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- <text id=90TT2303>
- <link 91TT0498>
- <link 91TT0271>
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- <title>
- Sep. 03, 1990: Kuwait:Where Shadows Are Dark
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Sep. 03, 1990 Are We Ready For This?
- The Gulf:Desert Shield
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF, Page 42
- Where Shadows Are Dark
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In Kuwait, food supplies are dwindling, a resistance force is
- growing, and order is breaking down as Iraqi soldiers pillage
- stores, grabbing whatever they want
- </p>
- <p> Several days after Iraq invaded Kuwait, a clandestine radio
- station passed word that a satellite would pass over Kuwait
- City at midnight and snap photographs. The message instructed
- citizens to go to their roofs to demonstrate their opposition
- to Saddam Hussein. As improbable as that scenario might sound,
- thousands of Kuwaitis climbed to the tops of buildings at
- midnight and unfurled huge banners in Arabic and English--the
- letters three feet high--reading KUWAIT FOR US, NOT FOR THE
- IRAQIS! and WE DIE AND KUWAIT LIVES! Despite the bursts from
- automatic weapons fired into the air by nervous Iraqi soldiers,
- Kuwaitis stayed for an hour, waving their banners and shouting,
- </p>
- <p> That brief, exhilarating moment of national defiance went
- unseen and unheard by the world. Each day Kuwait grows more
- isolated as the Iraqi occupiers cut off the last few lines of
- telephone communication. Even the dozens of Kuwaiti refugees
- in Saudi Arabia who call home by mobile cellular phone can
- rarely get through. Citizens and foreign residents must rely
- on friends and relatives who have escaped the country to bear
- their message of despair. Although the tide of refugees is
- drying up as Iraqis reportedly mine the desert roads, each day
- brings another exhausted traveler on the run with fresh news
- about life inside Kuwait. As in every war, it is difficult to
- know if these stories are true. But taken together, the
- accounts suggest that despite the country's initial spirited
- defiance, Kuwait is now living on the edge of its nerves.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam is slowly choking all life out of Kuwait. People stay
- in their homes, afraid to venture into the streets, where
- garbage smolders and the shells of stripped and abandoned cars,
- many of them disabled Iraqi military vehicles, glisten beneath
- the sun. Refugees report a deepening water shortage, and there
- is concern that the all-important desalinization plant is not
- being properly attended to. "There is no maintenance," says a
- Kuwaiti refugee in Saudi Arabia. "Sooner or later everything
- is going to break down."
- </p>
- <p> Food supplies are dwindling, propelled by widespread
- hoarding. There seem to be stocks of staples to last several
- more weeks, but fresh fruits and vegetables are quickly
- disappearing. Poorly equipped Iraqi soldiers, who apparently
- have little or no food with them, have their own answers to the
- shortages. The invading forces, which were disciplined and
- relatively well behaved, knocked on Kuwaitis' doors to ask for
- handouts. Those troops are gone now, replaced by a scruffy
- army of "volunteers," mostly teenagers and retirees armed with
- AK-47s. They simply enter houses and take food. They seem to
- regard their mission as a nasty game of Supermarket
- Sweepstakes. Ron Jack, an American escapee who watched Iraqi
- forces pillage a giant Kuwaiti store, says, "They went straight
- for the hi-fis and televisions." Other troops have piled
- 12-wheelers high with Kuwaiti munitions and missiles.
- </p>
- <p> Hard-to-confirm tales of destruction and rape abound.
- Saddam, who knows that such reports undermine his claim to have
- restored law-and-order in Kuwait, has introduced summary trial
- and execution for looters. Hamza Hendawi, a Reuters
- correspondent who escaped from Kuwait last week, reports that
- as a warning to thieves, Iraqi forces strung up the body of an
- executed lieutenant colonel on a crane and left it dangling
- outside Kuwait's municipal headquarters. A placard around the
- corpse's neck read HE STOLE THE MONEY OF THE PEOPLE. Beneath
- the body were piled stolen clothes and electrical goods.
- According to the Washington Post, the officer may actually have
- been punished for leading a dissident group in a clash with
- other Iraqi forces.
- </p>
- <p> Kuwaitis' fears have not translated into collaboration. They
- have ignored Saddam's back-to-work orders, keeping most
- businesses, government offices and banks closed. So far, Iraq
- has been unable to identify any Kuwaitis willing to serve in
- official positions. The "new" government that was paraded
- before cameras shortly after Iraq's invasion has not been seen
- since.
- </p>
- <p> There is a Kuwaiti resistance movement, but its
- effectiveness is difficult to assess. A refugee in Saudi Arabia
- who identifies himself only as Hussein says Kuwaiti soldiers
- and police distributed weapons to citizens on the day of the
- invasion, but there is a shortage of bullets. Refugees say that
- resistance groups mount hit-and-run attacks by night, targeting
- small units of Iraqi soldiers and military convoys with Molotov
- cocktails and hand grenades. When Iraq's intelligence service
- arrived in Kuwait City with a list of names and addresses of
- Kuwaiti army officers, civilians went around the city removing
- house numbers and street signs to thwart arrests.
- </p>
- <p> Last week Kuwait's crown prince told reporters in the Saudi
- capital of Riyadh that refugees are forming a liberation army.
- While any such force is unlikely to pose a threat to Iraq's
- occupying army, Saddam may face a challenge from within his own
- ranks. Many refugees tell of encounters with Iraqi soldiers who
- expressed embarrassment about their invasion and begged
- Kuwaitis to forgive them. "Some said they thought they were
- being sent to fight against Israel," says Youssef, a refugee
- in Saudi Arabia. An escaped Bedouin woman says, "The soldiers
- told us they were afraid that their families would be killed
- in Iraq if they refused to fight." If troop morale is low, it
- is not surprising that some soldiers are donning civilian
- clothes and trying to blend into the Kuwaiti population, while
- others have attempted to escape to Saudi Arabia.
- </p>
- <p> As Saddam moves quickly to seal all escape outlets, Kuwaitis
- and the remaining foreigners, who include some 2,500 Americans,
- will be in for tougher times. Baghdad Radio has warned Kuwaiti
- citizens that they will face "the severest of punishments" if
- they provide Westerners with shelter. Meanwhile, Saddam is
- filling Kuwait with thousands of Iraqis, who arrive in trucks
- with all their belongings and orders to take up residence in
- abandoned apartments. "By the time Saddam has finished," says
- a refugee in Saudi Arabia, "the population will be completely
- different." And Kuwait may well be a place no Kuwaiti would
- want to live in.
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe. Reported by William Dowell/Al Khafji and Jay
- Peterzell/Saudi Arabia.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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