Description
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The Saddam Tapes
During the 2003 war that ended Saddam Hussein’s regime, coalition forces captured thousands of hours of secret recordings of meetings, phone calls and conferences. Originally prepared by the Institute for Defense Analyses for the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Policy, this study presents annotated transcripts of Iraqi audio recordings of meetings between Saddam Hussein and his inner circle.
The Saddam Tapes, along with the much larger digital collection of captured records at the National Defense University’s Conflict Records Research Center, will provide researchers with important insights into the inner workings of the regime and, it is hoped, the nature of authoritarian regimes more generally.
The collection has implications for a range of historical questions. How did Saddam react to the pressures of his wars?
How did he manage the Machiavellian world he created? How did he react to the signals and actions of the international community on matters of war and peace?
Was there a difference between the public and the private Saddam on critical matters of state?
A close examination of this material in the context of events and other available evidence will address these and other questions.
- Provides a historically rare opportunity to view events from ‘the other side of the hill’ • Reveals an unvarnished look at totalitarian decision making in action • The transcripts from which this book is drawn will deepen, and in many ways challenge, what we thought we knew about Saddam’s Iraq
Contents
- The United States; u2. The ‘Zionist entity’; 3. The Arab world; 4. Qadisiyyah Saddam (the Iran–Iraq War); 5. The mother of all battles; 6. Special munitions; 7. The embargo and the special commission; 8. Hussein Kamil.
Review
‘Provides researchers with important insights.’ Middle East
The Saddam Tapes
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This post is also available in: العربية (Arabic)