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American Armenian Ken Nahigian to head Trump transition team

January 20, 2017 By administrator

Vice President-elect Mike Pence has appointed Ken Nahigian to replace Rick Dearborn as executive director of the Trump-Pence presidential transition, the transition team said in a press release on Wednesday.

Nahigian, who served as the head of strategic planning and support for President-elect Donald Trump, will now support Trump’s nominees through their confirmation hearings.

“In the days following the election, [Nahigian’s] role evolved to not only manage President-elect support, but also prepare our great cabinet designees for their hearings,” Dearborn was quoted as saying in the release. “The transition is in capable hands with Ken Nahigian, who has tirelessly supported it from day one and will carry it through the finish line.”

“Ken has been a tremendous and critical asset to the Transition,” said Mr. Dearborn.  “In the days following the election, his role evolved to not only manage President-elect support but also prepare our great cabinet designees for their hearings.  The Transition is in capable hands with Ken Nahigian, who has tirelessly supported it from day one and will carry it through the finish line.”

Throughout the pre-election and Transition periods, Mr. Nahigian served as the head of President-elect support, the body that oversees all strategic planning and support to the President-elect, Vice President-elect, their families, and nominees, where pre-planning is critical to ensure a strong foundation is built for a successful transition minutes after the election is called.  In this role, Mr. Nahigian and his team led the organization of critical functionality of the Transition pre-election, which included the creation of GreatAgain.gov, the structuring of a communications strategy post-election, the building of the resources infrastructure to be ready on day one, and creation of a network for public engagement during the Transition period.

“I’m honored that the President-elect, Vice President-elect and Rick Dearborn have entrusted me with this responsibility and it is my honor to continue my service to this new administration,” said Mr. Nahigian. “It has been a tremendous honor to be part of this historic and successful process of building our government.”

While not working on the Presidential Transition, Mr. Nahigian serves as a principal in a 17-year old public relations and communications planning and strategy firm.

Dearborn is leaving the post to assume his role as White House deputy chief of staff.

Trump’s inauguration will be held January 20 in Washington, DC, in front of the Capitol, the seat of the US Congress.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ken Nahigian, transition team, Trump

Turkey wasting no time Using #Trump adviser Michael Flynn who linked to Turkish lobbying met Turkish FM in Washington.

January 19, 2017 By administrator

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said Jan. 18 that he met with incoming U.S. National Security Advisor, retired Gen. Michael Flynn, and other officials in Washington.

Çavuşoğlu tweeted he had a “working breakfast” with Flynn but it was not immediately clear who else was in attendance.

He said he hopes relations between Ankara and Washington would gain momentum with the new U.S. administration.

Expected to be on Çavuşoğlu’s agenda while in Washington is the extradition of U.S.-based Islamic preacher Fethullah Gülen, whom the Turkish government accuses of being the mastermind behind a group of people mainly from the Turkish military that sought to overthrow the government on July 15, 2016 in an attempted coup.

Ankara has said Gülen’s network was behind a long-running campaign to overthrow the government through its infiltration in Turkish institutions, particularly the military, police and judiciary.

Flynn on Nov. 8, 2016, the day of the U.S. presidential election, wrote in a piece for the Hill newspaper that the U.S. should not provide a safe haven for Gülen.

“The forces of radical Islam derive their ideology from radical clerics like Gülen, who is running a scam. We should not provide him safe haven,” Flynn wrote.

Trump adviser linked to Turkish lobbying

A company tied to Erdogan’s government hired retired general Michael Flynn’s lobbying firm.

Donald Trump wants to forbid his officials from lobbying for foreign governments, but one of his top national security advisers is being paid by a close ally of Turkey’s president.

Retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, a vice chair of the Trump transition who is in the running for a top national security post in the new administration, runs a consulting firm that is lobbying for Turkish interests, an associate told POLITICO. Asked if Flynn’s firm was hired because of the general’s closeness to Trump, the associate, Robert Kelley, said, “I hope so.”

Kelley told POLITICO that the client, a Dutch consulting firm called Inovo BV, was founded by Kamil Ekim Alptekin. Alptekin is chairman of the Turkish-American Business Council, known as TAIK, an arm of the Foreign Economic Relations Board of Turkey, whose members are chosen by the country’s general assembly and economic minister. In that role, Alptekin was involved in organizing Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s visit to Washington earlier this year.

