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by Noam Chomsky

4/98
The concept "rogue state" is
highly nuanced. The U.S. does not fall into the category despite its
terrorist attacks against Cuba for close to 40 years.
The concept of "rogue state"
plays a pre-eminent role today in policy planning and analysis. The
current Iraq crisis is only the latest example. Washington and London
declared Iraq a "rogue state," a threat to its neighbors and to the entire
world, an "outlaw nation" led by a reincarnation of Hitler who must be
contained by the guardians of world order, the United States and its
British "junior partner," to adopt the term ruefully employed by the
British foreign office half a century ago. The concept merits a close
look. But first, let’s consider its application in the current crisis.
The most interesting feature of
the debate over the Iraq crisis is that it never took place. True, many
words flowed, and there was dispute about how to proceed. But discussion
kept within rigid bounds that excluded the obvious answer: the U.S. and UK
should act in accord with their laws and treaty obligations.
The relevant legal framework is
formulated in the Charter of the United Nations, a "solemn treaty"
recognized as the foundation of international law and world order, and
under the U.S. Constitution, "the supreme law of the land."
The Charter states that "The
Security Council shall determine the existence of any threat to the peace,
breach of the peace, or act of aggression, and shall make recommendations,
or decide what measures shall be taken in accordance with Articles 41 and
42," which detail the preferred "measures not involving the use of armed
force" and permit the Security Council to take further action if it finds
such measures inadequate. The only exception is Article 51, which permits
the "right of individual or collective self-defense" against "armed
attack...until the Security Council has taken the measures necessary to
maintain international peace and security." Apart from these exceptions,
member states "shall refrain in their international relations from the
threat or use of force."
There are legitimate ways to
react to the many threats to world peace. If Iraq’s neighbors feel
threatened, they can approach the Security Council to authorize
appropriate measures to respond to the threat. If the U.S. and Britain
feel threatened, they can do the same. But no state has the authority to
make its own determinations on these matters and to act as it chooses; the
U.S. and UK would have no such authority even if their own hands were
clean, hardly the case.
Outlaw states do not accept these
conditions: Saddam’s Iraq, for example, or the United States. Its position
was forthrightly articulated by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright,
then UN Ambassador, when she informed the Security Council during an
earlier U.S. confrontation with Iraq that the U.S. will act
"multilaterally when we can and unilaterally as we must," because "We
recognize this area as vital to U.S. national interests" and therefore
accept no external constraints. Albright reiterated that stand when UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan undertook his February 1998 diplomatic
mission: "We wish him well," she stated, "and when he comes back we will
see what he has brought and how it fits with our national interest," which
will determine how we respond. When Annan announced that an agreement had
been reached, Albright repeated the doctrine: "It is possible that he will
come with something we don’t like, in which case we will pursue our
national interest." President Clinton announced that if Iraq fails the
test of conformity (as determined by Washington), "everyone would
understand that then the United States and hopefully all of our allies
would have the unilateral right to respond at a time, place and manner of
our own choosing," in the manner of other violent and lawless states.
The Security Council unanimously
endorsed Annan’s agreement, rejecting U.S./UK demands that it authorize
their use of force in the event of non-compliance. The resolution warned
of "severest consequences," but with no further specification. In the
crucial final paragraph, the Council "decides, in accordance with its
responsibilities under the Charter, to remain actively seized of the
matter, in order to ensure implementation of this resolution and to ensure
peace and security in the area." The Council, no one else; in accordance
with the Charter.
The facts were clear and
unambiguous. Headlines read: "An Automatic Strike Isn’t Endorsed" (Wall
St. Journal); "U.N. Rebuffs U.S. on threat to Iraq if it Breaks Pact" (New
York Times); etc. Britain’s UN Ambassador "privately assured his
colleagues on the council that the resolution does not grant the United
States and Britain an ‘automatic trigger’ to launch strikes against Iraq
if it impedes" UN searches. "It has to be the Security Council who
determines when to use armed force," the Ambassador of Costa Rica
declared, expressing the position of the Security Council.
Washington’s reaction was
different. U.S. Ambassador Bill Richardson asserted that the agreement
"did not preclude the unilateral use of force" and that the U.S. retains
its legal right to attack Baghdad at will. State Department spokesperson
James Rubin dismissed the wording of the resolution as "not as relevant as
the kind of private discussions that we’ve had": "I am not saying that we
don’t care about that resolution," but "we’ve made clear that we don’t see
the need to return to the Security Council if there is a violation of the
agreement." The President stated that the resolution "provides authority
to act" if the U.S. is dissatisfied with Iraqi compliance; his press
secretary made clear that that means military action. "U.S Insists It
Retains Right to Punish Iraq," the New York Times headline read,
accurately. The U.S. has the unilateral right to use force at will:
Period.
Some felt that even this stand
strayed too close to our solemn obligations under international and
domestic law. Senate majority leader Trent Lott denounced the
Administration for having "subcontracted" its foreign policy "to
others"—to the UN Security Council. Senator John McCain warned that "the
United States may be subordinating its power to the United Nations," an
obligation only for law-abiding states. Senator John Kerry added that it
would be "legitimate" for the U.S. to invade Iraq outright if Saddam
"remains obdurate and in violation of the United Nations resolutions, and
in a position of threat to the world community," whether the Security
Council so determines or not. Such unilateral U.S. action would be "within
the framework of international law," as Kerry conceives it. A liberal dove
who reached national prominence as an opponent of the Vietnam War, Kerry
explained that his current stand was consistent with his earlier views.
Vietnam taught him that the force should be used only if the objective is
"achievable and it meets the needs of your country." Saddam’s invasion of
Kuwait was therefore wrong for only one reason: it was not "achievable,"
as matters turned out.
At the liberal-dovish end of the
spectrum, Annan’s agreement was welcomed, but within the narrow framework
that barred the central issues. In a typical reaction, the Boston Globe
stated that had Saddam not backed down, "the United States would not only
have been justified in attacking Iraq—it would have been irresponsible not
to," with no further questions asked. The editors also called for "a
universal consensus of opproprium" against "weapons of mass destruction"
as "the best chance the world has of keeping perverted science from
inflicting hitherto unimagined harm." A sensible proposal; one can think
of easy ways to start, without the threat of force, but these are not what
are intended.
