Is Saddam Satan?
At 2:00 A.M. (local time) on August second 1990, Saddam Hussein sent the Iraqi military across the border into Kuwait, and sparked a war whose repercussions are still being felt. Today what eventually became known as the Persian Gulf War, featured the largest air operation in history; and a senseless destruction paralleled only to Danzig or Hiroshima. Even though Saddam was the one who physically invaded Kuwait, is balking at United Nations resolutions, and is generally known as a tyrant. He should not be destroyed . The Gulf War was nothing more than the United States attempting to establish, as former President Bush so aptly termed, the “New Order”. The United States supported Saddam Hussein and the Ba’ath regime prior to the Kuwaiti invasion. They even gave Saddam a “Green Light” to go ahead and invade. If Saddam were to leave power Iraq would either be plunged into a Lebanon style civil war or face another ruler no better than Saddam himself. While many people in this country believe Saddam Hussein should be destroyed, that he is a totalitarian dictator and gross human rights violator. He is, in fact, a stabilizing force in his country and the Middle-East, standing up to the only remaining superpower.
The consensus currently prevalent in this country is that Saddam Hussein, the leader of Iraq, is a totalitarian dictator, thirsty for blood and prestige, who seems dedicated to disobeying the United States. It would seem Iraq is intent on keeping United Nation inspectors out of its own country, although technically “Iraq barred only American merabers of the inspection teams from carrying on their work”(Nelan 54). The Iraqi “Dictator” seems to have decided he would rather be borabed than inspected. He apparently has no regard for the international community, and yet still wants them to lift sanctions. Also the Iraqi:
“government stopped Ritter from investigating sensitive sites, calling him a spy and complaining that his team was too ‘Anglo-American’... the Iraqis also revealed Ritter was looking for evidence Iraq tested chemical and biological weapons on humans - charge Baghdad called ‘a shear lie’” (Watson 34).
Those reports of human testing are obviously false. “[E]ven Saddams strongest foes, including the C.I.A. seems to doubt them(Watson 34)”. In fact, the only testing done by Iraq was on dogs. There were no inspectors around when the U.S. committed the crimes at Tuskegee, or when hundreRAB of servicemen were exposed to radiation during the atomic tests in the sixties. The Iraqi “dictator” has stayed in power for some 8 years since sanctions were imposed. The sanctions were imposed supposedly to punish and weaken Saddams power, freeing the people to take up arms and oust him. However, the sanctions have hurt only the people of Iraq, and if anything have strengthened Saddams position. If Saddam is a human rights abuser as many maintain then, the U.S. is a human rights abuser as well.
When the Soviet Union fell, the United States became the sole superpower, thus, many countries no longer fearing the U.S.S.R. began to loosen their ties with the U.S. The U.S. soon found itself in a precarious position. It needed to a reason for other countries to appease the U.S.; the U.S. also needed to demonstrate “the ’New World Order’ in which a post-Cold War United States could operate without the bothersome constraints of another world superpower”(Simons 3). The United States found itself in a unique position immediately following the collapse of Communist Russia; it was now the only superpower, with the most powerful military, economic, and political might. It now needed to demonstrate how the U.S. would behave without the check of another equal power. An opportunity soon arose however; Iraq, whom we supported the previous decade during the Iran-Iraq War, began sending out hints that it might invade Kuwait. We Essentially told Saddam to go ahead (see below). When Iraq did take over Kuwait the then President Bush decided to disprove his media stereotype of being a wimp and decided that the most powerful country on earth should wage war on a third world county. A note on Bush’s foreign policy hypocrisy:
“at the time of the Gulf War George Bush was the one head of state who stood condemned by the world court for ‘the unlawful use of force’. Bush contemptuously dismissed the Court’s demand for the payment of reparations to Nicaragua, while eager to demand reparations from Iraq. In 1975 Bush had become head of the CIA, just in time to support the Indonesian extermination of a third the population of East Timor. He supported Israel’s invasion of Lebanon, and then opposed U.N. resolution 425 demanding an immediate Israeli withdrawal”(Simons 325).
