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- <text id=93TT0953>
- <title>
- Jan. 25, 1993: A Spanking for Saddam
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 25, 1993 Stand and Deliver: Bill Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- IRAQ, Page 44
- A Spanking for Saddam
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>But the U.S. raid failed to quell the Baghdad leader. How Clinton
- treats him will depend on what the dictator does next--and
- what he needs to prove.
- </p>
- <p>By JILL SMOLOWE - With reporting by Dean Fischer/Kuwait City,
- William Mader/London and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> George Bush is a man of caution, but not infinitely so.
- Saddam Hussein sees violence as a useful tool. The two were
- destined to fight again. With one eye on the history books and
- another on the sandglass marking the final hours of his
- presidency, Bush seemed determined to show Saddam Hussein one
- last time that he was not to be trifled with. Saddam, fully
- relishing the irony that his own reign would outlast that of his
- chief nemesis, could not resist tweaking Bush. This time Bush
- had no patience for the game and ordered a bombing raid that--at least briefly--forced Saddam to retreat.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond the personal animosity, though, Iraq and the U.S.
- are engaged in a crucial showdown over international order.
- Even as Iraqis mopped up after an allied bombing raid,
- Washington and Baghdad exchanged fresh threats about whether
- Iraq was or was not complying with U.N. requirements. Instead
- of retreating Iraq challenged U.S. planes over the weekend in
- the northern no-fly zone. After the U.S. shot down a threatening
- MiG-29 Washington hinted at stronger retaliation. Coming just
- days before Bush was to vacate the Oval Office, it was
- impossible to ignore the raw personal edge that drove both
- leaders' actions. But together they have bequeathed to Bill
- Clinton his own tough question: What happens next?
- </p>
- <p> The allied air strike was intended to send Saddam a
- political admonition to reform his behavior, rather than deliver
- a crippling military blow. The modest raid by 110 U.S., British
- and French warplanes on four missile sites and four command
- posts in southern Iraq was, as one U.S. official noted, "a
- spanking, not a beating"--and an inefficient one at that. The
- attack destroyed only one of the missile batteries the U.S.
- claimed were threatening allied aircraft in the skies over Iraq,
- although officials insisted that all but one of the eight
- targets were at least temporarily put out of action. More
- important, they argued, the bombing demonstrated allied resolve
- to enforce U.N. restrictions imposed after the Gulf War. Based
- on past experience, Saddam may back down for a time, but the
- raid neither damaged his hold on power nor diminished the
- problem he poses for the incoming Clinton Administration. "This
- business with Saddam," said White House spokesman Marlin
- Fitzwater, "is not finished, I can assure you."
- </p>
- <p> The President-elect did not need the reminder. Dipping his
- toe into the Iraqi morass the day of the raid, he stumbled. In
- an interview with the New York Times, he called the raid "the
- right thing to do," then seemed to open a small window for
- Saddam: "If you want a different relationship with me, you could
- begin by upholding the U.N. requirements to change your
- behavior. I'm not obsessed with the man." The softer rhetoric
- set off speculation that he might ease U.S. policy toward
- Baghdad. Clinton angrily denounced what he called a
- misinterpretation, and the tenor of the whole interview
- indicates that he has no intention of departing from Bush's hard
- line.
- </p>
- <p> But in the world of diplomacy, where perception and
- precise language are everything, the incident pointed up
- Clinton's unsure handling of foreign affairs. British officials
- were particularly leery of one Clinton remark: "I always tell
- everybody, I'm a Baptist; I believe in deathbed conversions."
- Said a senior British diplomat: "We don't need a Southern
- Baptist attitude, as we had with Jimmy Carter. We need
- pragmatism."
- </p>
- <p> For Bush, the aim was more than a last-minute potshot at
- his most intransigent rival. He wanted to send a message to
- Saddam that even though he is about to leave office, the Gulf
- War coalition remains firm in its demand that Iraq comply with
- U.N. resolutions. Given the military options available, the
- restraint of the operation shows the pains Bush took to ensure
- that his key allies, Britain and France, would sign on and to
- engage the support of the entire U.N. Security Council. By not
- overreacting to an escalating series of provocations by Saddam,
- the Western leaders reassured their electorates that they need
- not fear resumption of a full-scale war. Bush's moves were also
- calibrated to enlist the support of Arab allies, most important
- Saudi Arabia, which are wary of another divisive confrontation.
- </p>
- <p> What Bush probably wanted most was what he has failed to
- achieve all along: to provoke the Iraqi people into taking
- matters into their own hands. This raid alone had little chance
- of accomplishing that. But "if Saddam goes on playing the same
- game, he can expect the same response," says a British diplomat.
- "We hope some of those around him will see that the only
- sensible alternative is to get rid of him."
- </p>
- <p> Saddam's main motive, however, is survival. "Saddam has
- convinced himself he won the Gulf War," says Laurie Mylroie, a
- fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. "He
- wants to mark his victory by humiliating Bush in the closing
- days of his Administration." Saddam also may have been testing
- Clinton's mettle by warning that he, Saddam, was capable of
- stirring up trouble to divert the President-elect from his
- domestic agenda. Upstaging Clinton's Inaugural preparations was
- hardly a gambit to win and influence Friends of Bill.