Political analyst William Pfaff
deplored Washington’s unwillingness to consult "theological or
philosophical opinion," the views of Thomas Aquinas and Renaissance
theologian Francisco Suarez—as "a part of the analytical community" in the
U.S. and UK had done "during the 1950s and 1960s," seeking guidance from
"philosophy and theology"! But not the foundations of contemporary
international and domestic law, which are explicit, though irrelevant to
the intellectual culture. Another liberal analyst urged the U.S. to face
the fact that if its incomparable power "is really being exercised for
mankind’s sake, mankind demands some say in its use," which would not be
permitted by "the Constitution, the Congress nor television’s Sunday
pundits"; "And the other nations of the world have not assigned Washington
the right to decide when, where and how their interests should be served"
(Ronald Steel).
The Constitution does happen to
provide such mechanisms, namely, by declaring valid treaties "the supreme
law of the land," particularly the most fundamental of them, the UN
Charter. It further authorizes Congress to "define and punish...offenses
against the law of nations," undergirded by the Charter in the
contemporary era. It is, furthermore, a bit of an understatement to say
that other nations "have not assigned Washington the right"; they have
forcefully denied it that right, following the (at least rhetorical) lead
of Washington, which largely crafted the Charter.
Reference to Iraq’s violation of
UN resolutions was regularly taken to imply that the two warrior states
have the right to use force unilaterally, taking the role of "world
policemen"—an insult to the police, who in principle are supposed to
enforce the law, not tear it to shreds. There was criticism of
Washington’s "arrogance of power," and the like, not quite the proper
terms for a self-designated violent outlaw state.
One might contrive a tortured
legal argument to support U.S./UK claims, though no one really tried. Step
one would be that Iraq has violated UN Resolution 687 of 3 April 1991,
which declares a cease-fire "upon official notification by Iraq" that it
accepts the provisions that are spelled out (destruction of weapons,
inspection, etc.). This is probably the longest and most detailed Security
Council on record, but it mentions no enforcement mechanism. Step two of
the argument, then, would be that Iraq’s non-compliance "reinvokes"
Resolution 678 (29 Nov. 1990). That Resolution authorizes member states
"to use all necessary means to uphold and implement Resolution 660" (2
August 1990), which calls on Iraq to withdraw at once from Kuwait and for
Iraq and Kuwait "to begin immediately intensive negotations for the
resolution of their differences," recommending the framework of the Arab
League. Resolution 678 also invokes "all subsequent relevant resolutions"
(listing them: 662, 664); these are "relevant" in that they refer to the
occupation of Kuwait and Iraqi actions relating to it. Reinvoking 678 thus
leaves matters as they were: with no authorization to use force to
implement the later Resolution 687, which brings up completely different
issues, authorizing nothing beyond sanctions.
There is no need to debate the
matter. The U.S. and UK could readily have settled all doubts by calling
on the Security Council to authorize their "threat and use of force," as
required by the Charter. Britain did take some steps in that direction,
but abandoned them when it became obvious, at once, that the Security
Council would not go along. But these considerations have little relevance
in a world dominated by rogue states that reject the rule of law.
Suppose that the Security Council
were to authorize the use of force to punish Iraq for violating the
cease-fire UN Resolution 687. That authorization would apply to all
states: for example, to Iran, which would therefore by entitled to invade
southern Iraq to sponsor a rebellion. Iraq is a neighbor and the victim of
U.S.-backed Iraqi aggression and chemical warfare, and could claim, not
implausibly, that its invasion would have some local support; the U.S. and
UK can make no such claim. Such Iranian actions, if imaginable, would
never be tolerated, but would be far less outrageous than the plans of the
self-appointed enforcers. It is hard to imagine such elementary
observations entering public discussion in the U.S. and UK.
Contempt for the rule of law is
deeply rooted in U.S. practice and intellectual culture. Recall, for
example, the reaction to the judgment of the World Court in 1986
condemning the U.S. for "unlawful use of force" against Nicaragua,
demanding that it desist and pay extensive reparations, and declaring all
U.S. aid to the contras, whatever its character, to be "military aid," not
"humanitarian aid." The Court was denounced on all sides for having
discredited itself. The terms of the judgment were not considered fit to
print, and were ignored. The Democrat-controlled Congress immediately
authorized new funds to step up the unlawful use of force. Washington
vetoed a Security Council resolution calling on all states to respect
international law—not mentioning anyone, though the intent was clear. When
the General Assembly passed a similar resolution, the U.S. voted against
it, effectively vetoing it, joined only by Israel and El Salvador; the
following year, only the automatic Israeli vote could be garnered. Little
of this received mention in the media or journals of opinion, let alone
what it signifies.
Secretary of State George Shultz
meanwhile explained (April 14, 1986) that "Negotiations are a euphemism
for capitulation if the shadow of power is not cast across the bargaining
table." He condemned those who advocate "utopian, legalistic means like
outside mediation, the United Nations, and the World Court, while ignoring
the power element of the equation"—sentiments not without precedent in
modern history.
The open contempt for Article 51
is particularly revealing. It was demonstrated with remarkable clarity
immediately after the 1954 Geneva accords on a peaceful settlement for
Indochina, regarded as a "disaster" by Washington, which moved at once to
undermine them. The National Security Council secretly decreed that even
in the case of "local Communist subversion or rebellion not constituting
armed attack," the U.S. would consider the use of military force,
including an attack on China if it is "determined to be the source" of the
"subversion" (NSC 5429/2; my emphasis). The wording, repeated verbatim
annually in planning documents, was chosen so as to make explicit the U.S.
right to violate Article 51. The same document called for remilitarizing
Japan, converting Thailand into "the focal point of U.S. covert and
psychological operations in Southeast Asia," undertaking "covert
operations on a large and effective scale" throughout Indochina, and in
general, acting forcefully to undermine the Accords and the UN Charter.
This critically important document was grossly falsified by the Pentagon
Papers historians, and has largely disappeared from history.
The U.S. proceeded to define
"aggression" to include "political warfare, or subversion" (by someone
else, that is)—what Adlai Stevenson called "internal aggression" while
defending JFK’s escalation to a full-scale attack against South Vietnam.
