Mary Ann Parker LCDR
Joined: 02 Sep 2004 Posts: 406
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Posted: Sun Oct 24, 2004 7:22 pm Post subject: Syria now admits it has Saddam's money |
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Don't have time to format etc.
Another item of info to share.
So far Bush's vision and record seem to outperform
those so call intelligence agencies.
Make it an informed day.
Mary Ann Parker
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Syria now admits it has Saddam's money
GEOSTRATEGY-DIRECT INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Syria now admits it has Saddam's money
But insists amount much lower than U.S. alleges
http://worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=41051
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Posted: October 23, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern
Editor's note: WorldNetDaily brings readers exclusive, up-to-the-minute global intelligence news and analysis from Geostrategy-Direct, a new online newsletter edited by veteran journalist Robert Morton and featuring the "Backgrounder" column compiled by Bill Gertz. Geostrategy-Direct is a subscription-based service produced by the publishers of WorldTribune.com, a free news service frequently linked by the editors of WorldNetDaily.
© 2004 WorldNetDaily.com
Syria has acknowledged that its banks have held funds for Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq, reports Geostrategy-Direct, the global intelligence news service
But the regime of President Bashar Assad disputes U.S. officials who say Syria was harboring about $3 billion in Saddam funds.
Instead, Syria maintains that its Iraqi assets have not exceeded $300 million.
The Assad regime has frozen funds from the former Iraqi government, officials said. Dureid Dirgham, director of the Syrian Commercial Bank, said the Iraqi government deposited $216 million in the financial institution.
"No former Iraqi officials have private accounts in this bank," Dirgham was quoted by the official Syrian News Agency as saying.
Officials said the remaining funds have been deposited in other Syrian state-owned banks. They did not elaborate.
The Bush administration has threatened to impose sanctions on the Syrian Commercial Bank that would ban activities or contacts in the United States.
The bank — with a subsidiary in Lebanon and correspondent accounts with several U.S. banks — was said to have harbored up to $1 billion in Saddam funds and assets.
"Returning the funds is a natural right of the Iraqi side," Dirgham said. "But there are contracts concluded with Iraq before the war that first need to be settled."
The administration has also been examining a proposal to impose sanctions on Lebanese politicians who support the Syrian occupation. On Oct. 16, the Lebanese government issued a statement that warned against the proposal.
"Prime Minister Rafik Hariri summoned U.S. Ambassador Jeffrey Feltman today to express concern and opposition to a request by members of Congress to U.S. President Bush to freeze assets of Lebanese and Syrian officials to pressure Lebanon and Syria," the office of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri said in a statement.
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