The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Heroes in Error
By Jack Fairweather
Mother Jones
© March/April 2006
Pages 58 - 63
How a fake general, a pliant media, and a
master manipulator helped lead the United
States into war.
EIGHT WEEKS after September 11, a pair of
Americans entered the gleaming marble lobby
of Beirut’s Intercontinental Hotel La Vendome,
where they were greeted by a group of Iraqi
expatriates. The Americans were reporters —
New York Times war correspondent Chris Hedges,
who’d just been put on the Al Qaeda beat, and
Christopher Buchanan, an associate producer
of PBS’s Frontline—there to meet a mysterious
Iraqi defector with information about Saddam
Hussein’s secret weapons program. Hedges and
Buchanan were ushered to an elegant suite
overlooking the Mediterranean, where they
interviewed Jamal al-Ghurairy, an Iraqi lieutenant
general who had fled Iraq. Ghurairy claimed to
have witnessed foreign Islamic militants training
to hijack airplanes at an Iraqi terrorist training
camp.
Buchanan had been given the assignment just a
few days earlier and knew very little about
the interview’s subject. “It was all very hush-hush,”
he says. “His life might be in danger. I didn’t
know much else.” Buchanan recalls the general
as thickset, “fierce looking,” and having a
military bearing. “He looked the part,” he says.
Hedges adds that the general “was definitely
Iraqi and struck me as having spent a lot of
time in the military.” The general’s entourage —
including Nabeel Musawi, the political liaison
of the Iraqi National Congress (INC), which
had arranged the interview—“were all wearing
leather coats. They were slick and well organized,”
says Buchanan. “Very well organized, very well
set up,” Hedges concurs.
The general hadn’t been told he’d be filmed,
and it took Musawi almost an hour to persuade
him to go on camera. The general himself then
spent several minutes making sure his face would
be blacked out when the tape rolled. The resulting
television interview, for which Musawi acted as
translator, was stilted and brief. It would
become only a small segment of the Frontline
piece, which also featured an interview with
another INC-provided defector, Sabah Khodada,
a former Iraqi captain whose identity was not
concealed. Buchanan recalls that “as soon as the
lights and camera were switched off, the general
began to talk.” He says the general then spent
more than an hour with Hedges in an adjoining
room of the suite while he left the hotel to
transmit the tape via satellite uplink. When
Buchanan eventually returned to the empty suite,
he found coffee cups and saucers filled with
cigarette butts that he felt indicated an intense
conversation. Hedges says that after the interview
was completed, he “spoke to the U.S. embassy in
Turkey” — where the general had fled after leaving
Iraq — “and asked if the general was credible.
They confirmed he had recently been debriefed.”
Two days later the story that spun out on the
front page of the New York Times was as shocking
as it was convincing. Ghurairy claimed that as
a senior intelligence official, he had witnessed
foreign Arab fighters training to hijack
airplanes at the Salman Pak military facility
south of Baghdad. About 40 foreign nationals,
Ghurairy said, were based there at any given
time. “We were training these people to attack
installations important to the United States.
The Gulf War never ended for Saddam Hussein. He
is at war with the United States,” the Times
quoted Ghurairy as saying. Ghurairy also claimed
a German scientist was working in a section of
the base that produced biological agents. The
report noted the role the INC had in setting up
the interview, but no serious questions were raised
about the general’s provenance.
The impact of the article and the concurrent
Frontline show, “Gunning for Saddam,” was
immediate: Op-eds ran in major papers, and the
story was taken to a wider audience through
cable-TV talk shows. When Condoleezza Rice, then
George W. Bush’s national security adviser, was
asked about the story at a press briefing, she
said, “I think it surprises no one that Saddam
Hussein is engaged in all kinds of activities
that are destabilizing.” Vanity Fair and the
London Observer elaborated on Ghurairy’s
claims; another version of the story appeared
in the Washington Post courtesy of defector
Khodada. The White House included the story
of Salman Pak in its “Decade of Deception and
Defiance” background paper prepared for
President Bush’s September 12, 2002, speech to
the United Nations General Assembly. Along with
the tale of Mohammed Atta meeting Iraqi
intelligence agents in Prague — another INC-hyped
story — Ghurairy’s account helped establish
the connection between Saddam and the 9/11
hijackers, making Iraq, like Afghanistan, a
legitimate target for Bush’s war on terror.