When the U.S. bombed Libyan cities in 1986, the official justification was
"self defense against future attack." New York Times legal specialist
Anthony Lewis praised the Administration for relying "on a legal argument
that violence [in this case] is justified as an act of self-defense,"
under this creative interpretation of Article 51 of the Charter, which
would have embarrassed a literate high school student. The U.S. invasion
of Panama was defended in the Security Council by Ambassador Thomas
Pickering by appeal to Article 51, which, he declared, "provides for the
use of armed force to defend a country, to defend our interests and our
people," and entitles the U.S. to invade Panama to prevent its "territory
from being used as a base for smuggling drugs into the United States."
Educated opinion nodded sagely in assent.
In June 1993, Clinton ordered a
missile attack on Iraq, killing civilians and greatly cheering the
president, congressional doves, and the press, who found the attack
"appropriate, reasonable and necessary." Commentators were particularly
impressed by Ambassador Albright’s appeal to Article 51. The bombing, she
explained, was in "self-defense against armed attack"—namely, an alleged
attempt to assassinate former president Bush two months earlier, an appeal
that would have scarcely risen to the level of absurdity even if the U.S.
had been able to demonstrate Iraqi involvement; "Administration officials,
speaking anonymously," informed the press "that the judgment of Iraq’s
guilt was based on circumstantial evidence and analysis rather than
ironclad intelligence," the New York Times reported, dismissing the
matter. The press assured elite opinion that the circumstances "plainly
fit" Article 51 (Washington Post). "Any President has a duty to use
military force to protect the nation’s interests" (New York Times, while
expressing some skepticism about the case in hand). "Diplomatically, this
was the proper rationale to invoke," and "Clinton’s reference to the UN
charter conveyed an American desire to respect international law" (Boston
Globe). Article 51 "permits states to respond militarily if they are
threatened by a hostile power" (Christian Science Monitor). Article 51
entitles a state to use force "in self-defence against threats to one’s
nationals," British Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd instructed Parliament,
supporting Clinton’s "justified and proportionate exercise of the right of
self-defence." There would be a "dangerous state of paralysis" in the
world, Hurd continued, if the U.S. were required to gain Security Council
approval before launching missiles against an enemy that might—or might
not—have ordered a failed attempt to kill an ex-President two months
earlier.
The record lends considerable
support to the concern widely voiced about "rogue states" that are
dedicated to the rule of force, acting in the "national interest" as
defined by domestic power; most ominously, rogue states that anoint
themselves global judge and executioner.
Rogue States: the Narrow
Construction
It is also interesting to review
the issues that did enter the non-debate on the Iraq crisis. But first a
word about the concept "rogue state."
The basic conception is that
although the Cold War is over, the U.S. still has the responsibility to
protect the world—but from what? Plainly it cannot be from the threat of
"radical nationalism"—that is, unwillingness to submit to the will of the
powerful. Such ideas are only fit for internal planning documents, not the
general public. From the early 1980s, it was clear that the conventional
technique for mass mobilization was losing its effectiveness: the appeal
to JFK’s "monolithic and ruthless conspiracy," Reagan’s "evil empire." New
enemies were needed.
At home, fear of
crime—particularly drugs—was stimulated by "a variety of factors that have
little or nothing to do with crime itself," the National Criminal Justice
Commission concluded, including media practices and "the role of
government and private industry in stoking citizen fear," "exploiting
latent racial tension for political purposes," with racial bias in
enforcement and sentencing that is devastating black communities, creating
a "racial abyss" and putting "the nation at risk of a social catastrophe."
The results have been described by criminologists as "the American Gulag,"
"the new American Apartheid," with African Americans now a majority of
prisoners for the first time in U.S. history, imprisoned at well over
seven times the rate of whites, completely out of the range of arrest
rates, which themselves target blacks far out of proportion to drug use or
trafficking.
Abroad, the threats were to be
"international terrorism," "Hispanic narcotraffickers," and most serious
of all, "rogue states." A secret 1995 study of the Strategic Command,
which is responsible for the strategic nuclear arsenal, outlines the basic
thinking. Released through the Freedom of Information act, the study,
Essentials of Post-Cold War Deterrence, "shows how the United States
shifted its deterrent strategy from the defunct Soviet Union to so-called
rogue states such as Iraq, Libya, Cuba and North Korea," AP reports. The
study advocates that the U.S. exploit its nuclear arsenal to portray
itself as "irrational and vindictive if its vital interests are attacked."
That "should be a part of the national persona we project to all
adversaries," particularly the "rogue states." "It hurts to portray
ourselves as too fully rational and cool-headed," let alone committed to
such silliness as international law and treaty obligations. "The fact that
some elements" of the U.S. government "may appear to be potentially ‘out
of control’ can be beneficial to creating and reinforcing fears and doubts
within the minds of an adversary’s decision makers." The report resurrects
Nixon’s "madman theory": our enemies should recognize that we are crazed
and unpredictable, with extraordinary destructive force at our command, so
they will bend to our will in fear. The concept was apparently devised in
Israel in the 1950s by the governing Labor Party, whose leaders "preached
in favor of acts of madness," Prime Minister Moshe Sharett records in his
diary, warning that "we will go crazy" ("nishtagea") if crossed, a "secret
weapon" aimed in part against the U.S., not considered sufficiently
reliable at the time. In the hands of the world’s sole superpower, which
regards itself as an outlaw state and is subject to few constraints from
elites within, that stance poses no small problem for the world.
Libya was a favorite choice as
"rogue state" from the earliest days of the Reagan administration.
Vulnerable and defenseless, it is a perfect punching bag when needed: for
example, in 1986, when the first bombing in history orchestrated for prime
time TV was used by the Great Communicator’s speech writers to muster
support for Washington’s terrorist forces attacking Nicaragua, on grounds
that the "archterrorist" Qaddafi "has sent $400 million and an arsenal of
weapons and advisors into Nicaragua to bring his war home to the United
States," which was then exercising its right of self-defense against the
armed attack of the Nicaraguan rogue state.
