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- <text id=91TT0531>
- <link 93HT0847>
- <link 90TT2567>
- <link 90TT1493>
- <title>
- Mar. 11, 1991: "A Man You Could Do Business With"
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
- The Persian Gulf War:Desert Storm
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 11, 1991 Kuwait City:Feb. 27, 1991
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 59
- HISTORY
- "A Man You Could Do Business With"
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In Washington's eyes, Saddam was not always an enemy. In fact,
- three Presidents counted on him to keep Iran's brand of
- Islamic radicalism in check.
- </p>
- <p>By TED GUP
- </p>
- <p> Even at the edge of the abyss, U.S. policy toward Iraq ran
- headlong into contradiction with itself. On July 25, 1990, as
- Iraqi tanks and troops were massing along the border of Kuwait,
- U.S. Ambassador April Glaspie told President Saddam Hussein in
- Baghdad that the U.S. had little to say about Arab border
- disputes and was eager to improve relations with Iraq. That
- same day in Washington, anxious State Department officials
- urged the Pentagon to dispatch the aircraft carrier U.S.S.
- Independence and its battle group, then in the Indian Ocean, to
- the mouth of the Persian Gulf -- as a signal to Saddam that the
- U.S. would not sit idly by if Iraq crossed into Kuwait.
- </p>
- <p> Days passed. The Joint Chiefs of Staff resisted sending the
- Independence, arguing that such a force, obviously no more than
- a token, would be no match for Saddam's giant war machine. Just
- before the invasion, with the Iraqi army now poised for
- assault, the White House overruled the Pentagon's concerns and
- ordered the warships toward the gulf. The decision probably
- came too late to impress Saddam.
- </p>
- <p> The episode was typical of a U.S. policy toward Iraq that
- was marked by mixed signals, interagency disputes, intelligence
- failures, errors of judgment and flights of wishful thinking.
- Behind the specific failures lurked -- and still lurks -- a
- general policy dilemma the U.S. has yet to resolve: Must
- America dance with the devil to promote its strategic
- interests? When is the enemy of your enemy your friend?
- </p>
- <p> While it took months for Desert Shield to be transformed
- into Desert Storm, U.S. policymakers were scrambling for cover
- within days of the invasion, trying to defend their actions
- from the harsh judgments of hindsight. The great "Who lost
- Kuwait?" debate was on. Revisionism was rampant. But what was
- clear was that the roots of a failed policy went back more than
- a decade. The American embrace of Saddam Hussein began on Nov.
- 4, 1979, when the Islamic revolutionaries who had overthrown
- the Shah of Iran seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran and took 66
- Americans hostage. That cataclysmic event -- and the growing
- fear that Islamic fundamentalism would spread throughout the
- region -- became the driving force behind U.S. policy not only
- toward Iran but Iraq as well. Three U.S. administrations and
- both political parties shared responsibility for this view.
- </p>
- <p> 1. "A Counterbalance To the Iranians"
- </p>
- <p> Says Graham Fuller, a Middle East specialist with the CIA
- during the 1980s: "There was a genuine visceral fear of Islam
- in Washington as a force that was utterly alien to American
- thinking, and that really scared us. Senior people at the
- Pentagon and elsewhere were much more concerned about Islam
- than communism. It was an almost obsessive fear, leading to a
- mentality on our part that you should use any stick to beat a
- dog -- to stop the advance of Islamic fundamentalism." That
- stick was to be Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> Washington had few illusions about Saddam. Says Harold
- Brown, Jimmy Carter's Secretary of Defense: "The intelligence
- reports all said he was a thug and an assassin." Says Gary
- Sick, then a Middle East expert on the staff of the National
- Security Council: "I don't recall reading anything other than
- that this was a man who was ruthless and dangerous, but who
- nonetheless, as with the Shah, was a man you could do business
- with." But if there were grave misgivings about Saddam, there
- was also an early appreciation for the strategic role he could
- play in the gulf. According to Sick, then National Security
- Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski "talked quite openly, saying that
- Iraq provided a counterbalance to the Iranians, and we should
- cultivate that."
