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- THE GULF, Page 32Measuring the Embargo's Bite
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- Even if some countries relent and send emergency food and
- medicine to Baghdad, Saddam still faces a cash crunch
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- Iraqi television's ubiquitous stand-in for Saddam Hussein
- faced the camera with a doleful expression. "The children of
- Iraq," he claimed last week, "are dying because they are being
- deprived of their food and milk and medicine." With the
- U.N.-backed embargo only five weeks old, Baghdad's charge
- seemed extremely dubious. Diplomats in the Iraqi capital
- reported that despite lines at bakeries and preparations for
- rationing, no staples have disappeared from the shelves.
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- Precisely when the economic pressure will begin to hurt and
- whether it will force Saddam to pull out of Kuwait as the U.N.
- demands have become the biggest imponderables in the gulf
- confrontation. Iraq earns almost all its foreign exchange by
- selling oil abroad, and it imports three-quarters of its food
- and much of its manufactured goods. Thus economic sanctions are
- likely to hit Iraq hard, but only over six months to a year.
-
- Analysts offer different estimates of how long food supplies
- might last, though most agree that no Iraqis will be
- malnourished for at least a year. Even then, food will not
- provide the strongest lever for pushing Iraqi troops out of
- Kuwait. Iraq had a bumper wheat harvest this year and is
- seasonally self-sufficient in many fruits and vegetables. Much
- more of the country can -- and no doubt will -- be used to grow
- food.
-
- There is also a loophole in the Security Council resolution
- imposing the embargo. It provides that for humanitarian
- purposes, food and medical relief shipments to Iraq will be
- allowed. A Security Council advisory committee met last week
- to work out a definition of "humanitarian" but got nowhere. It
- is scheduled to meet again this week.
-
- In fact, many nations would decide for themselves. Jordan
- even now says it will not interrupt delivery of food and
- medicine to Iraq or its import of Iraqi oil. China and Iran
- hint they are rethinking the question. Altogether, nine
- countries have indicated that they may seek exemptions from the
- embargo. From these early signals it is clear that starvation
- will not become a U.N. weapon. The U.S. does not want to starve
- Iraq either; its plan is to make Iraqis' diet so minimal that
- they will become resentful and discontented.
-
- At the same time, Iraq's semideveloped economy is likely to
- grind on in straitened circumstances for many months. The need
- for imported clothing and household appliances is not pressing.
- As the shortage of spare parts becomes acute, water and power
- supplies will only gradually begin to decline. "There is scope
- for flexibility on Iraq's part for making do in a
- self-contained economy," says Marshall Wiley, a former U.S.
- ambassador to Oman.
-
- Nor is Saddam's biggest asset, his 1 million-man military,
- in danger of fading away. Iraq has stockpiled conventional
- weapons and spare parts and is continuing to assemble exotic
- ones -- including missiles and chemical warheads. "Iraq is
- reasonably well stocked with parts and ammunition, but only
- until a shooting war breaks out," says a White House official.
- "Then they're out of everything."
-
- Saddam's most painful shortage, the one that might break
- him, is money. Iraq earned more than $15 billion from its
- exports last year, and 97% of that came from oil. Now it cannot
- sell abroad, and no money is coming into the country. It has
- already lost $2.1 billion in potential oil income since it
- invaded Kuwait in early August. In due course, Baghdad's
- treasury will be empty.
-
- Thus far, friendly Arab neighbors like Jordan and Yemen have
- been willing to supply some of Iraq's needs with road and air
- shipments. Professional smugglers are already operating along
- the borders with Turkey and Iran and in small dhows on the gulf
- coast. But blockade runners demand cash payments, usually far
- higher than the market price, for their goods. "If Iraq has
- money, things will continue to get in, including food," says
- Rodney Wilson, head of the economics department at the
- University of Durham, England. "But now there's no money coming
- in, and nobody is going to provide credit."
-
- The key question is how much foreign exchange Iraq has and
- how long it will last. The higher estimates put Saddam's
- reserves at $10 billion to $12 billion. Last year the country
- spent more than $17 billion on imports. Though Baghdad will buy
- what it can this year, the cost of embargo breaking will
- increase and the money will run out.
-
- One way or another, the sanctions calculation seems to come
- back to the same time frame: six months to a year. If the
- international coalition holds together that long, Saddam should
- be hurting badly. The question then will be whether the pain
- will force him to withdraw from Kuwait or push him into violent
- attack. While the embargo is widely seen as an alternative to
- war, it is still possible that it might lead to one.
-
-
- By Bruce W. Nelan. Reported by Gisela Bolte/Washington and
- William Dowell/Cairo, with other bureaus.
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-
- ____________________________________________________________ HOW
- LONG IRAQ'S STOCKPILES MIGHT LAST
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- -- Rice 2 - 4 months -- Wheat 5 - 6 months -- Sugar
- 2 - 3 weeks -- Barley 9 - 10 months -- Corn 2 - 3 months
- -- Spare parts if war breaks out 2 weeks - 2 months --
- Cash reserves $5 billion - $12 billion (including $2-$4
- billion stolen from Kuwait)
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