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- <text id=90TT2196>
- <link 93XP0291>
- <link 91TT0126>
- <link 90TT3353>
- <link 90TT2437>
- <title>
- Aug. 20, 1990: The World Closes In
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 20, 1990 Showdown
- The Gulf:Desert Shield
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF, Page 26
- COVER STORIES
- The World Closes In
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Record, tough economic sanctions, U.S. troops and a pan-Arab
- force have been mobilized. But Iraq is in no mood for
- capitulation.
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer--Reported by William Dowell/Bahrain, Michael
- Duffy/ Washington and Christopher Ogden with Baker
- </p>
- <p> Once he gulped down Kuwait, Saddam Hussein paused to
- consider what move he should make next. That gave the rest of
- the world time to muster its defenses--but not much time. As
- the week wore on, Iraq and the U.S. moved closer to
- confrontation, but neither seemed to know just how far it would
- have to go. Saddam hesitated to send his battle-ready soldiers
- across the Saudi border, but he did not retreat either. A
- global gathering of opponents joined the U.S. in sweeping
- economic sanctions, but almost all troops landing in the desert
- to bolster the tiny Saudi army were American. The situation
- remained dangerously unstable. President Bush vowed not only
- to defend the Persian Gulf but also to force Saddam to disgorge
- Kuwait. Saddam formally annexed the Emir's kingdom, dropped all
- pretenses of a military pullout and called for a holy war to
- "burn the land under the feet of the aggressive invaders."
- </p>
- <p> Still, it began to look as if Iraq's gamble had been an
- audacious miscalculation. Standing together against Saddam,
- every major world power worked in unprecedented concert to tame
- his renegade ambitions. The U.N. Security Council voted without
- dissent for record, tough economic sanctions--mandatory for
- all U.N. members--aimed at strangling Saddam until he
- released Kuwait from his grip. As added encouragement, and to
- dissuade the Iraqi bully from pushing any farther into the
- Arabian peninsula, various navies began to crowd the Persian
- Gulf as well as the Mediterranean, Red and Arabian seas. They
- were well placed to enforce a blockade of Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. poured thousands of troops into Saudi Arabia to
- stare down the Iraqis gathered threateningly at the border with
- Kuwait. Bush was betting that the very presence of G.I.s would
- deter Saddam from ordering his army forward. At the same time,
- the U.S. force served credible notice that Bush was indeed
- willing to put his own men at risk to protect the sanctity of
- the gulf states--and their oil.
- </p>
- <p> Another worry for Saddam--surely unexpected--was the
- Arab League's remarkable decision on Friday to endorse the
- dispatch of Arab troops to join the Saudis' defense. A day
- later, contingents of Egyptian and Moroccan troops were in
- place, prepared to fight shoulder to shoulder with the
- Americans against their Arab brothers, and Syrians were on the
- way. The Arab presence had political as well as military
- significance. No longer could Saddam easily cast himself as the
- Arab nationalist taking on the Western imperialists and their
- Saudi lackeys. The Arab League's move was a difficult but brave
- decision that drew the circle tight around Iraq. Observed
- British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher: "I cannot remember
- a time when we had the world so strongly together against an
- action as now."
- </p>
- <p> The astonishing unanimity of purpose brought out all sorts
- of uncharacteristic behavior. The Saudis for the first time
- allowed the U.S. to stage military operations from their soil,
- breaking the old taboo against colluding openly with Israel's
- closest ally. Japan, which has assiduously avoided conflict
- with gulf states to guarantee a steady oil supply, chose
- principle over economics. Switzerland, which does not belong to
- NATO, the European Community or even the U.N. and ordinarily
- eschews economic sanctions, took sides by joining in. Even Cuba
- and Yemen, Security Council members that abstained in the vote
- for sanctions against Baghdad, fell into line when the Council
- moved to condemn Iraq's announced annexation of its tiny
- neighbor.
- </p>
- <p> The old geopolitical map was being redrawn. China, the
- Soviet Union and the U.S. found themselves voting together on
- the Middle East, a subject that has bitterly divided them in
- the past. Moscow held open the possibility of joining a U.N.
- force against its ally Iraq. That could mean joint military
- action with the U.S., an unthinkable idea for the past 45
- years. At the same time, the wider role that many in Washington
- would like to see NATO adopt got an unrehearsed trial run, with
- the U.S. relying heavily on Turkey to complete the economic
- asphyxiation of Iraq, its southeastern neighbor. "The real
- significance of this crisis," said a senior Bush Administration
- official, "is that it is going to define the post-cold war
- world."
