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- <text id=90TT2812>
- <title>
- Oct. 29, 1990: The Gulf:Trip Wires To War
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Oct. 29, 1990 Can America Still Compete?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 48
- THE GULF
- Trip Wires to War
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>What would it take for the U.S. to attack Iraq, and how would
- Bush square the decision with the U.N. and Congress?
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--Reported by Michael Duffy and Bruce van
- Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> With an impish smile, Claiborne Pell, Democratic Senator
- from Rhode Island and chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
- Committee, waved a newspaper clipping at Secretary of State
- James Baker last week. It reported that Soviet Foreign Minister
- Eduard Shevardnadze had told his country's parliament he would
- seek its prior approval for any military involvement in the
- Persian Gulf. "Can you make the same promise?" asked Pell. "We
- will continue to consult," replied Baker. But he added, "What
- I cannot do is make a general, across-the-board commitment."
- </p>
- <p> On the eve of its departure from Washington for a two-month
- adjournment, Congress was looking for a firmer pledge that the
- Administration would not go to war as soon as the legislators
- left town. The next day, at a House Foreign Affairs Committee
- hearing, Representative Gerry Studds asked Baker if he could
- offer assurances that the U.S. would not attack Saddam
- Hussein's forces without consulting Congress. "No," said Baker.
- Studds then observed that if he were a soldier, "I think I
- would put my helmet on." Baker replied, with a smile, "I think
- their helmets are on."
- </p>
- <p> Shevardnadze's parliamentary pledge reflected Mikhail
- Gorbachev's conviction that any use of force must be approved
- by the United Nations Security Council, a position the U.S.
- Congress tends to favor as well. For a while last week it
- seemed that the Soviet President might be testing the climate
- for a settlement based on a partial Iraqi withdrawal from
- Kuwait. Yevgeni Primakov, a Gorbachev aide who had visited
- Saddam in Baghdad three weeks ago, met with Bush on Friday and
- told him the Iraqi leader would not withdraw from Kuwait prior
- to negotiations, as U.S. policy now demands. Bush's reply:
- "Tell him I am not flexible either."
- </p>
- <p> Washington wants Saddam to be convinced that if he does not
- pull out of Kuwait, he will be driven out. But if Bush decides
- it must be war, how does he go about starting one? Far more
- would be involved than a simple order to begin bombing. What
- kind of provocation, if any, the U.S. could cite and what
- justification it could find in international law would bear
- heavily on whether the U.S. fought the war--and made a
- subsequent peace--at the head of a global coalition or as a
- lone wolf.
- </p>
- <p> It is possible, of course, that Saddam will ease Bush's
- task. U.S. officials have designated a series of acts that the
- Iraqi dictator might take as trip wires for an American strike
- that could be presented as legitimate self-defense. The most
- obvious is an Iraqi attack on the U.S. or other international
- forces in Saudi Arabia (or possibly on Israel, although
- America's Arab allies would hardly be eager to fight in defense
- of what they call the "Zionist entity"). Preparations for an
- attack might also suffice. For example, if satellites detected
- the fueling of Iraqi missiles, the U.S. and allies might
- strike right away.
- </p>
- <p> Baker has mentioned another trip wire to allies:
- mistreatment by the Iraqis of some of their thousands of
- hostages--killing or injuring them or even physically
- imprisoning them as the Iranians did with the American hostages
- seized in 1979. The justification in that case would be not
- self-defense but a principle of international law known as
- "humanitarian intervention," which says a nation has the right
- to use force to protect its citizens abroad.
- </p>
- <p> That formula could also apply to the diplomats holed up
- inside their embassies in Kuwait City. Baker hopes to win
- Security Council approval for a resolution calling for resupply
- of food, water and basic necessities to the five embassies
- (U.S., Britain, France, Tunisia and Bahrain) that remain open
- despite Saddam's directive to shut down. If Iraq were to reject
- the resolution and obstruct resupply efforts to diplomatic
- missions he has illegally ordered closed, that might become a
- trigger to war. Describing the conveniently vague wording of
- the resolution, an Administration official observed, "It's the
- type of language you can drive a truck through. Or a
- helicopter. Or a missile."
