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- <text id=91TT0271>
- <link 91TT0536>
- <title>
- Feb. 04, 1991: Kuwait:Waiting For Liberation
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 04, 1991 Stalking Saddam
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 39
- KUWAIT
- Waiting for Liberation
- </hdr><body>
- <p>While allied planes pound Saddam's occupying army, resistance
- fighters go from techno-euphoria to savoring U.S. tactics
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Kramer/Taif
- </p>
- <p> Here, finally, was a Saddam surprise, an Iraqi action that
- U.S. contingency planners had minimized before the war began.
- When Iraqi troops began pumping oil into the Persian Gulf from
- Sea Island, an offshore loading facility near Al-Ahmadi last
- week, Baghdad's motives were instantly clear to Saudi Arabia
- and to the Kuwaiti government-in-exile. In Taif, Saudi Arabia,
- where the Kuwaiti administration has settled for the time
- being, experts plotted the prevailing currents in the gulf and
- concluded that in only a few days the giant spill could reach
- Jubail, Saudi Arabia. That is where a mammoth desalinization
- plant provides much of the potable water consumed in the
- kingdom's eastern province--a military target if ever there
- was one.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the allied response might be, none could be
- undertaken without a go-ahead from the Kuwaitis. So at 10 a.m.
- last Friday, intense consultations began. Some argued for
- blowing Sea Island to smithereens. Others demurred, estimating
- that it could take two years to rebuild the facility. Most of
- the oil would dissipate anyway, they claimed, and floating
- booms placed near Jubail could capture the residue before the
- desalinization plant was seriously threatened. By Saturday
- morning, the options ranged from an air strike on Al-Ahmadi to
- a special-operations action designed to stanch the spill, but
- no decision had been reached.
- </p>
- <p> Such is the course of the gulf war. The coalition's air and
- naval forces have a free hand in conducting battle, but only
- after nonmilitary sensitivities are accommodated. Just as the
- alliance is trying to avoid civilian casualties, so too it is
- eager to save as much of Kuwait's infrastructure as possible.
- </p>
- <p> Inside Kuwait, meanwhile, resistance members wait. When the
- war started, techno-euphoria erupted. As they watched the CNN
- telecasts from Dubai, they marveled at the allied coalition's
- precision weapons. Expecting almost instant liberation, they
- began to joke. "We told each other we were going to beat the
- record," said Ali Salem, one of the resistance leaders. Israel
- took six days to defeat an Arab coalition during the 1967 war;
- now, the Kuwaitis predicted, the U.S. would show Israel how it
- could be done in even less time.
- </p>
- <p> That was before the alliance's strategy became clear,
- however. "Driving Saddam from our country is only good if we
- also make sure he can never come back," a Kuwaiti minister said
- last week. "If the Iraqis in Kuwait had been hit without mercy
- early on, it might have forced a pullback, and Saddam could
- have kept his war abilities intact. It's slower this way--going after his capacities in Iraq before turning to the
- occupation forces--but it is the best way to meet the
- ultimate objective."
- </p>
- <p> Salem, 35, was studying at Stanford University when Saddam's
- forces moved into Kuwait. Within 48 hours Salem was back home
- in Kuwait City. Today, with his wife and three children safe
- in Cairo, he coordinates food distribution in the city, keeps
- tabs on foreigners still hiding there and funnels intelligence
- reports to Taif.
- </p>
- <p> In several conversations with Salem, who was speaking by
- satellite phone from Kuwait City, a portrait of life there
- emerged. "We still have water and power," he reported last
- week, "so we are better off here than in Baghdad. But the
- Iraqis cut off gas on Thursday, and they are back to their old
- ways. Eleven Kuwaitis were executed on Wednesday and Thursday,
- and house-to-house searches, which had fallen off since the war
- started, have now picked up again." According to Salem, the
- Iraqis are still hunting the few remaining foreigners in Kuwait
- City, and reports of Iraqi defections to the resistance have
- been exaggerated. "What can we do with them?" he asks. "I think
- the word has gotten out that we cannot hide them, so with no
- one to surrender to, they wait for the allies to arrive."
- </p>
- <p> Also overblown, says Salem, are reports that Kuwait's
- hospitals are full of Iraqi casualties. "There are perhaps
- 200," he says, "but not thousands, as we know you have heard.
- On the other hand, our people say that the hospitals in Basra
- are indeed full. It seems that the Iraqis are taking their
- wounded home."
- </p>
- <p> On instructions from the government-in-exile in Taif, the
- resistance has for the most part ceased sniping at the Iraqi
- occupiers. But scattered automatic-weapons gunfire can be heard
- in Kuwait City about once every two days. "Some targets," Salem
- explains, "are just too tempting."
- </p>
- <p> Other resistance fighters report that Iraq's Republican
- Guards are being hit as hard by allied air attacks as the
- Pentagon's briefers say. "We hear it, and in some cases we see
- it," says one, "and the road to Basra is busy. Palestinians who
- have helped the Iraqis are fleeing Kuwait, and Kuwaitis who
- fled to Basra are coming back because the U.S. bombing of
- southern Iraq and northern Kuwait has become so heavy that it's
- safer to be back here."
- </p>
- <p> But not completely safe. "Someone is coming," Salem said
- last Friday at 7:30 p.m. "Call back tomorrow or Sunday. I'll
- be here, I hope."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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