Date: Wed, 11 Nov 1998 18:15:02 GMT
Message-Id: <v0211010bb26f84578709@[194.125.43.229]>
To: cj@cyberjournal.org
From: rkmoore@iol.ie (Richard K. Moore)
Subject: cj#863> Boyle & Blum on Iraq attacks
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sun, 8 Nov 1998 08:41:41 -0600
Reply-To: Boyle, Francis
<FBOYLE@LAW.UIUC.EDU>
Sender: World Order Conference List <WOC-L@PGS.CA>
From: Boyle, Francis
<FBOYLE@LAW.UIUC.EDU>
Subject: Attacking Iraq, Sudan,Afghanistan v. Impeaching Clinton
Comments: To: Recipients of icc-info <icc-info@igc.apc.org>
To: WOC-L@PGS.CA
Date: Wed, 11 Nov 1998 08:54:30 -0500 (EST)
From: MiD-EasT RealitieS <MER@MiddleEast.Org>
To: <MER@MiddleEast.Org>
Subject: The U.S. vs Iraq - A Study in Hypocrisy
We have heard that a half million children have died,
said
60 Minutes
reporter Lesley Stahl, speaking of US sanctions
against Iraq. I mean, that's more children than died in
Hiroshima. Andand you know, is the price worth it?
Her guest, in May 1996, U.N. Ambassador Madeleine Albright, responded:
I think this is a very hard choice, but the pricewe think the
price is worth it.
Today, Secretary of State Albright travels around the world to gather support for yet more bombing of Iraq. The price, apparently, is still worth it. The price is of course being paid solely by the Iraqi peoplea million or so men, women and children, dead from the previous bombings and seven years of sanctions. The plight of the living in Iraq, plagued by malnutrition and a severe shortage of medicines, is as well terrible to behold.
Their crime? They have a leader who refuses to cede all sovereignty
to the United States (acting under its usual United Nations cover)
which demands that every structure in Iraq, including the presidential
palaces, be available for inspection for weapons of mass
destruction
. After more than six years of these inspections, and
significant destruction of stocks of forbidden chemical, biological,
and nuclear weapon material, as well as weapons research and
development programs, the UN team still refuses to certify that Iraq
is clean enough. Inasmuch as the country is larger than California,
it's understandable that the inspectors can not be certain that
all prohibited weapons have been uncovered. It's equally
understandable that Iraq claims that the United States can, and will,
continue to find some excuse not to give Iraq the certification needed
to end the sanctions. It can be said that the United States has
inflicted more vindictive punishment and ostracism upon Iraq than upon
Germany or Japan after World War 2.
In the not too distant future, when Iran begins to flex its muscles a bit more, in ways not to Washington's pleasure, it may then be their turn for some good ol' Americandiplomacy.
The Saddam Hussein regime must wonder at the high (double) standard
set by Washington. Less than a year ago, the U.S. Senate passed an
act to implement the Convention on the Prohibition of the
Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and
on Their Destruction
(Short title: Chemical Weapons Convention),
an international treaty which has been ratified by more than 100
nations in its five-year life.
The Senate act, Section 307, stipulates that the President may deny
a request to inspect any facility in the United States in cases where
the President determines that the inspection may pose a threat to the
national security interests of the United States.
Saddam has asked
for no more than this for Iraq. Presumably, under the Senate act, the
White House, Pentagon, etc. would be off limits, as Saddam insists
his presidential palaces should be, as well as the military unit
responsible for Saddam's personal security, which an American
colonel demanded to visit.
Section 303 further states that Any objection by the President to
an individual serving as an inspector ... shall not be reviewable in
any court.
Again, this echoes a repeated complaint from the
Iraqisa recent team of 16 inspectors included 14 from the US and
Britain, Saddam's two principal adversaries, who areeven as
you read thisbusily planning new bombing raids on Iraq. The
team was led by a U.S. Marine Corps captain, a veteran of the Gulf
War, who has been accused of spying by Iraq. But the Iraqis do not
have a corresponding right of exclusion. The same section of the
Senate act provides, moreover, that an FBI agent accompanies each
inspection team visit
.
