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- <text id=90TT2308>
- <link 91TT0521>
- <link 90TT3296>
- <link 90TT2247>
- <title>
- Sep. 03, 1990: The Center Holds -- For Now
- </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 34
- COVER STORIES
- The Center Holds--for Now
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The unified march of Baghdad's opponents has evoked awe around
- the globe, but both bloodshed and a lengthy stalemate would
- test its cohesion
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer--Reported by Dean Fischer/Cairo, William
- Mader/London and Christopher Redman/Paris
- </p>
- <p> Backed further and further into a corner, Saddam Hussein has
- applied his energies to splintering the motley alliance of
- nations mustered against him. He attempted to paralyze some
- Western countries by making hostages of the foreign nationals
- caught in his grip. He sought to fragment his fellow Arabs by
- pitting the poor against the rich. He tried to crack the global
- economic sanctions imposed against him by making a hasty and
- generous peace with Iran. And he attempted to exploit
- anti-Americanism, always a potent force, by casting U.S.
- intervention in the gulf as a case of Yankee imperialism run
- amuck.
- </p>
- <p> So far, Saddam's tactics have failed. Rather than unravel,
- the anti-Baghdad coalition knitted itself more tightly last
- week. After two weeks of sometimes intense dickering, the U.N.
- Security Council voted 13 to 0, with Yemen and Cuba abstaining,
- to authorize "such measures commensurate to the specific
- circumstances" to enforce the sanctions voted against Iraq four
- days after the invasion. At Soviet insistence, the phrase
- "minimum use of force" was dropped, but that is still what the
- new, vaguer language means. With five dissent-free votes
- condemning Iraq in three weeks, the Security Council has taken
- on surprising new life as an international policeman.
- </p>
- <p> All week long, however, China and the Soviet Union, either
- of which could have vetoed the measure, resisted a precipitate
- decision. Beijing considered abstaining, because it likes to
- portray itself as a champion of the Third World against the
- superpowers and of the Arabs against Israel. Yet China wanted
- to support the West in order to help repair its image,
- shattered by last year's anti-democracy massacre in Beijing. In
- the end, China voted with the majority.
- </p>
- <p> The Soviets were wary of a strictly military solution to the
- crisis, and considered that the U.S. was moving too far, too
- fast. The Kremlin has been harshly critical of Baghdad.
- Gorbachev, who cut his August vacation short to deal with his
- country's economic problems, publicly lambasted Saddam's
- "perfidy and blatant violation of international law." What's
- more, Soviet officials reportedly gave visiting Iraqi Deputy
- Prime Minister Saadoun Hammadi a dressing down over the hostage
- affair. But Moscow is not keen to see a military solution--which the U.S. would clearly dominate--rule out a diplomatic
- one, for which the Soviets might be key. Aside from Hammadi,
- Moscow has played host to Saudi special envoy Prince Bandar Bin
- Sultan, and has dispatched diplomats to Iraq by way of Syria,
- Egypt, Libya and Jordan. The Soviets want to preserve their
- position as potential peacemaker, as well as their 30-year
- relationship with Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> Moscow's hemming and hawing may also have been a plea for
- attention. There was a palpable sense of injured pride in
- Moscow when the U.S. ignored the Soviet view and launched its
- unilateral police action in the gulf. "The possibilities for
- joint action should have been given more consideration," said
- Soviet Middle East expert Igor Belyayev. Finally, however, the
- Soviets lost patience with Saddam. On Friday Gorbachev issued
- an ultimatum: Withdraw from Kuwait or face "additional
- measures" from the U.N. Since Saddam was clearly not giving in,
- the way was cleared for Soviet support of an international
- blockade.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. contention that force was necessary to make the
- sanctions stick gained credibility last week. According to
- White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, Iraq was getting round
- the prohibitions to obtain military materiel as well as
- supplies used in the production of chemical weapons. Other
- Administration officials say the countries responsible include
- Libya, Yemen, Taiwan and South Africa. Yemen had earlier
- indicated that it would live up to its reluctant promise to
- abide by the embargo. It did allow one Iraqi tanker to unload
- at the port of Aden, but in response to international pressure
- it later refused to allow two others to discharge their cargo.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, Jordan continued to dither. Iraqi oil was still
- being trucked into the country in return for shipments of
- Jordanian goods. While King Hussein has said his country would
- abide by the sanctions, it has yet to comply. Jordan did close
- its borders briefly--to refugees from the gulf. Its
- facilities have been overwhelmed by the 210,000 who have
- escaped so far; most of them remained in the country, with
- little food, water or money, because of a shortage of outgoing
- boats and planes. After the U.S. and the European Community
- agreed to rush emergency food, medicine and clothes to the
- refugees, Amman relented, saying it would limit the influx to
- 20,000 people a day.
