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- <text id=91TT0498>
- <link 93XP0284>
- <link 91TT0541>
- <link 91TT0538>
- <title>
- Mar. 04, 1991: What Is Left Of Kuwait?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
- The Persian Gulf War:Desert Storm
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 04, 1991 Into Kuwait!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 34
- CONSEQUENCES
- What Is Left of Kuwait?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The country has weathered an invasion, aerial bombardment and
- a "scorched earth" endgame. Now it faces the task of
- rebuilding.
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN -- Reported by Dick Thompson/Dhahran and Bruce
- van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> For the exiled Kuwaitis who have been waiting more than six
- months for the liberation of their country, the roller-coaster
- events of last week unleashed contradictory emotions. On the
- one hand, there were feelings of anticipation, even joy, that
- a return to their homeland was imminent. But many also shared
- a sense of foreboding at what they would find when they
- arrived. "For me, Kuwait was a paradise," says Anwar Alduiaj,
- who manufactured ladies' clothing in Kuwait City before the
- Iraqi invasion. "Suddenly, the country our grandfathers built
- for us in 50, 60 years collapsed in hours. And it went from a
- paradise to a hell."
- </p>
- <p> What is left of Kuwait? And what will it take to rebuild the
- country after the Iraqis are forced out of Kuwait? Precise
- answers will not become clear until allied troops actually
- march into Kuwait City, the capital, economic center and home
- to 80% of Kuwait's prewar population of 2 million. Before last
- week, sketchy reports seeping out of the occupied emirate
- portrayed a country that had sustained much damage and
- disruption but was far from devastated. That picture, however,
- may have been tragically altered by the billowing clouds of
- smoke emanating from Kuwaiti oil wells late last week, part of
- what President Bush denounced as Saddam's "scorched earth"
- policy.
- </p>
- <p> Pentagon officials claimed on Saturday that Saddam's forces
- had set fire to at least 200 oil wells -- which along with
- about 100 wells that were sabotaged earlier account for 25% of
- all such facilities in the country. Pilots returning from
- bombing missions reported that a blanket of thick smoke was
- covering all of the country south of Kuwait City, reaching from
- the gulf on the east to the Saudi border on the west.
- </p>
- <p> Some Pentagon officials suggested that the new fires might
- have been started by the Iraqis as a last-ditch defensive
- strategy, to try to impede visibility for a final allied
- offensive. But U.S. military planners said they could
- circumvent any such tactics. The Iraqi actions seemed to be
- aimed more at crippling Kuwait's oil-producing capacity. U.S.
- officials reported that other oil-related facilities and
- shipping terminals had been damaged as well, with the
- intention, in President Bush's words, of "destroying the entire
- oil-production system of Kuwait."
- </p>
- <p> Oil experts say that is not likely to happen. Although
- putting out the fires could be a difficult and time-consuming
- task, Kuwait's 94.5 billion-bbl. oil reserves will hardly be
- dented. Depending on how much damage has been done to other
- facilities, production could resume within six months after the
- end of hostilities, Kuwaiti officials say -- though it may be
- years before output reaches prewar levels. "They will not lose
- enough to threaten their reserves or their economy or the world
- oil market in the long term," said an American oil expert.
- </p>
- <p> Although the Administration may be exaggerating the Iraqis'
- scorched-earth tactics for political purposes, the destruction
- was nonetheless alarming. Until then, physical damage wreaked
- on Kuwait had seemed relatively light. Though allied bombs have
- hit the country repeatedly during the five-week air campaign,
- pilots have carefully avoided most important buildings and
- residential neighborhoods in the capital. Nor had the Iraqis,
- before last week at least, inflicted any wholesale physical
- destruction on the city. U.S. satellite photos taken a week ago
- revealed that nearly all government buildings in Kuwait City
- were still standing. One exception: the communications
- ministry, which had been heavily damaged by the Kuwaiti
- resistance in an effort to cut off the Iraqis'
- telephone-monitoring ability. The port facilities in and around
- the capital, as well as the airport, also appeared to be
- largely intact. But the Iraqi occupiers have reportedly killed
- hundreds of people, and by last weekend had instituted a new
- wave of executions and civilian roundups, according to U.S.
- intelligence and other reports.
- </p>
- <p> Accounts from Kuwaiti refugees and members of the resistance
- inside the city suggest that the social fabric of the country
- has been rent in numerous ways. Homes and hospitals have been
- looted, and garbage is overflowing the streets. With little
- drinking water available, residents have been distilling water
- from the gulf. Only about one-fourth of the prewar population
- is estimated to have remained in the country, and those
- Kuwaitis have been joined by an undetermined number of Iraqi
- civilians who have moved into abandoned Kuwaiti homes as part
- of Saddam's plan to annex the country as Iraq's 19th province.
