|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
New US provocation against Iraq
By Martin McLaughlin
5 August 1998
The chief weapons inspector for the United Nations, Australian
diplomat Richard Butler, cut short a visit to Baghdad Monday and
returned to New York City after the collapse of talks on the conditions
for lifting UN sanctions against Iraq.
The UN Security Council will discuss the breakdown of talks
Wednesday, amid reports suggesting that the US and Britain will
seek to use the incident as the pretext for the long-planned escalation
of political, economic and military pressure against the regime
of Saddam Hussein.
Butler refused to discuss the details of the negotiations until
after he briefs the Security Council, other than to say that Iraqi
leaders, headed by Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz, had demanded
immediate certification by the United Nations Special Commission
(UNSCOM) that Iraq does not possess chemical and biological weapons
or offensive missiles.
"I told him that I cannot fulfill your demand because
I don't have the evidence," Butler said. The UN sanctions
are to continue until UNSCOM certifies to the Security Council
that Iraq is without such weapons. Iraqi officials have charged
that UNSCOM continually escalates its demands for inspection and
documentation in a process--proving a negative--which is for all
practical purposes neverending.
The Butler-Aziz talks took place under tense conditions in
Baghdad. At one point during the negotiations, the bodies of 35
children who died recently because of the UN economic blockade,
were brought past the meeting place in a funeral possession.
Tariq Aziz reiterated the longstanding Iraqi complaint that
UNSCOM is dominated by the United States and Britain, the two
countries that spearheaded the 1991 Persian Gulf war, and therefore
is not an objective or neutral body. He accused Butler of "serving
the American policy" of prolonging sanctions indefinitely.
"I have had ... the impression that UNSCOM is back to
its old games and tricks," he said, referring to an incident
July 28 when an American UNSCOM inspector was caught hiding behind
a UN truck taking photos of a train transporting military equipment.
An Iraqi who was accompanying the inspection team accused the
US inspector of espionage and the film was subsequently destroyed.
This evidence of US spying was not reported in the American press.
American intervention in Iraq has been publicly intensified
in the last two weeks, however. On July 23-24 US Undersecretary
of State David Welch visited northern Iraq, the highest-ranking
US official to visit the zone run by Iraqi Kurdish militias outside
of Saddam Hussein's control.
Over strenuous Iraqi protests, Welch held talks with two rival
Iraqi Kurdish leaders, Masud Barzani of the Kurdish Democratic
Party and Jalal Talabani of the Popular Union of Kurdistan, and
extended an invitation from the Clinton administration for both
to visit Washington later this year. The State Department later
issued a statement declaring the visit, "a useful expression
of the US role in northern Iraq."
On July 26 the Washington Post reported that the Clinton
administration has submitted to Congress a 27-page plan for the
political destabilization of Iraq, calling for the establishment
of a Radio Free Iraq and pumping another $5 million to fund a
center for Iraqi exile political activities in London and to gather
documents for a possible war crimes trial for Saddam Hussein and
other senior leaders of the Ba'athist regime.
While the CIA and State Department openly conspire at the overthrow
of the Iraqi government, the American media, working in close
coordination, seek to prepare public opinion for a new diplomatic
confrontation and ultimately for further US military action in
the region.
See Also:
US, Britain block relaxation
of Iraq inspections
[31 July 1998]
Missile attack on Iraq: Danger
of new US-made crisis in Persian Gulf
[7 July 1998]
Pentagon strategy for nuclear
strikes revealed
Iraq: a testing ground for
US militarism
[4 March 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |