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- <text id=91TT0730>
- <title>
- Apr. 08, 1991: Keeping Hands Off
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 08, 1991 The Simple Life
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 22
- Keeping Hands Off
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As Saddam's loyalists pound the rebels, the carnage inside Iraq
- poses a quandary with no attractive alternatives for the U.S.
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Dan Goodgame/Washington and
- Robert T. Zintl/Tehran, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Is George Bush supporting Saddam Hussein? The question
- sounds insane, but a number of critics charge that he is, in
- effect, by not helping the rebels fighting to oust the
- archdemon. Bush, after all, denounced the Iraqi dictator as
- being in some respects "worse than Hitler," organized a
- multinational crusade to crush his military power and repeatedly
- called for his overthrow. For the past four weeks, Shi`ite
- Muslims in the south and Kurds in the north have been trying to
- accomplish just that. Yet after Bush met with his top national
- security advisers last week, the President made it clear that
- U.S. military forces now occupying southern Iraq will give no
- overt assistance to the rebels.
- </p>
- <p> That decision, moreover, was made in full knowledge that
- Saddam is likely not just to defeat the insurrections but to
- massacre their supporters by the thousands. That is already
- happening in the south, where Saddam loyalists reportedly have
- regained control of nearly all the towns once captured by the
- Shi`ites and are taking a fearsome revenge. Refugees by the
- thousands have fled across the American lines, seeking succor
- and narrating tales of torture and mass executions.
- </p>
- <p> Now, predicts a U.S. official, "it's going to get really
- ugly" for the Kurdish fighters who have taken much of
- northeastern Iraq. "Saddam's probably going to use helicopter
- gunships, fixed-wing bombers, chemical weapons, napalm--the
- works." U.S. forces earlier had forbidden the Iraqi military to
- fly warplanes and had actually shot down two. Washington had
- further hinted that it might attack helicopters flying against
- the rebels and retaliate, presumably by bombing, if Saddam used
- chemical weapons or napalm against his own people. But by the
- end of last week those warnings were exposed as a bluff that did
- not work. Saddam's forces did use all kinds of aircraft to
- devastating effect in an assault that Baghdad claimed had
- recaptured the northern oil center of Kirkuk--and the U.S.
- made no attempt to stop them.
- </p>
- <p> To some columnists and Middle East experts, this policy
- seemed a disgraceful combination of cynicism and moral
- abdication. Several critics accused the President of reverting
- to his pre-August view of Saddam as a force for stability in the
- region, at least in the sense of being preferable to chaos. As
- to the moral argument, some in the Administration acknowledged
- discomfort. One official conceded, "It seems to me just like
- Hungary in 1956. Having called on people to overthrow their
- repressive leadership, we just sit back and watch them get
- slaughtered." Other commentators came up with a different
- analogy: the Red Army halting outside Warsaw in 1944 and doing
- nothing to stop a Nazi massacre of the Jewish ghetto residents
- who had risen in revolt.
- </p>
- <p> White House officials rejected the charges. "The only
- pressure for the U.S. to intervene is coming from columnists and
- commentators," said a senior presidential aide. He and other
- Bush advisers contend that the American public overwhelmingly
- wants U.S. troops to be brought home as rapidly as possible.
- Another White House official adds that "our coalition partners,"
- both European and Arab, "don't want us getting involved in
- Iraq's internal affairs" either. If the U.S. were to choose
- sides, it would be exceeding the U.N. mandates under which it
- fought the war, and with little support abroad or at home.
- </p>
- <p> And for what? A number of experts contend that the U.S.
- knows next to nothing about those who are fighting, what they
- want and whether they might be able to run part or all of the
- country. "There are no real groups competing for power," says
- a U.S. analyst. "The Baathists have destroyed them all." Bush's
- advisers fear that if some loose combination of rebels won, they
- would not be able to exercise effective control over the
- institutions dominated by Saddam's fellow Sunni Muslims--the
- army, the security police and the Baath party--that have kept
- Iraq together. The country could well splinter into rival
- fragments that might be gobbled up by neighboring Iran, Syria
- and Turkey, leading to instability throughout the Middle East.
- Or the rebels might provoke other multi-ethnic states to
- splinter. The Kurds, for example, have said they seek only
- autonomy within a federated Iraq, but American officials think
- that after a successful rebellion the Kurds would declare
- outright independence. That in turn would inspire agitation
- among Kurdish minorities in Turkey, Syria and Iran to join a
- Greater Kurdistan.
- </p>
- <p> Alternatively, Iraq might sink into a long-running,
- multisided civil war, like Lebanon--and "Lebanon" now rivals
- "Vietnam" as a one-word summation of the Administration's worst
- nightmares. The Kurds and Shi`ites, says a Bush adviser, were
- "fighting the Sunnis for years before we got there, and they'll
- continue killing each other long after we've gone." U.S. forces,
- moreover, might not be able to stay out of such a bloody
- quagmire. Having helped depose Saddam, Washington might be
- obliged to get involved in selecting and propping up a successor
- government. But the U.S., observes an Administration official,
- "has a history of horrible results when it tried to impose
- governments on other countries."
