I thought I would like to share
these articles with
FoTH
friends. I have no way of assessing the accuracy of
the information provided, but I am ready to accept at
face value.
From
http://www.polyconomics.com/searchbase/11-18-98.html
US Army War College: NO PROOF SADDAM GASSED THE KURDS!
Memo to
Jess Helms from InfoTimes. Note excerpt from US Army
War College report that no evidence exists to support
US claims that
Iraq
used gas on the Kurds.
I
continue to make inquiry into the situation in Iraq,
as it is likely to brew up into another crisis one of
these days when the US Army War College has no choice
but to conclude that Iraq is not hiding any weapons of
mass destruction -- or if they are, they are so well
hidden that nobody is going to find them. As you know,
I'm sure, the warhawks in the United States will
continue to insist that the embargo remain in place no
matter what, and there will be assertions from around
the world that we have not been acting in good faith.
As you also know, I believe there are serious
questions regarding our behavior toward Iraq that go
back further. You would agree, I think, that at the
very least our State Department gave a "green light"
to Saddam Hussein to go into
Kuwait
in August 1990.
The more I read of the events of the period, the more
I believe history will record that the Gulf War was
unnecessary, perhaps even that Saddam Hussein was
willing to retreat back to his borders, but our
government decided we preferred the war to the status
quo ante.
In my
previous correspondence with you on this matter, I had
been in a quandary about the state of our relations
with Baghdad during that critical period. In the
months immediately preceding the "green light" given
by our Ambassador, April Glaspie, a number of your
Senate colleagues including Bob Dole had traveled to
Baghdad,
met with Saddam, and found him to be a head of state
worthy of support. Even Sen. Howard Metzenbaum [D-OH],
a Jewish liberal and staunch supporter of
Israel,
gave him a seal of approval. What disturbs me even
now, Jesse, is that these meetings occurred after the
Senate Foreign Relations committee had accused Iraq of
using poison gas against its own people, i.e., the
Kurds. Like all other Americans, in recent years I had
assumed that what I read in the papers was true about
Iraq gassing its own people. Once the war drums again
began beating last November, I decided to read up on
the history, and found
Iraq
denied having used gas against its own people.
Furthermore, I heard that a Pentagon investigation at
the time had also turned up no hard evidence of Saddam
gassing his own people.
This is
serious stuff, because the
US Army
War College tells us that 1.4 million Iraqi civilians
have died as a result of the sanctions, which is 3,000
times more than the number of Kurds who supposedly
died of gassing at the hands of Saddam.
Many of my old Cold Warrior friends practically DEMAND
that we not lift the sanctions because if Saddam would
gas his own people, he would gas anyone. Now I have
come across the 1990 Pentagon report, published just
prior to the invasion of Kuwait. Its authors are
Stephen C. Pelletiere, Douglas V. Johnson II and Leif
R. Rosenberger, of the Strategic Studies Institute of
the U.S. War College at
Carlisle,
Pennsylvania. The report is 93 pages, but I append
here only the passages having to do with the
aforementioned issue:
Iraqi
Power and U.S. Security in the Middle East
Excerpt, Chapter 5
U.S.
SECURITY AND IRAQI POWER
Introduction. Throughout the war the United States
practiced a fairly benign policy toward Iraq. Although
initially disapproving of the invasion,
Washington
came slowly over to the side of
Baghdad. Both wanted to restore the status quo ante to
the Gulf and to reestablish the relative harmony that
prevailed there before Khomeini began threatening the
regional balance of power. Khomeini's revolutionary
appeal was anathema to both Baghdad and Washington;
hence they wanted to get rid of him. United by a
common interest, Iraq and the United States restored
diplomatic relations in 1984, and the
United
States
began to actively assist Iraq in ending the fighting.
It mounted Operation Staunch, an attempt to stem the
flow of arms to Iran. It also increased its purchases
of Iraqi oil while cutting back on Iranian oil
purchases, and it urged its allies to do likewise. All
this had the effect of repairing relations between the
two countries, which had been at a very low ebb.
In
September 1988, however -- a month after the war had
ended -- the State
Department abruptly, and in what many viewed as a
sensational manner, condemned
Iraq for allegedly using chemicals against its Kurdish
population.
