home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT0541>
- <link 90TT3428>
- <link 90TT2116>
- <title>
- Mar. 18, 1991: Kuwait:Chaos And Revenge
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
- The Persian Gulf War:Desert Storm
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 18, 1991 A Moment To Savor
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 28
- KUWAIT
- Chaos and Revenge
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By MICHAEL KRAMER/KUWAIT CITY -- With reporting by Lara Marlowe/
- Kuwait City
- </p>
- <p> Kuwait is burning -- physically, politically and
- spiritually. Kuwait City, where 80% of the prewar population
- of 2 million lived, is a sad, lonely town. The skyscrapers are
- abandoned, their ground-level shops have been looted, and
- nearly everything is covered with an oily soot, a reminder of
- the ongoing conflagration outside the capital -- the hundreds
- of oil-well fires depleting the nation's lifeblood at a rate
- far greater than anyone had predicted.
- </p>
- <p> Wherever one travels, nerves are raw, tensions deep. Many
- of those who remained while Iraq pillaged and raped their land
- resent those who fled, and sizable numbers in both camps want
- nothing less than the wholesale expulsion of Kuwait's
- Palestinians, despite evidence that most opposed Saddam's
- perfidy.
- </p>
- <p> If one complaint binds all, it is rage at Kuwait's
- government, which had months to plan for the nation's recovery
- but has so far performed incompetently. Many who had been
- effectively shut out of the nation's political life organized
- themselves admirably to survive Iraq's occupation;
- understandably, they now want a say in public affairs. Across
- all groups and all issues, the question since Kuwait has been
- freed is simple: Freed for what?
- </p>
- <p> At 3:30 in the morning on Sunday, March 3, in the shadow of
- Kuwait City's Maryam Mosque, a Kuwaiti resistance member who
- calls himself Mike leaned his French-made automatic rifle into
- the chest of his childhood friend Mustafa al-Kubaisi. He
- whispered, "This is your last night," and fired. Unsatisfied
- by the effect of the single shot, Mike used his 7.65-mm MAB
- pistol to put another round into Mustafa's head.
- </p>
- <p> Mustafa al-Kubaisi, who was 29, was born in Kuwait to Iraqi
- parents. He worked as an overseas telephone operator and
- enjoyed the cradle-to-grave benefits of Kuwait's welfare state,
- but he could never be sure of his status. Because of his
- parents' Iraqi origins, and despite his having been born in
- Kuwait, he had to have a work permit to remain in the country.
- Naturalization, common throughout the world, is virtually
- impossible in Kuwait.
- </p>
- <p> Mike, 33, is the son of wealthy Kuwaitis. He graduated from
- San Francisco State University and trained to be an airline
- pilot, but he quit to manage his family's real estate empire.
- Mike's house is within shouting distance of Mustafa's, and he
- recalls being something of a "big brother" to Mustafa. Mike
- advised him about work and girls and gave Mustafa rides in his
- Ferrari. He also supplemented Mustafa's salary. "Nothing big,"
- says Mike, "but on a fairly regular basis."
- </p>
- <p> When Iraq invaded Kuwait, Mike lay low. But then another
- childhood friend, a woman named Esrar al-Ghabandi, was killed.
- Unlike Mike, Esrar had joined the resistance immediately. After
- Esrar had made four trips to Saudi Arabia to deliver
- information about Iraqi troop movements in Kuwait, Mike and
- some friends discovered her mutilated body. Esrar had been axed
- in the head and shot seven times in her breasts and vagina.
- Within days, Mike and his friends formed their own resistance
- cell, which operated apart from the more organized efforts of
- other Kuwaitis. They met frequently to plan strategy, and
- Mustafa was usually present. "Why not?" says Mike. "We had known
- each other all our lives. I didn't think we had any secrets."
- </p>
- <p> But Mustafa had one. As he once confessed to another
- neighbor, Mustafa had always resented his uncertain status.
- Whether he also was a longtime spy for Iraq's secret police,
- as Mike believes, is debatable. What Mike and several other
- resistance members know for certain is that Kuwaiti army
- officers operating with Mike's cell began to disappear whenever
- Mustafa took part in the group's deliberations. "So we began
- watching his movements," says Mike. "He was informing. There was
- no doubt."