- </p>
- <p> It was not the first time the U.S. had relied on a repugnant
- regime to advance its interests in the gulf. For years the U.S.
- had supported the Shah of Iran, whose security apparatus used
- torture and terror but whose country was seen as a bulwark
- against Soviet "expansionism" from the north.
- </p>
- <p> By 1979 Iraq was already a formidable military power. Brown
- recalls that when the Pentagon prepared classified contingency
- studies matching U.S. forces against a potential Persian Gulf
- adversary, the standard of measurement and the imagined enemy
- was always Iraq. To Brown's consternation, Defense Department
- analysts actually used "Iraq" in their reports. Brown
- repeatedly asked the Pentagon to delete the country's name for
- fear the studies might be leaked and America would be seen as
- preparing for war with Baghdad -- a nondesirable and less than
- credible scenario at the time.
- </p>
- <p> Howard Teicher, a policy analyst in Brown's office,
- conducted a six-month study of Iraq for the Defense Department
- in 1979. "Nobody at a policy level had a good understanding of
- what was then the nature of the regime and what were its
- long-term goals," says Teicher. He produced a secret 50-page
- report that warned nine months before war broke out that Iraq
- would attack Iran in a bid to become the world's arbiter of oil
- supplies and pricing.
- </p>
- <p> Teicher's study ended up on Brown's desk. The Secretary
- rejected the analysis, says Teicher, and insisted that the
- Iraqi leadership had somewhat moderated its behavior. "They are
- not the nasty guys you claim they are," was the gist of Brown's
- comments, Teicher recalls. As personally brutal as Saddam
- undoubtedly was, Brown says, Iraq had until then not been
- outwardly aggressive toward its neighbors. Its economic and
- educational development, as well as its secular approach to
- nation building, made it more familiar and less threatening to
- the West than was Iran.
- </p>
- <p> Others were less certain. Robert Hunter was on the staff of
- the National Security Council under Carter. While recognizing
- the need to sometimes deal with dictators, he cautions from the
- vantage point of hindsight, "If you're going to sup with the
- devil, use a long spoon." But keeping one's distance from a
- tyrant while relying on him to advance U.S. interests would not
- be easy under any circumstances. Although the Carter
- Administration remained mostly neutral, the State Department
- allowed General Electric to sell eight jet engines for four
- warships being built by Italy for Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> 2. "We Created This Monster"
- </p>
- <p> By 1986 the struggle between Iraq and Iran had degenerated
- into a bloody stalemate. To assist Iraq, the U.S., along with
- Israel and Egypt, began providing Baghdad with intelligence
- data on Iranian troop movements. Over the next year the U.S.
- became more directly involved in protecting shipping in the
- gulf. Thirty-seven American sailors perished after an Iraqi
- warplane accidentally attacked the frigate U.S.S. Stark with
- an Exocet missile.
- </p>
- <p> As Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for International
- Economic Trade and Security Policy in the Reagan
- Administration, Stephen Bryen was responsible for protecting
- American security interests by preventing the transfer of
- sensitive technology to potential enemies. Most of his
- attention was directed at exports to the Soviet Union, but he
- also reviewed export licenses for Syria, Libya, Iran and Iraq
- -- countries that were jokingly referred to in Washington as
- "the Happy Four" because of their penchant for troublemaking.
- </p>
- <p> In 1986 Bryen learned of an application to export an
- advanced computer manufactured in New Jersey. Intelligence
- reports indicated that the computer's final destination was a
- research facility in Mosul, Iraq, known as Saad 16. There
- researchers were working to develop a ballistic missile with
- a longer range than the now familiar Soviet-supplied Scud.
- </p>
- <p> Bryen raised his concerns with the Commerce Department,
- which insisted nonetheless on going ahead with the sale. Paul
- Freedenberg, then the Under Secretary for Export
- Administration, insists that there were simply no grounds for
- stopping the transaction. "At the time," he says, "the State
- Department had no particular concerns in this area, so the
- national policy and the policy of President Reagan was normal
- trade with Iraq." While the transfer of purely military items
- was banned, sales of "dual use" technology, with both civilian
- and military applications, were reviewed on a case-by-case
- basis. Only infrequently, for example in situations involving
- extremely advanced computers, were sales not approved.