The Turkish government’s connection to Flynn’s client was first reported by the Daily Caller.

A lobbying registration posted Sept. 30 said that Kelley, a former chief counsel to the House National Security Subcommittee, would lobby on bills funding the departments of State and Defense.

“We’re going to keep them informed of U.S. foreign and domestic policy,” Kelley said in a phone interview. “They want to keep posted on what we all want to be informed of: the present situation, the transition between President Obama and President-Elect Trump.”

Kelley said he didn’t know if the client presented a conflict of interest. A spokesman for Flynn said he was too busy to answer questions. The Trump transition didn’t answer a request for comment.

Source:http://www.politico.com/story/2016/11/donald-trump-turkey-lobbying-231354

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Lobbying, Michael Flynn, Trump, Turkey

Armenian Assembly highlights policy issues for U.S. Secretary of State nomination

January 12, 2017 By administrator

President-Elect Donald Trump’s Secretary of State Nominee Mr. Rex Tillerson, former ExxonMobil CEO,

As the Senate Foreign Relations Committee met to consider President-Elect Donald Trump’s Secretary of State Nominee Mr. Rex Tillerson, former ExxonMobil CEO, the Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly) highlighted key policy issues in a letter sent to Chairman Bob Corker (R-TN) and Ranking Member Ben Cardin (D-MD).

“We need a Secretary of State committed to strengthening the permanent bonds between Armenia and the United States, two countries that share common values and beliefs, and who will see in Armenia, which remains an island of stability, a vital ally in the region,” Assembly Co-Chairs Anthony Barsamian and Van Krikorian said in their letter to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. “United States-Armenia relations have been consistently characterized by friendship and reciprocity and an active Armenian American community strongly supports further expanding the United States partnership with the Republic of Armenia,” they added.

Assembly Co-Chairs highlighted several areas of concern, including Azerbaijan’s flagrant violations of the 1994/5 cease-fire agreement with respect to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, intentionally escalating the violence as pressure for Armenian concessions and launching a 4-day war last April.

“Such behavior makes it clear that Azerbaijan cannot be trusted to honor its commitments and must be held accountable for its egregious human rights violations,” the Co-Chairs said in the letter. “All Americans should be deeply troubled by…reports of Azerbaijan’s ISIS-inspired mutilations of civilians and beheadings of soldiers.”

“Now is the time to strengthen the OSCE process and ensure vigorous U.S. engagement to bring about a lasting and durable settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict that is agreeable to all parties, and based upon America’s founding commitment to the principles of democracy, rule of law, and self-determination,”  they continued.

Barsamian and Krikorian also noted the Assembly’s concerns with respect to Turkey’s more than 20-year blockade of Armenia and its ongoing campaign of genocide denial. “Within Turkey, its treatment of minority communities, repression of basic freedoms, ties to ISIS, and its ongoing failure to return confiscated Armenian churches as well as its continued denial of the Armenian Genocide remain troubling trends,” Co-Chairs Barsamian and Krikorian stated.

In his opening statement, Secretary of State Nominee Tillerson said that “Our approach to human rights begins by acknowledging that American leadership requires moral clarity. We do not face an ‘either or’ choice on defending global human rights. Our values are our interests when it comes to human rights and humanitarian assistance…But our leadership demands action specifically focused on improving the conditions of people the world over, utilizing both aid and economic sanctions as instruments of foreign policy when appropriate.”

Both Azerbaijan and Turkey have a history of human rights abuses, especially in recent reports by international organizations such as Human Rights Watch and the U.S. Helsinki Commission. America and its next Secretary of State need to uphold America’s core values and protect fundamental freedoms and human rights.

As the confirmation process continues, the Assembly will continue to advance key priorities and look for ways to further expand U.S.-Armenia relations.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Rex Tillerson, Trump, U.S

VIDEO: U.S. Spy Chief Busts CNN & BuzzFeed For Fake Claims That U.S. Intel Agencies Released Bogus Dirt on Trump

January 12, 2017 By administrator

The Director of National Intelligence just tossed CNN and BuzzFeed under the proverbial spy bus. And while it was driving about 65 m.p.h.

