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- <text id=91TT0431>
- <title>
- Feb. 25, 1991: What If Saddam Pulls Out?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 25, 1991 Beginning Of The End
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 23
- CONSEQUENCES
- What If Saddam Pulls Out?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Iraq will emerge with its military substantially defanged, if
- not yet completely tamed, but its menacing President might
- keep his job
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer--Reported by Scott MacLeod/Amman and Christopher
- Ogden/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The first word of Iraq's peace proposal last week touched
- off rapturous celebrations in Baghdad, expressions of relief
- mixed with skepticism from allied troops and burgeoning peace
- hopes around the world. At the White House, however, there was
- surprise at the move and concern that a hastily arranged
- cease-fire might scuttle Washington's goal of neutralizing the
- Iraqi military and toppling Saddam Hussein. By attaching
- impossible conditions to the proposal, Baghdad ensured that it
- would be rejected by the coalition and that hostilities would
- continue--for now. But Saddam may soon find it necessary,
- particularly after the start of a ground battle, to make a
- serious peace offer that Washington can't refuse. What then?
- </p>
- <p> The exact shape of a postwar scenario, of course, would
- depend on the details of the Iraqi proposal and of the
- negotiations that would follow. But it is possible to sketch
- the broad outlines. The most significant fact is that Iraq will
- emerge from battle with the menacing, bristling war machine
- that Saddam built up over the past decade substantially
- defanged, if not yet completely tamed. The allies have seen to
- that from the first days of the war, knocking out Iraq's
- ability, at least for the time being, to produce chemical,
- biological and nuclear arms and later obliterating about a
- third of its tanks and artillery.
- </p>
- <p> But has Baghdad's military been weakened enough?
- Washington's goal has never been to liquidate Iraq's armed
- forces. Rather, the objective was to leave the country with
- enough military power to defend against hostile neighbors--but not so much that it could continue to threaten them. A
- rough gauge of where that balance lies can be found in the
- military muscle of Iran and Syria, the two heavies that Iraq's
- forces must counterweigh. Iran commands 504,000 soldiers, 185
- combat aircraft and perhaps 500 tanks. Syria has 404,000
- troops, 558 combat planes and 4,000 tanks. Iraq's losses in the
- current struggle have pared its hardware roughly to Syria's
- level. But since a country that is only defending its territory
- generally needs less firepower than its attacker, Iraq's
- weaponry could still use considerable trimming, say U.S.
- military planners. As for manpower, though it is not known
- exactly how many Iraqi soldiers have been killed by allied
- bombardments, no one believes that Saddam's forces, once 1
- million strong, have yet been drawn down to the levels of the
- other regional powers.
- </p>
- <p> Consequently Iraq's neighbors are far from ready to trust
- Saddam again--even if he withdraws completely from Kuwait.
- The gulf states and Saudi Arabia must find better ways of
- defending themselves than they had before Aug. 2. One
- possibility is that they will offer Egypt financial inducements
- to remain in the region as a deterrent force. Cairo sent two
- of its crack armored divisions to Saudi Arabia and does not
- expect them back in the foreseeable future.
- </p>
- <p> The Western forces, in contrast, will probably leave the
- gulf fairly rapidly. Although Washington may leave some troops
- in the region temporarily, a permanent military presence would
- probably provoke more political trouble than it would be worth.
- It would be preferable if nearly all the non-Arabs were out of
- the area before the annual Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca begins
- in June, but that timetable is probably unrealistic. Once the
- Westerners do leave, United Nations troops, including Arab
- units, are likely to provide peacekeeping forces in Kuwait,
- though the Western powers will have Kuwait's open invitation
- to return if necessary.
- </p>
- <p> To ensure that Saddam cannot patiently rebuild his military
- to its former glory, the U.S. and Britain will seek to maintain
- sanctions forbidding the sale to Iraq of weapons and munitions
- or the equipment for domestically producing them. Historically
- such embargoes have proved very leaky. At the moment, as many
- as 110 German firms are under investigation for breaking or
- attempting to circumvent the U.N. embargoes against any kind
- of trade with Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> The prospect of a still powerful Iraq would be far less
- worrisome if Saddam were not at the helm. His continuation in
- power would be a great disappointment to the allies. It is
- conceivable that a surrender, however artfully packaged, would
- leave Saddam vulnerable to a coup. The euphoria in Baghdad that
- initially greeted reports of the pullout offer suggests a high
- level of public anxiety over the war. To have been subjected
- to such horrific bombings and wind up with nothing to show for
- it might be too much for some Iraqis. But the decisive question
- is whether it would be too much for the small circle of
- officials Saddam allows to get near him.
- </p>
- <p> Given the sudden political shifts that are commonplace in
- the Arab world, it is possible that most of the Arab
- governments standing against Saddam may make amends to him
- after the war. Two exceptions: Syria's President Hafez Assad,
- who has a long-running personal rivalry with Saddam, and the
- Emir of Kuwait. At the same time, Jordan's King Hussein and
- President Bush are expected to patch things up. Bush still
- prefers the King to the more radical regime that would most
- likely replace him, while Hussein is eager for renewed financial
- assistance from the West and the Saudis.
- </p>
- <p> Containing Arab resentment over the allied pounding of Iraq
- could prove a difficult and delicate task. Above all, it will
- require a serious effort--especially on the part of the U.S.--to pursue a settlement of the Palestinian problem. Who will
- speak for the Palestinians is a crucial unresolved question.
- By allying himself with Saddam, P.L.O. Chairman Yasser Arafat
- has made himself more unpalatable than ever to the West; he has
- long been anathema to the Israelis. Given Arafat's exploded
- credibility, some Western diplomats say their governments might
- again look to King Hussein as the Palestinians' spokesman.
- </p>
- <p> Whoever speaks for the Palestinians will find Israel a
- prickly interlocutor. The target of dozens of unprovoked Scud
- attacks, the Israelis will be in no mood to compromise and may
- use Saddam's continued leadership as yet another excuse to
- avoid negotiations. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir put it
- bluntly last week: "There can be no peace in the region so long
- as Saddam Hussein remains in power." But Shamir has yet to face
- the fact that, regardless of Saddam's personal fate, the Middle
- East will never achieve a lasting peace until Israelis and
- Palestinians are ready to sit down and talk seriously about the
- future.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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