Unfortunately, the story was an elaborate scam.
The purported general had indeed met with
American intelligence agents in Turkey, but
unbeknownst to Hedges the agents had dismissed
his claims out of hand. What the reporters
also didn’t know, and what has never before
been reported, is that it now appears that
the man himself was a fake. According to an
ex-INC official, the Ghurairy who met with
the Times and PBS was actually a former Iraqi
sergeant, then living in Turkey and known by
the code name Abu Zainab. The real Lt. General
Ghurairy, it seems, had never left Iraq.
THE MEETING BETWEEN THE MAN purported to be
Ghurairy and the American reporters was arranged
by two men who did not attend it: INC leader
Ahmed Chalabi and Lowell Bergman, the former
60 Minutes producer immortalized by Al Pacino
in The Insider, who was heading up a collaborative
post-9/11 investigation for PBS and the New York
Times. Bergman had interviewed the other INC
defector, Sabah Khodada, but he was unable to
go to Beirut, so he and Chalabi briefed Hedges
at Brown’s Hotel in London before sending him
on to meet Ghurairy.
Chalabi had been a source for Bergman since
1991, when, following the Gulf War, the CIA
hired the Rendon Group, a public relations firm,
to unite Saddam’s surviving enemies with the
aim of destabilizing his regime. As part of
that project, the Rendon Group created the
INC. Led by Chalabi, an Iraqi expatriate who’d
recently fled Jordan after being convicted of
fraud, the INC was given millions of dollars
to set up a large network of defectors and
exiles, who, in addition to providing intelligence
to the CIA, were charged with disseminating
anti-Saddam propaganda in Iraq and to the
Western media. With the help of Rendon, the
INC began placing stories in the British press
about Saddam’s atrocities. The aim was for
the stories to then be picked up by the American
media, thereby bypassing U.S. laws that prevented
government funding of domestic propaganda.
This legal end run caused some unease at Langley —
“What did they expect?” says the INC’s Musawi.
“We were committed to overthrowing Saddam Hussein,
not holding a tea party. We had to take some
risks to achieve that.” — but it was the shoddy
intelligence provided by the INC defectors
(as well as an unauthorized and disastrous coup
attempt) that caused the CIA to withdraw funding
in 1996. “The quality was very bad,” said
Robert Baer, the former CIA base chief in
northern Iraq. (Baer’s memoir, See No Evil,
inspired the George Clooney character in
Syriana.) “There was a feeling that Chalabi
was prepping defectors. We had no systematic
way to vet the information, but it was obvious
most of it was cooked.”
But Chalabi had won support within the GOP,
and in 1998 the Republican-dominated Congress
overwhelmingly passed the Iraq Liberation Act.
Under its auspices, the State Department
awarded the INC $17.3 million to carry out
the “collection and dissemination of information”
about Saddam’s misdeeds to the media. (By the
summer of 2002, the INC was receiving $340,000
a month from the Defense Department to gather
intelligence, though it appears the CIA
remained suspicious of INC-generated information.)
The head of the INC “information collection
program” was Aras Habib, a Kurd who acted as
the point man for meetings between journalists
and defectors. Interviews took place in the
Middle East, as well as in the United States
and the United Kingdom, where many of the
defectors had sought asylum. “I have worked
with the CIA to make accessible useful
intelligence, some of which we then passed
on to journalists,” Habib told me in Baghdad
in 2004, shortly before he reportedly fled to
Iran, accused of working for Iranian intelligence.
