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- <text id=92TT1287>
- <title>
- June 08, 1992: Did Bush Create This Monster?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 08, 1992 The Balkans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- U.S. POLICY, Page 41
- Did Bush Create this Monster?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The President courted Saddam Hussein longer than he should have,
- but Democrats aren't making it a campaign issue
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Elaine Shannon and Nancy Traver/
- Washington
- </p>
- <p> Nothing inspires more confidence in Republican campaign
- strategists than the belief that George Bush is unbeatable on
- the foreign policy front. The President can point to the kind
- of experience that no mere Governor of Arkansas or Texas
- businessman can claim. Even the imperfect victory over Iraq,
- which failed to push Saddam out of power, is a Bush triumph in
- one crucial respect: it achieved the declared aim of ousting
- Saddam from Kuwait.
- </p>
- <p> But lately congressional Democrats are trying to credit
- Bush with Saddam's rise as well as his retreat. No fewer than
- three House committees are looking into the charge that, first
- as Vice President under Ronald Reagan and then as President,
- Bush provided Iraq with substantial U.S. assistance that
- strengthened Saddam's hand as a regional menace. Even as it
- became clear that Baghdad was moving to dominate its neighbors,
- Bush, Secretary of State James Baker and other White House
- officials urged the Commerce and Defense departments to approve
- sales to Iraq of sensitive U.S. technology that found its way
- into Saddam's weapons programs, including his effort to develop
- a nuclear bomb. The White House also pressed for federal loan
- guarantees that encouraged banks to extend credit to Iraq in
- return for assurances that the U.S. Treasury would pay if the
- Iraqis reneged. They did. Now American taxpayers are left
- holding the bag for $1.5 billion in bad loans.
- </p>
- <p> North Carolina Representative Charlie Rose, who chairs a
- House agriculture subcommittee, is looking into why the
- Agriculture Department's program, designed to help foreign
- nations purchase American farm goods, approved most of the loan
- guarantees. "These loans not only permitted Iraq to feed its
- people," complains another House Democrat, Henry Gonzalez of
- Texas, "they freed up scarce foreign exchange that was used by
- Iraq to build up its military arsenal."
- </p>
- <p> Gonzalez chairs the House Banking Committee, which last
- week resumed hearings into whether the Administration is
- withholding information about U.S. policy toward Iraq. One
- matter before the committee involves a Justice Department
- investigation into charges that, in exchange for kickbacks and
- other payoffs, officials at the Atlanta branch of one of Italy's
- largest banks, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro, made $4 billion in
- illicit loans to Iraq. Those include $350 million in defaulted
- loans backed by Agriculture Department guarantees. Christopher
- Drogoul, former manager of the Atlanta office, is expected to
- plead guilty this week to charges of fraud and money laundering.
- </p>
- <p> The Administration's critics maintain that it was a sign
- of White House blindness that it continued to court Saddam even
- after evidence emerged in the BNL probe of substantial Iraqi
- misuse of the loan-guarantee program. This week Texas Democrat
- Jack Brooks, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, will
- hold hearings on whether to call on the Justice Department to
- appoint a special prosecutor to determine if the Agriculture
- Department's program was improperly used.
- </p>
- <p> A long list of Administration officials has already
- appeared before the Gonzalez committee to admit that the effort
- to woo Iraq was a flop. "I have said 15 times today that it
- didn't work," Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger
- acknowledged wearily at the end of one session. But
- Administration spokesmen have also denied they were subject to
- undue pressure to favor Iraq. The comGonzalez has moved to
- counter their claims by reading into the Congressional Record
- a cloak of secret documents, mostly concerning White House
- efforts to secure the loan guarantees, which have become the
- subject of lengthy examinations in the Los Angeles Times and
- other publications.
