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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
US and Britain combine to maintain crippling sanctions on
Iraq
By Barry Grey
5 January 2000
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After more than eight months of intense negotiations within
the United Nations Security Council, the US decided last month
to bring to a vote a resolution that would effectively extend
the sanctions against Iraq indefinitely, even though only one
other permanent member of the Security Council, Britain, was prepared
to vote for it.
The resolution that was passed December 17 calls for the establishment
of a new weapons inspections agencythe United Nations Monitoring,
Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC)to replace
the United Nations Special Commission (UNSCOM). Baghdad refused
to allow UNSCOM and its chairman Richard Butler to reenter Iraq
after the US and Britain, based on a report from Butler denouncing
the Iraqis for noncompliance, launched their four-day air attack
in December of 1998. The Iraqis have likewise refused access to
the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which is responsible,
under the UN sanctions imposed in 1990, for verifying the absence
of nuclear weapons programs in the country.
Iraq announced in advance that it would reject any resolution
that did not provide for the unconditional lifting of sanctions,
and indicated it would consider a resumption of weapons inspections
only on the basis of a guarantee, with date certain, that the
embargo would be ended. Of the permanent Security Council members,
Russia, China and France, each of which could have exercised a
veto by voting no, abstained in the December 17 vote.
They were joined by Malaysia. The resolution, presented by Britain
and backed by the US, passed by a vote of 11-0, with four abstentions.
That the US decided to go ahead with the vote, knowing that
it would register the split within the Security Council over Iraq
and the increasing isolation of Washington and London, underscores
the American government's determination to continue its policy
of punishing Iraq, in the hope that the massive suffering of the
Iraqi population will lead eventually to the toppling of President
Saddam Hussein.
By any objective standard, the US policy toward Iraq constitutes
a crime against humanity. To find a comparable example of a great
power trampling on the national sovereignty of a small country
one would have to go back to the heyday of colonialism at the
turn of the last century. The toll of death and destruction on
the Iraqi populace from American bombs and US-backed sanctions
is immense. Numerous reports by international agencies and humanitarian
organizations have documented the collapse of health care, nutrition,
clean water, sanitation and other rudiments of civilization resulting
from more than nine years of economic embargo.
Last August, for example, the United Nations children's agency,
UNICEF, published a study concluding that child mortality had
more than doubled in central and southern Iraq since the UN sanctions
were implemented. An earlier UNICEF report estimated that over
5,000 Iraqi children were dying each month for lack of adequate
food and medicine. Last week the Iraqi Ministry of Health announced
that 1.4 million Iraqis of all ages have died over the past nine
years as a result of the UN embargo.
Since the December 1998 air war, the US and Britain have continued
to bomb Iraqi military and civilian targets on nearly a daily
basis. American and British jets patrolling no-fly
zones in northern and southern Iraq have, according to Baghdad,
carried out 16,848 missions and killed 156 people over the past
year. The US, Britain and France unilaterally imposed these no-fly
zones in the early 1990s, without even the legal cover of a UN
resolution.
UN weapons inspections have served as a thinly disguised tool
for Washington's efforts to destabilize and remove the Hussein
regime. Over many years UNSCOM carried out one provocation after
another, refusing to certify that Iraq had rid itself of chemical
and biological weapons and demanding access to the most sensitive
political and security-related facilities. Not infrequently UNSCOM's
inspections were designed to provoke Iraqi opposition, and thereby
provide a pretext for new political or military attacks by the
US. The December 1998 air assault, for example, was triggered
by Baghdad's refusal to allow Richard Butler's inspectors access
to the ruling Baath Party's headquarters.
Within weeks of that missile and bomb attack, major newspapers
around the world provided detailed evidence, including admissions
from US intelligence officials, that Washington had long been
using UNSCOM as a front for CIA intelligence gathering against
the Iraqi leadership. In addition to pinpointing the movements
of Saddam Hussein for possible assassination attempts, the CIA
used UNSCOM to select targets for the December 1998 air war. These
revelations vindicated Iraq's long-standing charge that UN weapons
inspectors were working as spies for American and Israeli intelligence.
Given this record, it is hardly surprising that the Iraqis
are reluctant to place their fate in the hands of another US-backed
inspections program. Under pressure from growing public sentiment,
both internationally and within the US, against the sanctions,
the Clinton administration sought to cast the December 17 resolution
as a mechanism for easing the burden on the Iraqi people, while
remaining intransigent toward the regime in Baghdad.
The resolution sets forth a plan for suspending sanctions on
the import and export of civilian goods for renewable periods
of 120 days, should UNMOVIC and the IAEA report that Iraq has
fully complied with their inspections programs for a period of
120 days. However, any suspension of sanctions must be voted on
by the Security Council, where both the US and Britain have a
veto. If, on the other hand, UNMOVIC or the IAEA should report
that Iraq has fallen out of full compliance, reimposition of sanctions
would be automatic.
