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- <text id=91TT0783>
- <title>
- Apr. 15, 1991: The Course of Conscience
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 15, 1991 Saddam's Latest Victims
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 28
- The Course of Conscience
- </hdr><body>
- <p>America and its allies confront a new dilemma: how to oppose
- military intervention but still take responsibility for the
- victims when the Saddams of the world run amuck
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Dan Goodgame and Christopher
- Ogden/Washington and William Mader/London
- </p>
- <p> "The Kurds don't need talk, they need practical action. It
- should not be beyond the wit of man to get planes there with
- tents, food and warm blankets. It is not a question of standing
- on legal niceties. We should go now."
- </p>
- <p>-- Margaret Thatcher, April 3, 1991
- </p>
- <p> As she did so often during her years at 10 Downing Street,
- Margaret Thatcher cut to the heart of a policy question. A fiery
- debate over whether the U.S. and its allies should have helped
- Kurdish and Shi`ite rebels topple Saddam Hussein raged in Europe
- as well as America. But as far as current policy goes, the
- wrangling is meaningless because the fighting is effectively
- over. Right or wrong, the decision was made not to get involved
- in an Iraqi civil war. Saddam has smashed the revolts; he will
- stay in power at least temporarily--and for the moment that
- pretty much is that.
- </p>
- <p> But what does demand an immediate answer is what the U.S.
- and its friends will do to prevent more deaths among refugees
- from the failed rebellions and Saddam's bloody vengeance. They
- number in the hundreds of thousands, if not millions, and their
- plight has drawn all the passion of hindsight debate. But the
- argument is critical--especially since the early response of
- Washington was pitifully inadequate.
- </p>
- <p> If Saddam is rightfully the target of public fury and
- condemnation for his brutal suppression of the rebels, George
- Bush has borne the brunt of the blame for Western inaction. The
- President not only failed to explain clearly why the U.S. was
- unwilling to support the insurgents, but he seemed to show no
- mercy when their rebellion turned into a rout. Declared
- Washington Post columnist Mary McGrory: "The sight of those
- wretched souls streaming into Turkey...as Bush abandons them
- on the 18th hole of a Florida golf course, makes you wonder if
- in this case it is peace, rather than war, that is hell."
- </p>
- <p> Others did step in. France proposed an amendment to a
- resolution passed last week by the U.N. Security Council, making
- an end to Saddam's oppression of his own people another of the
- conditions that Baghdad must meet to bring a formal cease-fire
- into effect. When the amendment failed to attract a majority,
- Paris substituted a resolution condemning Iraq's repression of
- rebel supporters that did pass, but it did not specify any
- measures to be taken if Baghdad refused to stop. Neither the
- international community nor the Kurds put much faith in Saddam's
- announced amnesty.
- </p>
- <p> French President Francois Mitterrand dispatched his
- Secretary of State for Humanitarian Action, Bernard Kouchner,
- to northern Iraq to distribute two planeloads of relief
- supplies. Asked what would happen if Baghdad objected to
- Kouchner's dropping in uninvited, Foreign Minister Roland Dumas
- replied, "Although one must abide by international obligations,
- sometimes it is necessary to violate international law."
- </p>
- <p> Britain pledged $40 million to help the refugees. After
- Thatcher phoned Primer Minister John Major and gave him an
- earful, London quickly sent three planeloads of tents and
- blankets for distribution among Kurdish refugees in Turkey and
- across the border in Iraq. Germany planned to send four planes
- with supplies, and France, two planes.
- </p>
- <p> But where was Bush? The answer: bonefishing in Florida.
- The argument over military intervention aside, there was
- nothing to stop Washington from dispatching planeloads of
- humanitarian aid to the borders. The U.S. surely had stockpiles
- of food, tents and medicine at hand in southern Iraq, not to
- mention plenty of transport. In January it gave a
- drop-in-the-ocean $1 million to the Red Cross and Red Crescent
- to study setting up refugee camps in southern Iraq when U.S.
- forces leave. That was about it.
- </p>
- <p> By Friday, it finally dawned even on the White House that
- the U.S. had a moral responsibility to do much more--and
- quickly. From Newport Beach, Calif., en route to Los Angeles to
- help celebrate the 50th anniversary of the USO, Bush ordered
- American planes to air-drop food, blankets, clothing and other
- relief supplies to refugees suffering in the border mountains.
- He promised up to $10 million in emergency aid to the refugees.
- And he called for a major international effort to keep the Kurds
- from starving and dying while someone figures out what to do
- with them.
- </p>
- <p> Washington will also confer about relief efforts with
- Ankara, which Secretary of State James Baker visited last
- weekend. But if the U.S. expects Turkey to take in thousands of
- refugees, it must deliver enough aid to enable the Turks to care
- for them. So far, the U.S. has not shown the generosity in
- adversity on which it prides itself--nothing, for example,
- like the massive relief dispatched to Armenia when a 1988
- earthquake decimated the region.
- </p>
- <p> In this case, the U.S. bears a much greater
- responsibility, if only because it went to considerable lengths
- to urge the rebels to rise up against Saddam. Washington could
- meet that responsibility by distributing aid directly to Kurdish
- refugees in northern Iraq and by treating any objections from
- Saddam with the same contempt voiced by the French. It could
- send similar aid to refugees reaching Iran. Such cooperation in
- concert with a country that has been hostile to the U.S. for
- more than a decade might even help to draw Ayatullah Khomeini's
- more moderate successors back into the world community.
- </p>
- <p> Still, no amount of humanitarian aid to the refugees is
- likely to still the retrospective debate over whether the U.S.