- </p>
- <p> In this instance, the Commerce Department's technical
- analysts raised no red flags. "Our analysts said the computer
- was old and unsophisticated," says Freedenberg. "Just because
- it was in use at White Sands doesn't mean it was advanced."
- Today he concedes that the sale was "a mistake" that could have
- been avoided had the Reagan Administration taken a tougher
- stance against Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> The issue assumed greater urgency in August 1988 when the
- Iraqis used poison gas to kill thousands of their own citizens
- -- Kurdish men, women and children. At a White House meeting
- sponsored by the NSC, Freedenberg, troubled by the gassings,
- asked the State Department to impose "foreign policy controls"
- on exports to Iraq, which would have blocked the sale of
- militarily useful items like the computer. The Defense
- Department concurred. Although both the State Department and
- the White House acknowledged the atrocities of Saddam's regime,
- they argued that Iraq still played a vital strategic role and
- that U.S. influence to moderate Baghdad's conduct would be
- strengthened most by encouragement and trade, not bluster and
- confrontation. "They said, `We have no concerns about Iraq;
- there is no reason to ask for foreign policy controls,'"
- Freedenberg remembers. "I was overruled by the State Department
- and the White House."
- </p>
- <p> Since 1986, says Freedenberg, sales of American goods to
- Iraq have totaled more than $1.5 billion. All the while, other
- nations, including France, were feverishly selling weapons to
- Saddam -- without opposition from Washington. Reason: the U.S.
- was obsessed with making sure Iran would not win the war.
- </p>
- <p> Bryen still ponders the question of the computer, which was
- sent to Iraq over his protests. "We created this monster," he
- says. "If you want to know who's to blame for all this, we are,
- because we let all this stuff go to Iraq."
- </p>
- <p> 3. "The Intelligence Was Limited"
- </p>
- <p> Despite deepening American involvement with Iraq, the CIA
- had trouble predicting what Saddam was up to. Part of the
- problem was the nature of Iraq's political structure. Saddam
- ran a ruthless, highly centralized regime. Says Richard Murphy,
- Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian
- Affairs in the Reagan Administration: "The intelligence was
- limited, always has been, and still is today. The access to
- Iraqi officialdom and private citizens was extraordinarily
- limited." The U.S. had few intelligence assets within Iraq; as
- one American official says, analysts were reduced to "dealing
- with a welter of contradictory, fragmentary and incomplete
- information, and then trying to make sense out of that mess."
- </p>
- <p> Washington looked to moderate Arab governments for help in
- understanding Saddam, but their assessments were distorted.
- Like the U.S., Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Jordan were
- counting on Iraq to hold the line against the spread of Islamic
- fundamentalism from Iran. Their leaders repeatedly assured the
- U.S. that Saddam was turning moderate and merited continued
- American support.
- </p>
- <p> Teicher, a member of the National Security Council staff
- under Reagan, remembers an April 1982 meeting between Walter
- Stoessel, then Deputy Secretary of State, and Egyptian
- President Hosni Mubarak. At the time, Iranian troops had
- recaptured much of the territory Iraq had seized in the first
- weeks of the war. At the end of the meeting, Teicher recalls,
- "Mubarak held my hand and wouldn't let go. He talked to me
- about the desperate situation Saddam Hussein was in, and the
- absolute necessity for America to find ways to help him. He
- wanted me to take his message back to President Reagan."
- </p>
- <p> Such appeals, which continued up to the eve of the 1990
- invasion of Kuwait, skewed U.S. assessments toward an
- unrealistically sanguine view of Iraq. The Reagan
- Administration seemed only too eager to accept the optimistic
- appraisals, which provided a basis, albeit shaky, for its --
- and later the Bush Administration's -- inclination to play down
- Saddam's human-rights violations and bellicose rhetoric because
- of Iraq's strategic importance. A senior State Department
- official reflects on the lesson: "One of the things we've
- probably learned is to put more stock in our own analysis and
- less confidence in what other nations are telling us. We
- listened to them, and we gave it considerable weight. In
- retrospect, that was an error."
