home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT2116>
- <link 93TO0078>
- <link 90TT2639>
- <link 90TT2364>
- <link 90TT2252>
- <title>
- Aug. 13, 1990: Iraq's Power Grab
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 13, 1990 Iraq On The March
- The Gulf:Desert Shield
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 16
- COVER STORIES
- Iraq's Power Grab
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Audacious and ruthless, Saddam Hussein seizes tiny Kuwait--and
- no one is sure where his ambition will end
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer--Reported by William Dowell/Cairo, J.F.O.
- McAllister/Washington and Christopher Ogden/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> With hindsight it looks so obvious, so wickedly brilliant.
- There sat Kuwait, fat and ripe, bulging with enormous reserves
- of oil and cash, boasting an excellent port on the Persian Gulf--and utterly incapable of defending itself against Iraq's
- proficient war machine. Saddam Hussein, hungry for money but
- greedier still for regional dominance, knew before the first
- of his soldiers crossed the border that it would be a walkover--and it was. In 12 hours, Kuwait was his.
- </p>
- <p> With his brief romp through the desert, the imperious Iraqi
- President doubled the oil under his control to some 20% of the
- world's known reserves; only Saudi Arabia, with 25%, has more.
- He strengthened his claim to the position he has long coveted:
- overlord of the Arab world. And he made the entire world quake,
- weak-kneed, at his raw power. Not since the brilliant military
- leader Nebuchadnezzar ruled the Babylonian Empire more than two
- millenniums ago had Baghdad exercised such sway.
- </p>
- <p> Just how far will Saddam Hussein's lust for power carry him?
- By provoking the first major military conflict of the post-cold
- war era, he provided the maiden test of the proposition that
- the U.S. and the Soviet Union can create more peace working
- together than apart. As recently as a year ago, such an
- incursion in the Middle East would probably have caused a
- fearsome rift between the superpowers. But in the summer of
- 1990, the Iraqi blitz prompted Washington and Moscow to act in
- stunning unanimity, each abhorring the raid and demanding, in
- an unprecedented joint statement, that the invaders retreat.
- That position was also endorsed by the United Nations Security
- Council. While all parties were clearly loath to take on the
- mightiest army in the Arab world--a force of 1 million
- fighting men--the rare convergence of views raised the
- possibility that Iraq's expansionism can somehow be contained.
- </p>
- <p> Or can it? To Saddam, the end of the cold war, the breakup
- of the Soviet empire and America's re-evaluation of its
- military spending offered a safe opening for his claims of
- hegemony. He has the army, the arsenal and the audacity to
- pursue his grand ambition to rule the region--or rock the
- world. In effect, Saddam has leveled a brazen challenge: Stop
- me if you can. Last weekend one of his spokesmen snarled that
- if anyone moved against Iraqi forces, Baghdad would "chop off
- his arm from the shoulder."
- </p>
- <p> Saddam's power grab is a bold reminder of the role brute
- force will always play in the history of nations. Without the
- threat of escalation to superpower conflict, countries with
- sophisticated weapons and thuggish rulers will try to take
- advantage of the shifting international climate to assert their
- will. The threat to U.S. interests is not some distant danger.
- It is very real, and not only because of the region's oil
- reserves. Does America really want to let the Saddams of the
- world shape the new global power structure?
- </p>
- <p> Saddam's aggression immediately cast the financial markets
- into turmoil. Some economists believe that even a slight surge
- in prices could push America's economy, already weakened by
- sluggish demand, the federal deficit and the S&L crisis, over
- the brink into recession. Perhaps more important, Saddam's move
- on the Middle East is an unexpected test of whether nations
- will pay the necessary price to assure peace and stability in
- the new global climate. Said a senior State Department
- official: "You just cannot allow this kind of behavior to go
- unchecked."
- </p>
- <p> But Saddam is not easily intimidated. He is convinced that
- no nation has the nerve to take him on. His conquest might have
- been deterred, but undoing it now will be nigh impossible.
- Baghdad radio warned that Iraq would "make Kuwait a graveyard
- for those who launch any aggression." The feckless
- international response to his muscle flexing during the past
- decade has nourished his belief that he has little to fear if
- he misbehaves. A loner, he has rarely if ever been told no--probably because the few who tried to do so tended to wind up
- dead. So no one can be very sure what, if any, message will
- derail his ruthless drive to be the paramount power in the
- Persian Gulf. Fortunately, Saddam has few friends around the
- globe, and his truculence is knitting unlikely partners into
- a broad-based opposition.
