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- <text id=91TT0272>
- <link 91TT0547>
- <link 91TT0323>
- <title>
- Feb. 04, 1991: A War Against The Earth
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 04, 1991 Stalking Saddam
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 32
- ENVIRONMENT
- A War Against the Earth
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Torching oil wells and disgorging crude into the gulf, Saddam
- makes the planet his latest victim
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Anne Constable/London and Ted
- Gup/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The military lexicon needs a new term: "eco-war." What
- better way to describe the acts of environmental carnage
- committed last week in the Persian Gulf, where the air is thick
- with the smoke from burning oil wells and a wide swath of crude
- petroleum is fouling the water and devastating wildlife? If
- these disasters brought to mind the Exxon Valdez, the news of
- air attacks on nuclear- and chemical-weapons facilities raised
- the specter of Chernobyl and Bhopal. The environment itself has
- become both a weapon and a victim.
- </p>
- <p> A first taste of possible nightmares to come arrived early
- last week, when a number of oil wells and storage tanks were
- set afire at Al-Wafra field in southern Kuwait and at the
- Shuaiba industrial complex just north of Mina Al-Ahmadi. U.S.
- and Saudi officials claimed that the fires were set by Iraq,
- perhaps to provide a massive shield of smoke that would confuse
- the guidance systems of allied missiles and planes and block
- the view of military satellites.
- </p>
- <p> Then came word of a full-scale disaster. Early in the week,
- the slightly nauseating odor of oil was noticeable along
- coastal areas of Saudi Arabia near the border with Kuwait.
- Within days, observers could see the source of the smell: a
- 16-km (10-mile) band of crude, so thick in places that the
- water heaved like mud. Iraq is believed to have opened the
- spigots of Kuwait's main supertanker-loading pier, the Sea
- Island terminal, 16 km offshore from the country's major
- petroleum refinery and loading complex at Mina Al-Ahmadi.
- Through pipes leading from giant storage tanks, millions of
- gallons of crude had been poured straight into the water. At
- the same time, at least three tankers docked there were
- deliberately being emptied into the gulf.
- </p>
- <p> The Iraqis may have released up to 120 million gal. by late
- last week--almost a dozen times as much as the Exxon Valdez
- leaked into Alaska's Prince William Sound in 1989. And this
- time any cleanup could be a deadly mission in itself. The spill
- is "in enemy territory," says Marine Major General Robert
- Johnston, the U.S. Central Command's chief of staff. "We can't
- just go in and shut it off."
- </p>
- <p> Though the Pentagon labeled the action "environmental
- terrorism," Saddam had probably unleashed the oil with military
- purposes in mind. Tar balls could gum up the desalinization
- plants along the Saudi coast that provide most of the fresh
- water to the gulf countries as well as to allied troops. As the
- Saudis scrambled to divert the slick with surface booms, plans
- were considered to extend intake lines deep into unpolluted
- waters and provide backup water supplies. President George Bush
- sent an interagency team to Saudi Arabia to assist the
- containment effort.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam might also have had in mind setting the oil ablaze
- to thwart an amphibious Marine landing on the Kuwaiti coast.
- Because most crude oil burns poorly, that prospect left allied
- military planners unfazed--even as they kept a wary eye on
- a fire that was spotted on the slick during the weekend.
- </p>
- <p> What is certain is that the oil spill has delivered a
- devastating blow to the ecology of the Persian Gulf. "Massive
- oil spills could turn this body of water into a virtual dead
- sea," says Brent Blackwelder, vice president of Friends of the
- Earth. Hundreds of oil-soaked marine birds are already washing
- up on the shores of northern Saudi Arabia.
- </p>
- <p> But last week's fires and oil spills could be just a prelude
- of future environmental disasters wrought by the war with Iraq.
- Among the areas of greatest concern:
- </p>
- <p> THE GULF. Because it is virtually an enclosed basin, with
- an outlet to the sea only 35 miles wide at the Strait of
- Hormuz, the gulf is especially vulnerable to oil spills. In a
- body of water badly contaminated by tankers, garbage and
- sewage, a disastrous spill of the kind that Iraq caused last
- week could destroy nesting areas for endangered sea turtles and
- spawning grounds for shrimp while poisoning tuna, snapper,
- sardines and anchovies, which are vital to local fishermen.
- "The ecosystems are endangered anyway," says Frank Barnaby,
- former director of the Stockholm Peace Research Institute.
- "Another million barrels of oil may be the last straw."