Once again, CNN and BuzzFeed get busted but this time by Office of the Director of National Intelligence which oversees the country’s spy agencies and Intel apparatus.

Director James Clapper released a scathing statement late Wednesday night disputing the claims of the news agencies who purported to obtain a bogus intelligence dossier on President-Elect Donald Trump from anonymous U.S.-based intelligence sources.

Wrong. More fake news, Clapper said in a surprise formal statement.

Clapper’s letter dropped right after CNN’s Anderson Cooper lied repeatedly about the sourcing during an on-air scrap with Trump spokeswoman, advisor and campaign guru Kellyanne Conway. That video is below. After the letter. Here is a link for the press release.

Source: http://truepundit.com/video-u-s-spy-chief-busts-cnn-buzzfeed-for-fake-claims-that-u-s-intel-agencies-released-bogus-dirt-on-trump/

https://youtu.be/Kk6asYpGJaM

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Clapper’s letter, cnn, fake news, Trump

Donald Trump: Russia never tried to use leverage over me “FAKE NEWS”

January 11, 2017 By administrator

Russia has never tried to use leverage over me, Donald Trump noted.

“I have nothing to do with Russia – no deals, no loans, no nothing!” Trump tweeted.

He also noted that U.S. media had reported that Russia had a compromising evidence against him but Kremlin disproved existence of such a material.

“Russia just said the unverified report paid for by political opponents is “A COMPLETE AND TOTAL FABRICATION, UTTER NONSENSE.” Very unfair!” he tweeted.

 “I win an election easily, a great “movement” is verified, and crooked opponents try to belittle our victory with FAKE NEWS. A sorry state!”
“Intelligence agencies should never have allowed this fake news to “leak” into the public. One last shot at me.Are we living in Nazi Germany?”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: fake news, Russia, Trump

Trump Decries ‘Witch Hunt’ In Russian Hacking Furor

January 6, 2017 By administrator

U.S. President-elect Donald Trump: “This is a political witch hunt.”

RFE/RL WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump on January 6 called the furor over alleged Russian hacking a “political witch hunt” and requested a congressional investigation into leaks from a classified intelligence report.

Trump’s media offensive came just hours before he was briefed by U.S. intelligence and law-enforcement officials who accuse Russia of trying to influence the November 8 presidential election by stealing and publishing Democratic party e-mails.

Trump later said he had a “constructive” meeting with Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and FBI Director James Comey, though his statement did not indicate whether he now agrees with the intelligence community that Russia directed the hacking campaign.

Trump’s statement echoed his previous statements that Russia, China, or other actors could have been behind the intrusions, and he asserted that the hacking had “no effect on the outcome of the election.”

In an interview with The New York Times shortly before the briefing, the Republican president-elect repeated his skepticism of Russia’s involvement in the hacking, which is widely seen as having damaged the campaign of his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton.

Contradicting the assessment of the U.S. intelligence community, Trump has repeatedly said that other states or individuals could have been behind the breaches.

“China, relatively recently, hacked 20 million government names,” Trump was quoted by The New York Times as saying, referring to the theft of millions of federal government personnel files in 2014 and 2015. “How come nobody even talks about that? This is a political witch hunt.”

Trump, who has said he wants to improve ties with Moscow, has also dismissed reports citing unidentified U.S. intelligence officials accusing Russia of trying to help him win the election with the hacking campaign.

The Kremlin has repeatedly denied any involvement in the cyberattacks.

Later on January 6, Trump called for a congressional investigation into an NBC News report featuring details from the classified intelligence report — ordered by President Barack Obama — about the alleged Russian hacking campaign.

The NBC News report on January 5 cited two unnamed intelligence officials reportedly involved in preparing the intelligence assessment, parts of which could be made public as early as January 6.

The intelligence document concludes, among other things, that the hacks were payback for the Obama administration’s questioning of Vladimir Putin’s legitimacy as Russia’s president, NBC News said in its report.

Several media outlets in addition to NBC reported contents of the classified report that had been delivered to Obama earlier on January 5.

There was no immediate response from congressional leaders, Democrat or Republican, to Trump’s call. Many lawmakers in both parties have endorsed the conclusions of intelligence agencies that Russia-government-backed hackers stole e-mails from U.S. political organizations.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters in Washington after Trump’s tweet that he feels “confident” that the White House did not leak details of the report to the media.