- and its allies should have extended military support to the
- rebels to keep them from becoming refugees. Critics such as
- Democratic Senator Thomas Daschle of South Dakota and columnist
- William Safire charge that the U.S. made a terrible mistake by
- not helping the Kurds and Shi`ites. The argument is usually
- couched in moral terms: having repeatedly called on Iraqis to
- overthrow Saddam, the U.S. is disgracing itself by standing idly
- by while those who heeded its word are slaughtered. New York
- Times columnist A.M. Rosenthal bitterly asked Bush: "Why do you
- sully your name, and our country's, by deliberately allowing
- Saddam Hussein to massacre the people you urged to rise against
- him?"
- </p>
- <p> But as a practical matter, could the U.S. have intervened
- effectively without committing itself to a march on Baghdad and
- a lengthy occupation of the whole country? The critics mostly
- say they would not have favored that course. But many insist the
- U.S. would have needed only to shoot down Saddam's helicopter
- gunships, as Bush once threatened to do. Deprived of air power,
- argued the critics, Saddam would have been toppled by the rebels
- or at least forced to come to terms with them.
- </p>
- <p> Bush aides respond that this would only have prolonged the
- agony. "Going after the helicopters would have been a symbolic
- gesture, not a serious way to change the outcome of the
- fighting," said an Administration official. The best U.S.
- intelligence estimates, he asserted, indicated that "Saddam
- could have put down the insurgencies even without helicopters
- by using his armor and artillery. If we were really going to
- help the rebels, we would have had to target tanks and
- artillery. That would have turned very quickly into full-scale
- fighting." And then to extricate its own troops the U.S. would
- have become involved in deciding who should govern Iraq, a
- treacherous choice in the best of times. Organizing a government
- that could keep the country together among rival Kurds, Shi`ites
- and Sunni Muslims would have presented as formidable a task as
- all those doomed attempts, starting in 1963 and continuing for
- a decade or so, to devise a Vietnamese government that could win
- popular support.
- </p>
- <p> Nor, say Administration officials, would further fighting
- have attracted support abroad or at home. No allies urged the
- U.S. to move in, and most of the Arab coalition members remain
- anxious to get U.S. troops out. Bush aides charge that many of
- the critics either were indulging in moralistic posturing or
- were just eager to knock the President. "Can you imagine how we
- would be pounded if we were `bogged down' in an `inconclusive
- civil war' in Iraq?" asks one official.
- </p>
- <p> Which does not take Bush off the hook. He utterly failed
- to discern the line between military intervention and
- humanitarian aid. He could have justified rejecting the first
- without forgoing the second. His unconscionable silence
- reflected a recurring problem of his foreign policy. The White
- House apparently believes the public will not understand
- decisions taken for hard-boiled reasons of national interest;
- it thinks those reasons must be given a pious cloak. The U.S.
- launched the gulf war in part to safeguard oil supplies, in part
- to protect allies and punish a naked act of aggression--all
- of which should have been moral enough. But Bush in addition
- preached a crusade against a demonized butcher of Baghdad, as
- if Washington would settle for nothing short of Saddam's
- departure or demise. That no doubt encouraged Iraqi rebels to
- expect help the U.S. was unwilling to supply--and led to
- today's recriminations. It also makes it hard to explain to
- Americans that while the President has not given up hope that
- Saddam will be overthrown by his own military, it may not
- happen.
- </p>
- <p> The problem may be eased by the Security Council's
- adoption last Wednesday of a resolution setting out the terms
- for a permanent cease-fire. As expected, the measure requires
- Iraq to destroy its chemical and biological weapons and
- ballistic missiles with a range of more than 93 miles, set aside
- a portion of oil revenues to pay claims arising from its
- invasion of Kuwait, and swear to respect its 1963 border with
- that country. On Saturday, Baghdad formally accepted in a
- 23-page letter to the U.N. that also complained the resolution
- was harsh and unjust. But, said Saadi Mahdi Saleh, speaker of
- Iraq's parliament, "we have no alternative but to accept." A
- U.N. observer force will move into the border areas, allowing
- the U.S. and allied troops occupying southern Iraq to head home.
- The Saddam regime, if it survives at all, will be too weakened
- to threaten its neighbors for a long time to come.
- </p>
- <p> But another question that looms ever larger remains
- unsettled: when, and under what conditions, is intervention in
- a country's internal affairs justified? The principle of
- noninterference is a cherished one, in theory if not always in
- practice. But moralists have argued that the global community
- must do something when the Saddams of the world rampage through
- their own countries. The U.N. cease-fire resolution addresses
- what has always been considered internal matters, notably by
- requiring unilateral disarmament. The condemnation of Saddam's
- repression of the Kurds takes the international body even
- further in that direction--however ineffectively.
- </p>
- <p> Neither act, however, spells out any new principles for
- deciding exactly when intervention is justified. Threats to
- world stability may come increasingly from eruptions in one
- nation that send floods of refugees across borders and upset a
- regional or international balance of power. The next such
- explosion might come in Yugoslavia; further--but perhaps not
- much further--down the road looms the specter of a bloody
- dissolution of the Soviet Union.
- </p>
- <p> Unhappily, any attempt to spell out such guidelines seems
- doomed to failure. The old no-intervention-ever principle is
- immoral; besides, countries disregard it whenever it suits their
- interest or when they think they can get away with it. Any
- attempt to codify principles that the U.N. could make a pass at
- enforcing would meet insuperable resistance from nations with
- festering internal disputes. So decisions to intervene will
- continue to be made on a case-by-case basis and, like the U.S.
- deter mination not to aid the anti-Saddam reb els, usually for
- reasons of realpolitik. That is a messy and unsatisfying answer
- to a pressing question. But then, that is the way wars usually
- end.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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