies, despite their apparent mistakes about Iraq's weapons programs. "You need to look into when you got it right, and when you got it wrong," Wolfowitz said. "It's important to understand we could not possibly do what we need to do in the world without intelligence."
© 2004 The Associated Press
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