In the statement released after the 90-minute meeting at his Manhattan office, Trump said that he was satisfied with the information he had received from the officials on the investigation.

The statement, however, did not specifically address the findings that the Russian government directed the hacks, instead stating only that Russia, China, and others were “consistently trying to break through the cyberinfrastructure” of U.S. government institutions.

Those targets, Trump said in the statement, included the Democratic National Committee, whose internal e-mails were later published by WikiLeaks, embarrassing top party officials. Wikileaks has denied it obtained the files from Russia.

Trump insisted, however, that hackers had “absolutely no effect on the outcome of the election including the fact that there was no tampering whatsoever with voting machines.”

Earlier on January 6, aides to Trump said the president-elect would have an open mind when he is briefed on the matter at his office in Manhattan.

Trump spokesman Sean Spicer told ABC News that the incoming president is “prepared to listen and understand how they got to the conclusions they did” but added that Trump has “a healthy skepticism of everything.”

Kellyanne Conway, who is set to serve as a counselor to Trump when he assumes office on January 20, told CBS television that “we do not want any foreign government to interfere in this country.”

“At the same time, let’s wait until the president-elect receives the briefing of this fresh, new material,” she said.

Trump’s briefing came a day after Clapper told a Senate committee that intelligence agencies were even more “resolute” now about the Russian hacking than in October, when an initial report was released.

“I think there is an important distinction here between healthy skepticism, which policymakers…should always have for intelligence, but I think there’s a difference between skepticism and disparagement,” Clapper said.

With reporting by The New York Times, Reuters, ABC, CBS, AFP, and NPR

Filed Under: News Tagged With: political, Trump, witch hunt

Trump Escalates Standoff With U.S. Intelligence Over Russian Hacking Claims

January 4, 2017 By administrator

RFE/RL

WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump has escalated his standoff with U.S. intelligence agencies over an alleged Russian cyber-campaign to meddle in the presidential election, ahead of congressional hearings and his scheduled briefing on the matter this week.

In a January 4 tweet, Trump repeated WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s assertion that Russia was not the source of leaked e-mails that were widely seen as having damaged Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton in the November 8 election.

“Julian Assange said ‘a 14 year old could have hacked Podesta’ — why was DNC so careless? Also said Russians did not give him the info!” Trump wrote, referring to Clinton campaign chief John Podesta and the Democratic National Committee, whose stolen e-mails were published by WikiLeaks before the vote.

Julian Assange said "a 14 year old could have hacked Podesta" – why was DNC so careless? Also said Russians did not give him the info!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 4, 2017

Assange repeated his claim in a January 3 interview with Fox News, contradicting the assessment of the U.S. intelligence community, which has publicly accused the Russian government of directing the campaign to influence the U.S. electoral process.

Media reports quoted unidentified CIA and FBI officials as saying that intelligence assessments had concluded that the alleged Russian effort was aimed at tilting the election toward Trump.

The New York real estate developer has repeatedly said he wants to repair ties with Moscow that were badly strained over the conflicts in Ukraine and Syria.

Both the Russian government and Trump have dismissed that conclusion as absurd, and President Barack Obama’s administration has yet to release details backing up the allegation that Moscow tried to help Trump with the stolen e-mails.

‘Sycophant For Russia’

The Republican president-elect’s apparent endorsement of the WikiLeaks founder’s assertion was his latest — and to many in Washington, his most astounding — public challenge of the U.S. intelligence conclusions on the affair.

Trump has repeatedly cited the faulty CIA intelligence that led to the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 as the basis for his skepticism about Russia’s alleged role in the hacks.

Defenders of Assange and Trump have deployed the same argument and said that the contents of the leaked e-mails — including ones that showed some Democratic officials favoring Clinton over primary rival Bernie Sanders — were more important than their provenance.

Senior Republican officials criticized Assange, whose organization has been under investigation by U.S. authorities for publishing classified government documents.

“I have really nothing [to say] other than the guy is a sycophant for Russia. He leaks. He steals data and compromises national security,” Paul Ryan, the Republican leader in the House of Representatives, said in a January 4 radio interview.

Current and former U.S. officials have expressed increasing concern at Trump’s public dismissal of the conclusions of the intelligence agencies that he will oversee when he takes office on January 20.

