WHY IRAQ?
Norman Balabanian
Veterans for Peace
Winter Solstice Peace Concert
December 18, 2002 Gainesville, FL|
Many responses have been repeated by US administrations:
1. Saddam Hussein poison-gassed his own people (Kurds);
2. Saddam invaded and occupied Kuwait in 1990;
3. He ignores UN Security Council Resolutions;
4. He is a brutal dictator;
5. He has "weapons of mass destruction": WMD.
The first four are even true! But these charges cannot be real
reasons for threatening, and preparing for, an imminent US invasion
of Iraq -- with or without UN acquiescence. Let's examine each
one.
1. From 1983 to August 1, 1990 - when Bush I was VP, then President
-- the US (and its NATO allies) had been supplying Saddam's Iraq
with all kinds of weapons and other material - such as high-strength
aluminum tubes that Bush II declared less than 2 weeks ago to
be of use in nuclear-weapons development! (Not so, says a British
Parliament report.) The US even sold Saddam the helicopters that
the Iraqis used in the chemical attack on Kurds in northern Iraq.
It even provided the funds for Iraq to buy these weapons. Obviously,
the US did not then disapprove of such actions.
2. Early in 1990 - the year of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait --
Bush I had signed a presidential order stating that it was in
the national interest to expand trade with Iraq! Furthermore,
Saddam had been complaining to the US about Iraqi disputes with
Kuwait. On July 25, just 8 days before the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait,
the US Ambassador to Iraq, April Glaspie - in response to a complaint
from Saddam about Kuwaiti actions against Iraq - told him:
". . . we have no opinion on Arab-Arab conflicts, like your
border disagreement with Kuwait. If we are unable to find a solution,
then it will be natural that Iraq will not accept death."
Could diplomatic language be any clearer that the US was acquiescing
in some kind of Iraqi action against Kuwait? Indeed, just 4 days
before our ambassador's meeting with Saddam, Bush I's administration
issued a press release reminding the world that the US had no
treaty with the Kuwaiti Government. One might be curious as to
why Saddam Hussein - just after he had moved his troops up close
to the Kuwaiti border - had to be reminded of that!
With that kind of encouragement from the US, Iraq invaded Kuwait
on August 2, 1990. In response to a reporter's question, after
the US-led attack on Iraq in early 1991, the ex-ambassador said:
". . . we never expected them to take all of Kuwait."
In other words, the administration did expect Iraq to take some
of Kuwait - in which it acquiesced!
Later on the day of the Iraqi invasion, the UNSC passed a resolution
condemning Iraq and calling on it to withdraw. Iraq did not do
so but -- starting in that same month -- made several proposals
for withdrawing. US State Department officials labeled these proposals
"serious pre-negotiating positions". But Bush I replied:
"Aggression will not be rewarded. There will be no negotiations."
Is it true that aggressors will not be rewarded?
Under the command of Bush I, the US invaded Panama in 1989, the
year before Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. That aggression was indeed
rewarded: a "regime change" was brought about; Panama's
Head of State (a former CIA asset was brought in chains to the
US and jailed. The reality is that some aggressors will be rewarded
and less powerful others will not.
3. Yes, Iraq has ignored some UN Security Council resolutions
- 12 or so since Saddam Hussein came to power. But Iraq is not
unique in this respect. Israel has ignored 32 UNSC resolutions
over the same period! Turkey -- a NATO ally of the US -- has ignored
24, twice as many as Iraq! All these UNSC resolutions have required
the affirmative vote of the US. Many of the resolutions against
Israel concern the demand to stop its policy of Israeli settlements
on Palestinian land. Since the US grants Israel several billions
of dollars annually, it could easily obtain Israeli compliance
with these UNSC resolutions - should it so desire.
4. Saddam Hussein is a brutal dictator - there is no doubt about
that. But many tyrants aided and abetted by the US have been equally
brutal dictators; among them: Marcos of the Philippines, Suharto
of Indonesia, Somoza of Nicaragua, Shah Reza Pahlavi of Iran,
Pinochet of Chile, and many more in Central and South America.
Without US support, not one of them even could have reached power.
So, "brutal dictator" can be only a tongue-in-cheek
charge.
5. "Weapons of Mass Destruction" is a red herring! Former
UN Weapons Inspector Scott Ritter (1992-1998) has asserted repeatedly
that 98% of all Iraq's WMD had been found and destroyed by 1998.
The US position on this matter -- especially as to nuclear WMD
- has been unprincipled.
* * * * * * * *
In April 1990, less than four months before the Iraqi invasion
of Kuwait, Saddam Hussein offered Bush I a deal to destroy his
biological and chemical WMD - Iraq did not then, nor now, have
nuclear weapons. Bush I agreed, but with a caveat: that this matter
not be linked to other issues or other weapons. What has to be
understood - without acknowledgement -- is that Israel must keep
its nuclear arsenal. Though the world is well aware that Israel
possesses nuclear weapons, it is curious why the US cannot acknowledge
it. Why not? We . . .ll:
In 1977 Congress passed, and President Carter signed, legislation
prohibiting US aid to countries developing nuclear weapons. So,
if the US admits that Israel has long ago developed and now possesses
nuclear weapons, not only will all future aid to Israel have to
be cancelled, but also past aid since about 1981 would have been
illegal. It is clear, then, that the US has not been interested
in a diplomatic settlement of the problem of WMD, in general.
Instead, it is prepared to go to war. It did so in 1990 and is
preparing to do so again.
One other thing the US has not wanted for over 25 years is a diplomatic
settlement of the Israel-Palestine conflict -- although there
has been interminable chatter about "the peace process".
The US has a veto in the UN Security Council but not in the UN
General Assembly (GA). In December 1989, just eight months before
the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, there was a proposal in the GA calling
for an international conference on the Israel-Palestine problem
that would take up a settlement on the basis of the 1967 UNSC
Resolution 242 on territorial guarantees and security that - to
this day - Israel has not adhered to. The vote was 151 in support
to 3 against (with only Dominica joining the US and Israel in
opposition). The yes vote included all the NATO allies! Why doesn't
the US want an international conference on the question? The reason
is clear: if a conference is held, it will call for a diplomatic
settlement -- and the US opposes that!
For the preservation of international law, it is imperative that
the US forego unilateral actions and adhere to civilized norms
of international conduct -- even in the face of wounds inflicted
by fanatics. Otherwise, since the US would be mimicking them,
these fanatics could feel vindicated in their actions -- even
permitted to expand them.