home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1299>
- <title>
- Mar. 29, 1993: Saddam, Still
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 29, 1993 Yeltsin's Last Stand
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- IRAQ, Page 32
- Saddam, Still
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>With power his only objective, Saddam has rebuilt Baghdad, rewarded
- his supporters and convinced his people they are the victims
- of Western aggression
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by Dean Fischer/Baghdad
- </p>
- <p> In Baghdad's art galleries hang heartrending depictions
- of slaughter, ruin and misery, painted since the Gulf War. On
- the sidewalks, poor families sell their meager household goods
- to procure enough money to eat. In the back alleys, women offer
- their bodies for sale--an extreme act of desperation in
- Muslim society--and men steal cars or rob their neighbors'
- houses.
- </p>
- <p> These are not the people that Saddam Hussein counts on. He
- has drawn around himself a tight circle of supporters, loyal
- members of his al-Tikriti clan, whose interlocking relationships
- ensure his control of the security services, the military and
- the Baath party. The army is run by a cousin who launched
- poison-gas attacks against the Kurds in 1988 and destroyed
- Shi`ite holy sites in the south after the war. Internal security
- is entrusted to two half-brothers, and Saddam's younger son,
- Qusai, 26, was recently put in charge of the 10,000-man
- presidential guard. Another half-brother, Barzan al-Tikriti, has
- just returned from a 10-year stint as U.N. ambassador in Geneva
- to serve as presidential adviser. He is also the overseer of
- Saddam's personal financial empire, allegedly a $30 billion
- fortune amassed by skimming 5% off Iraq's oil revenues since
- Saddam became President in 1979. Because $5.5 billion in
- official Iraqi accounts has been frozen abroad, Saddam is
- suspected of tapping his private accounts to finance restoration
- of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Two years after Saddam's shattering defeat in the Gulf
- War, the Iraqi dictator remains in full control of the Baghdad
- government. Though he has lost his hold on Kurdistan in the
- north and over parts of the Shi`ite south, he has bottled up the
- insurgents in both regions so they do not threaten his rule.
- Every step he takes has been aimed at buttressing his authority.
- He rebuilt Baghdad and the central region, where his Sunni
- Muslim backers hold sway; he gives government workers and
- members of the armed forces regular pay increases and
- relentlessly bombards the nation with self-serving propaganda.
- </p>
- <p> As a result, Saddam's power base remains solid. Postwar
- clashes with the armed and dangerous Kurds and Shi`ites alarmed
- the minority Sunnis, who provide the bulk of Saddam's military
- and civilian support. "When things threaten to fall apart,"
- says Baghdad novelist Jabra Ibrahim Jabra, "you stick with the
- man who can hold it together. Saddam was the one man who could
- make the center hold."
- </p>
- <p> Using his monopoly over press and television, Saddam has
- apparently convinced large segments of the population that the
- ever hostile West simply used the occupation of Kuwait as an
- excuse to attack Iraq: they see themselves as the victims.
- Saddam also seized on Bush's air strikes in January as evidence
- of Washington's vendetta. Iraqi TV director Faisal Yasiri
- produced a series of 56 installments on the Gulf War that
- portrayed the country as a victim. "People discovered by
- watching the programs," Yasiri says with a straight face, "that
- the target of aggression was Iraq. The liberation of Kuwait was
- only an excuse to attack Iraq."
- </p>
- <p> These citizens are unlikely to be moved by the U.S. report
- made public last week cataloging just how brutally Saddam's
- forces behaved in the Gulf War. According to Pentagon
- investigators, Iraq tortured and killed 1,082 Kuwaiti civilians
- and violently abused all captured prisoners of war. Kuwaiti
- victims were dismembered by axes and drowned in acid baths; U.S.
- POW's were beaten and forced to urinate on the American flag.