The resolution gives UNMOVIC, in particular, a carte blanche
to demand access to any and all facilities and individuals. It
states that Iraq should allow UNMOVIC teams immediate, unconditional
and unrestricted access to all areas, facilities, equipment, records
and means of transport as well as to persons under the authority
of the Iraqi Government.
This would obviously give the new inspections agency a wide
berth to stage the type of provocations for which its predecessor,
UNSCOM, became notorious. Moreover, the paragraph outlining the
conditions for suspending sanctions contains a caveat that Washington
could seize upon to block any temporary lifting of the embargo.
The innocuous-sounding clause reads: subject to the elaboration
of effective financial and other operational measures to ensure
that Iraq does not acquire prohibited items.
US Deputy Ambassador to the UN Peter Burleigh alluded to this
seemingly technical provision in his remarks following the passage
of the resolution. According to the summary of Burleigh's remarks
provided by the UN, the American delegate said: Before considering
suspensions, the Council would need to set guidelines on the means
of delivering civilian imports during suspension. The present
resolution did not define the details of those measures or stipulate
what means of delivery would or would not be authorized. The United
States attached the utmost importance to that requirement for
effective control measures.
In other words, the US was prepared to exploit the vagueness
of this clause to block even a temporary suspension of sanctions.
The one provision of the resolution that appears to grant some
unconditional relief is the removal of the existing cap on Iraqi
oil exports. Up to now the UN has limited Iraq to $5.26 billion
in oil exports every six months. The lifting of the oil cap is,
in large measure, a concession by the US and Britain to Russia
and France, both of which have a substantial economic stake in
the revival of the country's petroleum industry. This is further
indicated by another clause in the resolution which speaks of
options for involving foreign oil companies in Iraq's oil
sector, including investments, subject to appropriate monitoring
and controls.
Overall, however, the resolution maintains the status quo,
with no foreseeable end to the sanctions regime. Iraqi sovereignty
remains a dead letter, and the fate of the country remains firmly
in the hands of the US, which could continue indefinitely to block
any resumption of normal economic relations between Iraq and the
rest of the world. The resolution retains the basic mechanism
for holding the country in subjugationthe invidious requirement
that it prove the negative, i.e., that it has eliminated any capacity
for producing nuclear, chemical or biological weapons, something
that can never be positively proven.
Iraq immediately denounced the December 17 resolution as a
new device for maintaining the sanctions regime. Deputy Prime
Minister Tariq Aziz said, The US' and Britain's real objective
through this resolution is not to lift sanctions but rather to
trick international opinion. The suspension [of sanctions] is
nothing but a trick in that it relies on a long and complicated
series of conditions that are impossible to fulfill. Aziz
further attacked the resolution for failing to address the no-fly
zones and the ongoing bombing campaign of the US and Britain.
The semi-official Iraqi newspaper Babel said the resolution
maintains the embargo and brings Iraq back to the starting
point. It went on to say, This criminal resolution
turns Iraq into a protectorate led from the outside with Iraqi
money. At the same time the newspaper declared the Security
Council vote, with four abstentions, a victory for Iraq
because after eight months of negotiations, pressures and blackmail,
the United States and Britain failed to get a consensus on their
hostile policy towards Iraq.
In their statements, the French, Russian and Chinese delegates
echoed some of Iraq's concerns. Sergei Lavrov of the Russian Federation
said the resolution had the underlying purpose of indefinitely
postponing the lifting of sanctions. Qin Huasun of China
denounced the no-fly zones, which had never been authorized
or approved by the Council, and demanded that the US and
Britain cease their bombing of Iraqi targets in the north and
south of the country.
Peter Burleigh of the US underscored Washington's intransigent
position, insisting that the resolution had the force of international
law and demanding that all Security Council members, regardless
of how they voted, join in pressing Iraq for full and immediate
implementation. He emphasized that any suspension of sanctions
had to be approved by the Council, that it would only be temporary,
and that it would be automatically revoked should the IAEA or
UNMOVIC report noncompliance. He added that the Council had
placed the onus squarely on Iraq, which could expect no
benefit of the doubt.
Washington's motives were further underscored by its reaction
to Iraq's rejection of the resolution. The practical consequence
of the Iraqi rejection is there will not be any prospect for suspension
of sanctions, said US State Department spokesman James Foley.
The fact that France, Russia and China failed to exercise their
veto power to defeat the resolution, opting instead to abstain,
highlights their own economic and geopolitical ambitions in Iraq
and the Persian Gulf. Iraqi oil, not humanitarian concerns, lies
at the center of their maneuvers with the US and Britain in the
Security Council. France, in particular, vacillated over its vote,
deciding to abstain only after Iraq threatened to break off diplomatic
relations and scrap potentially lucrative oil contracts with French
companies if Paris supported the resolution.
Despite the Iraqi rejection, the Security Council is mandated
to proceed with the implementation of the December 17 resolution.
Maneuvering within the Council is now focused on the selection
of an executive chairman of UNMOVIC, to be appointed by January
16 by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan.
See Also:
Clinton administration
blocks easing of sanctions against Iraq
[28 September 1999]
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