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- <text id=91TT0213>
- <link 91TT0548>
- <link 91TT0535>
- <link 91TT0380>
- <title>
- Jan. 28, 1991: What Kind Of Peace?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
- The Persian Gulf War:Desert Storm
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Jan. 28, 1991 War In The Gulf
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 38
- THE CONSEQUENCES
- What Kind of Peace?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The allies could win the war but lose out in the region if
- Saddam's defeat fuels extremism or undermines existing states
- </p>
- <p>By LISA BEYER -- Reported by Jon D. Hull/Jerusalem, Scott
- MacLeod/Amman and Christopher Ogden/Washington
- </p>
- <p> World War I led to the Bolshevik Revolution, a power vacuum
- in Central Europe that was eventually filled by Adolf Hitler,
- and a British-French carve-up of the Middle East that 72 years
- later still forms the background for bloodshed. World War II
- boosted the Soviet Union to the status of a superpower
- dominating Eastern Europe and challenging the other superpower,
- the U.S., in a cold war that began almost as soon as the bombs
- stopped falling. The Korean War ended with U.S. forces
- stationed approximately on the line along which the shooting
- began. In the almost 38 years that have intervened, no President
- has found the time to be right for withdrawing those troops.
- </p>
- <p> All of which goes to show that wars almost invariably have
- consequences that the victors never foresee and certainly do
- not intend. There is no reason to believe that the war against
- Saddam Hussein will be any different.
- </p>
- <p> The rosiest predictions for the war's aftermath envision a
- solution to the Palestinian problem and the emergence of new
- collective security arrangements that would calm the
- tempestuous region. The darkest prognoses foresee a
- Lebanon-like partitioning of Iraq and Jordan and a fueling of
- nationalist and Islamic extremism that would threaten Western
- interests and perhaps even bring down moderate Arab regimes.
- The array of possibilities is bewildering even to those who are
- leading the war effort. "Some sort of planning needs to be
- done," conceded Defense Secretary Dick Cheney while appearing
- before the House Armed Services Committee last December.
- "Everybody's been so busy dealing with the crisis of the moment
- that there really hasn't been much effort put into longer range
- focus."
- </p>
- <p> The repercussions of Desert Storm, however, will be far more
- than a footnote to a glorious chapter of U.S. military history.
- "The only reason to make war is to make peace at the end," says
- Mohamad Milhem, an executive-committee member of the Palestine
- Liberation Organization. "If at the end there is instability
- and no peace, what is the point in making war?" The shape of
- the postwar order will depend to a great extent on how the
- various parties embroiled in the conflict survive the cataclysm
- of the battle.
- </p>
- <p> IRAQ. Early in the gulf crisis, the Bush Administration
- realized that it would be unwise to liquidate the country's
- military altogether. "If Iraq is totally out of the picture,"
- says William Quandt, a Middle East expert at the Brookings
- Institution, "there is no counterbalance to Iran." At the same
- time, the U.S. and its allies are determined to wipe out Iraq's
- weapons of mass destruction and seriously impair its
- conventional war machine. Reconciling those two aims requires
- a delicate balancing act. "You want an Iraq weak enough that
- it can't threaten the weakest of its neighbors, yet strong
- enough to deter the strongest of its neighbors," says Les
- Aspin, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee.
- </p>
- <p> The crucial question of who would rule a defeated Iraq is
- a black hole of speculation. It is conceivable that Saddam
- could survive and continue to govern. Though Washington would
- cheer Saddam's fall, the official mission of Desert Storm is
- to force him from Kuwait, not from Baghdad. Should Saddam
- manage to muddle through, Iraq's future would probably look a
- lot like its recent past: authoritarian, militaristic,
- confrontational -- and perhaps more isolated than ever.
- </p>
- <p> If Saddam does go, finding an acceptable successor will be
- a formidable challenge. Saddam's shoot-first,
- ask-questions-never policy of dealing with perceived
- challengers has eliminated virtually everyone who knows
- anything about running the country and is not marred by
- complicity in his roguery. Neutralizing the many close
- relatives Saddam has placed in high positions would also be
- difficult.
- </p>
- <p> While the Bush Administration concentrates mainly on winning
- a military victory, other nations in the region are keenly
- interested in the shape of postwar Iraq. The country's three
- northern neighbors -- Syria, Turkey and Iran -- may have
- designs on Iraq. Syria's President Hafez Assad has long claimed
- to be the sole legitimate leader of the Pan-Arab Ba`ath Party,
- rival factions of which rule his country and Saddam's. Turkey
- has historical claims on Iraq's oil-rich Mosul province in the
- north. And Shi`ite-led Iran could easily justify a land snatch
- as a means of liberating the Shi`ite majority in Iraq, which
- is dominated by a Sunni minority. Should moves to sunder Iraq
- begin, the country's Kurdish minority might rise up to carve
- its own state out of the north. That, in turn, might spark a
- rebellion among Turkey's Kurds.