- </p>
- <p> Retaking Kuwait City by force would be one of the trickiest
- battles of the allied campaign. Though the Iraqis have
- relatively little heavy armor inside the city, troops have
- reportedly embedded themselves in buildings and homes and
- planted vast numbers of booby traps. Routing them out could be
- a difficult and costly enterprise, as the allies learned in the
- battle to recapture the Saudi town of Khafji. "It takes a long
- time to take a city -- unless you destroy it," says a Western
- military attache in Riyadh. "You have to go street by street,
- house by house. It could take weeks."
- </p>
- <p> To avoid that scenario, and the heavy civilian casualties
- that might result, the allied strategy would probably involve
- encircling the city, cutting off the Iraqis who remain there,
- and simply waiting them out. "The last thing we want to do is
- engage in urban warfare," says one senior Pentagon officer.
- "That's a formula for civilian death and destruction."
- </p>
- <p> The fact that 250,000 Palestinians (out of an estimated
- prewar population of 400,000) have remained in Kuwait City
- raises other thorny problems. Scores of Palestinians have been
- identified as collaborators who joined the Iraqis in looting
- the city and turned in Kuwaitis, who were then murdered in
- front of their families. Some Kuwaiti exiles have promised to
- take revenge once the country is reoccupied. "Sabra and Shatila
- were nothing," vow many Kuwaiti exiles, referring to the 1982
- slaughter of hundreds of people in Palestinian refugee camps
- after the Israeli invasion of Lebanon.
- </p>
- <p> The extent of Palestinian collaboration has probably been
- exaggerated. Though Yasser Arafat and the Palestine Liberation
- Organization have been among the strongest backers of Saddam's
- invasion, the vast majority of Palestinians in Kuwait are
- believed to have stayed neutral during the occupation. And some
- have supported the resistance.
- </p>
- <p> Opposition to the Iraqis was extremely well organized in
- part because it was built around clandestine groups that
- existed before the occupation. In addition to Shi`ite Muslims
- opposed to the Emir, these include members of Arafat's Fatah
- guerrilla organization and Hamas, a more extreme Palestinian
- group that has been a key participant in the intifadeh in the
- Israeli-occupied areas. In addition, Ahmed Jibril's pro-Syrian
- Popular Front for the Liberaion of Palestine-General Command
- has detonated car bombs at Iraqi targets in Kuwait City.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the Shi`ite resistance members are believed to have
- been part of a secret organization set up by Iran during the
- Iran-Iraq war. They were there not to support the ruling family
- of the Emir, Sheik Jaber al-Ahmad al-Sabah, but to topple it.
- When the Emir fled the country, however, the same Shi`ites,
- including women in chadors, came out to demonstrate,
- brandishing photographs of the Emir. "You shouldn't be
- surprised at this," said a Western diplomat who lived in
- Kuwait. "In the Middle East, groups can change sides very
- quickly."
- </p>
- <p> For political reasons, Kuwaiti forces have been assured they
- will be in the front lines as the coalition troops march into
- Kuwait City. But other allied soldiers will be alongside,
- watching them closely. "There is a very strong danger that the
- Palestinians will be massacred," said a U.S. official in
- Riyadh. "It is a major consideration, and there has been a lot
- of planning to avoid it."
- </p>
- <p> The strength of the underground groups in Kuwait could also
- complicate the restoration to power of the ruling family. Some
- resistance leaders are nearly as opposed to the Emir as they
- are to the Iraqis; if they manage to seize control of the
- capital before the allies arrive, they might demand democratic
- concessions from the ruling family. "The politics of liberation
- are very complex," said a Western diplomat. "It could take
- place on the terms of the Kuwaiti resistance." The ruling Sabah
- family has promised to respect the constitution of 1962 by
- holding parliamentary elections sometime after liberation. But
- the exiled opposition and resistance leaders are skeptical.
- The crown prince, Sheik Saad, has said he may install martial
- law first.
- </p>
- <p> Not until these political problems are sorted out can the
- process of putting Kuwait back together again commence. The
- extent of that task will not be clear until the war is over and
- the damage can be surveyed. A lot depends on how much more
- fighting takes place, and how much more damage the Iraqis
- choose to inflict on the country as they exit. But the Kuwaiti
- government-in-exile has hired the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
- to lead the cleanup and repair operation for the first 90 days.
- Companies in several allied countries are already fighting for
- pieces of the lucrative construction work that lies ahead.
- Estimates of the cost of rebuilding Kuwait range as high as
- $100 billion. The Kuwaiti government may have to sell off some
- of its huge foreign-investment portfolio, currently being
- managed in London, to finance that reconstruction.
- </p>
- <p> Repopulation of the country will probably take weeks or
- months as Kuwait City's infrastructure, utilities and other
- services are restored. Even then the population will most
- probably have a quite different composition from that of prewar
- Kuwait. Nearly 60% of the residents before the Iraqi invasion
- were foreign workers and their families. Whoever rules the
- restored nation may sharply reduce that proportion.
- </p>
- <p> No matter how daunting the task of rebuilding may seem to
- outsiders, Kuwaitis are eager to begin it. "As much of the
- country as they destroyed, they cannot make sand of it," said
- Alquhtani Shaya, a former university stuent from Kuwait City.
- "We will build from that."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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