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Iraqi govt. papers: Saddam bribed
Chirac

BAGHDAD, Iraq, Jan. 28 (UPI) -- Documents from Saddam Hussein's
oil ministry reveal he used oil to bribe top French officials into
opposing the imminent U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
The oil ministry papers, described by the independent Baghdad
newspaper al-Mada, are apparently authentic and will become the
basis of an official investigation by the new Iraqi Governing
Council, the Independent reported Wednesday.
"I think the list is true," Naseer Chaderji, a governing council
member, said. "I will demand an investigation. These people must be
prosecuted."
Such evidence would undermine the French position before the war
when President Jacques Chirac sought to couch his opposition to the
invasion on a moral high ground.
A senior Bush administration official said Washington was aware
of the reports but refused further comment.
French diplomats have dismissed any suggestion their foreign
policy was influenced by payments from Saddam, but some European
diplomats have long suspected France's steadfast opposition to the
war was less moral than monetary.
"Oil runs thicker than blood," is how one former ambassador put
his suspicions about the French motives for opposing action against
Saddam.
Al-Mada's list cites a total of 46 individuals, companies and
organizations inside and outside Iraq as receiving Saddam's oil
bribes, including officials in Egypt, Jordan, Syria, the United Arab
Emirates, Turkey, Sudan, China, Austria and France, as well as the
Russian Orthodox Church, the Russian Communist Party, India's
Congress Party and the Palestine Liberation Organization.
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