- The atrocities were so widespread, said the report, "that they
- could not have occurred without the authority or knowledge of
- Saddam Hussein." The document was completed a year ago, but some
- officials say it was withheld to protect Bush from campaign
- charges that he had failed to bring Saddam to justice for his
- crimes. Clinton has his own political reasons for publishing:
- while the Iraqi leader has sought to charm the new President,
- the Administration wants to dispel any notion that he would
- adopt a softer line.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam's continued survival in many ways defies Western
- logic. The U.N. trade embargo keeps Iraq from marketing its oil
- abroad or importing most goods. The dinar has collapsed,
- inflation is out of control and foreign suppliers are shutting
- off its credit. The armed forces are down from a million men to
- 400,000, and morale is reported to be low.
- </p>
- <p> Despite such pressures, which would guarantee a change of
- government in most countries, Saddam predicts that Iraq will
- soon re-emerge as the dominant power in the region. To speed the
- removal of U.N. sanctions, he is assuring the West he will
- comply with all Security Council resolutions. In the Arab world,
- Saddam is appealing for a united front against Islamic
- fundamentalism, the threat that most worries the conservative
- governments of the Middle East. A key part of the strategy, he
- says, is cooperation to contain Iran, still a leading state
- sponsor of terrorism. With some success, Saddam has sent his
- half-brother Barzan to several Arab capitals to deliver that
- message.
- </p>
- <p> Oman and Bahrain, ever fearful of Iran, advocate
- normalization with Iraq. Even Egypt, which led the Arab League's
- battle against Iraq, says it might be willing to reconcile.
- Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's political adviser Osama
- al-Baz calls for a rapprochement with Baghdad "within a
- collective framework." Earlier this month, Turkey, which
- provided a base for U.S. bombers during the Gulf War, reopened
- its embassy in Baghdad.
- </p>
- <p> When a cease-fire halted the fighting in February 1991, a
- U.N. mission referred to "near apocalyptic" damage. Baghdad, in
- the Sunni heartland, shows little sign of the war's devastation
- today. All but one of the city's 12 bridges across the Tigris
- River are back in service. The Defense Ministry has been
- rebuilt, and the central telephone exchange is operating out of
- brand-new headquarters. Bazaars and open-air restaurants are
- full.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam has pampered the privileged while exploiting the
- misery of the poor for propaganda. He and his aides denounce the
- West for imposing the embargo and depriving people of food and
- medicine. In fact, the sanctions do not apply to food or
- humanitarian supplies, and the U.N. has offered Iraq the chance
- to sell oil worth $1.6 billion to finance such purchases. Saddam
- refuses to do so, claiming that the deal would violate Iraq's
- sovereignty because the U.N. would supervise the sales and the
- purchases. The real reason, Western officials believe, is that
- the arrangement would require Saddam to pay reparations to
- Kuwait and he is unwilling to hand over any oil revenues.
- </p>
- <p> Iraqi citizens may accept their leader's line on the
- sanctions, or they may be too frightened by the secret police
- and its informers to say anything else. At Qadissiya hospital
- on the outskirts of Baghdad, Dr. Maysoon Askar, a pediatrician,
- describes a cycle of milk shortages and protein deficiency among
- children that leads to disease and death. She says, "The
- sanctions have to be lifted. That is the problem."
- </p>
- <p> The embargo has not decreased the food supply but
- increased prices. At an outdoor market in Saidiyah, near
- Baghdad, the stalls are laden with Turkish lentils, Vietnamese
- rice, local lamb and fish. The prices are constantly rising;
- meat is 10 times as expensive as it was three years ago. "Before
- the war, we had money," says Rashid Karim Mohammed, a
- 62-year-old pensioner. "Now we are living on our savings." He
- blames the sanctions. Western diplomats suggest Saddam is acting
- out an old Iraqi proverb: "Make your dog hungry so he will
- follow you." Starving creatures can also grow dangerous, but no
- signs of mutiny are visible.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam has survived repeated rebellions, assassination
- attempts, a long and exhausting war with Iran and a devastating
- clash with most of the world. He now says he can overcome U.N.
- and Western sanctions, especially if his fellow Arabs accept
- his call to come together against fundamentalism. Since he also
- thrives on being underestimated, he may be right.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-