- </p>
- <p> The emerging harmony of international opinion, however, was
- scant consolation for Kuwait, since no one appeared actually
- willing to come to the defense of the tiny state and its 1.9
- million people. While Iraq in the face of the world's
- condemnation promised to bring its troops home beginning five
- days after the invasion, a subsequent announcement made
- nonsense of that pledge. Baghdad said it was raising a new army
- for Kuwait in which--surprise--100,000 Iraqis had
- volunteered to serve. What's more, Baghdad named a new
- government, composed of nine Kuwaiti army officers, that would
- clearly be a puppet regime. For all practical purposes, Iraq
- has annexed its southern neighbor.
- </p>
- <p> Iraq's land grab drew inevitable comparisons with the 1930s,
- when Hitler began to gobble up Europe in pieces small enough
- not to provoke a military response by the other powers of the
- day. It did not take long before fears grew that Iraq, having
- devoured Kuwait, would turn next to other appetizing and
- vulnerable gulf nations--most notably Saudi Arabia, the
- richest of them all. The extent to which the NATO countries,
- the Soviet Union and the threatened Arab states move to thwart
- Saddam will determine whether they have learned the lesson of
- history or are doomed to repeat it.
- </p>
- <p> Even in the fine points of his strategy, Saddam evoked
- echoes of the past. He excited his people with impassioned
- speeches full of grievances toward their neighbor. He exploited
- a border dispute, scheduled negotiating sessions that were
- intended all along to be fruitless, and cooked up a request for
- intervention by supposedly downtrodden locals. The invasion
- sequence itself was classic '30s: bluff, feint and grab.
- </p>
- <p> Baghdad's bitterest complaint against Kuwait was that the
- gulf state had been grossly overproducing oil in violation of
- OPEC quotas. Combined with similar cheating by the United Arab
- Emirates, Kuwait's excess pumping had depressed the average
- price of an OPEC barrel nearly $7. Iraq, which relies on oil
- for 95% of its export revenues, claims that every $1 drop in
- the price of a barrel of oil costs it $1 billion a year. As
- Saddam saw it, the Kuwaitis might as well have been stealing
- from his treasury.
- </p>
- <p> That business, however, was supposedly settled late last
- month at OPEC's midyear meeting in Geneva. Just before that
- session began, Saddam resorted to outright intimidation: he
- marched his 30,000-strong elite Republican Guard, the troops
- who did the toughest fighting in the gulf war, to the Kuwaiti
- border. Through Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who called
- the spat "a cloud that will pass with the wind"--a comment
- he would soon bitterly regret--Saddam promised he would not
- attack his neighbor, at least for the moment. Still, Kuwait and
- the U.A.E. got the hint, meekly agreed to abide by their
- production caps and consented to the first hike in OPEC's target
- price in four years.
- </p>
- <p> But rather than pull its forces back, Iraq sent in 70,000
- reinforcements. Saddam had other scores to settle with Kuwait.
- There was the quarrel over the rich Rumaila oil field, a
- finger-shaped deposit whose tip reaches just into frontier
- territory claimed by both Iraq and Kuwait. Baghdad insists that
- when its attention was turned to fighting Iran in 1980, Kuwait
- surreptitiously moved the border 2.5 miles north to tap into
- Rumaila. Now Saddam wants $2.4 billion in compensation for oil
- he claims Kuwait withdrew.
- </p>
- <p> Then there was Baghdad's insistence that Kuwait forgive $10
- billion to $20 billion in loans it extended to help fund Iraq's
- eight-year war against Iran. Saddam, who started the conflict,
- maintains that he fought off Iranian fundamentalism on behalf
- of all Arabs and is therefore entitled to relief from the
- entire $30 billion to $40 billion debt he racked up with the
- rest of the Arab world.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, Iraq saw in Kuwait a way to compensate for the
- disadvantages--enormous for an oil exporter--of being
- virtually landlocked. Iraq has just 18 miles of shoreline, and
- most of that is blocked by Kuwait's Bubiyan Island. Baghdad has
- long pressed Kuwait to cede or lease Bubiyan Island, but the
- Kuwaitis refused, figuring they would never get it back. Then
- there is Iraq's long-standing claim that all of Kuwait
- rightfully belongs to it. Once part of the province of Basra
- under the Ottoman Empire, Kuwait has never been acknowledged as
- a separate entity by Baghdad. Iraq tried to reclaim the land by
- force in 1961, when Britain granted Kuwait independence, and
- again in 1973 and 1976.
