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In custody,
Aziz ready
to name names

Saddam’s foreign minister may finger U.N. officials in oil-for-food scandal

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Dec. 17: Tariq Aziz, Iraq's former foreign minister, may be about to name United Nations officials allegedly involved in the oil-for-food program scandal. NBC's Lisa Myers reports.

Nightly News

Lisa Myers
Senior investigative correspondent

By Lisa Myers & the NBC investigative unit
updated 7:42 p.m. ET Dec. 17, 2004

Former Iraqi deputy prime minister Tariq Aziz was the sophisticated, intelligent face of a thuggish regime. He was known for his elegant English suits and a fondness for Cuban cigars.

But photos, obtained exclusively by NBC News, for the first time show Aziz as he lives now, in custody. It's a strikingly different image — Aziz appears frail in orange prison garb and plastic handcuffs.

David Kay — a former U.S. adviser in Iraq — spent months questioning Aziz and others. He says Aziz quickly turned on Saddam and could testify at any trial.

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"He talks about direct orders to murder, to assassinate, to kill," says Kay.

NBC News has learned U.N. investigators probing corruption in the U.N. oil for food program were scheduled to question Aziz last week. That session was delayed for security reasons.  

The U.N. investigation — led by former Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker — is looking into Saddam's alleged diversion of oil money that was supposed to go for food to U.N. officials and politicians in key countries.

U.S. officials say Aziz already has implicated the French and others, claiming payoffs were made with the understanding that recipients would support Iraq on key matters before the U.N.

"He pointed to specific individuals in Russia and France, in the United States — that received favorable treatment," says David Kay.

Now, sources tell NBC News that Aziz has indicated he's finally ready to talk about alleged bribes to U.N. officials. U.N. investigators refuse to comment.

Former Secretary of State James Baker says Aziz has an incentive to be helpful to the U.S.  

"He may very well be inclined to cooperate with us thinking that he could receive some sort of leniency or get a better deal," says Baker.

Once Saddam's tireless defender, Aziz is now singing a very different tune, to please his new keeper.


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