Evelyn Farkas, who resigned last year as the Pentagon’s top Russia official and supported Clinton in the election, said career civil servants in the Defense and State departments were “really alarmed” by Trump’s approach to the U.S. intelligence establishment.

“The policy people who work in the Pentagon and in the State Department, they absolutely accept the intelligence assessments of their colleagues in part because they are also privy to some of the raw intelligence and other pieces of analysis that go into the ultimate findings,” Farkas told RFE/RL.

Senator Lindsey Graham (Republican-South Carolina) told CNN in a January 4 interview that it was “very disturbing” that Trump was giving credence to Assange’s claims.

The WikiLeaks founder “has a history of undermining American interests,” said Graham, who has been a vocal critic of Trump’s hesitance to believe Russia was behind the cyberattacks. “I hope no American will be duped by him. You shouldn’t give him any credibility.”

Congressional Hearings And Trump Briefing

The dust-up over Assange comes a day before a hearing into the Russian hacking allegations by the Senate Armed Services Committee. In an interview with RFE/RL’s Ukrainian Service last week, the committee’s Republican chairman, John McCain, urged tougher action against Moscow.

“There are a lot more stringent measures we should take,” McCain said. “After all, it was an attack on the United States of America and an attack on the fundamentals of our democracy. If you destroy the elections, then you destroy democracy.”

Also on January 5, Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland is set to brief a closed hearing of Senate Foreign Relations Committee on the Obama administration’s newly announced sanctions in response to the hacking.

The White House also expelled 35 Russian diplomats in response to what Washington calls a campaign of harassment of its diplomats in Russia.

On January 6, Trump is slated to receive a formal briefing on Russia’s alleged effort to interfere in the election. Tensions over the meeting emerged between Trump and U.S. officials on January 3, when the president-elect suggested it had been postponed due to deficient evidence of Russian involvement.

“The ‘Intelligence’ briefing on so-called ‘Russian hacking’ was delayed until Friday, perhaps more time needed to build a case. Very strange!” Trump wrote on Twitter.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Russia, Trump, U.S. intelligence, WikiLeaks

Donald Trump Start serving America before Inauguration

January 3, 2017 By administrator

Donald Trump works as an employee in his hotel To remain grounded and in-touch with his employees, Donald Trump spent a day working as an employee in his own hotel.

“He wants to know what we do, how we do it, and what we need to be better at our job. He’s always approachable, and he always listens. He the best boss I’ve ever had.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: America, serving, Trump

Trump doubts Russia involved in hacking United States election

January 1, 2017 By administrator

US President-elect Donald Trump once again said Russia was not involved in hacking the US presidential election. Trump also said he was open to meeting with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen.

US President-elect Donald Trump again denied Russia hacked the US presidential election before celebrating New Year at his Florida estate.

“Well I just want them to be sure, because it’s a pretty serious charge, and I want them to be sure,” said Trump.

Trump added US intelligence was incorrect when it said Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction, a part of what lead to a US invasion of Iraq in 2003. He called the invasion “a disaster, and they were wrong.”

Trump said it was unfair to accuse Russia of hacking if there is doubt, saying he knows “a lot about hacking” and “it could be somebody else.”

“I also know things that other people don’t know, and so they cannot be sure of the situation,” said Trump, telling reporters they would find out Tuesday or Wednesday what he knew about hacking.

US intelligence agencies CIA and FBI agree that Russia intervened in the November US presidential election. Trump secured the electoral college vote, while Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton won the popular vote. Trump praised Russian President Vladimir Putin for vowing not to expel US diplomats after the US expelled 35 last week.

Hacking during the campaign hit the Democratic party hard, and the party blamed Russia for an attack in August.

Trump wishes happy NY to ‘enemies’

Trump noted he was open to meeting with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen. The two exchanged a controversial phone call after Trump’s victory, breaking more than three decades of the “one-China” policy.

“I’m not meeting with anybody until after January 20th because it’s a little bit inappropriate from a protocol standpoint. But we’ll see,” said Trump, who becomes president on January 20.

As for his New Year’s resolution, he harped on his campaign slogan: Make America great again.