- </p>
- <p> When the resistance was certain Mustafa was aiding the
- Iraqis, Mike invited him to stay at his home. "That way I could
- better keep an eye on him," says Mike. "I used him to help me
- get through checkpoints and to move some weapons around. It was
- minor stuff, and it bound us more closely together. We kept the
- important things from him, of course, but I am sure he thought
- he was continuing to penetrate us." Shortly after the
- liberation, Mustafa was arrested by the Kuwaiti intelligence
- service and removed to the local jail. "But he was mine," says
- Mike, "and one night I prevailed on the guards to turn him over
- to me. I wanted to kill him myself. I cooked him a last meal
- and told him I was going to turn him in as a POW. I told him
- he would be traded for allied prisoners. I told him to get his
- things, and we walked to a wall about a hundred yards from my
- house, which is where I did it. And that was it. I have no
- regrets. He was also helping to run Palestinians who informed
- on Kuwaitis. How could I let him go?"
- </p>
- <p> When the allies first rode into Kuwait City, on Feb. 26,
- they were led by Arab forces, though not by Kuwaitis. Earlier
- in the campaign, a Kuwaiti soldier killed a surrendering Iraqi
- and shoved his body into a ditch. "From that moment," says a
- U.S. military officer, "we were determined to restrain the
- Kuwaitis," and American special-forces troops now regularly
- accompany Kuwaiti patrols. But the resistance still operates.
- Mike says he knows of at least 80 "proven collaborators" who
- have been executed. "The word has gone out to be calm for now,"
- says a resistance leader, "to cool it until the journalists
- leave."
- </p>
- <p> "That's right," confirms a senior Western diplomat. "The
- government is operating with a light hand. The country is an
- arsenal. Everyone has weapons. They turn some in, to be
- perceived as cooperating with the call to lay down arms, but
- everyone is keeping some -- just as they are keeping the names
- of some collaborators to themselves when turning over their
- lists to the army." The problem, another Western diplomat says,
- is the government's poor credibility. "No one really knows if
- cracking down on the resistance would work, or whether they'd
- tell the ministers to shove it," he says. "All the government
- knows for sure is that at the end of the day, it doesn't want
- Kuwait perceived as no better than Saddam. We hope that the
- idea of sanctioning an open season later on won't really come
- to pass. We're counting on the passage of time to calm
- emotions."
- </p>
- <p> Kuwait is a tense nation at a tough time, "a place in need
- of therapy," says Dr. Abdul Rahman al-Awadi, a physician who
- long served as his country's Health Minister and is now
- Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs. Everyone has witnessed
- an atrocity or has a tale to tell. Al-Awadi turns pale when he
- recalls the story of an Iraqi patrol that spotted some Kuwaiti
- children playing in the street. "They were told to stop, and
- all but one did," says al-Awadi. "That one was picked up by the
- hair by an Iraqi soldier -- he was still holding his soccer
- ball -- and shot in the head in front of the other kids." Some
- of Mike's friends had to cut down seven young Kuwaiti girls who
- had been hanged in a schoolyard after having been raped. There
- are several hundred women awaiting abortions, says a doctor
- at Mubarak al-Kabir Hospital. All were victims of gang rape.
- </p>
- <p> Even when Kuwaitis try to forget the tragedies, they cannot
- escape reminders of the occupation. The sky is what everyone
- notices first each morning. When the wind blows toward Kuwait
- City, the sky darkens as if a storm were moving across the
- plain. At times, night appears at noon. The oil fires are that
- horrendous. There is no electricity, the result of last-minute
- Iraqi sabotage. Few believe the repeated assurances that at
- least some electricity will return "tomorrow." Too many
- tomorrows have passed.
- </p>
- <p> Water and power were operating until shortly before the
- Iraqis withdrew, apparently to pacify the population and permit
- Iraqi looters to spot unoccupied houses. When the Iraqis
- visited inhabited homes, it was mostly to make their presence
- felt. "We left things around, watches and some jewelry," says
- Tariq al-Riaz. "That usually satisfied them, and their searches
- were perfunctory. When we did need to hide, we did so in rooms
- we created behind walls."
- </p>
- <p> The hardest thing to do was to teach Kuwait's children to
- "like" Saddam, says Salah al-Awadi, manager of credit-card
- sales for the Gulf Bank. "When Iraqis visited us, we would
- serve them soft drinks. Once, my son Youssef, who is almost
- four, said, `Take this glass and put it on Saddam's head.' We
- had to teach the kids to say good things about Saddam for fear
- they would be killed if they didn't."
