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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!gumby!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: U.S. MAY PROVOKE IRAQ
- Message-ID: <1992Aug17.190949.24571@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: PACH
- Date: Mon, 17 Aug 1992 19:09:49 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 116
-
- /** mideast.action: 28.0 **/
- ** Topic: -> U.S. TO PROVOKE IRAQ MONDAY <- **
- ** Written 9:10 am Aug 16, 1992 by sfreedkin in cdp:mideast.action **
- (As printed as the lead story on Page 1 of the Santa Barbara (CA) News-Press,
- Sunday, August 16, 1992 -- I have added items in [square brackets] and the
- footnote about time zones)
-
- U.S. PLANS SHOWDOWN IN BAGHDAD
-
- By Patrick E. Tyler
- The New York Times
-
- HOUSTON -- The United States and its allies have decided to provoke a
- confrontation with Iraq on Monday morning* over the right to inspect Baghdad's
- most closely guarded ministry buildings, American officials familiar with
- administration planning said on Saturday.
- The plan could lead to renewed bombing in Baghdad in coming days and the
- evacuation of U.N. personnel in Iraq. Some U.S. government officials said
- that the timing appeared calculated to give President Bush a boost during
- the Republican National Convention, which begins on Monday, and could
- damage the credibility of the United Nations, which is carrying out weapons
- inspections in the name of the 15-member [U.N.] Security Council.
- After a series of interagency meetings in Washington last week, and
- consultations with British, French, and U.N. officials, Bush and his
- national security advisor, Brent Scowcroft, approved a plan on Thursday
- calling for U.N. inspectors now in Baghdad to demand access to Baghdad's
- Ministry of Military Industrialization, government officials said. The
- chief of the U.N. special commission that supervises the inspections, Rolf
- Ekeus, was said to have left for Bahrain, where inspection teams are based.
- This ministry, which was not bombed during the Persian Gulf War,
- supervised Iraq's once-secret program to develop weapons of mass destruc-
- tion under the management of President Saddam Hussein's son-in-law, Hussein
- Kamel Hassan.
- If Iraqi officials bar inspectors from the building, as they have
- threatened to do to protect Iraqi national security and sovereignty,
- American carrier-based aircraft would bomb the building in short order, the
- officials said, in a demonstration of American resolve that would have an
- inescapable impact on the political gathering here [the Republican National
- Convention in Houston].
- But the action would not necessarily end there. After an attack on
- the Military Industrialization Ministry, the United Nations would demand
- access to Iraq's Ministry of Defense, the heart of its national security
- apparatus, which was relocated to the Ministry of Petroleum building after
- the 1991 allied bombardment of the capital destroyed the original structure.
- Again, any refusal by Iraqi officials to allow access to this
- building would lead to its destruction by U.S. aircraft, officials said,
- adding that the confrontation and bombing could continue through a list of
- nine targets.
- Other U.S. officials said the Defense and Military Industrialization
- Ministries were selected not because American intelligence has identified
- specific documents hidden there, but because these buildings are so
- important to Hussein's overall survival that he is certain to refuse access.
- One official complained that "we are going to stage an incident" that
- relates less to the importance of any documents that might be found in the
- targeted buildings than to the conviction that the steps will provoke a
- confrontation that will serve as the pretext for military action and "to
- help get the president re-elected."
- "That is unbelievable -- that is total trash," Bush campaign political
- director Mary Matalin said in response.
- Defense Secretary Dick Cheney said there had been no change in policy
- regarding Iraq and that the allegation that Bush would hit Hussein in such
- a way for political gain was a "goofy charge."
- "We aren't doing anything that we haven't been doing for the last two
- years in terms of insisting that Saddam Hussein comply with U.N. resolu-
- tions," Cheney told reporters in Seattle.
- "As long as he complies with those resolutions, then everything's
- going to be fine," Cheney added. "If he fails to comply with those resolu-
- tions, clearly we have the capability, should it be required, to compel him
- to comply."
- Bush appeared to be calculating he has a strong mandate from the allies
- to confront Iraq's broad challenge to U.N. authority this summer as well as
- a political green light from his Democratic challenger, Gov. Bill Clinton
- of Arkansas, to take a tougher line against Hussein.
- Initially, Bush has selected a set of military options that pose the
- least risk to American military forces, though the loss or capture of any
- American pilots could deal Bush a damaging political blow.
- And, though more risky steps might have to be considered if Bush
- exhausts a target list and finds Hussein still defiant, he can also hope
- that the humiliation of renewed bombing will embolden internal Iraqi
- dissidents who staged an unsuccessful coup against Hussein in late June.
- The Bush administration telegraphed its planning last week when a
- senior official, speaking in a background session with reporters, said U.N.
- inspectors would demand access to Iraqi ministry buildings "within the
- proximite future."
- One reporter was encouraged beforehand to ask the senior briefer about
- planning against Iraq, and the official replied that if the Iraqi leader
- "decides we can't inspect certain places" U.S. military forces in the region
- "can respond sharply."
- "I think it might be useful to demonstrate that he had to obey the
- United Nations sanctions," the senior policymaker told the reporters, but
- declined to provide further details. In subsequent days, other officials,
- troubled by the rush with which the White House asked the State Department
- and the Pentagon to prepare for simultaneous relief and military operations
- in Somalia and Iraq during the Republican convention, provided additional
- details about the planned sequence of confrontation and the primary
- targets.
-
- -- This story includes reports from The Associated Press.
-
- ________________
- *The article did not clarify what "Monday morning" means. 8 a.m. Monday
- Baghdad time is midnight Monday morning Eastern time.
-
- POSTED BY:
-
- -- Steve Freedkin (igc:sfreedkin)
- Executive Director
- Peace Resource Center of Santa Barbara
- 13 W. Figueroa St.
- Santa Barbara, CA 93101-3103 USA
- tel. (805) 965-8583
- fax (805) 962-6227
- Mon.-Sat. noon-5 Pacific time
-
- ** End of text from cdp:mideast.action **
-
-