- </p>
- <p> President Bush fared better on other fronts in his campaign
- to muster as much global support as possible. The major powers
- of Europe, in an unprecedented display of cohesion, voted
- collectively to send more warships to the trouble zone, a
- decision that will bring the strength of the international
- armada up to nearly 100 vessels. Iran repeated its pledge to
- abide by the trade embargo, belying predictions it would serve
- as a back door for Iraqi trade.
- </p>
- <p> But how long will that line hold? Either of the obvious
- prospects for the future--a prolonged standoff or the
- outbreak of war--would be almost certain to unleash
- centrifugal forces on the fragile united front. "With stock
- markets crashing, higher oil costs, hostages in danger and
- voters calling for quick solutions, governments everywhere will
- be hard pressed to keep their nerve," says a NATO diplomat in
- Brussels. And that is to say nothing of the demoralizing
- effects of young people returning home maimed or zippered into
- body bags.
- </p>
- <p> The unified march of Saddam's opponents has so far evoked
- awe around the globe, especially given the signs of fissure
- that emerged almost from the start. Many nations were simply
- uncertain how far military vs. diplomatic action should go. The
- fractures deepened when the U.S. rode out ahead of the posse
- by unilaterally declaring a blockade of Iraq. That, said most
- world powers, was a matter strictly for the U.N.
- </p>
- <p> Soon enough, though, Saddam himself provided an antidote to
- dissent. By making the outrageous decision to confine
- foreigners trapped in Iraq and Kuwait to locations that would
- be likely to be targeted by an attacking force, Saddam drew the
- countries aligned against him closer together. "It's a losing
- policy," said British Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd. "It was
- designed to weaken European resolve. It has had the opposite
- effect." Hurd's boss was more outspoken. Saddam's attempt to
- "hide behind Western women and children" was "utterly
- repulsive," said Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Privately,
- Thatcher told aides she was determined "to bring that
- repulsive filth of a man down." Underscoring the global refusal
- to yield to Baghdad's bullying, 30 of the 66 countries with
- embassies in Kuwait defied Saddam's order last week to close
- their missions.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam also tried to divide and conquer. At one stage,
- France appeared to be working behind the scenes on a deal for
- preferential treatment of its citizens trapped in Iraq,
- presumably in exchange for a promise to soften its opposition
- to Baghdad. Those reports sparked agitated muttering in other
- Western capitals, where France's past record of bargaining for
- hostages is all too well known. But Paris passionately denied
- that it was playing a "solo game." In any case, when 27 French
- nationals in Iraq were forcibly relocated to unknown sites,
- it became clear that no special deal was in the offing.
- </p>
- <p> Then, in a startling about-face, President Francois
- Mitterrand came out firmly in support of blockading the
- renegade state, with or without the U.N.'s O.K. Mitterrand also
- announced that France would send a squadron of 180 paratroopers
- to the United Arab Emirates, making it the only Western country
- aside from the U.S. and Britain to commit troops on the ground.