- </p>
- <p> People move more freely now, of course, but a favorite
- pastime, a walk on the beach, is impossible. The seaside
- fortifications built by the Iraqis -- four separate lines of
- trenches and obstacles -- "look like Normandy from the air,"
- says a U.S. Army general. Mines are everywhere, and the
- minefield maps Baghdad provided the coalition are "useless,"
- says U.S. Ambassador Edward Gnehm. The city is rocked by
- explosions several times a day as U.S. Army experts detonate
- Iraq's abandoned ordnance. Sporadic gunfire is heard throughout
- the day -- celebratory rounds discharged mainly by Saudi
- soldiers. (It is the Americans, however, who are in demand for
- pictures and autographs.)
- </p>
- <p> Expatriates -- Palestinians particularly -- are subjected
- to time-consuming searches. In the Hawalli area, where many
- Palestinians live, Kuwaiti troops roam the streets, instructing
- the population, "Turn in your weapons, Palestinian people. This
- is for your own security." The latest graffito reads, DEATH TO
- PALESTINIAN TRAITORS. WE DON'T WANT THEM. "They are
- hypocrites!" screams Massmoa Hassan, a Kuwaiti woman passing
- by. "We went to school with you. We helped you. The P.L.O.
- donation boxes were filled by us. And you are traitors. Get
- out!"
- </p>
- <p> Hawalli residents tell of suspected collaborators being
- taken roughly away. Sarah Hamdan Salman says her three sons
- were blindfolded, handcuffed, beaten with machine guns and
- shoved into the trunks of cars by civilians who the
- Palestinians are convinced are resistance members. When she
- went to the local precinct to inquire about her children, she
- was told, "You're a Palestinian" -- and then she was spat upon.
- Did it happen? "I don't doubt it," says a U.S. Army major
- assigned as an adviser to the Kuwaitis. "All I can say is that
- we're trying to hold it down."
- </p>
- <p> All residents, even Kuwaitis, are subjected to the
- three-month martial law decree and its 10 p.m. to 4 a.m.
- curfew. "It's not fake," says Colonel Jesse Johnson, the
- commander of U.S. special-operations forces in Kuwait City.
- There have been several nighttime incidents "where people drive
- up to the checkpoints and open fire" on the Kuwaiti soldiers,
- says Johnson. The troops assume their attackers are
- Palestinians. The clash between those who remained and those
- who left is everywhere. Some Kuwaitis who stayed behind
- surrendered their automobile license plates for Iraqi tags. At
- a checkpoint last week, a Kuwaiti without plates was harassed.
- "So you changed your plates," shouted a Kuwaiti soldier. "And
- you fled, you coward," the driver yelled back.
- </p>
- <p> Some Kuwaitis have taken to visiting the house where the
- Iraqis constructed an elaborate torture chamber. Electric-shock
- devices are the most prominent features, and pinups of scantily
- clad women adorn the walls. The government is thinking of
- turning the place into a museum. "We should preserve this so
- we remember," says Minister of State al-Awadi, whose indoor
- swimming pool the Iraqis used to extract information. Victims
- would be dunked into the water while they were tied to ropes
- hung from the ceiling. A poignant scene plays out almost daily
- when Kuwaitis visit the Riqqa cemetery, searching for the
- remains of loved ones. Kuwaiti authorities say 2,792 bodies of
- people who died unnatural deaths since Aug. 2 are buried there.
- Another site of interest is the ice rink, which served as a
- makeshift morgue for Kuwaiti dead. There are no bodies there
- now -- only some dried blood and a persistent stench.
- </p>
- <p> Ambitious travelers journey about 30 miles toward Basra to
- see the remains of a convoy of fleeing Iraqi vehicles destroyed
- by allied aircraft. At the Iraqi border last week, tragedy was
- replaced by joy. Several thousand Kuwaitis were kidnapped by
- Iraqi soldiers in the last days of the occupation; last Friday
- Baghdad suddenly released about 1,175, transporting them back
- to Kuwait City in trucks bearing the seal of the Republican
- Guard. Most had been held at a military barrack near Basra,
- squeezed in so tight that they were forced to take turns
- sleeping. For the first three days, they were given no food or
- water. From then on, they subsisted on a single rock-hard roll
- a day.