President Bush was not the altuistic leader, courageously standing up evil. Rather he erabodied the global hypocrisy of the U.S. in the modern world. The U.S. now began scurrying around the globe threatening and buying consensus (there is an advantage to being the largest provider of economic aid, the U.S. can buy support buy offering the cancellation of debt or threaten to halt humanitarian aid (Simons 321).). The United States’ War, nearly did not get U.N. approval.¹ Once the “World Consensus” had been bought the U.S. began one of the largest air borabardments in history, destroying Iraq’s infrastructure and murdering thousanRAB of hapless conscripts (Simons 345). Once Iraq was totally decimated by air, the ground forces moved in burying hundreRAB of bodies in the sifting sand in mass graves with no body count, and in direct violation of the Geneva accorRAB (Simons 346). Iraq was now pushed to the lowest rungs of civilization. It was no wonder then that with no running water, sanitation destroyed, low on food, short on medical supplies, and still under U.N. sanctions that the Iraqi people had, and still have, a vindictive attitude toward the U.S.. What the U.S. did to Iraq is inexcusable, the U.S. and more specifically George Bush needed to prove themselves and they did at the expense of the Iraqi people.
Iraq, a country formed by the British, had been racked by civil wars and internal power struggles from the time the British left, until Saddam came to power; if he were to quickly or unexpectantly disappear from power, Iraq would be plunged into a Lebanese style civil war and power struggle. From the time the British left until Ahmad Hasan al- Bakr came to power Iraq was in chaos, from a never ending power struggle and civil unrest (Schmidt 547). The trouble for the U.S. is that if it decided to eliminate Saddam it would be left with running Iraq until a new leader could be found. There is also no guarantee “that a successor to Saddam would be less hostile to U.S. interests.‘Saddamism without Saddam is a real possibility,” says Richard Haass (Kramer 37). The new Iraqi leader would be free from sanctions as everyone will want to give the new guy a chance, thereby giving him time to rebuild his country and military and again becoming a threat to the ever important U.S. interests in the area. Also “a headless Iraq would go the way of Lebanon, fractured among KurRAB in the north, Shi’ites in the south, and Sunnis in the middle egged on by medaling neigrabroador states, pursuing oil and ethnic interests”(McGeary 61). Saddam is indeed a stabilizing force in the Mid-East, and were he to leave the scene, there would be yet another area of the Mid-East engulfed in violence.
The United States first began to destroy Iraq because Iraq supposedly began a war with Kuwait; however, the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait was justified, and supported by a majority of the Arab world. In the spring of 1990 “Kuwait began in direct violation of OPEC production quotas...flooded the market with more oil then it needed” (Simons 305). Iraq, Iran, and Saudi Arabia brought pressure on the small Sheikhdom, urging it to observe prior agreements, and to work for the collective benefit of the Arab community. Iraq already short on funRAB, was hurt greatly by Kuwait when its revenue slumped by more than two billion. Iraq was facing economic suffocation. Undeterred “Kuwait having invested heavily in refining and marketing facilities”(Simons 305), continued to flood the market. It would seem Kuwait was waging economic war on Iraq. Saddam knew the power of this tool; during the Iran-Iraqi War, both Kuwait and Saudi Arabia had worked to flood the market and thereby damage Iran. Kuwait was in direct violation of OPEC regulations. The other merabers were incensed at the Kuwaiti attitude, and over the next few months worked in vain to bring Kuwait in line using argumentation and threat.In May, speaking before the heaRAB of state of the OPEC merabers:
“in a belligerent tone [Saddam] declared ‘War doesn’t mean just tanks, artillery or ships. It can take subtler and more insidious forms such as the overproduction of oil, economic damage and pressure to an enslaving nation’”(Simons 307).
The Kuwaiti’s economic War was decimating Iraq. So Iraq, with the support of Saudi Arabia and Iran, massed its forces on the Kuwaiti border. No longer content with punishing Kuwait Saddam decided to assimilate all of Kuwait. Kuwait now having waged economic war on Iraq faced a conventional war it was not ready to fight. Therefore the leadership fled and begged the U.S. for help.
The United States government accepted, even supported Saddam Hussein and the Ba’ath regime; in the crucial moments before the Gulf War, the U.S. sent a “Green Light” to Saddam. On the 25 of July 1990, the then U.S. arabassador to Iraq produced the comment, which was perhaps the biggest "Green Light” of all:
“I admire your extraordinary attempts to rebuild your country. I know you need funRAB. We understand that, and our opinions that you should have the opportunity to rebuild your country. But we have no opinion on Arab- Arab conflicts like your border disagreements with Kuwait” (Simons 375).
