|
Iraq:
A Decade of Devastation
(Middle
East Report 215, Summer 2000)
Editorial
In
the spring of 1995, a special issue of Middle East Report
offered a damning assessment of US and Allied policy toward Iraq
since the Gulf war: economic sanctions imposed to topple the Iraqi
government were punishing the Iraqi people instead. Over five years
later, little and much has changed. UNICEF studies have established
beyond any doubt that US-led economic sanctions are wrecking Iraq's
public health, education system and infrastructure. Hospitals beg
for blood bags and basic sanitation supplies. Schools starve for
paper and pencils, let alone computers. Water pipes rust and rupture.
Drought exacerbates the crisis, reducing vegetable production in
the central and southern provinces to 50 percent of 1998 levels.
Security Council resolution 986 (Oil-for-Food) probably averted
a famine, but is completely inadequate to stem the dying--by UNICEF's
estimation, 250 die daily--and suffering traceable to the sanctions'
subtler impact. US and UK holds on Oil-for-Food contracts prevent
rehabilitation of Iraq's power grid and irrigation systems, among
other infrastructure. Even if economic sanctions were lifted tomorrow,
their long-term effects will continue to punish Iraqi civilians
for years to come.
Moreover, the
Ba'thist regime looks as strong as ever. Sanctions have not propelled
dissident factions to unseat Saddam Hussein, or weakened the leadership's
social base. To the contrary, as Faleh A. Jabar writes in this issue,
the government exploits the social disintegration brought on by
war and sanctions to shore up its power.
The stated
excuses for continuing sanctions ring hollow. The once mighty Iraqi
army is now too ill-equipped to threaten other states in the region,
protected by the ominous US military presence in the Gulf. As Gen.
Anthony Zinni testified on Capitol Hill in March, Iraq's dilapidated
tanks shouldn't scare anybody outside Iraq. The Iraqi military does
threaten Kurds being cleansed from Kirkuk, but they receive no protection
from the West. A new weapons inspection team, UNMOVIC, has been
formed to replace UNSCOM, but what would this team inspect should
Iraq allow it in the country? Former UNSCOM inspector Scott Ritter,
a self-described "unlikely ally" of anti-sanctions activists,
calls for ending the hunt for "nuts and bolts" that provides
"the illusion of arms control."
But the US
is no longer satisfied with "dual containment" and prohibiting
development of weapons of mass destruction. As Phyllis Bennis writes,
the Clinton Administration will now accept nothing less than the
removal of Saddam Hussein. The Iraq Liberation Act of 1998 allocated
$97 million to opposition groups to topple Hussein, but hawks who
want to make Iraq a "no-drive zone" criticize the administration
for transferring only $8 million so far. Candidates Bush and Gore
argue about who will be even tougher on Iraq, but in practice they
too may balk at risking prized "regional stability" by
actively subverting the Iraqi regime. Meanwhile, US and UK bombing
raids in the no-fly zones are so frequent they earn scarcely a mention
in the mainstream press, despite having killed 144 civilians in
1999 alone.
So what has
changed? Simply put, the imperial prerogative the US exercised during
Desert Storm and Desert Fox is being challenged. France, Russia
and China abstained from the voting on Security Council resolution
1284, the latest measure continuing sanctions, if not for the noblest
of reasons. The Netherlands, chair of the UN Sanctions Committee,
faces major pressure in its parliament to reverse support for the
US-led policy. Even Richard Butler, the UNSCOM chief whose abrupt
departure from Iraq precipitated the bombing in December 1998, said
on BBC radio June 4 that sanctions "have been utterly counterproductive."
In the US and Britain, domestic movements for ending sanctions are
gathering steam. Contrary to the State Department's cherished rhetoric,
lifting economic sanctions immediately does not mean coddling the
regime. Rigorous military sanctions and enhanced border inspections
should accompany the unrestricted renewal of needed imports and
the gradual reconstruction of the Iraqi economy. But discussions
of alternative policies can no longer divert attention from humanitarian
crisis. The time is now to end the failed sanctions on Iraq.
|