- </p>
- <p> Those who show up at the border are usually a bedraggled
- lot. At night they look like ghostly figures, small bands of
- refugees suddenly illuminated by the headlights of military
- convoys. Mostly they are expatriates or foreigners who lived
- in Iraq and are fleeing the anti-Saddam violence. Thousands of
- Egyptians, for example, are being deported. Mohammed el-Habal,
- 65, is one of about a dozen Egyptians who camped near the
- border last week, waiting for his status to be determined. "The
- Republican Guard told us that if Egypt had stayed with Iraq, if
- we had supported Iraq, we would not have been turned out," says
- el-Habal, who reports that some of his compatriots have been
- murdered by Iraqis.
- </p>
- <p> The plight of Iraqis who lived in Kuwait before the war and
- who are now trying to return to Kuwait is even more desperate.
- Men, women and children are encamped near the border highway.
- U.S. soldiers have given them rations, but they have no water.
- On a cold, rainy night last week, the Iraqis huddled around
- campfires. The horizon was lit by the flames of the burning oil
- fields. In her tattooed hands, Fadiyah Saad held her new
- granddaughter, born by the roadside on March 5. The family was
- debating whether to name the child Hudud (borders) or Istiqlal
- (independence).
- </p>
- <p> With Kuwait independent again, some of those who stayed
- behind yearn for aspects of the occupation. Supplies were more
- plentiful then, and those who had previously felt themselves
- to be mere employees of a business called Kuwait Inc. banded
- together as a nation. "For the first time," says Ali Salem, a
- resistance leader, "all barriers were breached. Shi`ite
- Muslims, who have long been discriminated against by the Sunni
- majority, were major players, perhaps even the most
- significant. We were, at least for that time, truly one."
- </p>
- <p> There were approximately 60 resistance groups operating at
- any given time, each with 40 to 50 members. The head of each
- cell knew his opposite number in other units, but his
- subordinates did not know one another. Elaborate codes were
- developed to fool eavesdropping Iraqis. Young girls carried
- bullets in their underwear. Fake identifications were common.
- A sophisticated printing operation was hidden a block from the
- headquarters of Iraq's secret police.
- </p>
- <p> In addition to the organized resistance, many Kuwaitis
- operated on their own. Since Iraqi soldiers examining cars at
- checkpoints frequently stole whatever was in sight, some
- Kuwaitis added rat poison to bottles of orange juice and then
- hid them in the trunk. Iraqi sentries would discover and seize
- the bottles -- and presumably drink the tainted liquid later.
- </p>
- <p> Salem presided over a network that distributed nearly $100
- million, smuggled into Kuwait from the exiled government in
- Taif, Saudi Arabia. "We used the money for bribes to get people
- out of jail, to pass checkpoints, to buy fruits and vegetables
- brought from Iraq," says Salem. "This is the Middle East, and
- money talked even more here because the Iraqis are so poor."
- </p>
- <p> Kuwait's leaders can be blamed for much of the current
- chaos. Like all governments, Kuwait's is sometimes savvy,
- sometimes incompetent. But at the top, and with a few notable
- exceptions, Kuwait's Cabinet is decidedly mediocre -- an
- opinion shared by most Kuwaitis. The government's primary
- mission for seven months has been to plan its return. The
- ministers began well by removing themselves from direct
- responsibility. A reconstruction plan was concocted in
- Washington by Fawzi al-Sultan, an executive director of the
- World Bank, who assembled a team of international experts.
- </p>
- <p> But as the war of liberation neared, the ministers in Taif
- became jealous of an organization that threatened to supplant
- them. In short order, al-Sultan's team was torpedoed. Each
- ministry recaptured control of its own work, coordination
- evaporated, and the resistance movement, which knew what was
- needed and how to accomplish it, was effectively shut out.