- </p>
- <p> For a time, anyway. Most nations seemed to realize that if
- the superpowers were no longer going to police the world, a
- global Neighborhood Watch had better develop--at least to
- counter this particular bogeyman. As extraordinary as the
- harmony of world reaction was, the circumstances that created
- it were equally improbable. It is not often that the world
- produces a dictator who so blatantly disregards the laws of
- civility to commit such an overt, unambiguous act of aggression
- against a peaceful neighbor that poses no security threat
- whatsoever. It is rare that a victim's fortunes are so directly
- tied to the health of the Western economies. And it is more
- unusual still that the aggressor rules an all but landlocked
- country dependent on imports for food and on the sufferance of
- its neighbors to get its one significant income earner, oil,
- to market. "In international affairs," said a senior Bush
- Administration official, "it is rare that the ball is so
- clearly teed up."
- </p>
- <p> But will the motives and the means to quell Iraq's hegemonic
- aims prove enough? Saddam was certainly in no mood for
- capitulation last week. "We would rather die than be
- humiliated," the Iraqi President thundered. "We will pluck out
- the eyes of those who attack the Arab nation." Baghdad cut off
- its only easy out when it dissolved the five-day-old
- provisional government it had established in Kuwait and
- announced an "eternal merger" of the country with Iraq. This
- left Iraq no way to retreat from Kuwait without a serious loss
- of face, something the megalomaniacal Saddam is not likely to
- accept.
- </p>
- <p> Next, Saddam upped the ante by explicitly threatening Saudi
- Arabia and the other gulf states, issuing a call for the
- overthrow of the "Emirs of oil." Ever since his capture of
- Kuwait, Saddam has played on Arab xenophobia and proclaimed
- himself the leader of a campaign to redistribute Arab wealth
- from the rich gulf monarchies to the poorer republics, or at
- least to Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam's intransigence left only dangerous scenarios for the
- outcome of the crisis. Despite their willingness to mount a
- pan-Arab force to protect Saudi Arabia, Iraq's fellow Arab
- states could eventually put together an agreement to buy Saddam
- off. In its most likely form, the dictator would agree to leave
- the rest of the gulf alone in exchange for large chunks of
- Kuwait's land--especially Bubiyan Island, which blocks most
- of Iraq's short shoreline--plus huge sums of money and
- possibly a permanent share of Kuwait's oil revenues. A nominally
- independent Kuwait might wind up in a federation in which
- Baghdad was the obvious senior partner. This solution would
- almost surely prove temporary. Once paid, the extortionist
- usually comes back for more.
- </p>
- <p> Or Iraq could sit tight in Kuwait while the American forces
- sweat it out in the Saudi desert. This could lead to a long
- standoff that would severely test the patience of the West and
- its commitment to the region. The U.S. in particular has an
- aversion to protracted expeditions abroad. Washington hopes
- that the economic sanctions will eventually force Saddam to
- relent. But if they fail, the U.S. would have to write off
- Kuwait or move against Iraq's troops there. Once Saddam is put
- on the defensive, his position could drastically improve in
- popular Arab circles, muddying the lines in the conflict.
- </p>
- <p> Or Saddam could strike out at his enemies. That would be an
- extremely daring, perhaps suicidal move. Before the deployment
- of foreign troops to Saudi Arabia, the Iraqis would have faced
- a weak opponent there. Now they are up against an American
- ground force, which could quickly grow to 50,000, plus the Arab
- contingent. Iraqi tanks would suffer air attacks from U.S. and
- British fighters, whose numbers will soon reach 130. And
- Baghdad would face the prospect of bombing raids. But in
- return, Saddam could wreak havoc with the region's oil fields,
- wiping out production facilities and sending the world economy
- into a tailspin.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam cannot win such an encounter, but that will not
- necessarily deter him. He fought the Iranians, after all, for
- eight years, spent $112 billion, lost an estimated 120,000
- soldiers, gained absolutely nothing and yet considers himself
- the victor of that conflict. While the presence of the Arab
- forces has reduced the likelihood that Saddam will send his
- tanks rushing across the border, he could choose a more limited
- form of engagement. He might well strike at foreign ships
- positioned nearby, as happened in the so-called tanker war of
- the 1980s, calculating that this would not provoke massive
- retaliation.