The incident cannot be understood without some
background of Iraq's relations with the Kurds. It is
beyond the scope of this study to go deeply into this
matter; suffice it to say that throughout the war Iraq
effectively faced two enemies -- Iran and the elements
of its own Kurdish minority. Significant numbers of
the Kurds had launched a revolt against Baghdad and in
the process teamed up with Tehran. As soon as the war
with Iran ended, Iraq announced its determination to
crush the Kurdish insurrection. It sent Republican
Guards to the Kurdish area, and in the course of this
operation - according to the U.S. State Department --
gas was used, with the result that numerous Kurdish
civilians were killed. The Iraqi government denied
that any such gassing had occurred. Nonetheless,
Secretary of State Schultz stood by U.S. accusations,
and the U.S. Congress, acting on its own, sought to
impose economic sanctions on Baghdad as a violator of
the Kurds' human rights.
Having
looked at all of the evidence that was available to
us, we find it impossible to confirm the State
Department's claim that gas was used in this instance.
To begin with there were never any victims produced.
International relief organizations who examined the
Kurds -- in
Turkey
where they had gone for asylum -- failed to discover
any. Nor were there ever any found inside Iraq. The
claim rests solely on testimony of the Kurds who had
crossed the border into Turkey, where they were
interviewed by staffers of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee.
We
would have expected, in a matter as serious as this,
that the Congress would have exercised some care.
However, passage of the sanctions measure through the
Congress was unusually swift -- at least in the Senate
where a unanimous vote was secured within 24 hours.
Further, the proposed sanctions were quite draconian
(and will be discussed in detail below). Fortunately
for the future of Iraqi-U.S. ties, the sanctions
measure failed to pass on a bureaucratic technicality
(it was attached as a rider to a bill that died before
adjournment).
It
appears that in seeking to punish Iraq, the Congress
was influenced by another incident that occurred five
months earlier in another Iraqi-Kurdish city, Halabjah.
In March 1988, the Kurds at Halabjah were bombarded
with chemical weapons, producing a great many deaths.
Photographs of them Kurdish victims were widely
disseminated in the international media. Iraq was
blamed for the Halabjah attack, even though it was
subsequently brought out that Iran too had used
chemicals in this operation, and it seemed likely that
it was the Iranian bombardment that had actually
killed the Kurds.
Thus,
in our view, the Congress acted more on the basis of
emotionalism than factual information, and without
sufficient thought for the adverse diplomatic effects
of its action. As a result of the outcome of the
Iran-Iraq War, Iraq is now the most powerful state in
the Persian Gulf, an area in which we have vital
interests. To maintain an uninterrupted flow of oil
from the Gulf to the West, we need to develop good
working relations with all of the Gulf states, and
particularly with Iraq, the strongest.
From
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/31/opinion/31PELL.html
A War
Crime or an Act of War?
By STEPHEN C. PELLETIERE
ECHANICSBURG, Pa. - It was no surprise that President
Bush, lacking smoking-gun evidence of Iraq's weapons
programs, used his State of the Union address to
re-emphasize the moral case for an invasion: "The
dictator who is assembling the world's most dangerous
weapons has already used them on whole villages,
leaving thousands of his own citizens dead, blind or
disfigured."
The
accusation that Iraq has used chemical weapons against
its citizens is a familiar part of the debate. The
piece of hard evidence most frequently brought up
concerns the gassing of Iraqi Kurds at the town of
Halabja in March 1988, near the end of the eight-year
Iran-Iraq war. President Bush himself has cited Iraq's
"gassing its own people," specifically at Halabja, as
a reason to topple Saddam Hussein.
But
the truth is, all we know for certain is that Kurds
were bombarded with poison gas that day at Halabja. We
cannot say with any certainty that Iraqi chemical
weapons killed the Kurds. This is not the only
distortion in the Halabja story.
I am
in a position to know because, as the Central
Intelligence Agency's senior political analyst on Iraq
during the Iran-Iraq war, and as a professor at the
Army War College from 1988 to 2000, I was privy to
much of the classified material that flowed through
Washington having to do with the Persian Gulf. In
addition, I headed a 1991 Army investigation into how
the Iraqis would fight a war against the
United States;
the classified version of the report went into great
detail on the Halabja affair.