Immediately after the Berlin Wall
fell, ending any resort to the Soviet threat, the Bush administration
submitted its annual call to Congress for a huge Pentagon budget. It
explained that "In a new era, we foresee that our military power will
remain an essential underpinning of the global balance, but...the more
likely demands for the use of our military forces may not involve the
Soviet Union and may be in the Third World, where new capabilities and
approaches may be required," as "when President Reagan directed American
naval and air forces to return to [Libya] in 1986" to bombard civilian
urban targets, guided by the goal of "contributing to an international
environment of peace, freedom and progress within which our democracy—and
other free nations—can flourish." The primary threat we face is the
"growing technological sophistication" of the Third World. We must
therefore strengthen "the defense industrial base"—aka high tech
industry—creating incentives "to invest in new facilities and equipment as
well as in research and development." And we must maintain intervention
forces, particularly those targeting the Middle East, where the "threats
to our interests" that have required direct military engagement "could not
be laid at the Kremlin’s door" —contrary to endless fabrication, now put
to rest. As had occasionally been recognized in earlier years, sometimes
in secret, the "threat" is now conceded officially to be indigenous to the
region, the "radical nationalism" that has always been a primary concern,
not only in the Middle East.
At the time, the "threats to our
interests" could not be laid at Iraq’s door either. Saddam was then a
favored friend and trading partner. His status changed only a few months
later, when he misinterpreted U.S. willingness to allow him to modify the
border with Kuwait by force as authorization to take the country over—or
from the perspective of the Bush administration, to duplicate what the
U.S. had just done in Panama. At a high-level meeting immediately after
Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait, President Bush articulated the basic problem:
"My worry about the Saudis is that they’re...going to bug out at the last
minute and accept a puppet regime in Kuwait." Chair of the Joint Chiefs
Colin Powell posed the problem sharply: "The next few days Iraq will
withdraw," putting "his puppet in" and "Everyone in the Arab world will be
happy."
Historical parallels are never
exact, of course. When Washington partially withdrew from Panama after
putting its puppet in, there was great anger throughout the hemisphere,
including Panama. Indeed throughout much of the world, compelling
Washington to veto two Security Council resolutions and to vote against a
General Assembly resolution condemning Washington’s "flagrant violation of
international law and of the independence, sovereignty and territorial
integrity of states" and calling for the withdrawal of the "US armed
invasion forces from Panama." Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait was treated
differently, in ways remote from the standard version, but readily
discovered in print (including this magazine).
The inexpressible facts shed
interesting light on the commentary of political analysts: Ronald Steel,
for example, who muses today on the "conundrum" faced by the U.S., which,
"as the world’s most powerful nation, faces greater constraints on its
freedom to use force than does any other country." Hence Saddam’s success
in Kuwait as compared with Washington’s inability to exert its will in
Panama.
It is worth recalling that debate
was effectively foreclosed in 1990-1991 as well. There was much discussion
of whether sanctions would work, but none of whether they already had
worked, perhaps shortly after Resolution 660 was passed. Fear that
sanctions might have worked animated Washington’s refusal to test Iraqi
withdrawal offers from August 1990 to early January. With the rarest of
exceptions, the information system kept tight discipline on the matter.
Polls a few days before the January 1991 bombing showed 2-1 support for a
peaceful settlement based on Iraqi withdrawal along with an international
conference on the Israel-Arab conflict. Few among those who expressed this
position could have heard any public advocacy of it; the media had loyally
followed the President’s lead, dismissing "linkage" as unthinkable—in this
unique case. It is unlikely that any respondents knew that their views
were shared by the Iraqi democratic opposition, barred from mainstream
media. Or that an Iraqi proposal in the terms they advocated had been
released a week earlier by U.S. officials who found it reasonable, and
flatly rejected by Washington. Or that an Iraqi withdrawal offer had been
considered by the National Security Council as early as mid-August, but
dismissed, and effectively suppressed, apparently because it was feared
that unmentioned Iraqi initiatives might "defuse the crisis," as the New
York Times diplomatic correspondent obliquely reported Administration
concerns.
Since then, Iraq has displaced
Iran and Libya as the leading "rogue state." Others have never entered the
ranks. Perhaps the most relevant case is Indonesia, which shifted from
enemy to friend when General Suharto took power in 1965, presiding over an
enormous slaughter that elicited great satisfaction in the West. Since
then Suharto has been "our kind of guy," as the Clinton administration
described him, while carrying out murderous aggression and endless
atrocities against his own people; killing 10,000 Indonesians just in the
1980s, according to the personal testimony of "our guy," who wrote that
"the corpses were left lying around as a form of shock therapy." In
December 1975 the UN Security Council unanimously ordered Indonesia to
withdraw its invading forces from East Timor "without delay" and called
upon "all States to respect the territorial integrity of East Timor as
well as the inalienable right of its people to self-determination." The
U.S. responded by (secretly) increasing shipments of arms to the
aggressors; Carter accelerated the arms flow once again as the attack
reached near-genocidal levels in 1978. In his memoirs, UN Ambassador
Daniel Patrick Moynihan takes pride in his success in rendering the UN
"utterly ineffective in whatever measures it undertook," following the
instructions of the State Department, which "wished things to turn out as
they did and worked to bring this about." The U.S. also happily accepts
the robbery of East Timor’s oil (with participation of a U.S. company), in
violation of any reasonable interpretation of international agreements.
The analogy to Iraq/Kuwait is
close, though there are differences: to mention only the most obvious,
U.S.-sponsored atrocities in East Timor were vastly beyond anything
attributed to Saddam Hussein in Kuwait.
There are many other examples,
though some of those commonly invoked should be treated with caution,
particularly concerning Israel. The civilian toll of Israel’s U.S.-backed
invasion of Lebanon in 1982 exceeded Saddam’s in Kuwait, and it remains in
violation of a 1978 Security Council resolution ordering it to withdraw
forthwith from Lebanon, along with numerous others regarding Jerusalem,
the Golan Heights, and other matters; and there would be far more if the
U.S. did not regularly veto such resolutions. But the common charge that
Israel, particularly its current government, is violating UN 242 and the
Oslo Accords, and that the U.S. exhibits a "double standard" by tolerating
those violations, is dubious at best, based on serious misunderstanding of
these agreements. From the outset, the Madrid-Oslo process was designed
and implemented by U.S.-Israeli power to impose a Bantustan-style
settlement. The Arab world has chosen to delude itself about the matter,
as have many others, but they are clear in the actual documents, and
particularly in the U.S.-supported projects of the Rabin-Peres
governments, including those for which the current Likud government is now
being denounced.
