U.S.: Saddam Not In Iraqi Custody
The United States denied that Saddam Hussein has been turned over to Iraqi authorities, contradicting a statement by the former Iraqi president's lawyer.
"There has been no change in Saddam's status," U.S. State Department spokesman Tom Casey said Friday, according to CBS News.
Casey said the information he had was provided by the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.
"I don't have any more details to offer you," he told reporters at the State Department. Casey reiterated the Bush administration's view that "we think it's very important there be accountability." He said "it was up to the Iraqis" to formally request that Saddam be brought forward for execution.
Asked when that might occur, Casey said, "I really don't have a timeline on this."
The White House declined to comment on the timing of the execution. Saddam has been in U.S. custody since he was captured in December 2003
Deputy White House press secretary Scott Stanzel, talking to reporters Friday from Crawford, Texas, where President Bush was vacationing, said the hanging of Saddam was a matter for the sovereign Iraqi government. Earlier, the White House said the appeals court decision to uphold the sentence marked an important milestone for the Iraqi people's efforts to replace the rule of a tyrant with the rule of law.
The physical handover of Saddam to Iraqi authorities is believed to be one of the last steps before he was to be hanged, although the lawyers' statement did not specifically say Saddam was in Iraqi hands.
"A few minutes ago we received correspondence from the Americans saying that President Saddam Hussein is no longer under the control of U.S. forces," according to the statement faxed to The Associated Press.
The U.S. military in Baghdad neither confirmed or denied that the transfer has taken place, citing security reasons, reports CBS News correspondent Cami McCormick.
However, a judge on the appeals court that upheld Saddam's death sentence said Friday, "Saddam will be executed today or tomorrow." Munir Haddad added: "All the measures have been done."
Haddad is authorized to attend the execution on behalf of the judiciary.
"I am ready to attend, and there is no reason for delays," Haddad said.
In Baghdad, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has signed the death sentence against Saddam, a government official said.
But the official, who refused to be identified by name because he was not authorized to release the information, said Iraqi authorities were not yet in control of Saddam.
"We will get him when the execution is going to be carried out," said the official, who refused to give other details.
The discrepancy could not be explained.
The defense team statement called on "everybody to do everything to stop this unfair execution."
Saddam's chief defense attorney, Khalil al-Dulaimi, said Friday that American officials had called him and asked him to authorize someone to receive Saddam's personal belongings from the U.S. military prison where the ousted Iraqi leader is being held. Al-Dulaimi said he had not yet done that.
The Pentagon said Friday that U.S. forces in Iraq are braced for any violence that may follow Hussein's execution.
"U.S. forces in Iraq are obviously at a high state of alert anytime because of the environment that they operate in and because of the current security situation," said spokesman Bryan Whitman. "They'll obviously take into account social dimensions that could potentially lead to an increase in violence, which certainly would include carrying out the sentence of Saddam Hussein."
Said Whitman: "Our forces stay at a constant state of high readiness in Iraq, and I would expect through this period they would do the same."
He wouldn't comment further on any potential troop movements to strengthen security for the execution, but said the commanders in Iraq have the ability to move forces as they deem appropriate based on conditions on the ground.
Whitman also said he wouldn't comment on anything that President Bush might be contemplating in terms of changing U.S. war policy in Iraq or in connection with the intensive administration review now under way on American strategy there.
Issam Ghazzawi, another member of Saddam's defense team, said there was no way of knowing when Saddam's execution would take place.
"The only person who can predict the execution of the president ... is God and Bush," Ghazzawi said on Thursday.
Saddam was being held at the American military prison known as Camp Cropper.
National Security adviser Mouffak al Rubaie said fear of reprisals by Saddam loyalists has kept the date of the execution secret.
"I think the sooner the better," al Rubaie told CBS News correspondent Randall Pinkston.
Iraqi officials have said that Saddam's final moments will be videotaped by the government.
"We will video everything," al Rubaie said. "All documentation will be videoed. Taking him from his cell to the execution is going to be videoed, and the actual execution will be documented and videoed."
It's not clear whether the videotape will be broadcast on Iraqi television.
In a farewell letter posted on the Internet Wednesday, Saddam urged Iraqis to embrace "brotherly coexistence" and not to hate the U.S.-led troops.
"I call on you not to hate because hate does not leave space for a person to be fair and it makes you blind and closes all doors of thinking," said the letter.
Saddam is in the midst of another trial, one in which he's charged with genocide and other crimes during a 1987-88 military crackdown on Kurds in northern Iraq. An estimated 180,000 Kurds died during the operation. That trial was adjourned until Jan. 8, and experts have said the trial of Saddam's co-defendants is likely to continue even if he is executed.
Human Rights Watch, an international watchdog group, says Saddam was certainly a human rights violator, but Iraq's government shouldn't execute him. "The true test of respect for human rights comes when the human rights of someone who has violated in unspeakable ways the human rights of many millions of people comes into play," said the group's Richard Dicker.
In other recent developments in Iraq: