Chicago Sun-Times

Leading Iraqi voice for U.S. invasion that ousted Saddam

- BY SINAN SALAHEDDIN

BAGHDAD — Ahmad Chalabi, a prominent Iraqi politician who became a Pentagon favorite when he helped convince the Bush administra­tion to overthrow Saddam Hussein in 2003 by pushing false allegation­s of weapons of mass destructio­n and links to al-Qaida, died Tuesday of a heart attack. He was 71.

Iraqi state TV said he died in Baghdad but did not provide further details.

Chalabi, a secular Shiite politician who lived in exile for decades, was a leading proponent of the invasion and had close ties to many in the Bush administra­tion, who viewed him as a favorite to lead Iraq.

But he had a falling out with the Pentagon after the invasion, and was largely sidelined by other Iraqi leaders, many with close ties to neighborin­g Iran. Chalabi had most recently been serving as the chairman of parliament’s finance committee, and was previously a deputy prime minister.

To his supporters in Iraq, Chalabi was a campaigner for democracy who deserves credit for Saddam’s removal.

“It is a very bad day for Iraq,” Shiite lawmaker Muwaffak al-Rubaie, a former national security adviser, told The Associated Press. “He was one of the most seasoned and pioneering politician­s. Chalabi worked for a democratic, liberal Iraq … I am glad he died peacefully.”

But Robert Baer, a former CIA officer who met with Chalabi repeatedly in the mid1990s and in the lead-up to the 2003 war, called him a “con man” who was able to manipulate American politician­s.

“He was the most charming man I’ve had to deal with at the CIA and the most educated,” Baer told the AP. “He understood American politics and he understood the American political narrative better than most Americans.”

The scion of a wealthy Baghdad family, Chalabi fled Iraq as a teenager when the monarchy was overthrown. He earned a bachelor’s degree from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology in 1965, and then went on to get a PhD in mathematic­s at the University of Chicago.

He became a leading figure in Iraq’s exiled opposition in the 1990s and cultivated close ties with the future Vice President Dick Cheney and Washington’s so-called neoconserv­atives, who favored a more muscular U.S. policy in the Middle East.

After the Sept. 11 attacks, Chalabi played a key role in convincing the administra­tion that the Iraqi government had weapons of mass destructio­n and ties to al-Qaida, unfounded claims at the heart of the case for war.

“There are weapons of mass destructio­n in Iraq and Saddam has them, and they are developing them continuous­ly, and I think, if there is a correct way to look for them, they will be found,” Chalabi told AP television in 2003.

After the invasion, Chalabi was appointed to the 25-member Iraqi governing council and earned a seat directly behind First Lady Laura Bush during the 2004 State of the Union.

“He more than any other Iraqi helped get rid of Saddam,” said Sajad Jiyad, a fellow at the Iraqi Institute for Economic Reform in Baghdad. “He brought together all the opposition parties — Islamists, communists, ex Baathists, secularist­s, nationalis­ts.”

Chalabi went on to chair Iraq’s de-Baathifica­tion Committee, which worked to purge the government of Saddam loyalists but was seen by the country’s Sunni minority as a means of sectarian scoresettl­ing by the country’s newly empowered Shiite majority.

Baer, the former CIA officer, said Chalabi’s role in de Baathifica­tion in particular was severely destructiv­e. “He alienated the Sunnis more than anyone” else in Iraq, Baer said.

Chalabi’s relationsh­ip with the U.S. soured in the months after the invasion, and in 2004 U.S. forces raided his home on suspicions that he was funneling intelligen­ce to Iran.

In 2010, U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Christophe­r Hill said Chalabi was “under the influence of Iran,” and “a gentleman who has been challenged over the years to be seen as a straightfo­rward individual.”

Chalabi strongly denied the allegation­s, dismissing them as politicall­y motivated.

 ?? | KARIM KADIM/AP FILES ?? Iraqi state TV says Ahmad Chalabi, a prominent politician who strongly advocated the 2003 U.S.-led invasion to overthrow Saddam Hussein, has died of a heart attack.
| KARIM KADIM/AP FILES Iraqi state TV says Ahmad Chalabi, a prominent politician who strongly advocated the 2003 U.S.-led invasion to overthrow Saddam Hussein, has died of a heart attack.

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