- </p>
- <p> The partitioning of Iraq would be a tragedy not only for the
- Iraqis but for the entire Middle East as well. Each of the
- borders in the region is as arbitrary as the next, and once one
- frontier is successfully challenged, all the others will be up
- for grabs. No regime will feel stable, no state secure.
- </p>
- <p> SYRIA. Before the gulf crisis, Hafez Assad was most closely
- associated in Western capitals with major-league terrorism
- abroad and savage repression at home. Since he contributed
- 19,000 troops to the anti-Saddam front, however, Assad has
- become a comrade-in-arms. President Bush held talks with him
- last November in Geneva, becoming the first U.S. President
- since Jimmy Carter, in 1977, to meet with the Syrian leader.
- Meanwhile, Britain restored diplomatic ties and the European
- Community resumed economic aid.
- </p>
- <p> The gulf crisis came at an opportune moment for Assad, who
- has wanted to edge closer to the West anyway since his old
- patron, the Soviet Union, was no longer able to keep his
- military outfitted in the style to which he had grown
- accustomed. Still, Assad has kept his newfound allies at arm's
- length. While joining forces with the U.S.-led coalition
- against Saddam, Assad has been careful to maintain his
- nationalistic credentials within the Arab world by periodically
- bashing Washington and Israel in his public statements.
- </p>
- <p> The aloofness is mutual, and for good reason: it is not easy
- to forget Assad's actions, like the 1982 massacre of some
- 20,000 civilians in the Syrian town of Hama while routing out
- Muslim fundamentalists, and his sponsorship of terrorists.
- "Assad's grisly record makes him unfit to serve as anything
- more than a temporary and tactical ally," says Daniel Pipes,
- director of the Foreign Policy Research Institute in
- Philadelphia.
- </p>
- <p> Not everyone agrees. "It's possible that the West can work
- with Assad to make a better Mideast," says a senior Western
- diplomat in Damascus. What is not in dispute is the notion
- that, with or without the West's friendship, Assad would jump
- at the chance to become the unrivaled leader of the
- Pan-Arabists following Saddam's fall. Considering Assad's
- success in asserting Syrian control over Lebanon late last year,
- his room to maneuver already appears greater than it was
- before the crisis erupted.
- </p>
- <p> SAUDI ARABIA AND THE GULF STATES. Once Saddam is defeated
- -- assuming he is -- the Saudis and their gulf neighbors will
- enjoy only momentary relief. Saddam's easy conquest of Kuwait
- showed how vulnerable Saudi Arabia is to aggression, a weakness
- that must be redressed.
- </p>
- <p> Some improved arrangement for collective security is sure
- to be worked out, possibly within the framework of the Gulf
- Cooperation Council, created in 1981 to promote economic
- integration in the region. But even if Saudi Arabia and the
- gulf states pool their resources, they will remain weak. Egypt
- could, in exchange for vast infusions of aid, agree to field
- large numbers of troops to help defend these countries.
- </p>
- <p> Egypt's help, however, will not be enough. Security
- arrangements with the U.S. will undoubtedly be strengthened.
- As in the past, King Fahd and the gulf Emirs will seek to make
- those ties as invisible as possible. There may be more ships
- just off the coast; large caches of American tanks, planes and
- weaponry will probably be maintained in the event that U.S.
- troops must return in massive numbers.
- </p>
- <p> In bolstering those ties with foreigners, the gulf and Saudi
- rulers must carefully balance external threats with internal
- ones. Even the smallest step toward the Western camp risks a
- backlash from the religious right, especially in puritanical
- Saudi Arabia. From the beginning of the gulf crisis, there have
- been ominous rumblings in the Saudi mosques -- and indeed
- throughout the Muslim world -- about the apostasy of having
- infidels defend the country that is host to Islam's holiest
- places. There could be increased demands on the oil sheikdoms
- to share more of their wealth with poorer states in the region.
- </p>
- <p> A related worry is that the presence of Western forces has
- encouraged local proponents of democracy to press gently for
- more openness. The progressive reforms expected in a liberated
- Kuwait will bring still more pressure on the Saudis. Religious
- hard-liners would resist such moves, perhaps violently, thereby
- adding to the pressure on the Saudi royal family.
- </p>
- <p> ISRAEL AND THE PALESTINIANS. Both have much to win and much
- to lose in the gulf confrontation. Israel's gain would be the
- defeat and containment of its strongest Arab foe. Its loss --
- at least in the eyes of many citizens -- would be heightened
- pressure, from the U.S. among others, to resolve the
- Arab-Israeli conflict by giving the Palestinians a homeland.
- If that does not happen, the Palestinians, having lined up
- behind Saddam Hussein, will find themselves poorer, weaker and
- more alien ated than ever before.