- </p>
- <p> France's reversal on the blockade controversy gave momentum
- to the British-American push for a U.N. endorsement of the
- interdiction effort, something both powers stressed they
- welcomed but did not need in order to go ahead with naval
- operations. More support came from the Western European Union
- (WEU), a security grouping of nine of NATO's 16 members. Last
- week they voted to increase Europe's military presence in the
- gulf region, and agreed to take "all necessary steps to comply
- with the embargo of Iraq." The same day E.C. foreign ministers
- unanimously adopted the identical position.
- </p>
- <p> Until now, the European countries have hesitated to back
- Washington fully, even though they depend more on Middle East
- oil than the U.S. does. Last week's spurt of resolve came just
- in time to save continental governments from appearing totally
- pusillanimous not only in the eyes of Washington but also in
- European public opinion. In general, Europeans have been
- enormously supportive of the tough U.S. approach. Remarked an
- American diplomat in London: "It's a funny feeling, not having
- abuse heaped at you."
- </p>
- <p> Saddam's truculent behavior even strengthened Arab
- opposition in some quarters. Syria, a longtime enemy of
- Saddam's, announced that it would dispatch additional troops
- to Saudi Arabia. At the same time, the United Arab Emirates,
- Oman and Bahrain expanded existing U.S. basing rights, while
- Qatar granted them for the first time.
- </p>
- <p> Like the U.S., Saddam's other opponents hope that Iraq can
- be forced out of Kuwait through economic strangulation. But for
- the noose to hold, that had better happen relatively quickly.
- Already, war jitters are convulsing world markets, wiping huge
- chunks off the value of U.S., Japanese and European stocks. The
- cost to the West of a protracted standoff would be inflated by
- the numerous aid commitments made last week to poorer Arab
- countries such as Jordan and Egypt. As the price tag climbs,
- popular opposition to the anti-Saddam effort may multiply. Some
- petro-nations like Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Mexico have
- promised to buffer Western economies by pumping more oil, but
- the gyrating markets do not seem confident that that will help
- enough.
- </p>
- <p> For the Arabs ranged alongside the West, a prolonged
- stalemate has an added pitfall: the inevitable rise in
- resentment over the presence of American troops. For now, the
- Saudis, Egyptians and others have made a virtue of necessity.
- But the domineering role of the West, inextricably linked with
- past Arab humiliations, is all too likely to arouse animosity
- over time.
- </p>
- <p> Some political analysts believe the anti-Saddam league
- actually stands a better chance of surviving intact if
- hostilities break out, depending on how they get started. "A
- military exchange would strengthen solidarity because the
- hostages would be endangered, and this affects almost all
- Western countries," says Thomas Koszinowski, deputy head of the
- German Orient Institute in Hamburg. "But if the conflict is
- viewed as deliberately provoked not by Iraq but by the U.S.,
- its Western partners would hold back." Of all the dangers to
- the coalition, the gravest might be a unilateral decision by
- the U.S. to initiate war in an impetuous way. To avoid that
- scenario, Bush must continue to be as solicitous as possible
- of allied opinion and try to seek a consensus, preferably
- through the U.N., before undertaking any major action.
- </p>
- <p> Paradoxically, unity would also be imperiled by an
- unexpected peace. "What happens if Saddam is persuaded to pull
- out of Kuwait, yet retains his army, his ambitions and a good
- deal of resentment?" asks a senior European adviser at the WEU
- meeting in Paris. "Some countries may be tempted to say, `We
- can all go home,' and pretend the crisis is over, while others
- will not want to leave the gulf until Saddam Hussein is
- neutralized."
- </p>
- <p> Analysts in Europe's defense establishment argue that there
- can be no end to the current crisis until Saddam is overthrown
- and Iraq's military machine and nascent nuclear program are
- dismantled. That could mean countenancing action in the gulf
- that goes way beyond the restoration of the status quo ante.
- "Once we start to contemplate that kind of action," says a NATO
- diplomat, "there will be a rush for the exit." Maybe. But
- perhaps by then, all those ranged against Saddam will see they
- have no other choice.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-