Working beneath Habib were Mohammed al-Zubaidi
and Abu Saud, who together ran a network of up
to 100 informers and agents. Their task was to
troll the large Iraqi exile communities in
Damascus and Amman for those who would trade
information in return for the INC’s help in
obtaining asylum in the West.
Zubaidi was well suited to the job, having
served as an officer in Saddam’s intelligence
agency. He moved to Damascus in the early ’80s
and later to Kuwait. By 1998, the then
46-year-old Zubaidi had been brought into
the orbit of the INC while maintaining
contacts with the Syrian regime.
After 9/11, Zubaidi began actively coaching
defectors, according to an ex-INC official
involved in the INC’s media operations. The
official, who met with Mother Jones over the
course of several interviews in Baghdad and
London, is one of the few former INC operatives
to come forward to speak out against the group.
As with others in this tale, his true motivation
remains unclear. He asked that his name not
be used, as he still maintains contacts within
the INC, which he claims to have left on
amicable terms following the fall of Saddam:
“The INC was about toppling Saddam, and the
INC is not a regular peacetime political party,”
he says. “There was no more reason to stay.”
Nonetheless, he said that he wanted to reveal
“some of the bullshit we got out there.”
This ex-INC official—for the purpose of clarity,
I will refer to him as “Haider”—said the coaching
took a number of forms. Some defectors had useful
information but had to be taught how to “sell”
their story. Others had little valuable
information and either embellished their
accounts by themselves or were given help by
the INC. In some cases, Haider said, the INC
handlers simply “gave some of the defectors scripts.
They learned the words, and then we handed them
over to the American agencies and journalists.”
For the first story following 9/11—the one that
would frame the public perception of Saddam’s
threat — Zubaidi was asked to come up with
something big. He did, in the form of Jamal
al-Ghurairy. Zubaidi brought Abu Zainab, chosen
from other expatriates for his knowledge of the
Iraqi military, from Turkey to a luxury hotel
in Beirut, Zubaidi’s operational base. There
he was primed on his new identity before
returning to Turkey and presenting himself
as Ghurairy to American and Turkish intelligence
officials. The initial stay in Beirut lasted
a month and cost $25,000, a small expense
given the millions the INC was receiving
courtesy of the Iraq Liberation Act. Abu Zainab
was also given an undisclosed fee for his
services. Though Abu Zainab had never served
with the elite Fedayeen Saddam, his 17 years
of service in the Iraqi army helped him sound
“convincing with a little training,” says
Haider. “It was the perfect hoax,” he adds.
“The man was a born liar and knew enough about
the military to get by, whilst Saddam’s regime
could hardly produce the real Ghurairy without
revealing at least some of the truth of the
story.” That truth, according to Haider, was
that Iraqi special forces were trained in
hostage and hijack scenarios, although this
training had nothing to do with Al Qaeda
operations as the Times story had indicated.
Last year Zubaidi, who parted ways with the INC
following an abortive attempt to appoint himself
mayor of Baghdad in April 2003, admitted to the
Times in a July 9, 2004, story that the INC
intentionally exaggerated information it provided
journalists. “We all know the defectors had a
little information on which they built big
stories,” he said. Of Lt. General Ghurairy,
Zubaidi was quoted as saying that “he is an
opportunist, cheap and manipulative. He has
poetic interests and has a vivid imagination
in making up stories.” But the story did not
indicate that the general was an outright
phony, and it quoted INC officials as calling
Zubaidi “loony” and “childish.”
Zaab Sethna, a Chalabi aide still with the
INC, defends the Ghurairy story: “Those people
who accuse us have got a grudge. It’s just
lying,” he said, adding that the INC presented
defectors to U.S. intelligence agencies only
if their accounts sounded “interesting and
plausible.”