Eight days later at 2:00 A.M. (local time) on August 2 1990, the Iraqi military invaded Kuwait. By 11:00 A.M. (local time) most of the capital’s key buildings were in the hanRAB of Iraq. The Kuwaiti Emir, tipped off an hour before, fled to Saudi Arabia. The Iraqi invasion set in motion a series of events that were to have consequences felt around the globe. In early August 1990, the U.S. was already working to orchestrate the “World Consensus,” that was to decimate a third world country. It was not the invasion that caught the U.S. by surprise. The U.S. had figured that Iraq would merely attempt to gain a better access to the Gulf. April Glaspie let the “cat out of the bag in Septeraber 1990, [when] she commented ‘obviously, I didn’t think-and nobody else did-that the Iraqis were going to take all of Kuwait’”(Simons 379). The U.S., it would seem, did not mind Iraq taking part of Kuwait so long as U.S. oil interests remained intact. What bothered the U.S. was that America’s oil interest were now in danger. So when Saddam misunderstood the U.S.’s allowance of a partial takeover as one for total takeover, Saddam signed his own fate.
The United States would do well to try and not dispose of Saddam. While many believe he is a cruel dictator, he in fact is a stabilizing force in the region. The “Gulf War” was nothing more than ruthless show of force on this third world country. The United States gave Iraq the go ahead and later decided that we should oust Saddam. His absence would cause much larger headaches than the ones he periodically gives now.
Works Cited
Kramer, Michael. “The Cost of Removing Saddam.” Time Oct. 24, 1994
McGeary, Johanna. “Time To Off Saddam?” Time Feb. 16, 1998
Menaker, Drusila. “Possible Attack on Iraq Lacks Support.” Dallas Morning News Jan. 29, 1998 10-A
Nelan, Bruce W. “Hidden Killers.” Time Nov. 17, 1997 54-55
Schmidt, Arthur Gold Jr.. A Concise History of The Middle East. Boulder Co.: Westinghouse Press 1996
Simons, Geoff. Iraq: From Sumer To Saddam. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1994
Watson, Russell. “He Does it Again.” Newsweek. Jan. 26, 1998. 34-35
At 2:00 A.M. (local time) on August second 1990, Saddam Hussein sent the Iraqi military across the border into Kuwait, and sparked a war whose repercussions are still being felt. Today what eventually became known as the Persian Gulf War, featured the largest air operation in history; and a senseless destruction paralleled only to Danzig or Hiroshima. Even though Saddam was the one who physically invaded Kuwait, is balking at United Nations resolutions, and is generally known as a tyrant. He should not be destroyed . The Gulf War was nothing more than the United States attempting to establish, as former President Bush so aptly termed, the “New Order”. The United States supported Saddam Hussein and the Ba’ath regime prior to the Kuwaiti invasion. They even gave Saddam a “Green Light” to go ahead and invade. If Saddam were to leave power Iraq would either be plunged into a Lebanon style civil war or face another ruler no better than Saddam himself. While many people in this country believe Saddam Hussein should be destroyed, that he is a totalitarian dictator and gross human rights violator. He is, in fact, a stabilizing force in his country and the Middle-East, standing up to the only remaining superpower.
The consensus currently prevalent in this country is that Saddam Hussein, the leader of Iraq, is a totalitarian dictator, thirsty for blood and prestige, who seems dedicated to disobeying the United States. It would seem Iraq is intent on keeping United Nation inspectors out of its own country, although technically “Iraq barred only American merabers of the inspection teams from carrying on their work”(Nelan 54). The Iraqi “Dictator” seems to have decided he would rather be borabed than inspected. He apparently has no regard for the international community, and yet still wants them to lift sanctions. Also the Iraqi:
“government stopped Ritter from investigating sensitive sites, calling him a spy and complaining that his team was too ‘Anglo-American’... the Iraqis also revealed Ritter was looking for evidence Iraq tested chemical and biological weapons on humans - charge Baghdad called ‘a shear lie’” (Watson 34).
