Would the Bush Administration mislead us about Iraq? I'd like to believe the
President. That's why I'm asking supporters of a new war against Iraq to help
out. Could you clear up a few nagging doubts from the last Gulf War that have
led critics like Rep. Jim McDermott to question the credibility of our leaders?
In case you've forgotten, here is a brief review.
1. The Incubator Babies. When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, Americans were appalled
by reports of at least 312 babies ripped from their life support systems by marauding
Iraqi troops. More than any other story, it helped sway public opinion in favor
of the war. When the Senate narrowly decided by five votes to authorize an invasion,
nine senators referred to these atrocities as a reason for their votes.
Who could not have been moved by the testimony of a 15 year-old Kuwaiti girl
known only as "Nayirah," before the Congressional Human Rights Caucus as she described
the babies she'd seen who'd been "left on the cold floor to die" by indifferent
soldiers looting a hospital?
At the time, neither Congress nor the public knew she was actually the daughter
of Kuwait's ambassador to the U.S., Saud al-Sabah, and had never been near these
hospitals. Nor did the public know this "testimony" had been "facilitated" by
a PR firm named Hill and Knowlton and financed by the government of Kuwait. These
facts came out after the war, when hospital employees in Kuwait universally denied
this atrocity story. But the tale had done its damage.
2. The Phantom Troops. In September of 1990 the Pentagon reported that 250,000
Iraqi troops with 1,500 tanks stood poised in Kuwait, ready to attack Saudi Arabia.
These reports lent a real urgency to our need to send in troops.
One lonely newspaper, the St. Petersburg Times of Florida, pursued this story.
They obtained Russian commercial satellite photos of Kuwait and then showed them
to military experts. None could find a troop build-up. Peter Zimmerman, a George
Washington University satellite imagery expert reported, "all of us agreed that
we couldn't see anything in the way of (Iraqi) military activity in the pictures"
despite the fact that the images were "astounding in their quality." They could
make out the build-up of U.S. jet fighters but few if any Iraqi military installations
near the Saudi border.
The St. Petersburg Times contacted the office of Secretary of Defense Dick
Cheney with their evidence of the non- existent invasion force, asking for refuting
evidence. Their answer, as Harper's publisher John Macarthur reports in his award
winning book Second Front, was "Trust us." The Pentagon would revise its troop
estimates way downward -- after the war ended.
3. "Collateral Damage." The Orwellian highpoint of the Gulf War was the discovery
of the anti-septic phrase "collateral damage" to cover over the harsh realities
of innocent civilian deaths. Thousands died in the bombings, but far more devastating
were the effects of our economic blockade after the war. A United Nations investigation
found our blockade of Iraq led to the deaths of an estimated half- million young
children from disease and malnutrition.
CBS reporter Lesley Stahl had a chance to interview our soon-to-be Secretary
of State Madeleine Albright in 1996 about this sensitive issue on 60 Minutes.
Asked Stahl: "We have heard that a half million children have died. I mean, that's
more children than died in Hiroshima. And - and you know, is the price worth it?"
To this Albright responded, "I think this is a very hard choice, but the price
- we think the price is worth it."
One half million dead children. We were never told our nation would exact this
kind of a price on another country.
It strikes me there comes a point where the killing of the innocent, even indirectly
by withholding medicine, destroys the credibility of the noblest of ideals. I'm
not sure exactly when that point comes, but some say it comes after the death
of one child.
Supporters of a war against Saddam owe it to us to come out from behind the
sanitized walls, to go beyond the language of distancing and denial that produced
"collateral damage" and speak directly. If your cause is just, then how many dead
Iraqi children is it worth? A hundred? A thousand? Ten thousand? A hundred thousand?
State your figure.
I know this is ancient history. I know George Bush Jr. was not on watch then.
But he walks in the footsteps of government officials who have misled and manipulated
us. We are not buying swampland again with the stakes in human suffering so high.
Wayne Grytting is the author of American Newspeak: The Mangling of Meaning
for Power and Profit (New Society Publishers, 2002) E-mail:wgrytt@scn.org
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