Before the New Year’s celebration, Trump also took to Twitter to wish happy New Year “to all, including to my many enemies and those who have fought me and lost so badly they just don’t know what to do.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Russia, Sanction, Trump

Saddam Hussein’s eldest daughter says Trump has ‘political sensibility’

December 23, 2016 By administrator

Raghad Saddam Hussein, daughter of the former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. Photo: Reuters

AMMAN,— On the morning of Eid al-Adha in December 2006, Raghad Saddam Hussein, her sister and their children squeezed together in front of the television in Raghad’s home in Amman and wept as they watched footage of her father being hurtled by masked men to the gallows where he would be hanged.

Saddam Hussein, who ruled Iraq from 1979 until his overthrow and capture by a US-led coalition in 2003, declined to wear the hood and shed no tears as the noose was put around his neck. The Iraqiya TV broadcast ended there, but a second video — shot on a cell phone by an onlooker below the scaffold — emerged a few hours later showing the moment of death.

“I never saw that moment and I refuse to see it,” Raghad, Saddam Hussein’s eldest daughter, told CNN in her first interview since her father’s death.

The footage also showed witnesses hurling insults at the deposed leader, convicted of crimes against humanity for the murder of 148 Iraqi Shias in 1982; they chanted “Moktada! Moktada! Moktada!” in reference to militant Shia cleric Moktada al-Sadr. Saddam Hussein shot back, “Is this how real men behave?” before the trap sprang and the noose tightened on a man who remained defiant to the end.

“The details of his death are ugly and painful — but it’s an honorable death,” Raghad said by phone from the Jordanian capital, where she sought refuge after the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

“I don’t think he would have gone in a death smaller than this. It was a death that brought pride to me, my children, my sisters and their children, to all those who love him and have a place for him in their heart.”

The then US president George W. Bush, who ordered the invasion of Iraq, said just after Saddam Hussein’s death that the execution “would not have been possible without the Iraqi people’s determination to create a society governed by the rule of law.” But the sectarian subtext heard in the video of his last moments seemed to denote an ensuing era of more sectarianism and violence that would remain 10 years on.

Raghad, who blames the US for the chaos that unraveled in her country, hopes that President-elect Donald Trump will be different to his predecessors.

“This man has just arrived to the leadership … But from what is apparent, this man has a high level of political sensibility, that is vastly different than the one who preceded him,” she told CNN. “He exposed the mistakes of the others, specifically in terms of Iraq, which means he is very aware of the mistakes made in Iraq and what happened to my father.”

During his presidential campaign, Trump said he opposed the war on Iraq, however he was publicly supportive of the invasion in interviews before and after the war. And while saying that Saddam Hussein “was a bad guy,” Trump has praised the former Iraqi leader’s efficient killing of “terrorists”.

Raghad said she has not been involved in politics and supports no groups or parties on the ground, however, the current Iraqi government has accused the 48-year-old of supporting her father’s Baath party, now outlawed, and has called on Jordan to expatriate her. More recently it has accused her of supporting ISIS and cheer leading the militants’ takeover of Mosul, allegations that she vehemently denies.

“Of course I don’t have any relations to this group [ISIS] and other extremist groups,” she told CNN. “Moreover, the family’s ideology has no similarities to that of extremist groups.”

“As a proof to this, these groups only became powerful in Iraq after we left the country and our rule ended.”

Self-declared jihadist groups sprung up in Iraq under the banner of fighting US army “infidels,” and the country became a magnet for foreign fighters. ISIS, or the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, started as the Islamic State of Iraq in 2006 — the year of Saddam Hussein’s death — and expanded to Syria in 2014, three years after the eruption of violence there.

The regime’s brutality

Raghad praised her father’s rule for the stability she believes it offered Iraq, saying ISIS and other groups would not have been able to enter had her father still been alive.

But for many, the execution of Saddam Hussein ended the life of a brutal dictator who oppressed the people of Iraq for three decades, unleashed devastating regional wars and reduced his once flourishing oil-rich nation to a police state.

Human rights organizations reported rampant government-approved executions, acts of torture and massacres from his rise to power until his fall. His two sons, Uday and Qusay — who died in a gun battle with US troops in 2003 — were accused of ordering many of the atrocities.

“People (who consider him a dictator) are free use whatever labels they want,” Raghad said.

For her, he was “a hero, courageous, nationalistic, a symbol to millions of people.”

“He was a struggler and he knew that his ending was not going to be easy.”