- </p>
- <p> Arab leaders were not alone in suggesting that Saddam could
- be lured into behaving with more restraint. In the spring of
- 1984, Teicher accompanied Donald Rumsfeld, then Reagan's
- special Middle East envoy, on a visit to Israel. Prime Minister
- Yitzhak Shamir told Rumsfeld that Israel considered Iran, not
- Iraq, to be the greatest threat in the region. According to
- Teicher, Shamir proposed the construction of an oil pipeline
- from Iraq to the Israeli port of Haifa as a goodwill gesture.
- When the U.S. relayed the offer to Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq
- Aziz, he refused to pass it along to Saddam, saying the
- President would kill him on the spot.
- </p>
- <p> Five years later, in the fall of 1989, the U.S. began a
- sweeping reassessment of its policies in the Persian Gulf.
- According to an official with access to secret intelligence
- analyses, the CIA, a major contributor to the review, concluded
- that Iraq's war-weariness and heavy international debt of $65
- billion made it likely that Baghdad would concentrate on
- rebuilding its crippled economy and increasing its oil
- production rather than embark on foreign adventures. Moreover,
- the assessment held, Iraq would feel beholden to those
- countries that had helped finance its fight against Iran, among
- them Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. There was one
- cautionary note, sounded almost in passing: Saddam was spending
- millions of dollars to build up chemical- and
- biological-weapons capacity.
- </p>
- <p> Intelligence assessments were only part of the review. State
- Department and other government policymakers made much of
- Iraq's relaxation of travel restrictions for its citizens, as
- well as Saddam's plans for drafting a new constitution --
- something that never materialized. Bush Administration
- officials claim that they were not predisposed to arrive at an
- assessment of Iraq that was rosier than the facts warranted.
- But if they were, there were familiar, if somewhat amended,
- strategic arguments to seduce them.
- </p>
- <p> Now Saddam reigned over the region's dominant military
- power, an emerging political force and a country whose rich oil
- fields promised to make it an economic giant. Already, 8% of
- America's petroleum came from Iraqi wells, and American
- corporations were eager to help rebuild Iraq's shattered
- infrastructure. The Bush Administration decided to edge still
- closer to Iraq and to deal with the issue of Saddam's egregious
- human-rights record by using private pressure and the benefits
- of trade to gently prod him along a more responsible path.
- </p>
- <p> 4. "Your Problems Lie With the Media"
- </p>
- <p> By the spring of 1990 Saddam had become more bellicose. He
- threatened to incinerate half of Israel if attacked. He moved
- Scud missiles to the border with Jordan, within striking range
- of Israel. He railed against the long-established U.S. naval
- presence in the gulf. He had an Iranian-born British journalist
- executed as a spy. He attempted to smuggle in triggering
- devices used in nuclear weapons.
- </p>
- <p> In the midst of these developments, on April 12, six U.S.
- Senators arrived in Iraq on a regionwide fact-finding mission.
- The group included Republicans Bob Dole of Kansas, Charles
- Grassley of Iowa, Alan Simpson of Wyoming and Frank Murkowski
- of Alaska as well as Democrats Howard Metzenbaum of Ohio and
- James McClure of Idaho. The group was taken to a hotel along
- the Tigris River, ushered into a suite and presented to Saddam.
- They were asked to surrender their tape recorders and cameras.
- </p>
- <p> The meeting drew much attention in the U.S. 10 months later
- after Baghdad released a partial transcript of the
- conversation. When Saddam raised the issue of the 1981 Israeli
- bombing of an Iraqi nuclear reactor, Dole reminded him, "We
- condemned the Israeli attack." Simpson, in particular, came off
- badly: "I believe that your problems lie with the Western media
- and not with the U.S. government," he advised Saddam.
