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The USA'S Iraq Policy: The Ultimate Beneficiary

by B.Raman

An objective assesment of the USA's Iraq policy is rendered difficult partly by the absence of a contrary view in the US and partly by the paucity of acceptable information, whether it be regarding US allegations of non-compliance by Iraq of the UN resolutions on weapons of mass destruction (WMD) or regarding the internal situation in Iraq.

Even in the worst days of the US-Iran confrontation after the exit of the Shah of Iran, there were independent-thinking scholars in the US who were reluctant to go along with the official Satanisation of the regime in Iran and questioned the wisdom of American policy. They stressed the wisdom of accepting the realities of the situation and reaching a modus vivendi with the post-Shah regime.

Initially, their views didn't prevail. Instead, the US Administration spared no pains to bring about the downfall of the regime. Its efforts, through its intelligence community, consisted partly of support to the Saddam Hussein regime in its eight-year war against Iran, partly of a well-orchestrated disinformation campaign to paint the Islamic regime in the worst colours and partly of support to anti-regime elements based abroad such as Bani Sadr operating from France and the Mujahideen Khalq.

Today, the Saddam Hussein regime is being condemned for its continued clandestine quest for weapons of mass destruction. Iraq's appetite for these weapons was, in fact, whetted by the West. France supplied the Osirak nuclear reactor which, however, was destroyed by Israel before it could be completed. The UK, the US and other Western countries clandestinely gave to Iraq chemical weapons or the capability to produce them.

So long as the Saddam Hussein regime used these capabilities to kill and maim Iranian nationals , the West watched with proforma expressions of concern, while at the same time clandestinely replenishing Iraqi stocks. Its attitude to Iraq's retaining these capabilities changed after the Gulf war of 1991. In the USA's perception, Iraq was not a rogue state so long as it kept killing Iranians, but it became one as soon as it started resisting US pressure to destroy the unused stocks.

An important issue in the latest confrontation between Iraq and Richard Butler, the head of the UN weapons inspection team, has not been adequately highlighted and analysed. It is with regard to Butler's demand that Iraq give a complete account of the chemical weapons which it had used in the war against Iran. Since the US and the UK know how much chemical weapons they gave to Iraq for being used against Iran, they want to verify how much of those stocks remained unutilised so that they could ensure that these are destroyed.

One saw a similar situation in Afghanistan. The CIA gave to Gulbuddin Heckmatyar, its blue-eyed mujahideen leader, and to Osama alias Osman Bin Laden, who was then projected as the Scarlet Pimpernal of the Afghan war, unlimited quantities of the Stinger missiles for being used against Soviet aircraft and helicopters. They were applauded so long as they kept killing the commies , but became rogues when they refused to return to the CIA or destroy the unused stocks after the commies withdrew.

It was in anger against their refusal that the CIA created the Taliban and helped it to defeat Heckmatyar and others who refused to co-operate with it in buying back the unused Stinger missiles. The result: the most despicable extremist regime in Kabul which follows no international law and treats women as men's chattels. This in an Islamic society where women have always been treated with respect.

Today, President Bill Clinton and his wife Hillary are eloquent in rightly condemning the abominable attitude of the Taliban regime towards women. They should ask themselves and the CIA who created and fed the Taliban and why.

In recent years, the views of those independent scholars who were critical of the US policy towards Iran are gaining increasing acceptance and the US Administration itself is veering round to a more moderate view, particularly after the coming to power of President Khatami.

Unfortunately, in the case of Iraq, one looks in vain for independent-thinkers who are not prepared to accept uncritically the over-Satanisation of the Saddam Hussein regime by the US Administration. Is the Saddam Hussein regime more sinned against than sinning? Nobody in the US poses this question. It is as if, totally influenced by the anti-Saddam Hussein disinformation campaign of the US intelligence community, the entire community of research scholars has unwittingly let itself be co-opted by the Administration in its pursuit of objectives of questionable wisdom.

What is the principal objective: bring about the end of Saddam Hussein, if possible by impelling sections of the armed forces to raise against him or, if necessary, by arming and sending into Iraq a hotchpotch of self-proclaimed leaders, most of whom are known neither in Iraq nor in the outside world outside the offices of the CIA and the MI-6, the British external intelligence agency.

There is a third option: Encourage the separatist elements amongst the Kurds and the Shias. Fortunately, there is a seeming realisation that this would be unwise. An autonomous or independent Kurd State would be the source of destabilisation in other countries such as Turkey having a large Kurdish population and an autonomous or independent Shia state would propel demands for a similar status for the Shias of Pakistan and add to the influence of Iran in the region.

Would the US and the UK succeed in their now publicly-proclaimed aim of bringing about the collapse of the Saddam Hussein regime through dissatisfied elements in the armed forces by inflicting unacceptable damage on the country or by helping the political exiles or through a combination of both? Even if they succeed, would it contribute to regional peace?

Nobody except an unthinking person would assert that this would be so. The US, because of its unquestioned power and resources , may succeed in bringing down the Saddam Hussein regime, but that would not be the end of the Iraqi problem , but only the beginning of another phase of it. By making Saddam Hussein, alive or dead, a martyr in the eyes of the people it would end up by creating new Frankensteins in the form of Islamic extremism in Iraq.

Today, Iraq and Syria are two countries in the West Asian region which have remained remarkably free of religious extremism. Whatever might be the sins of Saddam Hussein, he has given Islam as practised in Iraq a modern visage, extended the benefits of education to the poorest of the poor, kept the extremist clergy under control and given the Iraqi women their rightful place in society. These are assets not only of Iraq, but of the world as a whole. By destroying Saddam Hussein, the US might end up by destroying one more forward-looking Islamic society.

As it did in Afghanistan. If it had changed its Afghan policy after the withdrawal of the Soviet troops in 1988-89 and reached an accommodation with the Najibullah regime, Afghanistan might have been a different place today and its women would have taken their rightful place in the world today.

Instead, in its anger against Najibullah for letting himself be used by the erstwhile USSR, it continued to clandestinely help the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) of Pakistan and the medievalist mujahideen elements in their campaign to bring down Najibullah. They succeeded and brought him down in April, 1992. The atrocious sequel is there for all to see.

The Iraq policy calls for a genuine introspection by the American society, but, unfortunately, introspection has never been a virtue in the US.

India and the Indian people have special reasons to feel sad over what is happening to Iraq. How many of us remember that Iraq is the only country to have recognised Kashmir as an integral part of India. Not even the erstwhile USSR, despite its support to India against Pakistan, had ever said in clear terms that Kashmir is an integral part of India. How many of us remember that Saddam Hussein is the only Muslim leader who had always stood by India, whether it be in its contentions with the West or with Pakistan, despite his policy on Indo-Pakistan issues being criticised by some sections of the clergy?

Saddam Hussein may fall, but the ultimate beneficiary is going to be not the US or the UK or the democratic world. It would, most probably, be trans-national Islamic extremism.

19-12-98

(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India and presently Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai.)

 

 

 
            
               
 

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