home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT0139>
- <title>
- July 12, 1993: Broken Spirits
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 12, 1993 Reno:The Real Thing
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- IRAQ, Page 46
- Broken Spirits
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Isolated and impoverished, Iraqis must endure Saddam and the
- U.S. missile attack designed to unnerve him
- </p>
- <p>By LARA MARLOWE/BAGHDAD
- </p>
- <p> Saddam Hussein dies and goes to hell, begins a new joke making
- the rounds in the Iraqi capital. Because his sins are so great,
- Saddam is sent to a special section reserved for those doomed
- to burn the longest. But the fear imposed by the Iraqi dictator's
- secret police extends even to the netherworld. As Saddam is
- dragged toward the flames, his fellow sinners break into a chant,
- a variation of a political slogan often heard at official rallies
- during the Gulf War. Instead of addressing George Bush with
- defiant assurances of how much they love their leader, they
- now direct their warning to God: "Allah, Allah, listen well,
- we all love Saddam Hussein."
- </p>
- <p> Genuine expressions of love for Saddam are rare and hardly ever
- spontaneous in postwar Iraq--especially in the aftermath of
- the June 27 cruise-missile attack on Baghdad. Yet as they cleared
- rubble and replaced shattered windows, Iraqis blamed Bill Clinton--not their own leadership--for the deaths of eight civilians,
- including well-loved Iraqi artist Layla Attar. "People don't
- understand why the Americans are still punishing them," said
- a senior diplomat in Baghdad. "The economic sanctions and these
- not-so-surgical strikes don't affect Saddam or his network.
- The damage to his intelligence services was minimal."
- </p>
- <p> Still, the unexpected attack gave a psychological jolt to the
- Iraqi leadership. Fearing further action by the U.S., the regime
- backtracked on early threats of retaliation. On Thursday Deputy
- Prime Minister Tariq Aziz told CNN, "We are not contemplating
- an act of revenge...That's not going to serve our interests."
- For Saddam, well known for his brash threats to unleash the
- "mother of all battles" on the American-led Gulf War coalition,
- Aziz's appeal for "normal, quiet relations with the United States"
- must have been almost as painful as hellfire.
- </p>
- <p> Two missile attacks against Baghdad so far this year and the
- economic deprivation wrought by almost three years of economic
- sanctions have not led the Iraqi people to rise up against Saddam
- Hussein. His people fear him; some hate him and ardently wish
- for his death. But there are no signs of destabilization within
- the regime. So why has the Iraqi regime changed tack? Sheer
- exhaustion, it would seem. While Saddam's hold on power appears
- secure, his subjects are hungry, his weapons of mass destruction
- are dismantled, and his economy is a shambles. "They just don't
- have the ability to retaliate," says a diplomat. "If they didn't
- blow up planes and embassies or kidnap Americans during the
- Gulf War, they're not going to start now. Saddam has realized
- he has to come to some sort of modus vivendi with the West."
- </p>
- <p> Despite his missile attack, Bill Clinton is no match for George
- Bush in Iraqi demonology. A new mosaic showing Bush's grimacing
- face was recently laid at the entrance to Baghdad's al-Rasheed
- Hotel so that visitors cannot help stepping on the former President's
- face. BUSH IS CRIMINAL, it says in English and Arabic. Although
- they show no hostility toward visiting Americans, Iraqis are
- angry that they--not the government foisted upon them--are
- the ones who always suffer. At the Lawyers' Union in Baghdad's
- fashionable Mansour district, a white-haired attorney captures
- Iraqis' twin resentments in his rage: "Did Bill Clinton have
- to murder Layla Attar to prove how powerful he is?" he demands.
- "Did that strike oust Saddam? No. So what's the point?"
- </p>
- <p> Another lawyer, seated beneath a towering portrait of Saddam
- Hussein framed in gold Christmas-tree tinsel, makes a veiled
- appeal for a more decisive solution: "The U.S. government knows
- the right way. They know where everyone is. They know everything.
- I can't believe they don't know how to do it." A middle-aged
- working-class veteran of the wars with Iran and Kuwait, fearful
- enough to ask that neither his name nor occupation be revealed,
- claims that 70% of all Iraqis wish the Americans would kill
- Saddam or at least "take Saddam and his Republican Guard to
- the U.S. and leave us in peace."
- </p>
- <p> The Iraqi President's entourage, composed mostly of family members,
- remains loyal. "They know very well that if anything happens
- to him they will all be murdered," says a diplomat. And Saddam's
- regime remains still very much in control. Despite the damage
- wreaked by Tomahawk missiles on Iraqi Intelligence Service headquarters,
- at least half a dozen intelligence services remain active. Nor
- is it certain that the agency targeted was the most important
- of these. Saddam's half brother, Sabawi Hassan Hussein, heads
- the powerful Directorate of General Security. And another half
- brother, Watban Ibrahim al-Hassan, is the Interior Minister.