It is clearly untrue to claim
that "Israel is not demonstrably in violation of Security Council decrees"
(New York Times), but the reasons often given should be examined
carefully.
Returning to Iraq, it surely
qualifies as a leading criminal state. Defending the U.S. plan to attack
Iraq at a televised public meeting on February 18, Secretaries Albright
and Cohen repeatedly invoked the ultimate atrocity: Saddam was guilty of
"using weapons of mass destruction against his neighbors as well as his
own people," his most awesome crime. "It is very important for us to make
clear that the United States and the civilized world cannot deal with
somebody who is willing to use those weapons of mass destruction on his
own people, not to speak of his neighbors," Albright emphasized in an
angry response to a questioner who asked about U.S. support for Suharto.
Shortly after, Senator Lott condemned Kofi Annan for seeking to cultivate
a "human relationship with a mass murderer," and denounced the
Administration for trusting a person who would sink so low.
Ringing words. Putting aside
their evasion of the question raised, Albright and Cohen only forgot to
mention—and commentators have been kind enough not to point out—that the
acts that they now find so horrifying did not turn Iraq into a "rogue
state." And Lott failed to note that his heroes Reagan and Bush forged
unusually warm relations with the "mass murderer." There were no
passionate calls for a military strike after Saddam’s gassing of Kurds at
Halabja in March 1988; on the contrary, the U.S. and UK extended their
strong support for the mass murderer, then also "our kind of guy." When
ABC TV correspondent Charles Glass revealed the site of one of Saddam’s
biological warfare programs ten months after Halabja, the State Department
denied the facts, and the story died; the Department "now issues briefings
on the same site," Glass observes.
The two guardians of global order
also expedited Saddam’s other atrocities—including his use of cyanide,
nerve gas, and other barbarous weapons—with intelligence, technology, and
supplies, joining with many others. The Senate Banking Committee reported
in 1994 that the U.S. Commerce Department had traced shipments of
"biological materials" identical to those later found and destroyed by UN
inspectors, Bill Blum recalls. These shipments continued at least until
November 1989. A month later, Bush authorized new loans for his friend
Saddam, to achieve the "goal of increasing U.S. exports and put us in a
better position to deal with Iraq regarding its human rights record...,"
the State Department announced with a straight face, facing no criticism
in the mainstream (or even report).
Britain’s record was exposed, at
least in part, in an official inquiry (Scott Inquiry). The British
government has just now been compelled to concede that it continued to
grant licenses to British firms to export materials usable for biological
weapons after the Scott report was published, at least until December
1996.
In a February 28 review of
Western sales of materials usable for germ warfare and other weapons of
mass destruction, the Times mentions one example of U.S. sales in the
1980s, including "deadly pathogens," with government approval, some from
the Army’s center for germ research in Fort Detrick. Just the tip of the
iceberg, however.
A common current pretense is
Saddam’s crimes were unknown, so we are now properly shocked at the
discovery and must "make clear" that we civilized folk "cannot deal with"
the perpetrator of such crimes (Albright). The posture is cynical fraud.
UN Reports of 1986 and 1987 condemned Iraq’s use of chemical weapons. U.S.
Embassy staffers in Turkey interviewed Kurdish survivors of chemical
warfare attacks, and the CIA reported them to the State Department. Human
Rights groups reported the atrocities at Halabja and elsewhere at once.
Secretary of State George Shultz conceded that the U.S. had evidence on
the matter. An investigative team sent by the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee in 1988 found "overwhelming evidence of extensive use of
chemical weapons against civilians," charging that Western acquiescence in
Iraqi use of such weapons against Iran had emboldened Saddam to
believe—correctly—that he could use them against his own people with
impunity—actually against Kurds, hardly "the people" of this tribal-based
thug. The chair of the Committee, Claiborne Pell, introduced the
Prevention of Genocide Act of 1988, denouncing silence "while people are
gassed" as "complicity," much as when "the world was silent as Hitler
began a campaign that culminated in the near extermination of Europe’s
Jews," and warning that "we cannot be silent to genocide again." The
Reagan administration strongly opposed sanctions and insisted that the
matter be silenced, while extending its support for the mass murderer. In
the Arab world, "the Kuwait press was amongst the most enthusiastic of the
Arab media in supporting Baghdad’s crusade against the Kurds," journalist
Adel Darwish reports.
In January 1991, while the war
drums were beating, the International Commission of Jurists observed to
the UN Human Rights Commission that "After having perpetrated the most
flagrant abuses on its own population without a word of reproach from the
UN, Iraq must have concluded it could do whatever it pleased"; UN in this
context means U.S. and UK, primarily. That truth must be buried along with
international law and other "utopian" distractions.
An unkind commentator might
remark that recent U.S./UK toleration for poison gas and chemical warfare
is not too surprising. The British used chemical weapons in their 1919
intervention in North Russia against the Bolsheviks, with great success
according to the British command. As Secretary of State at the War Office
in 1919, Winston Churchill was enthusiastic about the prospects of "using
poisoned gas against uncivilised tribes"—Kurds and Afghans—and authorized
the RAF Middle East command to use chemical weapons "against recalcitrant
Arabs as experiment," dismissing objections by the India office as
"unreasonable" and deploring the "squeamishness about the use of gas": "we
cannot in any circumstances acquiesce in the non-utilisation of any
weapons which are available to procure a speedy termination of the
disorder which prevails on the frontier," he explained; chemical weapons
are merely "the application of Western science to modern warfare."
The Kennedy administration
pioneered the massive use of chemical weapons against civilians as it
launched its attack against South Vietnam in 1961-1962. There has been
much rightful concern about the effects on U.S. soldiers, but not the
incomparably worse effects on civilians. Here, at least. In an Israeli
mass-circulation daily, the respected journalist Amnon Kapeliouk reported
on his 1988 visit to Vietnam, where he found that "Thousands of Vietnamese
still die from the effects of American chemical warfare," citing estimates
of one-quarter of a million victims in South Vietnam and describing the
"terrifying" scenes in hospitals in the south with children dying of
cancer and hideous birth deformities. It was South Vietnam that was
targeted for chemical warfare, not the North, where these consequences are
not found, he reports. There is also substantial evidence of U.S. use of
biological weapons against Cuba, reported as minor news in 1977, and at
worst only a small component of continuing U.S. terror.