- </p>
- <p> All the points of discord between Iraq and Kuwait were on
- the agenda of talks between the two countries last Wednesday.
- From the outset the Kuwaitis made it clear that they were
- willing to pay Baghdad a sizable sum for peace. But the Iraqis,
- who demanded Kuwait's total capitulation on every count, were
- determined to see the negotiations break down. After a
- fruitless two hours, they did. At exactly 2 the next morning,
- the 100,000 Iraqi soldiers massed on the border--a force
- nearly five times as great as the entire Kuwaiti military--spilled south. Two additional commando units swarmed in by air
- and sea.
- </p>
- <p> Rolling unchallenged down the empty superhighway Kuwait had
- built--as a token of friendship with Iraq--to link the two
- countries, the troops made the 37 miles to the capital, Kuwait
- City, in just four hours. "It was chaos in the streets," said
- Stephanie McGehee, a photographer who witnessed the attack.
- Panicked residents tried to flee south toward Saudi Arabia, but
- the Iraqis forced people out of their autos and angrily ripped
- out car phones--no rarity in a country with so many wealthy
- citizens--presumably because they could be used to
- communicate troop positions.
- </p>
- <p> While an estimated 300 Iraqi tanks prowled the city, an
- additional 50 surrounded the Emir's palace and the nearby U.S.
- embassy. But the Emir, Sheik Jaber al-Ahmed al-Sabah, and his
- family were able to flee to Saudi Arabia by helicopter. Though
- the invaders had quickly seized Kuwait's radio and television
- station, a hidden transmitter continued to broadcast
- exhortations to resist the raiding foreigners and pleas for
- help from other Arab states. "O Arabs, Kuwait's blood and honor
- are being violated. Rush to its rescue!" cried a voice thought
- to be the crown prince's. "The children, the women, the old men
- of Kuwait are calling on you."
- </p>
- <p> Though help never came, Kuwaiti troops put up small pockets
- of resistance. At the palace, the country's symbolic heart, the
- Kuwaitis held their own through a two-hour artillery barrage.
- During the battle, the Emir's younger brother Fahd was killed.
- The Iraqi force assigned to secure the oil rigs off Kuwait's
- shores saw the most action. Kuwaiti troops and missile boats
- managed to sink and burn an unknown number of Iraqi landing
- craft and escort ships. By early afternoon, however, nearly all
- Kuwait's guns had been silenced. In all, it is estimated that
- 200 Kuwaitis were killed in the assault. No figure for Iraqi
- casualties was available.
- </p>
- <p> Concocting the flimsiest of excuses for an invasion, the
- Iraqis announced that they had entered the country at the
- invitation of the Free Interim Government, which had supposedly
- seized control of the country from the Emir. This previously
- unknown organization was said to be made up of "young
- revolutionaries." But no one bought the tale. "Instead of
- staging a coup d'etat before the invasion, they got it the wrong
- way around," said Thomas Pickering, Washington's U.N.
- ambassador.
- </p>
- <p> To one and all, it was obvious that the Iraqi assault was,
- as President Bush termed it, "naked aggression." Resource-rich
- but sparse in people, Kuwait was a timely acquisition--an act
- of piracy, pure and simple--for Iraq, whose war with Iran
- left the country with $70 billion in debts and tremendous
- reconstruction costs. While Saddam does not face an immediate
- cash shortage, he is intent on proceeding with some $40 billion
- worth of self-memorializing development projects that he has
- been unable to finance. Among them: the Baghdad metro, 2,000
- miles of railway and two gigantic hydroelectric dams. Now Saddam
- can not only pocket the profits of Kuwait's oil wells but also
- manipulate their production levels to ensure a high price for
- his own oil.
- </p>
- <p> Equally tantalizing were Kuwait's enormous investments
- overseas, estimated at $100 billion, which provide the gulf
- state with more than $6 billion a year, a sum roughly
- equivalent to its oil revenues. What's more, Iraq's new piece
- of real estate, which includes Port Ahmadia and 120 miles of
- coastline, gives it direct access to the Persian Gulf.
- </p>
- <p> Of course, Saddam had more on his mind than money. Having
- won--by his lights--the war against Iran, he is intent on
- making himself the new Gamal Abdel Nasser, master and hero of
- the entire Arab world. As Robert E. Hunter, former director of
- Middle East affairs for the National Security Council, points
- out, "If you're going to run a protection racket, every once
- in a while you have to blow up a dry cleaner."