- </p>
- <p> The mood in Baghdad is one of despair and humiliation. "I am
- hungry, he is hungry, all the people in Iraq are hungry," says
- Abbas, a vendor in Baghdad's Arabi Street market, where Iraqi-made
- plastic sandals, shampoo and deodorant are almost the only goods
- to be found. "We want to eat. We don't care about politics."
- An Iraqi journalist says the U.S. was mistaken if it thought
- the Iraqi people could be driven to overthrow their government.
- "The policy has backfired. People's only concern now is to feed
- their children. The game played by the West has served the regime,
- because when you starve people they don't think about anything
- else."
- </p>
- <p> Economic sanctions, even more than the missile attacks, have
- trained Iraqis' anger on the U.S. and the U.N. "The U.S. said
- it wanted to defend Saudi Arabia," says the white-haired lawyer.
- "Fine. The U.S. expelled Iraq from Kuwait. Fine. But starving
- 18 million Iraqis is too much." Negotiations on the export of
- Iraqi oil are scheduled to resume July 7. The Iraqi government
- has until now rejected U.N. resolutions that would enable it
- to sell $1.6 billion worth of oil abroad; more than two-thirds
- of the proceeds would go to war reparations to Kuwait and for
- U.N. expenses in Iraq. Officials argue that the remaining few
- hundred million dollars would scarcely alleviate food shortages.
- The Health Ministry claims that it needs $3 billion a year for
- medical imports alone.
- </p>
- <p> Physical isolation also weighs heavily on Iraqis. Hostile neighbors--Turkey, Iran, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia--surround them. Even
- once friendly Jordan has distanced itself from Saddam since
- the Gulf War. International flights are banned under the sanctions,
- and the 621-mile trek across the burning desert to Amman is
- the only way out of the country. A recently imposed exit tax
- of 15,000 dinars (more than $200 at black-market rates) a person,
- nearly 20 times the average monthly salary, has made travel
- virtually impossible for most Iraqis.
- </p>
- <p> "Iraq is like a criminal sentenced to a very long prison term,"
- says a diplomat in Baghdad. "Whatever they do, it's not enough
- to make a difference." Under Security Council Resolution 687,
- the U.N. could reconsider economic sanctions if Iraq destroyed
- its weapons of mass destruction. "But the U.N. keeps raising
- the bar they have to jump over," says another diplomat. "Now
- they are being required to comply with more resolutions passed
- after 687." Outstanding issues include U.N. insistence on helicopter
- flights over Baghdad and the placing of surveillance cameras
- in weapons facilities.
- </p>
- <p> Iraqi officials say they have been trying to settle their differences
- with the U.S. since Bill Clinton was inaugurated. "Some of us
- thought Clinton would concentrate on domestic policy and ease
- the pressure on us," says a high-ranking Iraqi official. But
- Saddam's charm offensive, which included a pledge not to challenge
- aircraft over no-fly zones in southern and northern Iraq, found
- no favor in Washington. "The Iraqis were hoping that sooner
- or later, if they did not provoke Washington, the U.S. and its
- Arab allies would realize they need a strong Iraq to counterbalance
- Iran," says a diplomat in Baghdad. The Iraqis were bitterly
- disappointed by the new U.S. policy of "dual containment" enunciated
- by Martin Indyk, senior director for Near East and South Asian
- affairs at the National Security Council. He smashed Iraqi hopes
- that the West and other Arabs would once again build Iraq up
- as a bulwark against Iran. Indyk argued that Iraq and Iran were
- equally inimical to American interests in the Middle East, and
- suggested that the U.S. back the ineffective Iraqi opposition-in-exile.
- </p>
- <p> But if Iraq was seeking better relations with the U.S., why
- would it plot to assassinate George Bush? Though most found
- the circumstantial evidence compiled by U.S. intelligence to
- be compelling, Iraqi officials claim the plot was fabricated
- by the Kuwaitis and seized upon by Clinton to raise his standing
- at home--a suspicion widely shared by foreign diplomats in
- Baghdad, who harbor reservations about U.S. Ambassador Madeleine
- Albright's presentation to the Security Council. "The proof
- given by the Americans was not very convincing," said the senior
- diplomat. "Confessions of people still on trial are not acceptable."
- </p>
- <p> "In the 2 1/2 years since the Gulf War, American policy toward
- Iraq has been ineffective," notes a European diplomat. "They
- were aiming to get Saddam Hussein out of power. They have not.
- They wanted to compensate Kuwait and finance U.N. operations
- through oil sales; they have not. Furthermore, American propaganda
- has failed to convince the Iraqi people that the sanctions are
- the fault of their own government."
- </p>
- <p> So despite the Tomahawks that hit Baghdad last week, Saddam
- is likely to remain in power, even as his people become more
- dispirited. Says a diplomat in Iraq: "The more you beat him,
- the stronger he becomes." That is a dilemma Bill Clinton seems
- no closer to resolving than George Bush was.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-