These precedents aside, the U.S.
and UK are now engaged in a deadly form of biological warfare in Iraq. The
destruction of infrastructure and banning of imports to repair it has
caused disease, malnutrition, and early death on a huge scale, including
567,000 children by 1995, according to UN investigations; UNICEF reports
4,500 children dying a month in 1996. In a bitter condemnation of the
sanctions (January 20, 1998), 54 Catholic Bishops quoted the Archbishop of
the southern region of Iraq, who reports that "epidemics rage, taking away
infants and the sick by the thousands" while "those children who survive
disease succumb to malnutrition." The Bishop’s statement, reported in full
in Stanley Heller’s journal The Struggle, received scant mention in the
press. The U.S. and Britain have taken the lead in blocking aid
programs—for example, delaying approval for ambulances on the grounds that
they could be used to transport troops, barring insecticides to prevent
spread of disease and spare parts for sanitation systems. Meanwhile,
western diplomats point out, "The U.S. had directly benefited from [the
humanitarian] operation as much, if not more, than the Russians and the
French," for example, by purchase of $600 million worth of Iraqi oil
(second only to Russia) and sale by U.S. companies of $200 million in
humanitarian goods to Iraq. They also report that most of the oil bought
by Russian companies ends up in the U.S.
Washington’s support for Saddam
reached such an extreme that it was even willing to overlook an Iraqi air
force attack on the USS Stark, killing 37 of the crew, a privilege
otherwise enjoyed only by Israel (in the case of the USS Liberty). It was
Washington’s decisive support for Saddam, well after the crimes that now
so shock the Administration and Congress, that led to Iranian capitulation
to "Baghdad and Washington," Dilip Hiro concludes in his history of the
Iran-Iraq war. The two allies had "co-ordinate[d] their military
operations against Teheran." The shooting down of an Iranian civilian
airliner by the guided-missile cruiser Vincennes was the culmination of
Washington’s "diplomatic, military and economic campaign" in support of
Saddam, he writes.
Saddam was also called upon to
perform the usual services of a client state: for example, to train
several hundred Libyans sent to Iraq by the U.S. so they could overthrow
the Qaddafi government, former Reagan White House aide Howard Teicher
revealed.
It was not his massive crimes
that elevated Saddam to the rank of "Beast of Baghdad." Rather, it was his
stepping out of line, much as in the case of the far more minor criminal
Noriega, whose major crimes were also committed while he was a U.S.
client.
In passing, one might note that
the destruction of Iran Air 655 in Iranian airspace by the Vincennes may
come back to haunt Washington. The circumstances are suspicious, to say
the least. In the Navy’s official journal, Commander David Carlson wrote
that he "wondered aloud in disbelief" as he observed from his nearby
vessel as the Vincennes—then within Iranian territorial waters—shot down
what was obviously a civilian airliner in a commercial corridor, perhaps
out of "a need to prove the viability of Aegis," its high tech missile
system. The commander and key officers "were rewarded with medals for
their conduct," Marine Corps colonel (retired) David Evans observes in the
same journal in an acid review of the Navy Department cover-up of the
affair. President Bush informed the UN that "One thing is clear, and that
is that the Vincennes acted in self-defense...in the midst of a naval
attack initiated by Iranian vessels...," all lies Evans points out, though
of no significance, given Bush’s position that "I will never apologize for
the United States of America—I don’t care what the facts are." A retired
Army colonel who attended the official hearings concluded that "our Navy
is too dangerous to deploy."
It is difficult to avoid the
thought that the destruction of Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie a few months
later was Iranian retaliation, as stated explicitly by Iranian
intelligence defector Abolhassem Mesbahi, also an aide to President
Rafsanjani, "regarded as a credible and senior Iranian source in Germany
and elsewhere," the Guardian reports. A 1991 U.S. intelligence document
(National Security Agency), declassified in 1997, draws the same
conclusion, alleging that Akbar Mohtashemi, a former Iranian interior
minister, transferred $10 million "to bomb Pan Am 103 in retaliation for
the U.S. shoot-down of the Iranian Airbus," referring to his connections
with "the Al Abas and Abu Nidal terrorist groups." It is striking that
despite the evidence and the clear motive, this is virtually the only act
of terrorism not blamed on Iran. Rather, the U.S. and UK have charged two
Libyan nationals with the crime.
The charges against the Libyans
have been widely disputed, including a detailed inquiry by Denis Phipps,
former head of security at British Airways who served on the government’s
National Aviation Committee. The British organization of families of
Lockerbie victims believe that there has been "a major cover-up"
(spokesperson Dr. Jim Swire), and regard as more credible the account
given in Alan Frankovich’s documentary The Maltese Cross, which provides
evidence of the Iranian connection and a drug operation involving a
courier working for the U.S. DEA. The film was shown at the British House
of Commons and on British TV, but rejected here. The U.S. families keep
strictly to Washington’s version.
Also intriguing is the U.S./UK
refusal to permit a trial of the accused Libyans. This takes the form of
rejection of Libya’s offer to release the accused for trial in some
neutral venue: to a judge nominated by the UN (December 1991), a trial at
the Hague "under Scottish law," etc. These proposals have been backed by
the Arab League and the British relatives organization but flatly rejected
by the U.S./UK. In March 1992, the UN Security Council passed a resolution
imposing sanctions against Libya, with five absentions: China, Morocco
(the only Arab member), India, Zimbabwe, Cape Verde. There was
considerable arm-twisting: thus China was warned that it would lose U.S.
trade preferences if it vetoed the resolution. The U.S. press has reported
Libya’s offer to release the suspects for trial, dismissing it as
worthless and ridiculing Qaddafi’s "dramatic gesture" of calling for the
surrender of U.S. pilots who bombed two Libyan cities, killing 37 people,
including his adopted daughter. Plainly, that is as absurd as requests by
Cuba and Costa Rica for extradition of U.S. terrorists.
It is understandable that the
U.S./UK should want to ensure a trial they can control, as in the case of
the Noriega kidnapping. Any sensible defense lawyer would bring up the
Iranian connection in a neutral venue. How long the charade can continue
is unclear. In the midst of the current Iraq crisis, the World Court
rejected the U.S./UK claim that it has no jurisdiction over the matter,
and intends to launch a full hearing (13-2, with the U.S. and British
judges opposed), which may make it harder to keep the lid on.
