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		<title>Iraq&#x27;s &#x27;Chemical Ali&#x27; hanged for 1988 gas attack</title>
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		<description>time*treat's Blog: Iraq&#x27;s &#x27;Chemical Ali&#x27; hanged for 1988 gas attack</description>
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			<title>Comment #1</title>
			<link>/blogentry/37223#c45228</link>
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			<pubDate>Fri, 29 Jan 2010 08:17:41 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>TigerAngel</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>I heard it was the U.S. that supplied the gas. Thanx for the post.</p>]]></description>
			<category>TigerAngel</category>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Iraq&#x27;s &#x27;Chemical Ali&#x27; hanged for 1988 gas attack</title>
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			<pubDate>Fri, 29 Jan 2010 04:47:24 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>time*treat</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>http://townhall.com/news/world/2010/01/25/iraqs_chemical_ali_hanged_for_1988_gas_attack<br /><br />Even in Saddam Hussein&#x27;s ruthless regime, Chemical Ali stood apart, notable for his role in gassing 5,000 people in a Kurdish village the deadliest chemical weapons attack ever against civilians.<br /><br />Ali Hassan al-Majid was hanged Monday, leaving a notorious legacy that stamped Saddam&#x27;s regime as capable of unimaginable cruelty and brought unsettling questions about Iraq&#x27;s stockpiles of poison gas and whether it could unleash them again.<br /><br />The poison gas clouds that struck the village of Halabja began what would become an about-face by Washington which had supported Saddam during the eight-year war against Iran&#x27;s new Islamic state in the 1980s*, but soon became his arch-foe and protector of the Kurds in their northern enclave.<br /><br />*Now, they admit what conspiracy nuts were saying, years ago. This line has been omitted from many online versions of this story. Guess what kind of support . It&#x27;s unthinkable the Iranian leadership might use that fact for their own purposes. Kurds = important, Iranians = expendable. Uncle Jed also just happened to find some &#x27;black gold/Texas tea&#x27; in the northern enclave of we-won&#x27;t-call-it-Kurdistan-just-yet. ~t*t<br /><br />I want to kiss the hangman&#x27;s rope, said Kamil Mahmoud, a 40-year-old teacher who lost eight family members in the March 16, 1988, attack in Iraq&#x27;s Kurdish region.<br /><br />Photos taken after the Halabja attack showed bodies of men, women, children and animals lying in heaps on the streets.<br /><br />Al-Majid, 68, was executed about a week after he received his fourth death sentence since facing Iraqi courts after the fall of Saddam. He was one of the last high-profile members of the former Sunni-led regime still on trial in Iraq.<br /><br />He said Praise God in Arabic as the sentence was read Jan. 17.<br /><br />The only public record of the execution so far are two still photos shown briefly on state TV: one of him wearing red prison coveralls and the other of him on the gallows with a black hood over his head. The mood was far more controlled than the taunting reported at Saddam&#x27;s hanging in December 2006.<br /><br />Iraq&#x27;s government spokesman, Ali al-Dabbagh, gave no other details of the execution. But that didn&#x27;t stop speculation that three deadly suicide attacks in Baghdad just before the official announcement of the death could have been retaliation for the act.<br /><br />Al-Majid, who bore a striking resemblance to Saddam, carried out some of the regime&#x27;s bloodiest missions.<br /><br />In 1988, as the Iran-Iraq war was winding down, al-Majid commanded a scorched-earth campaign known as Anfal to wipe out a Kurdish rebellion in the north. An estimated 100,000 people most of them civilians were killed over less than a year after Saddam suspected the non-Arab Kurds of siding with Persian Iran during the war. But it was the Halabja attack that riveted the world&#x27;s attention.<br /><br />He led another sweeping campaign, crushing a Shiite uprising in southern Iraq after Saddam&#x27;s military was driven from Kuwait in 1991.<br /><br />Al-Majid was a warrant officer and motorcycle messenger in the army before Saddam&#x27;s Baath party took power in a 1968 coup. He was promoted to general and served as defense minister from 1991-95, as well as a regional party leader.<br /><br />During the war with Iran in the 1980s, al-Majid was part of command structure for Iraqi forces, which was accused of using chemical agents on Iranian troops in a conflict that left a total of 1 million dead. Two main formulas were cited by U.N. investigators: mustard gas, an oily liquid first used in World War I whose vapor can remain deadly for days; and tabun, a nerve gas that causes convulsions and paralysis before death.<br /><br />For Saddam Hussein, chemical weapons were a force multiplier, a way of countering the Iranian human-wave infantry tactics that were overwhelming Iraqi positions, said Jonathan Tucker, a Washington-based senior fellow at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies.<br /><br />The lingering worries about possible secret stockpiles helped fuel support for the U.S.-led invasion despite no clear evidence and Iraqi claims that it disposed of its chemical weapons, which are banned under international conventions.<br /><br />During the trials after Saddam&#x27;s fall, prosecutors played audiotapes of what they said were conversations between Saddam and al-Majid.<br /><br />In one of the recordings, al-Majid was heard vowing to leave no Kurd (alive) who speaks the Kurdish language.<br /><br />He claimed he used such language as psychological and propaganda tools against the Kurds to frighten them into not fighting government forces.<br /><br />In a January 2007 court hearing, he said a death sentence did not worry him.<br /><br />I will face death with open arms, he said.<br /><br />The sentences to hang then came: first for the suppression of the Shiites in 1991, and then for the Anfal campaign and a third for a 1999 crackdown that sought to quell Shiite unrest after the slaying of a Shiite cleric who opposed the regime.<br /><br />The previous sentences were not been carried out in part because Halabja survivors wanted to have their case against him heard.<br /><br />Chemical Ali was the symbol of crimes and genocide in modern history. Executing him is a lesson to those who do the same .... those who kill their people and use banned weapons, said Saadi Ahmed, a member in the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan party led by Iraq&#x27;s president, Jalal Talabani.<br /><br />In Saddam&#x27;s hometown Tikrit some residents offered prayers for the loss of a man who remains a favored son.<br /><br />I give my condolences to the Iraqi people on the martyrdom of comrade Ali Hassan al-Majid. Tikrit and Iraq are proud of him, said one man from Tikrit, who refused to give his name.<br /><br />The Halabja attack left many of the survivors with long-term medical problems such as permanent blindness, skin burns, respiratory and digestive problems and cancer, said Farman Othman, a doctor in Suleimaniyah who has treated a number of patients.<br /><br />Joost Hiltermann, deputy program director for the Middle East and North Africa at International Crisis Group, said what set Halabja apart was its full scale attack on a population center with a weapon of mass destruction.<br /><br />In terms of proliferation and human rights abuses, this is an order of magnitude different than going into a city and just shooting up the place, said Hiltermann, who is the author of a book on the Halabja attacks.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="/blogentry/37223">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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