- </p>
- <p> The results of mismanagement are everywhere. Supplies of
- essential foodstuffs, supposedly stockpiled and ready to go in
- Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, were delayed at the border because
- Kuwait's Interior Ministry had failed to provide proper
- documentation. Some of the stocks spoiled. When a shipment
- finally arrived in Kuwait City late last week, five days behind
- schedule, the Commerce Ministry's distribution plan had to be
- scrapped because it could not do the job quickly. Some of the
- needed food was distributed by U.S. Ambassador Gnehm. "He had
- the media with him," says a Kuwaiti minister admiringly. "He
- wanted to embarrass us into moving faster, and it worked." But
- the shipments still lag. "Quite literally," says Ali Salem, "we
- had more in the stores when Saddam controlled Kuwait."
- </p>
- <p> The oil industry, Kuwait's backbone, is in even worse shape.
- Rashid al-Amiri, the Oil Minister, is roundly denounced by his
- colleagues. A committee of other ministers was appointed last
- Thursday to "assist" him. "What is unforgivable," says one of
- al-Amiri's associates, "is that he is in no small measure
- directly responsible for much of the havoc we face."
- </p>
- <p> Some months ago, Kuwaiti operatives trained by Western
- intelligence agencies successfully sabotaged Iraq's plan to
- cripple Kuwait's oil-producing centers. The wires leading to
- explosive charges buried in the sand were snipped and reburied.
- Al-Amiri was so delighted that he bragged about it in an
- interview he gave to an Arab newspaper. Whether the Iraqis
- would have checked the wires in any event may never be known,
- but Kuwait says it is now losing 6 million bbl. a day from the
- 600-odd wells ablaze.
- </p>
- <p> Complaints about specific ministers from other ministers and
- the public at large prompted the entire Cabinet to consider
- resigning at a late-night meeting last Thursday. But the Prime
- Minister urged them all to work harder instead. "We'll see
- where things stand in three or four weeks," an aide reports
- Sheik Saad as saying. Says a Western diplomat: "Considering the
- public's anger, and all the weapons available, they're lucky
- they don't have a new regime by now."
- </p>
- <p> What is really on the government's mind these days, and on
- everyone else's as well (which is why the government is
- consumed by it), is the matter of democracy. The Prime
- Minister, a poet of noncommitment who usually deflects direct
- inquiries by saying, "That will be discussed," is promising
- elections for a new parliament. The opposition wants a return
- to the dissolved 1986 parliament. But that is the same assembly
- that refused to expand suffrage to include women and "second
- grade" Kuwaitis -- people who cannot trace their ancestry in
- Kuwait earlier than 1920.
- </p>
- <p> Many Kuwaitis, including those who served in the resistance,
- believe that voting rights must be expanded. In addition, says
- Hamad al-Towgari, 34, a San Jose State University graduate who
- owns the Kuwait Plaza Hotel, the "real issue is what powers any
- parliament has. We want to be modern. We want something closer
- to a constitutional monarchy, something closer to the British
- system." Says Ali Salem, a member of the ruling al-Sabah
- family: "The oligarchy must give way."
- </p>
- <p> The person who perhaps best expresses the pervasive disgust
- is Laila al-Qadhi, a Kuwait University English professor. Few
- say on the record what al-Qadhi says, but many agree with her.
- "At best," says al-Qadhi, "we have a democracy tailored for a
- few. It can't be real, of course, until women and the children
- of expatriates who are born here are entitled to vote as full
- citizens. Certainly those who stayed and fought for Kuwait
- while the cowards fled deserve to participate in their
- government. But I am not optimistic. Many will collaborate to
- restore the old order because it is so comfortable for so many.
- The Sabahs are smart. They have bought the loyalty of most
- with a system that makes all comfortably lazy. What has changed
- is that we who stayed no longer fear those who rule, and they
- fear us because we do not fear them. But if we don't change,
- then the answer to the question `Is Kuwait worth dying for?'
- is no."
- </p>
- <p> Among those in the government most disposed to change is
- Minister of State al-Awadi, an enlightened liberal. "It is not
- easy to establish a democracy in this part of the world," he
- says, "especially when other nations will be upset if we do.
- But it will come, all of it, including the right of women to
- vote. It will just take time." To which al-Qadhi answers
- simply, "Why should we have to wait?"
- </p>
- <p> The biggest losers in Kuwait are its Palestinian residents,
- who numbered 400,000 before the invasion. About 180,000 stayed
- behind. The resistance estimates that 50,000 actually
- collaborated with the Iraqis. But even those who helped Kuwait
- resist the occupation are likely to suffer. "The Palestinians
- were invaluable," says al-Towgari. "They got us through
- checkpoints and got us fake identity papers saying we were
- foreigners. We know who the good ones are, and we want to tell
- the world about them. But they say no. They are scared of P.L.O.