- </p>
- <p> No country that shares a border with Iraq can rest easy. It
- is obvious that Saddam has the military might to seize more
- territory in the gulf, and he could move--who knows?--into
- Jordan or Syria as well, a prospect that raises anxieties in
- Israel. The first modern Arab invasion of another Arab state
- has broken the myth of family that held those competing states
- in check. But even if Saddam reins in his soldiers, the threat
- that he might loose them will scare his Arab neighbors into
- submission. They will find it easier and the better part of
- valor to knuckle under.
- </p>
- <p> Nor can they necessarily count on foreign help. Kuwait
- pleaded for military intervention. "My friend, we are desperate
- for any kind of assistance we can get," said Sheik Saud Nasir
- Al-Sabah, Kuwait's ambassador to the U.S., addressing a
- reporter. But the immediate international response smelled of
- appeasement. Although the U.S. moved to position three of its
- aircraft carriers in the region, President Bush at first said
- his government was not "discussing intervention." The Arab
- League met for a full day in Cairo and was unable to come up
- with even an expression of concern.
- </p>
- <p> Soon enough, however, the danger of allowing Saddam to get
- away with murder began to sink in. The U.S. State Department
- reported that some of the Iraqi invaders had moved to within
- five miles of the border with Saudi Arabia. Though the Saudis
- have stockpiled tens of billions of dollars' worth of Western
- military hardware over the years, they have only a 65,000-man
- armed force that is no match for the Iraqis. Holding that
- neighbor under its guns, Iraq would control more than 44% of
- the world's proven oil reserves. Suddenly backbones
- straightened up. Bush said he was not ruling out a counterstrike
- and warned later that Iraq would be attacking U.S. "vital
- interests" if it took on Saudi Arabia. His aides asserted that
- Washington had unspecified "contingency plans" in the event of
- an Iraqi move beyond Kuwait. Bucking itself up, the Arab
- League, though rejecting foreign interference, condemned the
- invasion and demanded an immediate withdrawal.
- </p>
- <p> In a compelling display of the new relationship between the
- superpowers, U.S. Secretary of State James Baker quickly flew
- to Moscow to consult with his Soviet counterpart, Eduard
- Shevardnadze. After what Shevardnadze called "a rather unusual
- meeting," the two issued a rare communique, the first team
- effort by the superpowers to muster global support to halt a
- regional war. Decrying the "brutal and illegal" Iraqi attack,
- the two countries called on all nations to join in an arms
- embargo of the aggressor state. Signing the statement,
- Shevardnadze allowed, was "rather difficult" for the Soviet
- Union, since Iraq had long been a close client. But, he said,
- the joint declaration was "more consistent with the new
- political thinking."
- </p>
- <p> For the moment, the consensus seemed to be that it was more
- prudent to try to squeeze Saddam dry than to outgun him. "There
- are two approaches to the problem: confrontation or
- asphyxiation," said a Western diplomat in Cairo. "Asphyxiation
- is the best, but it requires the complete cooperation of all
- the countries if it is going to work." The U.S. immediately
- froze Iraqi assets and imposed a boycott on Iraqi oil. Last
- weekend the European Community adopted those measures, banning
- arms sales to Baghdad and adding on a boycott of Kuwaiti oil.
- The U.S. and the European countries have also frozen Kuwaiti
- assets to keep the Iraqis from getting their hands on them.
- Japan asked its financial institutions to follow suit.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever countermeasures are taken, they had better be
- decisive. "The invasion is the first fundamental challenge to
- the new superpower order," says John Hannah of the Washington
- Institute for Near East Policy. The implications of failure are
- underscored by the fact that Iraq, with its less than
- punctilious attachment to the rules of civilized conduct, is
- thought to be three to 10 years away from possessing a nuclear
- bomb. Already Iraq is one of the world's largest producers of
- chemical weapons, and Saddam has shown he is willing to use them
- not only to subdue his external enemies but also to cow his
- own compatriots.
- </p>
- <p> As with any bully, the key to taming Saddam is to make sure
- he gets away with nothing. Given "the mind-set of a person as
- ruthless as he is," says a high-level U.S. State Department
- official, "unless you meet this kind of aggressive behavior
- very firmly, he's encouraged to try again, and you'll pay a
- substantial price later." What the U.S., the other Arabs and
- the rest of the international community must come to terms with
- is that the time to draw a line in the sand is now.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-