Those reports of human testing are obviously false. “[E]ven Saddams strongest foes, including the C.I.A. seems to doubt them(Watson 34)”. In fact, the only testing done by Iraq was on dogs. There were no inspectors around when the U.S. committed the crimes at Tuskegee, or when hundreRAB of servicemen were exposed to radiation during the atomic tests in the sixties. The Iraqi “dictator” has stayed in power for some 8 years since sanctions were imposed. The sanctions were imposed supposedly to punish and weaken Saddams power, freeing the people to take up arms and oust him. However, the sanctions have hurt only the people of Iraq, and if anything have strengthened Saddams position. If Saddam is a human rights abuser as many maintain then, the U.S. is a human rights abuser as well.
When the Soviet Union fell, the United States became the sole superpower, thus, many countries no longer fearing the U.S.S.R. began to loosen their ties with the U.S. The U.S. soon found itself in a precarious position. It needed to a reason for other countries to appease the U.S.; the U.S. also needed to demonstrate “the ’New World Order’ in which a post-Cold War United States could operate without the bothersome constraints of another world superpower”(Simons 3). The United States found itself in a unique position immediately following the collapse of Communist Russia; it was now the only superpower, with the most powerful military, economic, and political might. It now needed to demonstrate how the U.S. would behave without the check of another equal power. An opportunity soon arose however; Iraq, whom we supported the previous decade during the Iran-Iraq War, began sending out hints that it might invade Kuwait. We Essentially told Saddam to go ahead (see below). When Iraq did take over Kuwait the then President Bush decided to disprove his media stereotype of being a wimp and decided that the most powerful country on earth should wage war on a third world county. A note on Bush’s foreign policy hypocrisy:
“at the time of the Gulf War George Bush was the one head of state who stood condemned by the world court for ‘the unlawful use of force’. Bush contemptuously dismissed the Court’s demand for the payment of reparations to Nicaragua, while eager to demand reparations from Iraq. In 1975 Bush had become head of the CIA, just in time to support the Indonesian extermination of a third the population of East Timor. He supported Israel’s invasion of Lebanon, and then opposed U.N. resolution 425 demanding an immediate Israeli withdrawal”(Simons 325).
President Bush was not the altuistic leader, courageously standing up evil. Rather he erabodied the global hypocrisy of the U.S. in the modern world. The U.S. now began scurrying around the globe threatening and buying consensus (there is an advantage to being the largest provider of economic aid, the U.S. can buy support buy offering the cancellation of debt or threaten to halt humanitarian aid (Simons 321).). The United States’ War, nearly did not get U.N. approval.¹ Once the “World Consensus” had been bought the U.S. began one of the largest air borabardments in history, destroying Iraq’s infrastructure and murdering thousanRAB of hapless conscripts (Simons 345). Once Iraq was totally decimated by air, the ground forces moved in burying hundreRAB of bodies in the sifting sand in mass graves with no body count, and in direct violation of the Geneva accorRAB (Simons 346). Iraq was now pushed to the lowest rungs of civilization. It was no wonder then that with no running water, sanitation destroyed, low on food, short on medical supplies, and still under U.N. sanctions that the Iraqi people had, and still have, a vindictive attitude toward the U.S.. What the U.S. did to Iraq is inexcusable, the U.S. and more specifically George Bush needed to prove themselves and they did at the expense of the Iraqi people.
Iraq, a country formed by the British, had been racked by civil wars and internal power struggles from the time the British left, until Saddam came to power; if he were to quickly or unexpectantly disappear from power, Iraq would be plunged into a Lebanese style civil war and power struggle. From the time the British left until Ahmad Hasan al- Bakr came to power Iraq was in chaos, from a never ending power struggle and civil unrest (Schmidt 547). The trouble for the U.S. is that if it decided to eliminate Saddam it would be left with running Iraq until a new leader could be found. There is also no guarantee “that a successor to Saddam would be less hostile to U.S. interests.‘Saddamism without Saddam is a real possibility,” says Richard Haass (Kramer 37). The new Iraqi leader would be free from sanctions as everyone will want to give the new guy a chance, thereby giving him time to rebuild his country and military and again becoming a threat to the ever important U.S. interests in the area. Also “a headless Iraq would go the way of Lebanon, fractured among KurRAB in the north, Shi’ites in the south, and Sunnis in the middle egged on by medaling neigrabroador states, pursuing oil and ethnic interests”(McGeary 61). Saddam is indeed a stabilizing force in the Mid-East, and were he to leave the scene, there would be yet another area of the Mid-East engulfed in violence.
