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Sanctioned Genocide: Was ‘the Price’ of Disarming Iraq Worth It?

Arab news | 11.06.2003 14:12

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Sanctioned Genocide: Was ‘the Price’ of Disarming Iraq Worth It?
Rob Kennedy • Deutsche Presse-Agentur


BANGKOK, 11June 2003 — As political fallout rains down on London and Washington amid the absence of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Iraq, another controversial justification must also be revisited: Economic sanctions directly responsible for the deaths of at least1 . 5million Iraqis.

For nearly 13 years, the United Nations Security Council imposed an all-encompassing embargo on Iraqi imports and exports, intending to force dictator Saddam Hussein to destroy stockpiles of biological and chemical weapons, and to dismantle a burgeoning nuclear weapons program. Several weapons inspectors on the ground in Iraq claimed WMD disarmament was virtually complete by the mid-1990s. The sanctions, however, were removed only last month when the United States declared victory after its latest invasion.

According to UN aid agencies, by the mid-1990s about1 . 5million Iraqis — including565 , 000children — had perished as a direct result of the embargo, which included “holds” on vital goods such as chemicals and equipment to produce clean drinking water.

Former assistant secretary general of the United Nations, Dennis Halliday, quit in protest in 1998 after one year at the helm as the UN humanitarian coordinator in Iraq. He described the sanctions as “genocidal”.

“I’ve been using the word ‘genocide’ because this is a deliberate policy to destroy the people of Iraq. I’m afraid I have no other view,” Halliday told journalist David Edwards in a March 2002 interview.

Halliday’s successor in Iraq, Hans von Sponeck, also resigned citing the same reasons after a year-and-a-half. The two former UN staffers, with64 -years combined experience working at the world body, said what was inflicted on the Iraqi people during the12 -plus years of sanctions is tantamount to crimes against humanity.

Both said changes to the UN’s sanctions procedure must be made to ensure what occurred in Iraq from 1991 to 2003 never happens again.

The UN adopted economic sanctions in 1945 as a measure to keep trouble-making regimes in line. Iraq, however, was the only nation ever to have its imports and exports under complete control of the15 -member United Nations Security Council. The real decision-making power over Iraq’s sanctions, however, was in the hands of veto-wielding permanent members — France, China, Russia, Britain, and the United States.

Professor Joy Gordon from Fairfield University in Connecticut, spent three years researching the economic sanctions and interviewing UN staff involved in Iraq. In a Harper’s Magazine story in November2002 , Gordon concluded most resistance holding up vital goods into Iraq came from the United States and the United Kingdom.

US officials routinely claimed “dual-use” (having both civilian and military applications) items needed to be “held” and contracts reviewed to ensure the Saddam Hussein regime could not use imports for weapons programs. Gordon, Halliday, von Sponeck, among numerous others, accused the US of deliberately withholding aid vital to the health and welfare of the Iraqi people.

Last year, for example, the US blocked contracts for water tankers on the grounds that they might be used to haul chemical weapons. Yet the arms experts from the United Nations Special Commission (UNMOVIC) had no objection to the tankers, Gordon reported in the Harper’s article. This was at a time when the major cause of child deaths in Iraq was a lack of access to potable water, and when the country was in the middle of a severe drought.

Award-winning journalist John Pilger — who produced the documentary film “Paying the Price - Killing the Children of Iraq” — said up to July2002 , $5.4 billion in vital humanitarian supplies for the people of Iraq were being obstructed by the United States, backed by Britain.

The UN humanitarian reports on the blockade’s effects on Iraqi children tell a grisly tale. In December1995 , the UN Food and Agriculture Organization reported567 , 000Iraqi children had died as a direct consequence of economic sanctions. In March1996 , a World Health Organization study released found the blockade had caused a six-fold increase in the mortality rate of Iraqi children under age five. UNICEF reported in October 1996 that4 , 500Iraqi children under five were dying every month as a result of sanctions-induced starvation and disease. Statistics such as these are not hard to find.

Then US Secretary Of State Madeline Albright was adamant during her tenure about maintaining the tough sanctions despite the horrific reports coming out of Iraq. She was interviewed about the UN sanctions in a1995 television interview with American TV magazine “ 60Minutes”.

Asked by interviewer Lesley Stahl: “We have heard that a half-million children have died (in Iraq, as a result of the sanctions) ... I mean, that’s more children than died in Hiroshima. And you know, is the price worth it?”

Albright replied: “I think this is a very hard choice, but the price — we think the price is worth it.”

The real threat posed by Saddam Hussein, and the need to disarm him of alleged stockpiles of deadly arms, remains a contentious issue. The main justification for the March 2003 US-led invasion was the threat of his WMD. After 82 days in Iraq, not a single banned weapon has surfaced.

