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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
US and British planes kill Iraqi civilians in weekend bombing
raid
By Julie Hyland
15 August 2000
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US and British planes bombed two civilian installations in
Iraq over the weekend, killing two civilians and injuring more
than 20 people.
The first attack was made on Friday, August 11 at approximately
11 p.m. local time. The Iraqi News Agency (INA) reported that
US and British planes fired around a dozen rockets at the main
distribution centre used to store food permitted under the United
Nations oil-for-food programme in the city of Samawa, 175 miles
south of the capital Baghdad. Two civilians were reported killed
and 19 injured in the attack.
According to INA, on Saturday evening US and British planes
struck the Samawa railway station and injured a number of
citizens and inflicted damage to nearby houses.
Both the US and Britain claimed to have been targeting military
installations. The two countries' planes patrol a no-fly
zone over southern and northern Iraq imposed by the Western
powers after the 1991 Gulf war. Ostensibly established to protect
Kurds in the north and Shi'ite Muslims in the south from attacks
by the Iraqi regime, the patrols have been used to mount almost
continuous bombing raids.
Iraq says that around 300 civilians have been killed and 900
wounded in British and US attacks over the last decade. The bombing
raids were stepped up in 1998 in response to Iraqi efforts to
win support from other countries for an end to the total trade
embargo imposed at the conclusion of the Gulf War.
According to the UN's own figures, the economic blockade has
already left at least one million Iraqis dead, with children accounting
for at least half a million. UNICEF, the UN children's fund, states
that the country is facing an ongoing humanitarian emergency.
The country's hospitals lack basic drugs and equipment, and there
are growing cases of malnutrition.
There had been a six-week lull since the last US-British raid.
The decision to resume military operations seems to have been
prompted by the visit to Iraq one day earlier by Venezuelan President
Hugo Chavezthe first by a head of state since the 1991 Gulf
War. America and Britain pinned their hopes on sanctions undermining
Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, to bring about a change in the country's
leadership to one more favourable to the West.
These plans have backfired, however, leading to growing criticism
of the sanctions policy. In the past years several leading former
US and UN officials have publicly opposed the Iraqi sanctionsincluding
Denis Halliday, former UN assistant secretary-general; Scott Ritter,
former UN weapons inspector in Iraq; and Count Hans von Sponeck,
UN humanitarian coordinator in Iraq.
The UN Security Council is also split over the issue, with
China, France and Russia calling for sanctions to be lifted immediately.
Despite this, the US and Britain continue to insist that sanctions
remain in place until Iraq has proven to the UN Security Council
that it has not only rid itself of nuclear, chemical and biological
weapons and long-range missiles (so-called weapons of mass
destruction), but even the capacity to make
theman impossible task. The two countries had begun to proceed
more cautiously in the face of mounting disagreements and had
not made any bombing raids for several weeks, prior to last weekend.
Chavez's visit is the most serious public challenge to date
to US policy. The US and Britain reacted angrily to his decision
to meet Hussein. The US in particular put intense pressure on
him not to make the journey, with State Department spokesman Richard
Boucher claiming that it bestows an aura of respectability
upon Saddam Hussein that Iraq would use for propaganda purposes.
Boucher has hinted that Chavez could be considered in violation
of UN sanctions and that his trip would be something the US would
keep in mind in any future dealings with Venezuela.
The Venezuelan government had made clear it would not conform
to US demands. Prior to the trip, Foreign Minister Jose Vicente
Rangel warned: Nobody can influence our decision.... He
[Chavez] is going to arrive, whether it be on a skateboard or
a camel. During his visit Chavez openly attacked the US,
condemning it at one press conference for meddling
in the internal affairs of a sovereign country. We
say to the United States: don't panic. You have plenty of other
problems to worry about, so don't place too much importance on
this [visit], Chavez stated. He offered support for Iraqi
efforts to end UN sanctions, stating his government's opposition
to any kind of boycott or sanctions that are applied against
Iraq or any other country in the world.
A former paratrooper, Chavez was recently re-elected as president
of Venezuela after running a populist campaign aimed at assuaging
mounting discontent over growing poverty in the country, despite
its oil wealth. He visited Baghdad as part of a 10-day tour of
OPEC (Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries) members in
preparation for a summit to be held in the Venezuelan capital
Caracas on September 27. Chavez has called for OPEC to show
its power once again on the world market and unite against
US economic power. Venezuela is a major oil supplier to the US.
Recently the price of a barrel of crude oil surged above $30,
following the release of data from the American Petroleum Institute
showing a fall in US crude stocks.
Following his visit to Iraq, Chavez went to Tripoli for talks
with Mummar Gaddafi. Both leaders were reported to have visited
the site where the Libyan leader's adopted daughter died in a
US bomb attack in 1986. The forthcoming OPEC summit will be only
the second meeting of the 13-member organisation, established
in 1960, which includes Iraq, Libya and Indonesia. At the weekend,
Indonesian President Abdurrahman Wahid added his own voice to
demands for an end to sanctions against Iraq, following talks
with Chavez in Jakarta. Wahid indicated that he would make his
own visit to Baghdad later this year.
See Also:
Washington police arrest anti-Iraq sanctions
protesters
[10 August 2000]
Iraq
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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