IN OCTOBER OF LAST YEAR, my Iraqi colleague,
Aqil Hussein, and I used tribal records to
track down Lt. General Jamal al-Ghurairy to
his family’s hometown of Mahmudiya. His
single-story house is a typical country
residence of a person of some status or
wealth: a garden compound shaded by palm
trees; a couple of cars in the driveway. But
the interview, arranged by the Mujahideen
Shura council, took place in a modest coffee
shop in Fallujah, a city the council (a
collection of tribal and insurgent leaders)
then controlled. The coffee shop opened onto
Fallujah’s main street; inside, a couple of
rickety chairs and tables were scattered
across a dingy marble floor. The general,
who wore a gray dishdasha and head scarf,
appeared to be about 50; he was thin and
finely featured, with dark hair and a neat
mustache. He was accompanied by two middle-aged
men, who deferentially referred to him as
“general,” as if they were junior officers.
Though the day was blisteringly hot, all the
men drank strong hot tea. During the 20-minute
interview, in which he grew increasingly angry
and suspicious, Ghurairy said he had been the
commandant of the Suwara military base from
1993 to 2000 and had never worked at the
Salman Pak military facility. He also said he
had never spoken to U.S. intelligence agents
or Western journalists: “I have never met
these people. I have not left Iraq,” Ghurairy
told Mother Jones, adding that he had not been
aware that a man claiming to be him had been
quoted in U.S. newspapers and on television.
It was not possible to independently verify
this Ghurairy’s identity. For one thing,
records in Iraq are in considerable disarray,
and many people have incentive to conceal
the truth about their activities before and
after the war—former generals are likely
high on that list. The interview was Ghurairy’s
first, and he refused to be photographed. But
information Ghurairy provided was corroborated
by other senior Iraqi army officers, who said
that while Iraq’s special forces did train
to retake hijacked airplanes at the Salman
Pak facility, such training was routine for
any elite combat unit. Foreign fighters
were housed with the Fedayeen Saddam — whose
main headquarters were at the Suwara facility —
but only in the run-up to the 2003 invasion
of Iraq, not back in 2001. Still, as Haider
suggested, there were enough parallels between
the tales of the two Ghurairys to present Iraqi
officials difficulty disputing the Times and
Frontline accounts.
But the Ghurairy we found in Iraq was adamant:
“I have never met these people!” he repeated
with considerable agitation. “I have not left
Iraq. The people who say this were trying to
use my name to make war!”
THE GHURAIRY TALE was one of 108 stories the
INC placed in the American and British media
between October 2001 and May 2002. We know
this to be true because, in a particularly
audacious boast, the INC submitted a list of
these stories to Congress to convince lawmakers
that it should continue to receive funding.
The revelation of this memo provoked
soul-searching within the media. The New York
Times has since admitted faults with its
prewar reporting. But though the Times’ rather
tepid mea culpa alluded to the Ghurairy story,
it stated only that the story had “never been
independently verified.” In June 2004 Frontline’s
website was amended to add a small footnote to
the “Gunning for Saddam” transcripts, indicating
that the general’s claims have “not been
substantiated.” And since I started speaking
to the principals in this story, the website
has again been amended to acknowledge the gist
of the allegations made in this story.
Hedges, who has been publicly critical of the
war, recently told me that if he had arranged
the interview with Ghurairy himself, he would
have more thoroughly investigated the general.
He remembers asking himself during the interview,
“Is this man who he says he is? Even though
this was Lowell’s show, I asked myself the
question.” Ultimately Hedges was convinced by
the general’s range of knowledge and Bergman’s
considerable reputation. “There has to be a
level of trust between reporters. We cover each
other’s sources when it’s a good story because
otherwise everyone would get hold of it,”
Hedges says. He adds that he wasn’t aware how
close reporters such as Bergman and the Times’
Judy Miller were to Chalabi or that Chalabi
was often “the only source of their stories.”
He assumed that they were working with members
of the intelligence community more credible
than Chalabi. “I was on the periphery of all
this. This was Bergman’s show.”