- </p>
- <p> Simpson does not deny making the remark but says the
- transcript reflects only 15 minutes of a three-hour meeting and
- omits the Senators' remonstrations with Saddam about the use
- of poison gas by Iraq, its efforts to build super-long-range
- artillery weapons and its threats against Israel. Saddam
- offered to take the group via helicopter to the Kurdish region.
- </p>
- <p>Outside in the hotel parking lot, five helicopters were ready.
- When the Senators declined, uniformed officers in the room
- laughed derisively, Simpson says. (Later the Senators spoke
- among themselves of the hazards of flying in Iraqi
- helicopters.) Saddam told them that should Israel ever attack,
- his generals had instructions to launch everything in their
- arsenal at the Jewish state -- even if he were dead.
- </p>
- <p> Dole spoke last. He put forward his withered right arm,
- injured in 1945 by German mortar and machine-gun fire, and
- looked Saddam in the eye. "I have a daily reminder of the
- futility of war," Dole said. Recalls Simpson: "Saddam didn't
- respond to that. He was taken aback."
- </p>
- <p> 5. "Take a Tyrant At his Word"
- </p>
- <p> U.S. officials with access to classified intelligence
- reports for the month preceding the invasion of Kuwait say they
- provided precise details of Iraqi troop movements, logistics
- and air activity. But for most of that crucial period the
- reports remained vague on a fundamental question: Was Saddam
- bluffing the Kuwaitis, planning a short cross-border raid, or
- about to swallow the country whole? One explanation:
- intelligence assessments tend to be cautious and shy away from
- firm predictions. But there were other reasons why the
- Administration was so slow to come to terms with threats from
- Saddam. Policymakers who had spent years offering sanguine
- assessments of his regime were reluctant to accept the fact
- that the policies they had promoted had so dismally failed.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam can be accused of many things, but masking his
- intentions is not one of them. In May 1990 he told a gathering
- of Arab leaders in Baghdad that he considered oil production
- above the limits set for each producer nation by the
- Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to be an act of
- war. Kuwait was exceeding its OPEC limits at the time. But a
- senior State Department official dismissed the statement as
- "typical exaggerated rhetoric." Says the same official today:
- "I guess there is a lesson here: Take a tyrant at his word."
- </p>
- <p> If the U.S. was slow to discern Saddam's intentions, Saddam
- was worse at understanding the U.S. He knew little of America
- and drew many a false conclusion. U.S. Ambassador Glaspie told
- State Department colleagues how Saddam had marveled at some
- earthworks constructed in Iraq by Vietnamese workers. Saddam
- had been amazed that a Third World people could defeat a
- superpower and may have been emboldened by the thought. He
- seemed to repeatedly conclude from America's experience in the
- Vietnam War that the U.S. lacked will. "He thought he knew more
- about us than we knew about ourselves, and that was ultimately
- his most severe miscalculation," observes a senior State
- Department official.
- </p>
- <p> But given the mixed signals the U.S. was sending Saddam, no
- wonder he misread Washington's intentions. On July 25, a week
- before the invasion, Glaspie was summoned to a hasty meeting
- with Saddam even as his troops threatened the border with
- Kuwait. She told him, "We don't have much to say about
- Arab-Arab differences, like your border difference with
- Kuwait." After the invasion Glaspie was severely criticized for
- her remarks, which were seen by many foreign policy analysts
- as having given Saddam a virtual green light for invasion. The
- criticism was misplaced. "She was an ambassador operating on
- the basis of instructions," says Representative Lee Hamilton,
- chairman of the House subcommittee on Europe and the Middle
- East.
- </p>
- <p> The mistake was compounded on July 31, two days before the
- invasion, when Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern
- and South Asian Affairs John Kelly told a congressional
- subcommittee, "We have no defense-treaty relationships with any
- of the [gulf] countries. We have historically avoided taking
- a position on border disputes or on internal OPEC
- deliberations, but we have certainly, as have all
- administrations, resoundingly called for the peaceful settlement
- of disputes and differences in the region." Says Hamilton:
- "The Administration still believed Saddam was a guy they could
- work with. They were still taking that position right up to the
- day of the invasion." Like Saddam, Hamilton and other
- Congressmen had concluded that the U.S would not fight on
- behalf of Kuwait.