- </p>
- <p> But Saddam's primary audience was elsewhere. His
- chest-pounding provocations were a classic
- barbarians-at-the-gate strategy, designed to deflect attention
- from the dismal economic situation at home, heightened by U.N.
- sanctions, that has left Iraqis hunting daily for food. His
- police apparatus has reasserted its grip since the war, so
- citizens harbor few doubts that Saddam is still in charge. But
- he may have cause to worry about his 400,000-man armed forces.
- Kurds and other opponents have spread stories of anti-Saddam
- moles within the armed forces, particularly those stationed far
- from Baghdad. "I think a substantial portion of the military is
- dissatisfied with him," says a U.S. government expert on Iraq.
- By creating a crisis, Saddam is able to keep his army on alert
- and out of politics.
- </p>
- <p> For audiences beyond his borders, the aim is to shatter
- the Gulf War coalition, weaken resolve at the U.N. and
- transform the U.S. into the bully. "He may sense that the unity
- of the sanctions regime is starting to fray," says a State
- Department official. "The Russians have lots of things at home
- on their minds, and the Europeans have the Balkans." Saddam
- wants to ease the constraints imposed on his sovereignty and
- remove the conflict from the U.N. context: within those
- corridors, Iraq is putting itself forward as accommodating. "In
- our culture, once somebody comes to you with military threats,
- you don't respond. If someone comes to us in a nice way, we
- respond," Iraqi Ambassador Nizar Hamdoon insists. Would Saddam?
- "Yes."
- </p>
- <p> Saddam is particularly interested in exploiting Arab
- perceptions that the West applies an anti-Muslim double
- standard. He massages Arab resentment that the same allied
- forces that retaliate so quickly against Iraq remain indifferent
- to the Serbian slaughter of Bosnia's Muslims and turn a blind
- eye to Israel's expulsion of more than 400 Palestinians. Said
- the Turkish daily Cumhuriyet: "How could the U.S. start this
- operation against the background of public opinion horrified by
- events in Bosnia? With 10,000 women raped and people jammed into
- internment camps in Bosnia, this bombing is inexplicable."
- </p>
- <p> For Iraq's close neighbors, particularly the Kuwaitis,
- there are more specific worries. Saddam failed to meet a U.N.
- deadline to remove six police posts that remain on Kuwaiti soil.
- The diplomatic community is not very hopeful that Bush's air
- strike will have much influence on the situation. "I don't think
- it will cause Saddam much pain," noted a Western envoy in
- Kuwait. "And I doubt it will deter him. He has a long history
- of miscalculations." Adds a Kuwaiti businessman: "We are behind
- the U.S. action, but we believe that Saddam will continue to
- defy the U.N."
- </p>
- <p> From the Western vantage point, the raid was inevitable,
- as it became the only way to make Saddam abide by U.N.
- strictures. Saddam's movement of missiles into both the southern
- and northern no-fly zones late last year was provocation enough.
- But he virtually invited retaliation when he banned flights by
- U.N. inspectors and staged cross-border salvage raids into
- Kuwait last week on four successive days.
- </p>
- <p> The allies responded to none of this with haste. Plans for
- the raid began months before Christmas. Bush, in phone
- consultations with British Prime Minister John Major and French
- President Francois Mitterrand, agreed that the violations of the
- no-fly zones could not go unanswered. Top military staff at all
- three defense ministries were instructed to draft a variety of
- options, ranging from a strike on one no-fly zone to a major
- assault on Iraq's airfields, missile bases and
- control-and-command structure. During Bush's New Year's Eve
- visit to Riyadh, he enlisted the cooperation of King Fahd.
- </p>
- <p> British, French and U.S. ambassadors to the U.N. were
- instructed to consult their Chinese and Russian colleagues on
- the Security Council about preparing an ultimatum for Saddam.
- Bush spoke with Russian President Boris Yeltsin, while Secretary
- of State Lawrence Eagleburger contacted his Chinese counterpart.
- With their acquiescence, the ultimatum was delivered on Jan. 6,
- and a day later the allies settled on a limited strike. To keep
- Saddam guessing, they fueled press speculation that the attack
- might be massive.
- </p>
- <p> Then the game began in earnest, as the mission was called
- off a first time, when Saddam seemed to remove the missiles,
- and again last Tuesday because of inclement weather. By
- Wednesday, the skies had largely cleared, and the allies needed
- only to wait for darkness. When the mission was complete, the
- allies had suffered no casualties. Iraq reported that 19 people,
- including two civilians, were killed and 15 wounded. Saddam
- threatened, "We will inflict great humiliation on the infidels."
- </p>
- <p> Saddam's game is hardly over. But if he has taken heart
- from talk of weak resolve on Clinton's part, he will be
- disappointed. The incoming President is likely to pursue the
- same course as Bush.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-