This much about the gassing at Halabja we undoubtedly
know: it came about in the course of a battle between
Iraqis and Iranians. Iraq used chemical weapons to try
to kill Iranians who had seized the town, which is in
northern Iraq not far from the Iranian border. The
Kurdish civilians who died had the misfortune to be
caught up in that exchange. But they were not Iraq's
main target.
And
the story gets murkier: immediately after the battle
the United States Defense Intelligence Agency
investigated and produced a classified report, which
it circulated within the intelligence community on a
need-to-know basis. That study asserted that
it was Iranian gas
that killed the Kurds, not Iraqi gas.
The
agency did find that each side used gas against the
other in the battle around Halabja. The condition
of the dead Kurds' bodies, however, indicated they had
been killed with a blood agent - that is, a
cyanide-based gas - which
Iran was known to use.
The Iraqis, who are thought to have used mustard
gas in the battle, are not known to have possessed
blood agents at the time.
These
facts have long been in the public domain but,
extraordinarily, as often as the Halabja affair is
cited, they are rarely mentioned. A much-discussed
article in The New Yorker last March did not make
reference to the Defense Intelligence Agency report or
consider that Iranian gas might have killed the Kurds.
On the rare occasions the report is brought up, there
is usually speculation, with no proof, that it was
skewed out of American political favoritism toward
Iraq in its war against Iran.
I am
not trying to rehabilitate the character of Saddam
Hussein. He has much to answer for in the area of
human rights abuses. But accusing him of gassing his
own people at Halabja as an act of genocide is not
correct, because as far as the information we have
goes, all of the cases where gas was used involved
battles. These were tragedies of war. There may be
justifications for invading Iraq, but Halabja is not
one of them.
In
fact, those who really feel that the disaster at
Halabja has bearing on today might want to consider a
different question: Why was Iran so keen on taking the
town? A closer look may shed light on America's
impetus to invade Iraq.
We are
constantly reminded that Iraq has perhaps the world's
largest reserves of oil. But in a regional and perhaps
even geopolitical sense, it may be more important that
Iraq has the most extensive river system in the Middle
East. In addition to the Tigris and Euphrates, there
are the Greater Zab and Lesser Zab rivers in the north
of the country. Iraq was covered with irrigation works
by the sixth century A.D., and was a granary for the
region.
Before
the Persian Gulf war, Iraq had built an impressive
system of dams and river control projects, the largest
being the Darbandikhan dam in the Kurdish area. And it
was this dam the Iranians were aiming to take control
of when they seized Halabja. In the 1990's there was
much discussion over the construction of a so-called
Peace Pipeline that would bring the waters of the
Tigris and Euphrates south to the parched Gulf states
and, by extension, Israel. No progress has been made
on this, largely because of Iraqi intransigence. With
Iraq in American hands, of course, all that could
change.
Thus America could alter the destiny of the Middle
East in a way that probably could not be challenged
for decades - not solely by controlling Iraq's oil,
but by controlling its water. Even if America didn't
occupy the country, once Mr. Hussein's Baath Party is
driven from power, many lucrative opportunities would
open up for American companies.
All
that is needed to get us into war is one clear reason
for acting, one that would be generally persuasive.
But efforts to link the Iraqis directly to Osama bin
Laden have proved inconclusive. Assertions that Iraq
threatens its neighbors have also failed to create
much resolve; in its present debilitated condition -
thanks to United Nations sanctions - Iraq's
conventional forces threaten no one.
Perhaps the strongest argument left for taking us to
war quickly is that Saddam Hussein has committed human
rights atrocities against his people. And the most
dramatic case are the accusations about Halabja.
Before we go to war over Halabja, the administration
owes the American people the full facts. And if it has
other examples of Saddam Hussein gassing Kurds, it
must show that they were not pro-Iranian Kurdish
guerrillas who died fighting alongside Iranian
Revolutionary Guards. Until Washington gives us proof
of Saddam Hussein's supposed atrocities, why are we
picking on Iraq on human rights grounds, particularly
when there are so many other repressive regimes
Washington supports?
Stephen C. Pelletiere is author of "Iraq and the
International Oil System: Why America Went to War in
the Persian Gulf."