- </p>
- <p> By then, cautious intelligence estimates had been replaced
- by loud alarms. In mid-July, Iraqi supply buildups were
- considered large enough for a military operation in northern
- Kuwait, possibly to take disputed border oil fields or Bubiyan
- Island. A week before the invasion, at the very time Glaspie
- was meeting with Saddam, senior officials at the White House,
- Pentagon and State Department were advised in intelligence
- briefings that Saddam was not bluffing. His patience with
- Kuwait was growing thin. Intelligence summaries cited Iraqi air
- exercises indicating preparation for a massive ground assault.
- </p>
- <p> At 3 p.m. on Aug. 1, Iraqi Ambassador Mohammed al-Mashat sat
- across from Kelly and other U.S. officials in Kelly's
- sixth-floor office at the State Department. The conversation
- was tense. Kelly warned Mashat that the U.S. was deeply
- concerned about the military buildup, that the massing of
- forces had created anxiety throughout the area. Mashat blamed
- U.S. rhetoric for increased fears. Preposterous, answered
- Kelly, noting that 100,000 Iraqi troops were deployed along the
- Kuwait border. Iraq, said Mashat, had the right to move its
- troops within Iraqi territory as it pleased; he also assured
- Kelly that press accounts of negotiations with Kuwait were
- unduly pessimistic. "You don't need to worry," the ambassador
- declared. "We are not going to move against anybody."
- </p>
- <p> Two hours later, at 5 p.m., senior State Department
- officials, joined by representatives from the Defense
- Department, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the White House and the
- CIA, met behind closed doors in Secretary of Defense James
- Baker's conference room. There, CIA Deputy Director Richard
- Kerr made an ominous prediction: Iraq would invade within six
- to 12 hours. At 8:30 that evening, Kerr's prediction came true.
- </p>
- <p> "A Man You Could Do Business With" - A History:
- </p>
- <p> 1979
- </p>
- <p> Shah of Iran ousted; Iranians seize U.S. embassy, taking
- hostages.
- </p>
- <p> 1980
- </p>
- <p> Iraq invades Iran.
- </p>
- <p> 1981
- </p>
- <p> Israel destroys Iraqi nuclear reactor.
- </p>
- <p> 1982
- </p>
- <p> U.S. takes Iraq off list of countries supporting terrorism.
- </p>
- <p> 1982
- </p>
- <p> Iran repels Iraqi advances raising concerns that Iran will
- win the war.
- </p>
- <p> 1984
- </p>
- <p> U.S. establishes diplomatic relations with Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> 1985-86
- </p>
- <p> U.S. supplies vital military intelligence to Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> 1987
- </p>
- <p> U.S. loans to Iraq for commodities double in 5 years.
- </p>
- <p> 1987
- </p>
- <p> U.S. reflags Kuwaiti tankers; Iraqi missile hits U.S.S.
- Stark, killing 37.
- </p>
- <p> 1988
- </p>
- <p> Iran-Iraq war ends; Saddam uses chemical weapons on
- thousands of Kurds.
- </p>
- <p> 1989
- </p>
- <p> To prod Saddam toward moderation, the Bush Administration
- urges economic ties with Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> 1990 - March
- </p>
- <p> Intelligence reports that Iraq has missile launchers near
- Jordan border capable of hitting Israel.
- </p>
- <p> British seize Iraqi-bound electronic devices for triggering
- nuclear bombs.
- </p>
- <p> 1990 - April
- </p>
- <p> Saddam threatens to incinerate Israel with chemical weapons
- if attacked.
- </p>
- <p> Six U.S. Senators advise Saddam on how he can improve U.S.-
- Iraq relations.
- </p>
- <p> 1990 - July 25
- </p>
- <p> U.S. Ambassador April Glaspie tells Saddam that the U.S.
- takes no position on Iraq's quarrel with Kuwait.
- </p>
- <p> 1990 - August 2
- </p>
- <p> Iraq invades Kuwait.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-