Raghad said much of what the media says about her family is made up.

“Yes, there was brutality, sometimes a lot of it and I can’t support brutality. But Iraq is a country that is difficult to rule and it’s only now that people are realizing it,” she said.

Raghad said she, her two sisters and her mother were not involved in the decisions the men made.

“The women of the family were not allowed to contribute. They only answered when they were asked — and they were never asked.”

During two of the biggest massacres committed in Iraq during her father’s rule — the Dujeil massacre in 1982 and the Halabja gas attack to quell a Kurdish uprising in the late 1980s — Raghad said she was still a teenager with very little awareness of what was happening in the country.

By the time she was in her twenties, she had five children to raise and university classes for her degree in English translation to attend.

“I was a very studious. Studying is how I spent most of my time,” Raghad said.

Given that satellite dishes were banned in the country during her father’s rule, she said that she herself also did not have access to information about what was happening at the time.

Relationship with father

At 15, Raghad was married to Hussein Kamel, a high-ranking military official who oversaw Iraq’s buildup of missiles, the country’s nuclear research program, and its chemical and biological weapons. Her sister, Rana, married Kamel’s brother, another senior official. In 1995, the brothers defected with their wives to Amman.

Less than a year later, Saddam Hussein convinced them to return to Iraq, promising them amnesty. But upon their arrival, he ordered the men to divorce his daughters. They were killed three days later by her father’s men.

Many theories emerged as to why the Kamel brothers defected. Jordanian King Abdullah in his book cited a clash with Saddam Hussein’s eldest son Uday, adding that he speculated that Kamel wrongly thought the West would embrace him, and that the US would help make him the leader of Iraq.

“It was a very difficult time for me. I found myself stuck between two families, my father and brothers on one side, and my husband and children on the other,” recalled Raghad who is putting her own version of the story across in a book she is currently writing.

She said her children hold no grudges whatsoever against her family for their role in their father’s death.

“I know this is hard for a normal family to understand. But all families of rulers are not average people and sometimes it’s hard to understand the complexity of their lives,” she said, adding that her daughter, 30-year-old Harir Hussein Kamel, has written a yet unpublished book that delves into those complex family relations.

After the defection and the death of Kamel, the relationship between Raghad and her father lost its “luster”.

It was around the time of the invasion that their ties were strengthened as the family united to defend their rule.

“And till the last moment, my father remained satisfied, grateful and proud of me,” she said.

Returning home

The setting where Raghad last saw her father was a family gathering in his living room a few days before the invasion. He was sitting across from her asking the family to stay strong and to be prepared if their homes got bombed.

The first airstrike that the US launched in Iraq in 2003 hit Raghad’s farmhouse, she said.

Shortly afterwards, she fled to Jordan, where she received sanctuary from the royal family. She never returned home, adapting to her new reality slowly and becoming preoccupied with the chores of daily life.

Raghad lives a comfortable life in Jordan, spending a lot of time with her children and her friends, but said she longs for her home. She would want to return if Iraq entered “a stage that is moderate and away from the obsession with hatred and revenge”.

“This Iraq is mine, my family’s, my ancestors’ — It’s everyone’s Iraq. Why wouldn’t I imagine returning? It would be very normal for me to return one day.”

And despite the seemingly never-ending cycle of violence, Raghad is hopeful about the future.

“What is happening is just a momentary state, a state of invasion and confusion. But this is not the fate of Iraq,” she said.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: amman, Raghad Saddam Hussein, Trump

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  • Pashinyan Government Pays U.S. Public Relations Firm To Attack the Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Breaking News: Armenian Former Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan Pashinyan is agent
  • November 9: The Black Day of Armenia — How Artsakh Was Signed Away
  • @MorenoOcampo1, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, issued a Call to Action for Armenians worldwide.
  • Medieval Software. Modern Hardware. Our Politics Is Stuck in the Past.

Recent Comments

  • Baron Kisheranotz on Pashinyan’s Betrayal Dressed as Peace
  • Baron Kisheranotz on Trusting Turks or Azerbaijanis is itself a betrayal of the Armenian nation.
  • Stepan on A Nation in Peril: Anything Armenian pashinyan Dismantling
  • Stepan on Draft Letter to Armenian Legal Scholars / Armenian Bar Association
  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State

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