- </p>
- <p> Or he could completely alter the equation by attacking
- Israel, thus pulling his Arab opponents back to his cause. "No
- intelligence service in the world can anticipate what he will
- do," noted an intelligence official in Israel, where the air
- force and air defense command were on alert, and where
- television broadcasts were filled with advice on how to survive
- a chemical-weapons attack. "He is cornered and can do almost
- anything."
- </p>
- <p> Among the scariest of Saddam's options would be to exploit
- the tens of thousands of foreign nationals who are stranded in
- Iraq and Kuwait. Both countries are a hostage taker's dream
- bazaar. Among the expatriates in Kuwait are 3,000 Americans,
- 3,000 Britons and 3,000 Turks. In Iraq there are an additional
- 500 Americans, 2,000 Britons, 8,000 Soviets and 3,000 Turks.
- Last week Iraq sealed its borders and Kuwait's. Later, 11
- Americans, all of them Baghdad embassy staff and their
- dependents, except for 10-year-old Penelope Nabokov, were
- allowed to depart for Jordan. But there was no indication of
- when any others would be permitted to leave.
- </p>
- <p> Fears about Saddam's intentions toward the foreigners
- escalated when the short-lived provisional government in Kuwait
- hinted that it might take hostages. The regime announced it
- could not be expected "to act honorably at a time when
- [foreigners] are conspiring against us and our brothers in
- Iraq." If Saddam does interpose these civilians between himself
- and his confronters, the Western powers will face the nastiest
- dilemma: giving in to the demands of a vicious brute or risking
- thousands of innocent lives to squash him.
- </p>
- <p> Even if the foreigners do not become Saddam's pawns, life
- in occupied Kuwait is unpleasant enough. According to refugees
- who managed to escape, the invaders have gone on a rampage of
- pillage and rape. A Turkish man saw Iraqi troops carry off
- every piece of gold in every store along Amara Street, Kuwait's
- jewelry row. Other witnesses said soldiers broke into
- automobile showrooms, seized Mercedes and drove them back to
- Iraq. The marauders raided private homes and even emptied
- supermarket shelves. "It was more like a big robbery than an
- invasion," said Ali Awsar, a Turk who had been working in
- Kuwait.
- </p>
- <p> Examining all options to defuse the crisis, the U.S. has
- begun to weigh the possibilities of toppling Saddam from
- within. That, however, would be no mean feat. There is no
- organized opposition in Iraq and no dissident movement to speak
- of. Saddam has seen to that by killing or imprisoning all foes,
- real or imagined. According to British diplomats, he had some
- 50 senior military officers, including several generals, shot
- when they balked at his plans to raid Kuwait.
- </p>
- <p> The Iraqi dictator, however, will find his position at home
- sorely tested as economic sanctions start to bite. The U.N.
- measures bar all member states from buying anything from or
- selling anything to either Iraq or Kuwait, except on
- humanitarian grounds. Separately, the E.C., the U.S. and Japan
- have frozen Kuwait's foreign assets, some $100 billion
- worldwide, to keep them out of Saddam's clutches.
- </p>
- <p> Only twice before has the U.N. leveled mandatory sanctions
- to try to humble a recalcitrant state. Both attempts were
- flops. A ban on trade with Rhodesia was in effect for 13 years,
- beginning in 1967, after the white racist government
- unilaterally declared independence from Britain. Neighboring
- South Africa kept Rhodesia--now Zimbabwe--supplied with
- arms, gasoline and vital consumer goods while acting as
- middleman for the country's tobacco exports. In 1977 the U.N.
- banned arms sales to South Africa to protest apartheid, and
- independently, many countries restricted their economic ties
- in the mid-1980s. Still, South Africa's economy has prospered.
- </p>
- <p> Iraq's circumstances, however, are more favorable to the
- sanctioners. The country is vulnerable because its economy is
- staggering under the weight of $70 billion in war debts and the
- $10 billion-a-year cost of keeping 1 in 17 Iraqi citizens under
- arms. In addition, the sanctions against Iraq, unlike those
- against South Africa, are comprehensive. And unlike Rhodesia,
- Iraq derives its income almost entirely from one commodity,
- oil, which accounts for 95% of its exports. Unlike each of the
- other countries, Iraq lacks the industrial or agricultural base
- necessary to achieve a significant degree of self-sufficiency.