The Court ruling was welcomed by
Libya and the British families. Washington and the U.S. media warned that
the World Court ruling might prejudice the 1992 UN resolution that
demanded that "Libya must surrender those accused of the Lockerbie bombing
for trial in Scotland or the United States" (New York Times), that Libya
"extradite the suspects to the United States and Britain" (AP). These
claims are not accurate. The issue of transfer to Scotland or the U.S.
never arose, and is not mentioned in the UN Resolutions. Resolution 731
(21 January 1992) "Urges the Libyan Government immediately to provide a
full and effective response" to requests "in connection with the legal
procedures" related to attacks against Pan Am 103 and a French airliner.
Resolution 748 (31 March 1992) "Decides that the Libyan Government must
now comply without any further delay" with the request of Resolution 731,
and that it renounce terrorism, calling for sanctions if Libya fails to do
so. Resolution 731 was adopted in response to a U.S./UK declaration that
Libya must "surrender for trial all those charged with the crime," with no
further specification.
Press reports at the time were
similarly inaccurate. Thus, reporting the U.S. dismissal of the Libyan
offer to turn the suspects over to a neutral country, the New York Times
highlighted the words: "Again, Libya tries to avoid a U.N. order." The
Washington Post dismissed the offer as well, stating that "The Security
Council contends that the suspects must be tried in U.S. or British
courts." Doubtless Washington prefers to have matters seen in this light.
A correct account was given in a 1992 opinion piece by international legal
authority Alfred Rubin of the Fletcher School (Christian Science Monitor),
who noted that the Security Council resolution makes no mention of
extradition to the U.S. and UK, and observes that its wording "departs so
far from what the United States, Britain, and France are reported to have
wanted that current public statements and press accounts reporting an
American diplomatic triumph and UN pressures on Libya seem
incomprehensible"; unfortunately, the performance is all too routine.
In the NY Times, British
specialist on UN law Marc Weiler, in an op-ed, agreed with Rubin that the
U.S. should follow the clear requirements of international law and accept
Libya’s proposal for World Court adjudication. Libya’s response to the
U.S./UK request was "precisely as mandated by international law," Weiler
wrote, condemning the U.S./UK for having "flatly refused" to submit the
issue to the World Court. Rubin and Weiler also ask obvious further
questions: Suppose that New Zealand had resisted powerful French pressures
to compel it to abandon its attempt to extradite the French government
terrorists who had bombed the Rainbow Warrior in Auckland harbor? Or that
Iran were to demand that the captain of the Vincennes be extradited?
The World Court has now drawn the
same conclusion as Rubin and Weiler.
The qualifications as "rogue
state" are illuminated further by Washington’s reaction to the uprisings
in Iraq in March 1991, immediately after the cessation of hostilities. The
State Department formally reiterated its refusal to have any dealings with
the Iraqi democratic opposition, and as from before the Gulf War, they
were virtually denied access to the major U.S. media. "Political meetings
with them would not be appropriate for our policy at this time," State
Department spokesperson Richard Boucher stated. "This time" happened to be
March 14, 1991, while Saddam was decimating the southern opposition under
the eyes of General Schwartzkopf, refusing even to permit rebelling
military officers access to captured Iraqi arms. Had it not been for
unexpected public reaction, Washington probably would not have extended
even tepid support to rebelling Kurds, subjected to the same treatment
shortly after.
Iraqi opposition leaders got the
message. Leith Kubba, head of the London-based Iraqi Democratic Reform
Movement, alleged that the U.S. favors a military dictatorship, insisting
that "changes in the regime must come from within, from people already in
power." London-based banker Ahmed Chalabi, head of the Iraqi National
Congress, said that "the United States, covered by the fig leaf of
non-interference in Iraqi affairs, is waiting for Saddam to butcher the
insurgents in the hope that he can be overthrown later by a suitable
officer," an attitude rooted in the U.S. policy of "supporting
dictatorships to maintain stability."
Administration reasoning was
outlined by New York Times chief diplomatic correspondent Thomas Friedman.
While opposing a popular rebellion, Washington did hope that a military
coup might remove Saddam, "and then Washington would have the best of all
worlds: an iron-fisted Iraqi junta without Saddam Hussein," a return to
the days when Saddam’s "iron fist...held Iraq together, much to the
satisfaction of the American allies Turkey and Saudi Arabia," not to speak
of Washington. Two years later, in another useful recognition of reality,
he observed that "it has always been American policy that the iron-fisted
Mr. Hussein plays a useful role in holding Iraq together," maintaining
"stability." There is little reason to believe that Washington has
modified the preference for dictatorship over democracy deplored by the
ignored Iraqi democratic opposition, though it doubtless would prefer a
different "iron fist" at this point. If not, Saddam will have to do.
The concept "rogue state" is
highly nuanced. Thus Cuba qualifies as a leading "rogue state" because of
its alleged involvement in international terrorism, but the U.S. does not
fall into the category despite its terrorist attacks against Cuba for
close to 40 years, apparently continuing through last summer according to
important investigative reporting of the Miami Herald, which failed to
reach the national press (here; it did in Europe). Cuba was a "rogue
state" when its military forces were in Angola, backing the government
against South African attacks supported by the U.S. South Africa, in
contrast, was not a rogue state then, nor during the Reagan years, when it
caused over $60 billion in damage and 1.5 million deaths in neighboring
states according to a UN Commission, not to speak of some events at
home—and with ample U.S./UK support. The same exemption applies to
Indonesia and many others.
The criteria are fairly clear: a
"rogue state" is not simply a criminal state, but one that defies the
orders of the powerful—who are, of course, exempt.
More On "The Debate"
That Saddam is a criminal is
undoubtedly true, and one should be pleased, I suppose, that the U.S. and
UK, and *mainstream doctrinal institutions, have at last joined those who
"prematurely" condemned U.S./UK support for the mass murderer. It is also
true that he poses a threat to anyone within his reach. On the comparison
of the threat with others, there is little unanimity outside the U.S. and
UK, after their (ambiguous) transformation from August 1990. Their 1998
plan to use force was justified in terms of Saddam’s threat to the region,
but there was no way to conceal the fact that the people of the region
objected to their salvation, so strenuously that governments were
compelled to join in opposition.