- </p>
- <p> While Palestinian support for Saddam confounds many
- Americans, the U.S. may have no choice but to seriously address
- their plight soon after the liberation of Kuwait. Reason: the
- U.S. will owe at least that much to its Arab allies, who,
- though infuriated by the Palestinians' crowing for Saddam,
- remain publicly committed to the idea of a Palestinian
- homeland.
- </p>
- <p> The prospects for progress are small, given Jerusalem's
- strong opposition even to discussing the idea of withdrawing
- from the occupied West Bank and Gaza, much less allowing a
- Palestinian homeland. The U.S., whose $3 billion annually in
- aid accounts for 7% of Israel's GNP, could bring definitive
- pressure on Jerusalem to relent, but the Palestinians do not
- expect that to happen.
- </p>
- <p> If the Palestinians feel let down again, they will almost
- certainly become still more militant. Among the likely results
- are an aggravation of international terrorism and more
- bloodshed in the occupied territories. Already the moderate
- elements of the P.L.O. have been hit hard. Chairman Yasser
- Arafat has managed to lose both the backing of his wealthy Arab
- patrons (for supporting Saddam) and that of the street (for not
- supporting Saddam enough). Last week Arafat's faction suffered
- a crushing blow when a Palestinian, apparently working for
- P.L.O. dissident Abu Nidal, assassinated Abu Iyad, the
- organization's No. 2 leader, and Abu Hol, its chief of internal
- security.
- </p>
- <p> JORDAN. King Hussein's worst fear is that Iraq and Israel
- will use his country as their battlefield. The most dangerous
- threat is that Israel will fly through Jordanian airspace to
- retaliate for Iraqi missile strikes. Hussein has vowed to
- repulse any intrusion, but that would draw him into a conflict
- in which he has nothing to gain. Even if Jordan manages to stay
- out of the actual fighting, there are other possibilities for
- its destabilization. Aggravated by the gulf conflict, tensions
- between the country's Palestinian majority and Bedouin
- minority, to which the King belongs, could spark an uprising.
- </p>
- <p> Many Palestinians are concerned that Israel will use a war
- to expel thousands of them, though this is unlikely unless
- Israel and Jordan become involved in a major conflict. Some
- Israeli right-wingers have long advocated the creation of a
- Palestinian homeland in Jordan. The current government realizes
- that wholesale deportations would inflame world opinion. But
- should they occur nonetheless, they would provoke unrest on the
- east bank of the Jordan River.
- </p>
- <p> The failure to deal with the Palestinian problem could
- likewise stir rebellion in Jordan. Even if Hussein weathers
- such storms, the Jordanian economy has been wrecked by the
- cutoff of trade with Iraq prescribed by U.N. sanctions; the
- specter of the 1989 riots prompted by government austerity
- measures still looms large.
- </p>
- <p> As much as the King is cursed among Saddam's opponents for
- his neutrality in the gulf conflict -- often miscast as support
- for Baghdad -- the probable alternatives to his rule would
- scarcely suit their interests. Among the leading contenders
- would be a radical Palestinian administration or a
- fundamentalist regime.
- </p>
- <p> THE U.S. In swatting one obnoxious troublemaker in the
- person of Saddam Hussein, the U.S. runs the real risk of seeing
- others take his place. To whatever extent it may seem
- irrational to Western minds, Saddam has made himself a hero to
- many Arabs by confronting the West and Israel -- no matter how
- corrupt and selfish his motives. Thus smiting the Iraqi leader
- could make him a martyr and fertilize the ground for his
- successors, who would do their best to thwart U.S. interests
- in the region.
- </p>
- <p> "The new ideology of the Middle East is anti-Americanism,"
- says Asad Abdul Rahman, a political scientist at Jordan
- University. "Regimes that are seen as nothing but stooges of
- the Americans could be toppled. That could be coupled with all
- kinds of violence, anti-American acts, the establishment of
- radical regimes." Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is
- considered particularly exposed because he has allied himself
- so closely with the U.S. Says Amos Perlmutter, a political
- scientist at American University in Washington: "Mubarak will
- be in the cross hairs of every terrorist."
- </p>
- <p> Much will depend on how Washington behaves in the aftermath
- of war. A quick withdrawal of American forces would give the
- lie to a loony, but widespread, Middle East conspiracy theory:
- that the U.S. provoked the gulf crisis -- actually encouraged
- Saddam to invade Kuwait -- in order to colonize the region. The
- degree to which Washington pressures Israel to withdraw from
- the occupied territories and, ultimately, give the Palestinians
- a homeland will also determine the level of American
- credibility in the region.
- </p>
- <p> However skillfully the U.S. and its allies manage their
- expected victory, the Middle East will not soon overcome the
- violence and instability that have plagued the region for the
- better part of this century. But the coalition must make every
- effort to turn the momentum of battlefield success into lasting
- political solutions. For the worst of the end-game scenarios
- will be avoided only if a new peace is sought as aggressively
- as the war was fought.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-