Operacja Samum is a 1999 Polish spy film directed by Władysław Pasikowski, starring Marek Kondrat, Bogusław Linda, and Olaf Lubaszenko.
Walton and his two other CIA agents manage to escape into hiding as they prepare to leave Iraq before a possible war.
Walton is warned by a Polish-American Mossad agent named Karen Pierce to leave Iraq immediately.
The film shifts back to Iraq, where two Polish UOP agents, Edward Broński and Stanisław Kosiński, are inquiring on the whereabouts of Pierce and Mayer's son.
Hayes says that if the extraction is successful, Poland's foreign debts to the United States would be decreased dramatically.
Shopsovitz reveals that Magnus and his team hold a microfilm containing Saddam Hussein’s daily schedules.
As Broński and Kosiński head out of the Polish Embassy to find the agents, they are followed by Iraqi secret police.
Kosiński gets the agents on board of a bus with other Europeans and gets them inside the Polish Embassy without being noticed by the secret police.
Back in Poland, Mayer, Broński, Kosiński and the UOP chief are awarded medals of distinction at the American Embassy.