- </p>
- <p> In time, the Sea Island terminal spill could be compounded
- by a flood of oil from a major refinery, either as the result
- of a U.S. attack or a decision by Iraq to open the faucets. A
- single refinery tank can hold millions of gallons--enough to
- smear large stretches of the sebkha, the flat coastal terrain
- where Kuwaiti refineries are located.
- </p>
- <p> BURNING OIL FIELDS. Saddam is assumed to have mined all or
- most of Kuwait's 360 operating oil wells. If he throws the
- switch, the resulting fires could send forth a vast cloud of
- dense black smoke that would foul the air and darken skies as
- far east as Afghanistan and northern India. After 30 days,
- smoke could cover an area half the size of the U.S. But because
- oil gushes naturally to the surface in most Kuwaiti wells, with
- no need of pumping, it will go on feeding a blaze until someone
- puts it out--months or years later, depending on how long the
- war lasts.
- </p>
- <p> The worst possibility is that the immense pall could lower
- temperatures in the Indian subcontinent four to five degrees,
- disrupting the monsoon rains that are essential to crops for
- the nations of that area. "If this goes on until spring and
- summer, it will be a direct threat to their food supply, which
- is already marginal," says Anne Ehrlich, a Sierra Club expert.
- </p>
- <p> There is not much support, however, for the contention of
- a few scientists, including the astronomer Carl Sagan and
- Abdullah Toukan, science adviser to Jordan's King Hussein, that
- oil-field fires could bring on a nuclear winter, affecting
- weather patterns all around the world with devastating effects
- on agriculture. Nuclear blasts and volcanoes can send smoke
- exploding 16 km or more into the upper atmosphere, enabling it
- to travel long distances around the globe; but the worst
- oil-field inferno would probably lack the upward thrust to send
- smoke even one-tenth as high into the air before it started to
- cool and descend.
- </p>
- <p> A group of scientists at the University of California's
- Lawrence Livermore laboratory recently used a computer model
- to estimate the effect of a worst-case scenario: simultaneous
- fires at all of Kuwait's rigs that would put as much as 50,000
- tons of soot into the sky each day. "We see no way it's going
- to get to the upper atmosphere," says Michael MacCracken, who
- headed the project. "It will get rained out." A black, oily
- shower was descending upon Iran not long after last week's
- fires began.
- </p>
- <p> NUCLEAR CONTAMINATION. There have been no signs so far of
- radioactive contamination resulting from allied air attacks on
- Iraq's two nuclear reactors at Tuwaitha. Both are small
- research facilities, with modest amounts of nuclear material
- at their cores. The smaller of the two is a pint-size reactor
- of less than a megawatt. The larger puts out just five
- megawatts of power. Chernobyl was roughly a thousand times as
- powerful.
- </p>
- <p> Even a runt reactor can contaminate the nearby area if its
- radioactive core is fractured, in which case some radioactive
- particles could remain in the soil for decades. But the
- prospect that a radioactive cloud will spread across the region
- is universally discounted. "You would need a direct hit to
- splatter the stuff around," says Thomas B. Cochran of the New
- York City-based Natural Resources Defense Council. "And then
- it would be only a local hazard."
- </p>
- <p> CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WEAPONS. Chemical weapons work fast,
- then disappear. They were used during the Iran-Iraq war,
- sometimes with devastating consequences for combatants, but
- with almost none for the environment. Since the gulf war began,
- allied planes and missiles have pounded Iraqi chemical-weapons
- plants, situated about 25 miles northwest of the Shi`ite holy
- city of Samarra, that manufacture mustard gas and nerve agents.
- Because the plants are surrounded by a 25-sq.-km (9.6-sq.-mi.)
- "exclusion zone," the likelihood of a deadly plume invading
- populated areas is small. Explosives would also tend to break
- the gases down into less deadly substances. Harmful chemicals
- that penetrated the soil would disappear without a trace
- within a few weeks at most.
- </p>
- <p> Biological agents could be a different problem. Iraq is
- believed to possess some of them, including typhoid, cholera
- and botulin toxin. In open air, most of those die within hours.
- So does anthrax, an infectious, spore-forming bacterium that
- Saddam is also believed to possess. But if spores of anthrax
- penetrate the ground, they can survive in a dormant state for
- decades, waiting for new victims.
- </p>
- <p> One consolation for environmentalists is that this may be
- the first war in which the ecological consequences of battle
- have been a focus of world attention even as the fighting takes
- place. Yet that very awareness multiplies the sense of horror
- and demoralization caused by Saddam's callous acts of
- environmental terrorism. In his quixotic madness, the Iraqi
- strongman seems intent on waging what he calls "the mother of
- all battles" against the mother of us all--the earth itself.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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