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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=91TT0498>
<link 93XP0284>
<link 91TT0541>
<link 91TT0538>
<title>
Mar. 04, 1991: What Is Left Of Kuwait?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
The Persian Gulf War:Desert Storm
</history>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Mar. 04, 1991 Into Kuwait!
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE GULF WAR, Page 34
CONSEQUENCES
What Is Left of Kuwait?
</hdr><body>
<p>The country has weathered an invasion, aerial bombardment and
a "scorched earth" endgame. Now it faces the task of
rebuilding.
</p>
<p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN -- Reported by Dick Thompson/Dhahran and Bruce
van Voorst/Washington
</p>
<p> For the exiled Kuwaitis who have been waiting more than six
months for the liberation of their country, the roller-coaster
events of last week unleashed contradictory emotions. On the
one hand, there were feelings of anticipation, even joy, that
a return to their homeland was imminent. But many also shared
a sense of foreboding at what they would find when they
arrived. "For me, Kuwait was a paradise," says Anwar Alduiaj,
who manufactured ladies' clothing in Kuwait City before the
Iraqi invasion. "Suddenly, the country our grandfathers built
for us in 50, 60 years collapsed in hours. And it went from a
paradise to a hell."
</p>
<p> What is left of Kuwait? And what will it take to rebuild the
country after the Iraqis are forced out of Kuwait? Precise
answers will not become clear until allied troops actually
march into Kuwait City, the capital, economic center and home
to 80% of Kuwait's prewar population of 2 million. Before last
week, sketchy reports seeping out of the occupied emirate
portrayed a country that had sustained much damage and
disruption but was far from devastated. That picture, however,
may have been tragically altered by the billowing clouds of
smoke emanating from Kuwaiti oil wells late last week, part of
what President Bush denounced as Saddam's "scorched earth"
policy.
</p>
<p> Pentagon officials claimed on Saturday that Saddam's forces
had set fire to at least 200 oil wells -- which along with
about 100 wells that were sabotaged earlier account for 25% of
all such facilities in the country. Pilots returning from
bombing missions reported that a blanket of thick smoke was
covering all of the country south of Kuwait City, reaching from
the gulf on the east to the Saudi border on the west.
</p>
<p> Some Pentagon officials suggested that the new fires might
have been started by the Iraqis as a last-ditch defensive
strategy, to try to impede visibility for a final allied
offensive. But U.S. military planners said they could
circumvent any such tactics. The Iraqi actions seemed to be
aimed more at crippling Kuwait's oil-producing capacity. U.S.
officials reported that other oil-related facilities and
shipping terminals had been damaged as well, with the
intention, in President Bush's words, of "destroying the entire
oil-production system of Kuwait."
</p>
<p> Oil experts say that is not likely to happen. Although
putting out the fires could be a difficult and time-consuming
task, Kuwait's 94.5 billion-bbl. oil reserves will hardly be
dented. Depending on how much damage has been done to other
facilities, production could resume within six months after the
end of hostilities, Kuwaiti officials say -- though it may be
years before output reaches prewar levels. "They will not lose
enough to threaten their reserves or their economy or the world
oil market in the long term," said an American oil expert.
</p>
<p> Although the Administration may be exaggerating the Iraqis'
scorched-earth tactics for political purposes, the destruction
was nonetheless alarming. Until then, physical damage wreaked
on Kuwait had seemed relatively light. Though allied bombs have
hit the country repeatedly during the five-week air campaign,
pilots have carefully avoided most important buildings and
residential neighborhoods in the capital. Nor had the Iraqis,
before last week at least, inflicted any wholesale physical
destruction on the city. U.S. satellite photos taken a week ago
revealed that nearly all government buildings in Kuwait City
were still standing. One exception: the communications
ministry, which had been heavily damaged by the Kuwaiti
resistance in an effort to cut off the Iraqis'
telephone-monitoring ability. The port facilities in and around
the capital, as well as the airport, also appeared to be
largely intact. But the Iraqi occupiers have reportedly killed
hundreds of people, and by last weekend had instituted a new
wave of executions and civilian roundups, according to U.S.
intelligence and other reports.
</p>
<p> Accounts from Kuwaiti refugees and members of the resistance
inside the city suggest that the social fabric of the country
has been rent in numerous ways. Homes and hospitals have been
looted, and garbage is overflowing the streets. With little
drinking water available, residents have been distilling water
from the gulf. Only about one-fourth of the prewar population
is estimated to have remained in the country, and those
Kuwaitis have been joined by an undetermined number of Iraqi
civilians who have moved into abandoned Kuwaiti homes as part
of Saddam's plan to annex the country as Iraq's 19th province.