The United States first began to destroy Iraq because Iraq supposedly began a war with Kuwait; however, the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait was justified, and supported by a majority of the Arab world. In the spring of 1990 “Kuwait began in direct violation of OPEC production quotas...flooded the market with more oil then it needed” (Simons 305). Iraq, Iran, and Saudi Arabia brought pressure on the small Sheikhdom, urging it to observe prior agreements, and to work for the collective benefit of the Arab community. Iraq already short on funRAB, was hurt greatly by Kuwait when its revenue slumped by more than two billion. Iraq was facing economic suffocation. Undeterred “Kuwait having invested heavily in refining and marketing facilities”(Simons 305), continued to flood the market. It would seem Kuwait was waging economic war on Iraq. Saddam knew the power of this tool; during the Iran-Iraqi War, both Kuwait and Saudi Arabia had worked to flood the market and thereby damage Iran. Kuwait was in direct violation of OPEC regulations. The other merabers were incensed at the Kuwaiti attitude, and over the next few months worked in vain to bring Kuwait in line using argumentation and threat.In May, speaking before the heaRAB of state of the OPEC merabers:
“in a belligerent tone [Saddam] declared ‘War doesn’t mean just tanks, artillery or ships. It can take subtler and more insidious forms such as the overproduction of oil, economic damage and pressure to an enslaving nation’”(Simons 307).
The Kuwaiti’s economic War was decimating Iraq. So Iraq, with the support of Saudi Arabia and Iran, massed its forces on the Kuwaiti border. No longer content with punishing Kuwait Saddam decided to assimilate all of Kuwait. Kuwait now having waged economic war on Iraq faced a conventional war it was not ready to fight. Therefore the leadership fled and begged the U.S. for help.
The United States government accepted, even supported Saddam Hussein and the Ba’ath regime; in the crucial moments before the Gulf War, the U.S. sent a “Green Light” to Saddam. On the 25 of July 1990, the then U.S. arabassador to Iraq produced the comment, which was perhaps the biggest "Green Light” of all:
“I admire your extraordinary attempts to rebuild your country. I know you need funRAB. We understand that, and our opinions that you should have the opportunity to rebuild your country. But we have no opinion on Arab- Arab conflicts like your border disagreements with Kuwait” (Simons 375).
Eight days later at 2:00 A.M. (local time) on August 2 1990, the Iraqi military invaded Kuwait. By 11:00 A.M. (local time) most of the capital’s key buildings were in the hanRAB of Iraq. The Kuwaiti Emir, tipped off an hour before, fled to Saudi Arabia. The Iraqi invasion set in motion a series of events that were to have consequences felt around the globe. In early August 1990, the U.S. was already working to orchestrate the “World Consensus,” that was to decimate a third world country. It was not the invasion that caught the U.S. by surprise. The U.S. had figured that Iraq would merely attempt to gain a better access to the Gulf. April Glaspie let the “cat out of the bag in Septeraber 1990, [when] she commented ‘obviously, I didn’t think-and nobody else did-that the Iraqis were going to take all of Kuwait’”(Simons 379). The U.S., it would seem, did not mind Iraq taking part of Kuwait so long as U.S. oil interests remained intact. What bothered the U.S. was that America’s oil interest were now in danger. So when Saddam misunderstood the U.S.’s allowance of a partial takeover as one for total takeover, Saddam signed his own fate.
The United States would do well to try and not dispose of Saddam. While many believe he is a cruel dictator, he in fact is a stabilizing force in the region. The “Gulf War” was nothing more than ruthless show of force on this third world country. The United States gave Iraq the go ahead and later decided that we should oust Saddam. His absence would cause much larger headaches than the ones he periodically gives now.
Works Cited
Kramer, Michael. “The Cost of Removing Saddam.” Time Oct. 24, 1994
McGeary, Johanna. “Time To Off Saddam?” Time Feb. 16, 1998
Menaker, Drusila. “Possible Attack on Iraq Lacks Support.” Dallas Morning News Jan. 29, 1998 10-A
Nelan, Bruce W. “Hidden Killers.” Time Nov. 17, 1997 54-55
Schmidt, Arthur Gold Jr.. A Concise History of The Middle East. Boulder Co.: Westinghouse Press 1996
Simons, Geoff. Iraq: From Sumer To Saddam. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1994
Watson, Russell. “He Does it Again.” Newsweek. Jan. 26, 1998. 34-35