- retribution. It is a vicious circle. Maybe when things calm
- down, people will realize how much we need the Palestinians
- just to get on here."
- </p>
- <p> Maybe later, but not quite yet. Last Sunday at the Doha
- power plant, a Kuwaiti army lieutenant who had spent the past
- seven months in exile refused to allow six Palestinian workers
- to enter the facility. His orders, he said, came straight from
- the Defense Minister: no Palestinians. Arguing with the soldier
- was the plant's director, who patiently explained that the
- whole country was waiting for electricity and that it would
- never be restored until the Palestinians were admitted, because
- they were the people who knew how to do the work. Still the
- lieutenant was unmoved. Finally, and just by chance, Minister
- of State al-Awadi arrived. For a time, even he could not budge
- the soldier. He succeeded eventually, but as the Palestinians
- walked toward the plant, the soldier spit at them.
- </p>
- <p> "The worst hatred toward the Palestinians is coming from
- those who left," says al-Awadi. "On the outside we heard about
- the atrocities and had to listen to Yasser Arafat's support of
- Saddam. Perhaps after people have come back and have a chance
- to assess the real situation, their attitudes will change." For
- the time being, the Palestinians who remained in Kuwait through
- the occupation will be allowed to stay, but even those who did
- not collaborate may never be trusted again. "For a time," says
- Major Mohammed Hamoud, a Kuwaiti air force Hawk missile
- battalion commander, "we let some Palestinians into the army,
- mostly the sons of longtime residents. I had 30 or so in my
- battalion, and they performed well on the first day of the
- invasion when we shot down 12 Iraqi planes and helicopters. But
- now, you can never be sure if they will turn, and so they must
- go."
- </p>
- <p> One goal of Fawzi al-Sultan's disbanded reconstruction team
- has survived Kuwait's internal politics: the proposal to cut
- the country's preinvasion population of 2 million almost in
- half by shedding many of the country's non-Kuwaiti resident
- workers. "Demography is the key," al-Sultan says. "We want
- Kuwaitis to work, to have incentive, to be productive. We want
- a merit system in education and at work, without guaranteed
- government jobs. The way to make Kuwaitis not be lazy is to
- force them to fend for themselves. And the way to do that is
- to strip away the foreigners who do most of the hard work while
- Kuwaitis lie about."
- </p>
- <p> The process has already begun. On March 2, the Gulf Bank ran
- an advertisement in the daily newspaper Voice of Kuwait seeking
- Kuwaitis to be trained as bank clerks in Dubai. "That's the
- start," says Salah al-Awadi, who works for the bank. "What will
- happen in my office is that we will gradually replace
- foreigners with Kuwaitis. I am sure that others will follow."
- </p>
- <p> Last fall those Kuwaiti officials who would hazard a guess
- at the optimum size of the Palestinian population put the
- figure at 100,000. "Now surely we can achieve that," says one
- minister. "We can do it either by denying readmission to those
- who left and deporting some of those who stayed -- or we can
- kick out some who stayed and replace them with some who left
- who we are fairly sure can be trusted."
- </p>
- <p> As he drives through Kuwait City inspecting the damage
- inflicted by Iraq, Minister of State al-Awadi can barely
- contain his anger. "You see what they did to the museum, to the
- scientific center, to art in people's houses," he says. "I know
- it is said that the Iraqi soldiers were just following Saddam's
- orders, and I am sure they were. But living in a place like
- Iraq, with a regime like Saddam's, makes little Saddams of
- everyone, or brings out the Saddam in all of us. When you live
- in a society without principles, the rape of Kuwait is what you
- get. If there is a silver lining to all this, it is that we may
- now understand the value of having principles as we try to
- build a new, more democratic and merit-driven country. If
- people can understand that, Saddam will have done us a great
- good.
- </p>
- <p> "I hope that will happen," adds al-Awadi as he notices the
- wind shift, "but I just don't know." The dark cloud is
- approaching rapidly, and perhaps in anticipation of its
- arrival, al-Awadi begins to cough the cough that many suffer
- whenever they are near where Kuwait burns.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-