</p>
<p> Retaking Kuwait City by force would be one of the trickiest
battles of the allied campaign. Though the Iraqis have
relatively little heavy armor inside the city, troops have
reportedly embedded themselves in buildings and homes and
planted vast numbers of booby traps. Routing them out could be
a difficult and costly enterprise, as the allies learned in the
battle to recapture the Saudi town of Khafji. "It takes a long
time to take a city -- unless you destroy it," says a Western
military attache in Riyadh. "You have to go street by street,
house by house. It could take weeks."
</p>
<p> To avoid that scenario, and the heavy civilian casualties
that might result, the allied strategy would probably involve
encircling the city, cutting off the Iraqis who remain there,
and simply waiting them out. "The last thing we want to do is
engage in urban warfare," says one senior Pentagon officer.
"That's a formula for civilian death and destruction."
</p>
<p> The fact that 250,000 Palestinians (out of an estimated
prewar population of 400,000) have remained in Kuwait City
raises other thorny problems. Scores of Palestinians have been
identified as collaborators who joined the Iraqis in looting
the city and turned in Kuwaitis, who were then murdered in
front of their families. Some Kuwaiti exiles have promised to
take revenge once the country is reoccupied. "Sabra and Shatila
were nothing," vow many Kuwaiti exiles, referring to the 1982
slaughter of hundreds of people in Palestinian refugee camps
after the Israeli invasion of Lebanon.
</p>
<p> The extent of Palestinian collaboration has probably been
exaggerated. Though Yasser Arafat and the Palestine Liberation
Organization have been among the strongest backers of Saddam's
invasion, the vast majority of Palestinians in Kuwait are
believed to have stayed neutral during the occupation. And some
have supported the resistance.
</p>
<p> Opposition to the Iraqis was extremely well organized in
part because it was built around clandestine groups that
existed before the occupation. In addition to Shi`ite Muslims
opposed to the Emir, these include members of Arafat's Fatah
guerrilla organization and Hamas, a more extreme Palestinian
group that has been a key participant in the intifadeh in the
Israeli-occupied areas. In addition, Ahmed Jibril's pro-Syrian
Popular Front for the Liberaion of Palestine-General Command
has detonated car bombs at Iraqi targets in Kuwait City.
</p>
<p> Some of the Shi`ite resistance members are believed to have
been part of a secret organization set up by Iran during the
Iran-Iraq war. They were there not to support the ruling family
of the Emir, Sheik Jaber al-Ahmad al-Sabah, but to topple it.
When the Emir fled the country, however, the same Shi`ites,
including women in chadors, came out to demonstrate,
brandishing photographs of the Emir. "You shouldn't be
surprised at this," said a Western diplomat who lived in
Kuwait. "In the Middle East, groups can change sides very
quickly."
</p>
<p> For political reasons, Kuwaiti forces have been assured they
will be in the front lines as the coalition troops march into
Kuwait City. But other allied soldiers will be alongside,
watching them closely. "There is a very strong danger that the
Palestinians will be massacred," said a U.S. official in
Riyadh. "It is a major consideration, and there has been a lot
of planning to avoid it."
</p>
<p> The strength of the underground groups in Kuwait could also
complicate the restoration to power of the ruling family. Some
resistance leaders are nearly as opposed to the Emir as they
are to the Iraqis; if they manage to seize control of the
capital before the allies arrive, they might demand democratic
concessions from the ruling family. "The politics of liberation
are very complex," said a Western diplomat. "It could take
place on the terms of the Kuwaiti resistance." The ruling Sabah
family has promised to respect the constitution of 1962 by
holding parliamentary elections sometime after liberation. But
the exiled opposition and resistance leaders are skeptical.
The crown prince, Sheik Saad, has said he may install martial
law first.
</p>
<p> Not until these political problems are sorted out can the
process of putting Kuwait back together again commence. The
extent of that task will not be clear until the war is over and
the damage can be surveyed. A lot depends on how much more
fighting takes place, and how much more damage the Iraqis
choose to inflict on the country as they exit. But the Kuwaiti
government-in-exile has hired the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
to lead the cleanup and repair operation for the first 90 days.
Companies in several allied countries are already fighting for
pieces of the lucrative construction work that lies ahead.
Estimates of the cost of rebuilding Kuwait range as high as
$100 billion. The Kuwaiti government may have to sell off some
of its huge foreign-investment portfolio, currently being
managed in London, to finance that reconstruction.
</p>
<p> Repopulation of the country will probably take weeks or
months as Kuwait City's infrastructure, utilities and other
services are restored. Even then the population will most
probably have a quite different composition from that of prewar
Kuwait. Nearly 60% of the residents before the Iraqi invasion
were foreign workers and their families. Whoever rules the
restored nation may sharply reduce that proportion.
</p>
<p> No matter how daunting the task of rebuilding may seem to
outsiders, Kuwaitis are eager to begin it. "As much of the
country as they destroyed, they cannot make sand of it," said
Alquhtani Shaya, a former university stuent from Kuwait City.
"We will build from that."
</p>
</body></article>
</text>