Report: Russia Gave Iraq U.S. War Info
Pentagon Report Faults Ambassador, Finds Leak In U.S. Central Command
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Play CBS Video Video Russia Shared Info With Saddam The Pentagon released documents that show that Saddam Hussein got intelligence from Russia during the early days of the Iraq war. But as Bob Orr reports, the tips didn't do Saddam any good.
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Video Rescue Frees 3 Iraq Hostages British and U.S. forces stormed a house in Baghdad and freed three Western peace activists who had been kidnapped. Lara Logan reports.
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Video Surviving A Hostage Ordeal Sheila MacVicar reports on a man who had been kidnapped in Iraq and lived to tell about it - and what the U.S. military is doing to increase the survival rate of hostages.
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Residents help to put a body of a bakery employee into an ambulance in Baghdad on Friday, March 24, 2006. (AP Photo/Mohammed Hato)
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Authorities say Thursday's raid in Iraq freed three Western hostages: peace activists Harmeet Singh Sooden, left, James Loney, center, and retired British professor Norman Kember. (AP/CP, Christian Peacemaker Teams)
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Relatives and friends carry the bodies of Iraqis for burial, killed by drive-by shooters, in Baghdad on Friday, March 24, 2006. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)
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Police stand outside the home in London of Norman Kember, the peace activist held hostage in Iraq, Thursday March, 23, 2006. He and two other peace activitsts were freed by coalition forces. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)
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U.S. military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch gives details about freed hostages during a news conference in Baghdad on Thursday, March 23, 2006. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)
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Interactive Held Hostage Details on foreign workers and soldiers captured by insurgents in Iraq.
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Interactive Saddam's Judgment Background on the former Iraqi leader's alleged crimes, his life and capture, plus video and photos.
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Interactive Battle For Iraq The government, the insurgency, key players, background and photos.
The unclassified report does not assess the value of the information or provide details beyond citing an Iraqi document that says the battlefield intelligence was provided to Saddam through the Russian ambassador in Baghdad.
Maria Zakharova, spokeswoman for Russia's U.N. mission in New York, said the allegations were false.
"To my mind, from my understanding it's absolutely nonsense and it's ridiculous," she said, adding that the U.S. government had not shown Russia the evidence cited in the report. "Somebody wants to say something, and did - and there is no evidence to prove it."
An official in the office of Foreign Intelligence Service spokesman Boris Labusov in Moscow quoted him saying Saturday, "We don't consider it necessary to comment on such fabrications."
A classified version of the Pentagon report, titled "Iraqi Perspectives Project," is not being made public.
Documents released as part of a Pentagon's report show the Russian government had sources inside the American military command as it planned and executed the 2003 invasion.
U.S. officials said none of information was of any real strategic value, and large parts of it were incorrect. U.S. officials, however, were "surprised by the Russians' actions."
CBS News correspondent Bob Orr reports that military analysts think the bad information actually helped feed Saddam's delusions.
Whether by chance or design, one piece of Russian intelligence actually contributed to an important U.S. military deception effort. By telling Saddam that the main attack on Baghdad would not begin until the Army's 4th Infantry Division arrived around April 15, the Russians reinforced an impression that U.S. commanders were trying to create to catch the Iraqis by surprise.
The attack on Baghdad began well before the 4th Infantry arrived, and Saddam's regime collapsed quickly.
In other recent developments:
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