The wishes of the Iraqi government to place certain sites off limits
and to have less partisan inspectors have been dismissed out of hand
by U.S. government spokespersons and the American media. What do
they have to hide?
has been the prevailing attitude.
The hypocrisy runs deeper yet. In his recent State of the Union
address, President Clinton, in the context of Iraq, spoke of how we
must confront the new hazards of chemical and biological weapons,
and the outlaw states, terrorists and organized criminals seeking to
acquire them.
He castigated Saddam Hussein for developing
nuclear, chemical and biological weapons
and called for
strengthening the Biological Weapons Convention. Who among his
listeners knew, who among the media reported, that the United States
had been the supplier to Iraq of much of the source biological
materials Saddam's scientists would require to create a biological
warfare program?
According to a Senate Report of 1994: From 1985, if not earlier, through 1989, a veritable witch's brew of biological materials were exported to Iraq by private American suppliers pursuant to application and licensing by the U.S. Department of Commerce. Amongst these materials, which often produce slow and agonizing deaths, were:
Dozens of other pathogenic biological agents were shipped to Iraq
during the 1980s. The Senate Report pointed out: These biological
materials were not attenuated or weakened and were capable of
reproduction.
The United Nations inspectors have uncovered evidence that Iraq was conducting research on pathogen enhancement and biological warfare-related stimulant research on many of the identical types of biological agents shipped to the country from the United States. These shipments continued to at least November 28, 1989 despite the fact that Iraq had been reported to be engaging in chemical warfare and possibly biological warfare against Iranians, Kurds, and Shiites since the early 80s.
During the Iraq-Iran war of 1980-88, the United States gave military aid and intelligence information to both sides, hoping that each would inflict severe damage on the other, in line perhaps with what Noam Chomsky has postulated:
It's been a leading, driving doctrine of U.S. foreign policy since the 1940s that the vast and unparalleled energy resources of the Gulf region will be effectively dominated by the United States and its clients, and, crucially, that no independent, indigenous force will be permitted to have a substantial influence on the administration of oil production and price.
Indeed, there is evidence that Washington encouraged Iraq to attack Iran and ignite the war in the first place. This policy, as well as financial considerations, were likely the motivating forces behind providing Iraq with the biological materials. (Iran was at that time regarded as the greater threat to the seemingly always threatened U.S. national security.)
As the American public and media are being prepared to accept and
cheerlead the next bombing of the people of Iraq, the stated
rationale, the official party line, is that Iraq is an outlaw
state (or rogue
state, or pariah
statethe media
obediently repeats all the White House and State Department buzz
words), which is ignoring a United Nations Security Council
resolution. Israel, however, has ignored many such resolutions
without the U.S. bombing Tel Aviv, imposing sanctions, or even cutting
back military aid. But by some arcane ideological alchemy, Israel is
not deemed an outlaw
state by Washington. Neither does the
United States regard itself so for turning its back on a ruling of the
U.N.'s World Court in 1984 to cease its hostile military actions
against Nicaragua, nor for the numerous times the U.S. has totally
ignored overwhelming General Assembly resolutions, or for its repeated
use of chemical and biological agents against Cuba since the 1960s.
The bombing looks to be inevitable. The boys are busy moving all
their toys into position; they can already see the battle decorations
hanging from their chests. Of course, no one knows what it will
accomplish besides more death and destruction. Saddam will remain in
power. He'll be more stubborn than ever about the inspections.
There may be one consolation for the Iraqi people. The Washington
Post has reported that Secretary of Defense William Cohen has
indicated that U.S. officials remain wary of doing so much military
damage to Iraq as to weaken its regional role as a counterweight to
Iran.
In the not too distant future, when Iran begins to flex its
muscles a bit more, in ways not to Washington's pleasure, it may
then be their turn for some good ol' American diplomacy
.