Bahrein refused to allow
U.S./British forces to use bases there. The president of the United Arab
Emirates described U.S. threats of military action as "bad and loathsome,"
and declared that Iraq does not pose a threat to its neighbors. Saudi
Defense Minister Prince Sultan had already stated that "We’ll not agree
and we are against striking Iraq as a people and as a nation," causing
Washington to refrain from a request to use Saudi bases. After Annan’s
mission, long-serving Saudi foreign minister Prince Saud al-Faisal
reaffirmed that any use of Saudi air bases "has to be a UN, not a U.S.
issue."
An editorial in Egypt’s
quasi-official journal Al Ahram described Washington’s stand as "coercive,
aggressive, unwise and uncaring about the lives of Iraqis, who are
unnecessarily subjected to sanctions and humiliation," and denounced the
planned U.S. "aggression against Iraq." Jordan’s Parliament condemned "any
aggression against Iraq’s territory and any harm that might come to the
Iraqi people"; the Jordanian army was forced to seal off the city of Maan
after two days of pro-Iraq rioting. A political science professor at
Kuwait University warned that "Saddam has come to represent the voice of
the voiceless in the Arab world," expressing popular frustration over the
"New World Order" and Washington’s advocacy of Israeli interests.
Even in Kuwait, support for the
U.S. stance was at best "tepid" and "cynical over U.S. motives," the press
recognized. "Voices in the streets of the Arab world, from Cairo’s teeming
slums to the Arabian Peninsula’s shiny capitals, have been rising in anger
as the American drumbeat of war against Iraq grows louder," Boston Globe
correspondent Charles Sennott reported.
The Iraqi democratic opposition
was granted a slight exposure in the mainstream, breaking the previous
pattern. In a telephone interview with the New York Times, Ahmed Chalabi
reiterated the position that had been reported in greater detail in London
weeks earlier: "Without a political plan to remove Saddam’s regime,
military strikes will be counter-productive," he argued, killing thousands
of Iraqis, leaving Saddam perhaps even strengthened along with his weapons
of mass destruction and with "an excuse to throw out UNSCOM [the UN
inspectors]," who have in fact destroyed vastly more weapons and
production facilities than the 1991 bombing. U.S./UK plans would "be worse
than nothing." Interviews with opposition leaders from several groups
found "near unanimity" in opposing military action that did not lay the
basis for an uprising to overthrow Saddam. Speaking to a Parliamentary
committee, Chalabi held that it was "morally indefensible to strike Iraq
without a strategy" for removing Saddam.
In London, the opposition also
outlined an alternative program: (1) declare Saddam a war criminal; (2)
recognize a provisional Iraqi government formed by the opposition; (3)
unfreeze hundreds of millions of dollars of Iraqi assets abroad; restrict
Saddam’s forces by a "no-drive zone" or extend the "no-flight zone" to
cover the whole country. The U.S. should "help the Iraqi people remove
Saddam from power," Chalabi told the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Along with other opposition leaders, he "rejected assassination, covert
U.S. operations or U.S. ground troops," Reuters reported, calling instead
for "a popular insurgency." Similar proposals have occasionally appeared
in the U.S. Washington claims to have attempted support for opposition
groups, but their own interpretation is different. Chalabi’s view,
published in England, is much as it was years earlier: "everyone says
Saddam is boxed in, but it is the Americans and British who are boxed in
by their refusal to support the idea of political change."
Regional opposition was regarded
as a problem to be evaded, not a factor to be taken into account, any more
than international law. The same was true of warnings by senior UN and
other international relief officials in Iraq that the planned bombing
might have a "catastrophic" effect on people already suffering miserably,
and might terminate the humanitarian operations that have brought at least
some relief. What matters is to establish that "What We Say Goes," as
President Bush triumphantly proclaimed, announcing the New World Order as
bombs and missiles were falling in 1991.
As Kofi Annan was preparing to go
to Baghdad, former Iranian president Rafsanjani, "still a pivotal figure
in Tehran, was given an audience by the ailing King Fahd in Saudi Arabia,"
British Middle East correspondent David Gardner reported, "in contrast to
the treatment experienced by Madeleine Albright...on her recent trips to
Riyadh seeking support from America’s main Gulf ally." As Rafsanjani’s
ten-day visit ended on March 2, foreign minister Prince Saud described it
as "one more step in the right direction towards improving relations,"
reiterating that "the greatest destabilising element in the Middle East
and the cause of all other problems in the region" is Israel’s policy
towards the Palestinians and U.S. support for it, which might activate
popular forces that Saudi Arabia greatly fears, as well as undermining its
legitimacy as "guardian" of Islamic holy places, including the Dome of the
Rock in East Jerusalem, now effectively annexed by U.S./Israeli programs
as part of their intent to extend "greater Jerusalem" virtually to the
Jordan Valley, to be retained by Israel. Shortly before, the Arab states
had boycotted a U.S.-sponsored economic summit in Qatar that was intended
to advance the "New Middle East" project of Clinton and Peres. Instead,
they attended an Islamic conference in Teheran in December, joined even by
Iraq.
These are tendencies of
considerable import, relating to the background concerns that motivate
U.S. policy in the region: its insistence, since World War II, on
controlling the world’s major energy reserves. As many have observed, in
the Arab world there is growing fear and resentment of the long-standing
Israel-Turkey alliance that was formalized in 1996, now greatly
strengthened. For some years, it had been a component of the U.S. strategy
of controlling the region with "local cops on the beat," as Nixon’s
Defense Secretary put the matter. There is apparently a growing
appreciation of the Iranian advocacy of regional security arrangements to
replace U.S. domination. A related matter is the intensifying conflict
over pipelines to bring Central Asian oil to the rich countries, one
natural outlet being via Iran.
**And U.S. energy corporations
will not be happy to see foreign rivals—now including China and Russia as
well—gain privileged access to Iraqi oil reserves, second only to Saudi
Arabia in scale, or to Iran’s natural gas, oil, and other resources.
For the present, Clinton planners
may well be relieved to have escaped temporarily from the "box" they had
constructed that was leaving them no option but a bombing of Iraq that
could have been harmful even to the interests they represent. The respite
is temporary. It offers opportunities to citizens of the warrior states to
bring about changes of consciousness and commitment that could make a
great difference in the not too distant future.
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