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- <text id=90TT2997>
- <link 90TT3352>
- <title>
- Nov. 12, 1990: On The Warpath
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 12, 1990 Ready For War
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 24
- COVER STORIES
- On the Warpath
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Spreading confusion about his plans, Bush escalates his verbal
- offensive against Saddam Hussein--and then pulls back
- </p>
- <p>By OTTO FRIEDRICH--Reported by Dean Fischer/Cairo and J.F.O.
- McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> "Darn," said President Bush last week to express his
- indignation about Saddam Hussein's mistreatment of his U.S.
- hostages. "The American flag is flying over the Kuwait embassy,
- and our people inside are being starved by a brutal dictator.
- Do you think I'm concerned about it? You're darn right I am. And
- what am I going to do about it? Let's just wait and see. Because
- I have had it with that kind of treatment of Americans."
- </p>
- <p> If that was not exactly the most warlike battle cry ever
- issued, it was typical of a week of confusing and contradictory
- signals on whether the U.S. is preparing to launch an armed
- attack to oust Iraqi forces from Kuwait. After Defense Secretary
- Dick Cheney and General Colin Powell, Chairman of the Joint
- Chiefs of Staff, recommended that 100,000 U.S. troops be added
- to the 210,000 already deployed along the Persian Gulf, there
- were widespread rumors and speculation that the offensive would
- start soon after this week's congressional elections--or
- before Christmas, or early in the new year. In contrast, Soviet
- President Mikhail Gorbachev declared that any "military
- solution" was "unacceptable" after his personal envoy, Yevgeni
- Primakov, returned from a second exploratory mission to Baghdad.
- There Primakov claimed to find Saddam "more disposed to a
- political solution," a development invisible to everyone else.
- </p>
- <p> President Bush, campaigning for Republican candidates in
- California, began the week's verbal barrages by denouncing
- Iraq's siege of foreign embassies in Kuwait as "unconscionable
- and inhumane." Then he seemed to escalate. "I am as determined
- as I have ever been that this aggression will not stand," he
- declared. "We have a lot of troops there, and they are highly
- motivated. That alone is sending a strong message to Saddam
- Hussein." Speaking in Los Angeles the same day, Secretary of
- State James Baker was even more explicit: "We will not rule out a
- possible use of force if Iraq continues to occupy Kuwait."
- </p>
- <p> Other Administration officials went still further by
- suggesting that the U.S. would send an unarmed cargo ship to
- resupply the embassy in Kuwait City, where 27 diplomats are
- reportedly down to their last month's worth of canned tuna and
- rice. If Iraq tried to interfere with the mission, that might
- provide a pretext for massive military retaliation. Saddam's
- reaction was to put his commanders on "extreme alert" in order
- to "thwart the perfidious intentions of the United States and
- its allies to launch an attack in the coming few days."
- </p>
- <p> As the war talk escalated, congressional leaders sought
- reassurance that Bush is not planning to launch an offensive
- while the legislature is in recess for the next three months.
- Bush refused to commit himself. Although the Constitution gives
- only Congress the authority to declare war, Bush, like several
- recent Presidents, claims the right to use military force on his
- own. "Nobody asked the President to rule out a military option,"
- said Senator Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont after the leaders
- conferred with Bush. "But many of us told him to make sure that
- we don't use the military option out of impatience."
- </p>
- <p> Did the President really mean those threats of war, or was
- he just trying to get voters' minds off the budget mess and the
- impending recession and end his own slump in the opinion polls?
- Bush branded those suggestions as "the ultimate of cynicism and
- indecency." When questioned by reporters about whether he was
- attempting to prepare the American people for war, Bush denied
- it. "I'm not trying to sound the tocsin of war," he said. "I
- want to have a peaceful resolution to this question. I've
- indicated we're prepared to give sanctions time to work, and
- I'll repeat that. But I'm not ruling out further options."
- </p>
- <p> When the U.N. voted to bar all trade into or out from Iraq,
- many experts estimated it would take at least six months, and
- perhaps even a year, before economic collapse would paralyze the
- Iraqi army and provoke street riots or coup attempts. So far,
- the political impact of the sanctions has been virtually nil.
- One effect, the imposition of gas rationing, was abruptly
- canceled last week when Saddam announced that the Oil Minister
- had underestimated the available supplies of necessary chemical
- additives. After firing the minister, Saddam gave the job to his
- son-in-law.
- </p>
- <p> Imports of industrial goods, raw materials and machinery
- have been reduced by 90%, according to State Department
- spokeswoman Margaret Tutwiler. Shortages of imported lubricants,
- spare parts and chemicals are causing production difficulties.
- Bread, sugar and soap are being rationed.
- </p>
- <p> Despite all this, there are many weak spots in the embargo.
- Western intelligence officials have learned that Saddam
- stockpiled rice, wheat and other foods before invading Kuwait,
- and the Iraqi army's plundering of Kuwaiti warehouses has
- increased Iraq's supplies substantially. Besides, Iraq has had
- a record harvest this year; the markets contain plenty of fruits
- and vegetables. One reason for the bountiful supplies is that
- Saddam's government has eased many controls on farmers and
- increased food prices. Higher prices have also inspired Iranian
- and Turkish smugglers to supply the black market.
- </p>
- <p> Industry has been more directly hit by the lack of spare
- parts, and many long-term building projects have had to be
- postponed, but cannibalizing and improvising can make a lot of
- difference. Another major effect of the embargo has been to cut
- Iraq's ability to pay for its imports with oil revenues. Here,
- too, Saddam can find ways around the restrictions. For one
- thing, he confiscated some $1 billion in gold in the Kuwaiti
- treasury. Libya's Muammar Gaddafi has reportedly been offering
- him credit. In addition, Saddam runs a police state that can
- easily squelch discontent about plunging living standards.
- Adding up all the guesses and intangibles, Western intelligence
- officials estimate that Saddam can survive the embargo pretty
- well until some time in the middle of next year, at the earliest--a long time for the fraying Western coalition to hold
- together.
- </p>
- <p> The blockade might eventually persuade Saddam to withdraw.
- In fact, Washington's bellicose talk last week, however
- discordant, was basically intended to enhance the blockade's
- impact. "In terms of shaping Saddam's calculus," says a State
- Department official, "what you're looking for is not economic
- deprivation that causes riots in the streets but rather a sense
- that the sanctions are gradually having effect, that they're not
- going to be loosened, that the international consensus in favor
- of them is strong. Then, projecting them out into the future,
- Saddam sees a point where they are going to affect his
- survival."
- </p>
- <p> In theory, then, the tocsins of war might make war
- unnecessary, if the U.S. and its allies remain patient enough
- for the blockade and pressure to work. That, in turn, will
- require unified support from the American people for the means,
- as well as the ends, of Bush's policy. The President's inability
- to clarify how he plans to get Saddam out of Kuwait last week
- did nothing to halt the confusion. Perhaps he can better explain
- his objectives to the Americans with the most at stake in the
- crisis: the troops he will be meeting on a Thanksgiving Day
- visit to the gulf.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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