- </p>
- <p> The principal holdout against a hands-off policy was
- George Bush. The President was so eager to see Saddam overthrown
- that he insisted on warnings to the Iraqi leader not to use
- maximum force against the insurgents. The threats, however,
- scared Saddam less than they did congressional leaders of both
- parties, who rushed to the White House to urge Bush to do
- nothing that would interfere with the speedy return of American
- soldiers. Finally, when it came time last week to put up or shut
- up on his warnings to Saddam, Bush decided to shut up. His
- spokesman Marlin Fitzwater made it official: "We do not intend
- to involve ourselves in the internal conflicts in Iraq."
- </p>
- <p> That probably means no one will save the Iraqi rebels.
- Like the U.S., Iraq's neighboring powers would dearly love to
- see Saddam overthrown. But also like the U.S.--though for
- different reasons--they are unwilling to give the
- insurrectionists enough help to assure their victory.
- Overwhelmingly Shi`ite Iran has allowed some Iraqis who either
- defected or were taken prisoner during the 1980-88 war between
- the two countries to infiltrate back into Iraq and join the
- Shi`ite rebels in the south. There are widespread suspicions
- that Iran has smuggled some arms to them too, though Tehran
- denies it. In any case, the southern rebels say they have not
- received enough help to be effective. The Iranians "are very
- stingy," complains a Shi`ite opposition leader.
- </p>
- <p> Though Iran would no doubt be delighted to have a
- congenial Shi`ite regime as a neighbor, its principal short-term
- goal appears to be to end its isolation and woo investment from
- the West to help rebuild its shattered economy. What Iran needs
- is, in a word, money. That dictates soft-pedaling attempts to
- export Islamic fundamentalist revolution and professing
- devotion to Middle Eastern stability. Tehran figures the best
- way to achieve its goals is to cool its "Great Satan" rhetoric
- and keep things quiet enough to convince Washington that
- withdrawal of its troops would be safe.
- </p>
- <p> Turkey is too afraid of abetting nationalist sentiments
- among its own Kurdish minority (an estimated 7 million in a
- population of 56 million) to risk helping Kurds in Iraq. Foreign
- Ministry officials in Ankara did meet recently with heads of the
- Iraqi Kurdish insurrection but offered them only "moral support"--and only on condition that they forswear any ambitions to
- set up an independent Kurdistan.
- </p>
- <p> Syria has encouraged the formation of a joint-action
- committee representing all of Saddam's opponents and has
- arranged a meeting for the group--in Beirut, not Damascus. As
- that suggests, Syria is also cautious about getting too close
- to the rebels, even though Syrian leader Hafez Assad and Saddam
- nurture a long-standing mutual hatred. The allied crushing of
- Saddam's offensive military power has already effectively
- removed him as Assad's rival for Middle East power and
- influence. Though Assad doubtless would like to see the job
- finished by Saddam's personal downfall, he would not necessarily
- want that to be accomplished by the rise of either Shi`ites or
- Kurds. His ideal outcome would be a friendly military regime set
- up by a coup organized by pro-Syrian Baathist generals.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. also nourishes some hope that Saddam will
- eventually be replaced by his own military. Some U.S. officials
- argue that the rebellions make Saddam's demise less likely
- because Iraq's Sunni elite has been forced to close ranks around
- the dictator to save their own skins. Once the insurrection is
- quelled, goes the theory, the Sunnis may feel free to dump the
- leader.
- </p>
- <p> If not? Then, Washington hopes, the cease-fire resolution
- shaping up in the U.N. Security Council will defang and
- humiliate Iraq so completely that it will never again be a
- threat to its neighbors, no matter who holds power in Baghdad.
- The resolution would require Iraq to destroy all its chemical
- and biological weapons and ballistic missiles under the eyes of
- international inspectors, turn over all nuclear material that
- could be fashioned into atomic weapons, and pay reparations to
- Kuwait out of future oil revenues. The U.S. sold the other four
- permanent members of the Security Council on the resolution last
- week. Though a hitch developed when the Soviets tried to exempt
- missiles with a range of 200 miles or less, the U.S., British
- and French objected so violently that Moscow dropped the idea.
- Some of the 10 rotating members, who have no veto power, raised
- objections to other provisions, but the outlook is for the
- resolution to pass this week in the shape Washington wants.
- </p>
- <p> Acceptance of the terms is the only way Iraq can bring the
- worldwide trade embargo to an end. Once the cease-fire is
- approved, U.N. observers would move in to monitor a
- demilitarized zone on both sides of the Iraq-Kuwait border;
- after they are in place, Washington will feel free to bring home
- the rest of its soldiers. That may not do much to make the
- Middle East less of a breeding ground for war or to bring
- democracy to Iraq. But the U.S. and its allies at least will
- have fought off a threat to world oil supplies, defeated a naked
- aggression and destroyed the offensive military power of a
- world-class bully--and, for the moment at least, that, in the
- Bush Administration's view, is enough.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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