- </p>
- <p> Iraq's softest spot is food. The country relies on imports
- for 70% of its wheat and nearly all its chicken feed, meat,
- cheese, sugar and cooking oil. Most of these foodstuffs come
- from North America, Europe and Australia. The sanctions exempt
- food exports if they are justified on humanitarian grounds, but
- many of Saddam's suppliers have decided to starve him out, at
- least as long as famine is not imminent. Estimates of how long
- Iraq's food stores will last range from two to six months.
- </p>
- <p> Even if Saddam finds someone to sell to him, he will soon
- run out of cash for supplies if the boycott of Iraqi and
- Kuwaiti oil continues to hold. By week's end the embargo was
- nearly 100% complete, choking off all exports from both
- countries.
- </p>
- <p> For now, only an honor system enforces the sanctions. After
- 30 days, the U.N. will determine whether violations have
- occurred. If they have, the U.S. will press for a
- U.N.-sponsored naval blockade of Iraq. Ships in nearby waters
- could--with considerable accuracy--monitor incoming and
- outgoing vessels to ensure that no blacklisted oil got out. In
- effect, President Bush has already put such a blockade into
- position, warning Saddam, "I would advise Iraqi ships not to go
- out with oil."
- </p>
- <p> These sanctions will also damage many of the countries that
- impose them, since the world relies on Iraq and Kuwait for 10%
- of its oil needs. But Iraq's opponents won a reprieve last week
- when important oil producers like Saudi Arabia, the United Arab
- Emirates, Venezuela and Mexico said they would increase output
- to make up for most of the shortfall. That news helped
- stabilize world financial markets and stymie the superquick
- climb of oil prices last week.
- </p>
- <p> Particularly vulnerable to the fallout of the sanctions is
- Turkey, which had been getting about half its oil from Iraq.
- A poor country, Turkey earned as much as $250 million a year
- in pipeline fees from Iraq, which is among its largest trading
- partners. Because the location of Turkey makes it a linchpin
- in the strategy to isolate Saddam, its worries have been taken
- seriously. Kuwait's Emir has offered to compensate the Turks
- for most if not all of their financial damages, which Ankara
- estimates will come to $2.5 billion annually. Because Turkey
- is so vulnerable to Saddam's wrath, Secretary of State James
- Baker traveled to Ankara to personally deliver Western
- assurances, and saw to it that NATO reaffirmed its commitment
- to back the country in the event of an attack.
- </p>
- <p> President Turgut Ozal agreed to enforce the full-scale
- sanctions against Iraq, but Baker's reassurances apparently
- were not enough to persuade him to contribute forces to the
- Saudis' defense. The other NATO countries have also been happy
- to have the Americans shoulder the brunt of the burden. Still,
- every time Saddam blusters anew, fresh offers of assistance
- roll in. "If Saddam is not punished this time," said a worried
- official close to Ozal, "he will be out seeking new adventures
- soon."
- </p>
- <p> It would be overly optimistic to hope that the global
- encirclement of Saddam will serve as a model for coping with
- future regional conflicts. The world response to the Kuwaiti
- crisis is a special case because the stakes--oil--are so
- high and because Saddam has played such a textbook villain. No
- such unanimity could be expected if, for example, India invaded
- Pakistan, Senegal made a move on Gambia, or Bolivia rumbled
- into Paraguay. In effect, this first test of the post-cold war
- security structure is a relatively simple one. But that is all
- the more reason why the forces lined up so uniformly against
- Saddam must not be allowed to fail.
- </p>
- <p>PUTTING ON THE SQUEEZE
- </p>
- <p> The world moved in near unanimity against Iraq last week,
- applying pressure on several fronts:
- </p>
- <p>DIPLOMATIC
- </p>
- <p> The U.N. Security Council condemned Iraq's invasion and
- annexation of Kuwait. So did the Arab League.
- </p>
- <p>ECONOMIC
- </p>
- <p> The U.N. imposed mandatory sanctions, forbidding all member
- states to conduct business with Iraq. The European Community,
- the U.S. and Japan froze Kuwaiti assets.
- </p>
- <p>MILITARY
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. deployed ground forces and air units to protect
- Saudi Arabia. Britain sent two squadrons of combat planes.
- Members of the Arab League sent troops. The U.S., Britain,
- France, Canada, Australia, West Germany, the Netherlands and
- Belgium moved to position naval vessels to enforce a potential
- blockade. The Soviet Union dispatched two ships as a
- precaution.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-