Some days I choose to blog the state-owned news media in China even on international stories; I do this for a couple of reasons. One is that they are almost always brief and directly to the point. The other is that it is in contrast to what I read in the western media, and contrast is the spice of intellect the same as it is in art. Without light and shade, everything would be grey and virtually invisible. The same is true with ideas and information; there must be something in contrast or very little would be discernible in your mind from anything else--just a mass of grey ideas. Think about it. Oh, I also love the hyperlinks sprinkled throughout, little nuggets of basic information that come in handy when reading a short news story.
The U.S.-appointed council estimates that the Iraqi dictator seized $40 billion while in power and is now searching for that amount deposited in Switzerland, Japan, Germany and other countries, Iyad Allawi told the London-based Arab newspapers Al-Hayat and Asharq al-Awsat.
"Saddam has started to give information on money that has been looted from Iraq and deposited abroad," Allawi told Asharq al-Awsat. "Investigation is now concentrated on his relationship with terrorist organizations and on the money paid to elements outside Iraq."
Allawi said Saddam, who has been questioned by American interrogators since his capture this month, gave names of people who know where the money is deposited and also know the location of arms and ammunition depots used by insurgents in attacks against the coalition forces and the Governing Council.
In similar remarks to Al-Hayat, Allawi said Saddam had confessed to "important matters," a reference to the smuggling of billions of dollars abroad.
"We have asked international legal and specialized companies to follow up the money he (Saddam) has deposited in Switzerland, Germany, Japan and other countries which is estimated at around $40 billion under fictitious companies' names," Allawi told Al-Hayat.
Allawi spoke to Lebanese journalists during a private visit to Beirut last week.