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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Killing Of Returned Defectors Keeps Saddam Firmly In Power It’s Unlikely Iraqi President Will Face Challenge, Experts Say

John Daniszewski Los Angeles Times

The speedy elimination of Saddam Hussein’s son-in-law after the country’s most famous defector was lured back to Baghdad has proven once again the ruthlessness of Iraq’s iron-fisted leader and shown that his grip on power is now more secure than ever five years after the Persian Gulf War, analysts said Saturday.

As he has in the past, Hussein sent a warning to all would-be opponents, including any that might exist within his own tight family circle, that the penalty for betraying him is death, the analysts said.

It is now considered unlikely that Hussein will ever face a meaningful challenge to his power from inside Iraq. Moreover, the way may now be cleared for a Hussein dynasty, with his son Uday waiting in the wings as a possible successor.

Iraqi state-controlled media portrayed the death of Lt. Gen. Hussein Kamel Majid and his brother and fellow defector Saddam Kamel Majid - both married to Saddam Hussein’s daughters until Thursday, when the women divorced them - as the result of divisions inside the influential Majid clan.

Those divisions, the state media said, led to a pitched gunfight Friday afternoon at the suburban Baghdad villa where the defectors had lived since returning Tuesday from Jordan. According to the state media, the two defectors, their father and a third brother were killed by cousins who demanded their blood to remove the stain on the family honor.

That account, however, found little credence Saturday among analysts and the Iraqi opposition in exile, especially after the state endorsed the killings by awarding a heroes’ funeral to two men who died storming the Majids’ home.

“Saddam Hussein cannot tolerate any questioning of his authority and needed to make an example of these two,” said Michael Barron, a Middle East analyst.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Karim Kabariti expressed indignation at the killings, saying that the defectors had left their sanctuary in the Jordanian capital, Amman, only because they “were given the impression that they would be safe and they were pardoned.”

The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Madeleine Albright, said of Hussein, “His brutality knows no bounds.”

Such criticism will make no difference to Hussein, according to the analysts, because his only concern is staying in power. And with the cold-blooded elimination of his own sons-in-law, he has removed any chance of an internal threat.

“No one is going to dare try anything,” Barron said.

Even if international disgust at the killings hurts Iraq in its talks with the United Nations to resume international oil sales, the effect will be short-lived, said Jordanian political scientist Labib Kamhawi, a veteran Iraqi observer: “Worse episodes were forgotten in their time.”

The killings put to rest any lingering suspicions about whether Hussein Kamel Majid’s defection was authentic. During his six-month Jordanian exile, Majid - who had run the military-industrial complex responsible for Iraq’s secret weapons program - was shunned by other foes of his father-in-law because it was felt that such a close associate of the Iraqi leader should not be trusted.

Disappointment at his continued isolation in Jordan, the persistent pleas of his wife, Raghad, to return, and assurances from family intermediaries that he would be safe in Baghdad were behind his fatal decision to go back.

According to U.S. sources, while in exile Majid never fully cooperated in revealing what he knew about the regime. But his defection so unnerved the Iraqis that they turned over thousands of pages of secret documents to the United Nations - a stunning admission that Iraq had been continuing work on weapons of mass destruction in violation of its promises.