Every time Washington suspects that
Iraq is making gains in the propaganda
war over sanctions, reports emanate from
the US capital claiming that Baghdad
continues to be a global menace and must
be contained by the blockade.
The latest yarn alleges Iraq is testing
short-range missiles.
Down around the third or fourth paragraph
the writer admits that such missiles do
not violate the terms of the Mother
of All UN Resolutions, which lays
down what sort of weaponry Iraq can have:
short-range missiles with a range of 150
kilometers are permitted.
Some reports infer that Iraq is also
redeveloping medium-range missiles in
violation of the resolution. But this has
been categorically denied by Scott
Ritter, the US citizen who formerly
served on the UN Special Commission which
monitored Iraqs arms of mass
destruction.
Ritter, writing in the current issue of
Arms Control Today, an independent
journal published in Washington, says
that Iraq now has no banned arms of any
importance.
Nevertheless, US and British warplanes
continue to bomb Iraqi targets on an
every-other-day basis and insist that the
punitive sanctions regime must be
maintained until Saddam Hussein is no
longer in power. This unending
belligerency against Iraq has now caused
the most respectable of the opposition
groups, the Iraqi National Accord, to
pull out of the umbrella grouping, the
Iraqi National Congress, which is meeting
in London this week to work out a new
strategy to topple Hussein.
One of the reasons given by the Accord
for withdrawing from the Congress is its
close connection with the US Central
Intelligence Agency, Congressional
leaders and the Clinton administration.
All are viewed by ordinary Iraqis living
under sanctions as their inveterate enemy
rather than Saddam. The Accord clearly
realized that membership in the Council
is not only counterproductive but also
pointless because it will never be in a
position to oust Saddams regime.
This being the case, Denis Halliday, the
former UN humanitarian coordinator in
Baghdad who resigned in 1998 to protest
against the sanctions, is now offering
Washington and London an alternative to
their murderous sanctions policy. He is
proposing a 13-point plan which includes
the resumption of UN monitoring of
Iraqs weapons program; imposition
of smart sanctions on
arms-producing states to prevent Iraq
from obtaining prohibited weaponry; an
end to the demonization of
Iraq and its president; dialogue with
Baghdad; lifting of economic sanctions;
release of oil equipment to repair the
countrys severely damaged oil
industry; investment in the devastated
economy; postponement of reparations
payments which consume 30 percent of
gross oil revenues; and an end to the
daily Anglo-US bombing sorties which Iraq
says have killed 300 of its civilians and
wounded more.
Halliday, who had made a career in the UN
and held the rank of assistant
secretary-general before he resigned,
admitted to this correspondent in an
interview that he was not very
happy with his plan. But he said it
had been designed to help
Washington and London to get out of this
dreadful mess they have gotten themselves
into by insisting on sanctions
until Saddam disappears from the scene.
While he agrees that Saddams
presence at the helm permits Washington
and its loyal acolyte, London, to
continue the punitive sanctions regime,
Halliday thinks there are a few
people in Washington who want to
bring sanctions to an end. These people,
he said, have come to realize that the
US, and specifically the Clinton
administration, could be blamed for
crimes against humanity, including
possibly genocide because of the
sanctions.
Halliday is not very optimistic about the
US changing its policy under either of
Clintons potential successors,
Vice-President Al Gore or Texas Governor
George W. Bush, who have shown themselves
more hawkish on Iraq than Clinton.
What Im working on now is
trying to get other governments
to
put pressure on Washington to change its
policy before Clinton leaves office
in January 2001, he said. In much
of the world there is outrage amongst
parliamentarians over the continuation of
economic sanctions.
He believes that these anti-sanctions
parliamentarians could reinforce the
position of the 70 courageous
US congressmen who have taken a stand
against the blockade. These lawmakers
understand, he said, that the human
calamity caused by sanctions
isnt serving the best
interests of the US or Europe.
In his opinion, the UN will never again
be able to impose the sort of
illegal sanctions Iraq has
endured for the past 10 years. What
is happening in Iraq is a complete breach
of international humanitarian law,
he stated. It amounts to punishing
a people in order to get at their
ruler.
Indeed, he believes that the sanctions
provisions in the UN Charter will have to
be rewritten so that no
other population is ever targeted
in the way the people of Iraq have. He
defines the Iraqi sanctions as
genocide because if you
look at the convention on genocide, it
requires intent.
To sum up his thinking: since the
Security Council, under US/UK pressure,
persists with sanctions knowing what
impact the embargo is having on the Iraqi
populace, one cannot but conclude that
the council is responsible for the murder
of 7,000 Iraqis a month, 5,000 of them
children under the age of five.
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