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- DATE: JAN. 25, 1991 10:27 REPORT:
- TO: SPL
- FOR:
- CC:
- BUREAU: PARIS
- BY: FREDERICK UNGEHEUER
- IN:
- SLUG: TOUGH OPTIONS
-
- From a French vantage point it sometimes seems as though
- the U.S. had already made its options clear. Commented
- 'Le Monde' in a lead editorial in its Saturday (Jan 26)
- edition: "They (the United States) henceforth consider it
- justified the eliminate the regime in Baghdad, its army
- and its chief. We find ourselves well beyond the
- 'mandate' given to the anti-Iraq alliance by the Security
- Council." The newspaper noted that France's president
- Francois Mitterrand had joined this point of view last
- Sunday, when he announced on television that it was
- necessary "to destroy the military-industrial potential"
- of Iraq in order to liberate Kuwait.
-
- As air attacks on Saddam's Republican Guards just on the
- other side of the Iraq-Kuwait border grew in volume by
- mid-week, General Etienne Copel, 55, former deputy chief
- of staff of the French Air Force, called the Paris Bureau
- of TIME with a plea, "to pause for a brief cease fire,
- perhaps of just one day, before we proceed with the
- carnage of tens of thousands or even hundreds of
- thousands Iraqi soldiers. We must make one last attempt
- to persuade Saddam Hussein to save his army." Copel
- suggested that Tunisia's president Ben Ali, who is known
- to be on good terms with Saddam, or U.N. Secretary
- General Javier Perez Cuellar should be asked to contact
- the Iraqi president, once more. "At least the Allies will
- have shown that they tried everything to avoid the
- carnage," He had little hope of being heard in the
- melee.
-
- Serge July, editor of the respected left-wing daily
- 'Liberation' wrote today (Jan 25), "The Kuwait trap is
- the 'butchery' aimed at unleashing Western and Arab
- opinion within the coalition. For the leader in Baghdad
- the American and European armies have a weak point:
- careful to keep their losses low, they have planned a
- long war, of several weeks, perhaps several months. To
- transform a long war into a quagmire Saddam Hussein has
- to turn Kuwait into a hell that lasts until Ramadan
- beginning in the second half of March. Then, the master
- of Baghdad believes, the coalition partners will find
- themselves caught between an Arab-Islamic tempest and an
- about-face by public opinion. This is what he is betting
- on, a wager he obviously cannot be permitted to win."
-
-