- </p>
- <p> A terrorist outrage like the blowing up of Pan Am Flight 103
- over Scotland in December 1988 might serve as a trip wire too,
- provided that it could plausibly be traced to Iraqi
- instigation. Two weeks ago, Rifaat el-Mahgoub, the Speaker of
- Egypt's Parliament and the second-ranking official in the
- country, was shot to death. Cairo blamed Iraq for the attack.
- As nerves tighten further, such an atrocity might trigger
- massive retaliation. Baker and National Security Adviser Brent
- Scowcroft have said that continued Iraqi pillaging, murdering
- and raping in Kuwait might shorten the time the U.S. gives for
- the embargo to work, a hint that that also might be regarded
- as a sufficient cause for war.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam, however, has been seeking to avoid provocation. For
- example, his jet fighters have run away every time U.S. planes
- have approached them. If he avoids crossing any of the trip
- wires, how could the U.S. justify an attack?
- </p>
- <p> One school of thought holds that Article 51 of the U.N.
- Charter, which recognizes the right of self-defense against
- armed attack not only for the victim nation but also for others
- coming to its aid, gives Washington and its allies all the
- justification they need. Many experts, however, read Article
- 51 as approving the use of force in self-defense only in the
- absence of action by the U.N. Security Council. And the
- Security Council has passed nine resolutions condemning Iraq
- and authorizing a worldwide embargo against it. Thus, in this
- view, the time for invoking Article 51 has passed; some other
- justification would be needed for military action now.
- </p>
- <p> Washington has begun preliminary soundings about a Security
- Council resolution that would specifically authorize the use
- of force. This could be done under Article 42, which provides
- that if economic sanctions are inadequate the Security Council
- "may take such action by air, sea or land forces as may be
- necessary to maintain or restore international peace and
- security." The big problem is that such a resolution might be
- vetoed--probably not by the Soviet Union but quite possibly
- by China or perhaps even by France.
- </p>
- <p> Another problem is that Article 42 contemplates the
- formation of a blue-helmeted U.N. force under some sort of
- international command. The Soviet Union has indicated that this
- is the only basis on which it would send troops to fight
- against Iraq. But such an integrated international force might
- be very clumsy and time-consuming to set up. Article 39 might
- also be invoked, although at the possible cost of Soviet
- participation. This provision permits the Security Council to
- make "recommendations" to member states on how to restore peace;
- the recommendation could simply be to coordinate military
- action with the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Then there is Capitol Hill. The pace of modern warfare has
- rendered declarations of war obsolete, and the War Powers Act
- of 1973 has become a virtual dead letter. Every President since
- its passage has denounced it as an unconstitutional
- infringement on his powers as Commander in Chief, and the
- courts have refused to enforce its key provision, which
- requires the President within 60 days to pull U.S. forces out
- of any situation in which hostilities seem imminent unless the
- legislature votes to let them stay.
- </p>
- <p> The House and Senate have adopted separate resolutions
- endorsing all the actions that Bush has taken so far, but
- making clear--or so the framers claimed--that they did not
- confer any advance approval of a decision to fight. There has
- been talk of a resolution providing that Bush could order war
- only with the specific approval of the U.N., but nobody has
- introduced such a resolution yet. Senate Armed Services
- Committee chairman Sam Nunn observes that Congress's real power
- is the ability to shut off funds for a war. That seems
- theoretical, to put it mildly; can anyone seriously imagine
- Congress refusing American troops the money to buy the
- ammunition to return enemy fire?
- </p>
- <p> One of the weaknesses of the War Powers Act is that it fails
- to specify who should be consulted or exactly when (Ronald
- Reagan informed Capitol Hill leaders of the impending U.S. air
- strike on Libya in 1986 only after the bombers were in the air
- and nearing their targets). Nunn would remedy that by setting
- up a bipartisan group that the President would be required to
- consult with regularly, including times when Congress is not
- in session. That provision could be important; the most widely
- repeated war scenario on the Washington rumor circuit calls for
- fighting to begin in mid-November--during the adjournment.
- </p>
- <p> None of this might matter greatly if a war follows the
- quick-knockout script sketched by some Air Force enthusiasts.
- In the politics of war, as in other matters, nothing succeeds
- like success. Even then, however, the U.S. would need the
- support of its world coalition to shape a durable peace. And
- at home one need only mention the word Vietnam to underscore
- the importance of congressional and popular support.
- Unfortunately, the scenarios for fighting a war seem to have
- been far more carefully drawn and fully thought out than the
- scripts for justifying the decision.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-