- </p>
- <p> The paper trail emanating from the Gonzalez hearings
- depicts a long, costly courtship of Saddam. In its early stages,
- during Ronald Reagan's first term, it was intended to serve a
- plausible policy assumption: by helping Iraq in its war against
- Iran, the U.S. would counter Iranian influence in the Middle
- East while encouraging Baghdad to moderate its own policies. In
- 1982, three years after Jimmy Carter placed Iraq on the State
- Department's list of nations supporting terrorism, Ronald Reagan
- removed Iraq from the list, reopening the way for U.S. aid. The
- Reagan Administration moved quickly to provide Iraq with over
- $400 million in loan guarantees to buy American grain.
- </p>
- <p> It also began to push for loan guarantees from the Federal
- Export-Import Bank, which helps American companies sell products
- abroad by offering loan guarantees. Documents made public by
- Gonzalez show that in December 1983, Under Secretary of State
- Eagleburger wrote a secret letter urging bank chairman William
- Draper III to open a line of credit for Iraq, though most of the
- world's financial institutions had stopped lending to Baghdad
- and the Export-Import Bank's own analysts had concluded that
- Iraq could not be counted on to repay.
- </p>
- <p> The following June, Vice President Bush telephoned Draper,
- an old friend from Yale, to urge approval of $500 million in
- loan guarantees for a pipeline through Jordan to deliver Iraqi
- oil to the Red Sea. The bank approved the loan guarantees the
- next week. Because the pipeline was never built, the guarantees
- were never used. But the bank also soon began providing Iraq
- with $200 million in short-term loans. Within months Baghdad
- fell behind in its payments.
- </p>
- <p> In 1986 Bush again pressed the bank on Saddam's behalf.
- Hoping to bring good news to an upcoming meeting with Iraqi
- Ambassador Nizar Hamdoon, he successfully urged the new bank
- chairman, John A. Bohn Jr., to provide another $200 million in
- loan guarantees the bank had earlier denied. At his meeting with
- Hamdoon, Bush was also able to assure the ambassador that
- because two more export licenses had been approved--over
- Pentagon objections--Iraq would soon have permission to make
- two long-sought purchases of American high technology.
- Eventually hundreds of export licenses would be approved to sell
- Iraq more than $600 million in dual-use technology. The
- purchases included a laser-guided welding system that Iraq would
- use to construct centrifuges that produce weapons-quality
- uranium.
- </p>
- <p> By the time Bush became President in 1989, Iraq's war with
- Iran had ended, and the measure of Saddam's ruthlessness had
- been made apparent by his use of poison gas to slaughter 5,000
- Iraqi Kurds the previous summer. But the new President pushed
- on with his policy of carrots without sticks. Revelations about
- Iraq that emerged from the BNL scandal in 1989 led the Treasury
- Department, the Office of Management and Budget and the Federal
- Reserve to attempt to block the $1 billion in loan guarantees
- sought for 1990 by the White House. Any resistance was futile
- after Bush signed National Security Directive 26, which ordered
- government agencies to pursue closer ties with Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> But when the final guarantees were eventually granted in
- late 1989, they came with a safeguard. Only half of the $1
- billion would be available at the outset. The rest would be
- released if there were no further problems arising from the BNL
- probe. Iraq's efforts to secure the second half were cut short
- when its invasion of Kuwait put an end to U.S. aid.
- </p>
- <p> Though many Democrats would like to make an issue of
- Bush's cozy dealings with Iraq, it is unlikely the matter will
- become a focus of voter outrage. Even the Clinton campaign is
- approaching the matter warily. "We think the issue has some
- power," says Clinton's campaign manager David Wilhelm. "But it's
- a complicated question." One complication is that the prewar
- dalliance with Saddam won widespread support from Democrats as
- well as Republicans in the Congress, many of whom were eager for
- their states to benefit from trade with Iraq. Another is that,
- for Americans preoccupied with domestic issues such as jobs and
- health care, the ins and outs of commodity credits are an
- obscure branch of governmental cosmology.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-