“The only weapon that Iraq has is oil and its revenues,” Halliday said in December 2002 interview with Cairo’s Al-Ahram Weekly newspaper.

That sentiment is backed by former chief UNSCOM weapons inspector Scott Ritter who spent seven years in Iraq. He has insisted the Iraqi regime was “fundamentally disarmed” between1991 -98, with90 - 95percent of its WMD eliminated by December1998 .

He said the fact Saddam was a tyrant should not cloud over the outrage inflicted by the UN Security Council on the population of Iraq.

“He (Saddam) is a brutal dictator. He may torture to death1 , 800people a year. That’s terrible and unacceptable. But we kill6 , 000a month. Let’s put that on a scale,” Ritter said in a June 1999 interview.

Evidence exists indicating US planners recognized early on the devastation sanctions would deliver upon the Iraqi population.

A declassified document from the US Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) in 1991— titled “Iraq’s Water Treatment Vulnerability” — outlined with deadly precision the effect economic sanctions would have on Iraq’s water supply.

“Iraq depends on importing specialized equipment and some chemicals to purify its water supply,” the DIA report, dated Jan.22 ,1991 , said. “Failing to secure supplies will result in a shortage of pure drinking water for much of the population. This could lead to increased incidences, if not epidemics, of disease.

“Although Iraq is already experiencing a loss of water treatment capability, it probably will take at least six months (to June1991 ) before the system is fully degraded.”

Thomas Nagy, a professor at George Washington University who discovered and brought the DIA document to the media’s attention, said the US government knew the sanctions would result in water-treatment failure and, consequently, would kill an incalculable number of Iraqis.

As outlined by the Geneva Conventions, he says, that is a war crime.

 http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7&section=0&article=27272&d=11&m=6&y=2003

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Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

Reality Check

11.06.2003 15:57

During the war in Iraq a story did the rounds of the media about an uprising in Basra which was later quashed as untrue.

The BBC was quick to point out at the time that the people of Basra were betrayed by George Bush Snr during the Gulf War in 1991 and were therefore unlikely to rise against Saddam Hussein on the strength of American assurances.

Interestingly when 15,000 bodies were unearthed in a mass grave a week or two ago very few media outlets mentioned that these graves were the direct result of George Bush Snr's betrayal in 1991.

The 1991 betrayal by the Americans of the Shi-ite and Kurdish people is an intriguing story about which little has been written. I hope some day someone will write a book about it.

For the interested, there are many sites on google.com which can direct you to articles by reputable sources elaborating on the fact that S.Hussein was groomed for power in the Ba-ath Party, by the CIA; that America [and Britain ] supplied him with chemical and deadly biological weapons - anthrax and the plague - to use in a war on Iran; that Britain built the nuclear facility that Powell warned about in the United Nations; that the CIA gave Hussein the names of many thousands of alleged "communists" to destroy in the 1970s just as they gave Indonesia's Suharto 500,000 names of leftists to murder. Yes, Hussein was a tyrant but an American puppet all the same who would still be a favoured American client had he not erred and attacked America's cheap oil source, Kuwait.
The truth of the matter is that the American Government has no cleaner hands than Hussein. It's just that Americans are a gullible uncritical audience who, for all intents and purposes, appear to be unaware of their own real danger - homegrown fascism.

Sara


Please post news from RELIABLE sources

11.06.2003 17:35

Posting articles from Arab supremacist sites like the extremist propaganda source arabnews.com is as bad as posting articles from Spearhead. It discredits your cause and cheapens the purpose of Indymedia. Please try and post from reliable sources.

tired of the lies


The 'price' is demise

11.06.2003 18:33

The US govt., by its actions, has shown us that even by its own criteria the sanctions weren't 'worth it.' The intention of the sanctions was to precipitate Saddam's fall and the ushering in of a pro US puppet. Then we get the invasion (more accurately termed Gulf Slaughter II) which was meant to obtain the same objective. However, there is now a major problem - notably passionate Iraqi resistance to subjegation by an imperial power which, in itself, could ignite a pan-Arab liberation movement - not exactly a rosy scenario for 'the West'.

A hegemon that continually screws up, severly damaging its own interests (and those of its backers) is not a hegemon that is likely to be trusted to run an empire.

Victory to the resistance!

no-one


tired of the lies?

11.06.2003 22:32

The original source, if you could have been arsed reading the first few words, was the Deutsche Presse.

Now if you're going to malign them because it's not the ADL, Searchlight, Fox News, or whatever bullshit you usually believe, you're welcome.

Just because it's republished in the Arab press doesn't make it true.

What is Arab supremacism anyway? Is it a new Ziocodeword for anti-zionism?

Bri.

Brian