Like other journalists working in the Middle
East, Hedges says he first encountered Chalabi
in northern Iraq in the mid-’90s, and was
offered “exclusives” by him over the years,
which he evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
Soon after the Ghurairy interview, for example,
Chalabi again reached out to Hedges, going
so far as to personally ferry him from his
London hotel to INC headquarters in a
bulletproof vehicle. This time the story
Chalabi was trying to push was that U.N.
inspectors were spying for various governments —
a story Hedges says he rejected outright.
Similarly, Hedges says he “never trusted” the
tale of 9/11 hijacker Mohammed Atta meeting
with Iraqi intelligence agents in Prague.
Chalabi has proved himself to be deeply
untrustworthy, says Hedges. “He’s a sleazy
guy who I was not comfortable working around,
but there was nothing right after 9/11 to
indicate he was an outright liar.”
Bergman, who set up the Ghurairy interview,
now says, “You’ve got to remember that
back then there really was only one show
in town, and that was Chalabi’s. If you
were doing a story on Saddam’s Iraq, you
would speak to the Iraqi government, the
White House, and the INC.” He says he
tried to verify the general’s bona fides
with former CIA director James Woolsey,
who had taken an interest in the defector’s
story. In an interview done with Woolsey for
“Gunning for Saddam,” Bergman noted that the
CIA had “shown almost no interest in” the
general’s story. But he now recalls that
Woolsey told him that the FBI had met with
the general in Ankara. (Woolsey was not
available for comment for this article.)
Bergman says he was aware that Chalabi was
perceived as a bad actor by the CIA and that
INC stories took a very definite angle.
“Chalabi was dangerous goods in the sense you
know he’s advocating war. But that label is
up-front. I think Chalabi is given too much
credit for influencing the march to war.”
THREE MONTHS AFTER U.S. and British forces
invaded Iraq in 2003, a Washington Post opinion
poll showed 69 percent of Americans believed
Saddam Hussein had a role in the September 11
attacks. Though various government inquiries have
said that much of the information provided by the
INC was worthless, some Republican pundits
continue to cite the Ghurairy story to justify
the war in publications such as the Weekly
Standard and the National Review. And on its
website, the White House continues to list
“shutting down the Salman Pak training camp
where members of many terrorist camps
trained” in its “Progress Report on the
Global War on Terrorism,” first released
September 10, 2003.
In May 2004, Iraqi police raided Chalabi’s
home and offices in Baghdad, charging the
INC with embezzlement, theft, and kidnapping;
Chalabi was publicly accused by U.S. officials
of spying for Iran. Authorized by the White
House, the raid seemed to mark a break between
Chalabi and the U.S. government, perhaps as
retribution for the INC’s disinformation
campaign. But ultimately Chalabi has proved
himself to be a far better navigator of
postwar Iraqi politics than his former American
supporters. Chalabi became a stern critic of
the U.S. occupation and quickly made sufficient
inroads with the Shiite clergy to be elected
to the National Assembly. He has served as
deputy prime minister and acting oil minister,
and by late fall was again being wooed by
the Bush administration, this time as the
most secular member of Iraq’s Shiite-led
government. On a November 2005 trip to
Washington, he met with Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice and gave a speech at the
American Enterprise Institute. Afterward, a
reporter asked him about the mis-information
he had provided. Displaying his usual insouciance,
he referred to the findings of a recent Senate
committee, the Robb-Silberman report, which he
claimed exonerated him of all wrongdoing. In
fact, the report stated that at least two INC
defectors were fraudulent, although Ghurairy
was not listed among them.
Chalabi was more revealing when I spoke with
him in Baghdad in 2004: “As far as we’re
concerned, we’ve been entirely successful.
That tyrant Saddam is gone, and the Americans
are in Baghdad. What was said before is not
important. The Bush administration is looking
for a scapegoat. We’re ready to fall on our swords
if he wants. We are heroes in error.”
Jack Fairweather was Baghdad bureau chief
for the Daily Telegraph for two years and
currently contributes to Harper's Magazine
and the New Internationalist. During the U.S.
invasion of IRaq in 2003, he was embedded
with the British military.
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