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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=90TT1492>
<link 91TT0531>
<link 91TT0319>
<title>
June 11, 1990: With A Little Help From Friends
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
June 11, 1990 Scott Turow:Making Crime Pay
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 34
MIDDLE EAST
With a Little Help from Friends
</hdr>
<body>
<p>How the U.S. and its allies made Iraq a most dangerous nation
</p>
<p>By Richard Hornik--With reporting by Karen Wolman/Rome
</p>
<p> The man who now threatens the peace of the Middle East was
on the ropes himself just a few years ago. Saddam Hussein's
forces were on the verge of being overrun by Iran's fanatical
Revolutionary Guards, and in spite of billions of dollars in
aid to Iraq from other Arab states, his weaponry was
insufficient, his coffers were empty and his credit rating was
abysmal. Despite an informal embargo, the world's armsmakers
were willing to sell Iraq practically anything--for a price.
Eventually Saddam found benefactors in the West: nations more
fearful of an Iranian victory than of him. France supplied an
estimated $12 billion worth of military hardware between 1981
and 1988. Iraq was able to buy sophisticated technology for its
missile-development program from willing, or gullible, firms
in Britain, Italy, Germany and the U.S. To finance those
purchases, the cash-strapped Saddam needed a friendly banker.
He found at least two: the Atlanta branch of Italy's largest
bank and Uncle Sam.
</p>
<p> This month a federal grand jury in Atlanta is expected to
hand up indictments in connection with almost $3 billion in
unauthorized loans funneled to Iraq through the local branch
of the Rome-based Banca Nazionale del Lavoro. Although the
individual credits themselves were not forbidden, their sum
total violated state and federal banking regulations, as well
as those of the home bank in Italy. Federal investigators are
reportedly trying to ascertain if BNL Atlanta extended a credit
to a British-based company accused of trying to procure for
Iraq elements of a triggering device for an atom bomb, a
transaction uncovered by a joint U.S.-British sting operation
last March.
</p>
<p> The U.S. Government connection surfaced when it turned out
that a fourth of the export credits extended by BNL had been
backed by the Commodity Credit Corporation. The CCC, an arm of
the Department of Agriculture, provides guarantees to spur
sales of U.S. farm products. But the department's own inquiry
revealed that the CCC had no idea whether the credits it had
backed were used to purchase U.S. farm commodities that
actually reached Iraq, or were resold to third countries for
hard currency. Possibly some of the credit guarantees backed
shipments of nonagricultural products like transportation spare
parts.
</p>
<p> In Italy BNL officials attempted to pin the blame on a rogue
branch manager in Atlanta. But the trail has also led to
accusations that BNL credits were used to finance sales by
Italian and other Western firms of equipment for Iraq's Condor
2 missile, an intermediate-range nuclear-capable missile. But
uncovering the full details about how the loans were used has
proved extremely difficult: as much as $500 million of the
credits that BNL Atlanta approved, say Italian sources, do not
carry the names of specific companies, making it impossible to
determine what they financed.
</p>
<p> The indiscretions of BNL and the CCC were badly kept
secrets. Says Italian Senator Francesco Forte, a member of a
parliamentary commission investigating the BNL affair: "It was
widely known in Italy that the way to finance operations with
Iraq was through Atlanta." Regulatory negligence in the U.S.
banking industry was common during much of the past decade.
Congressional watchdogs had been complaining for three years
about reports that CCC credits were not carefully supervised.
And the Reagan and Bush administrations consistently turned
a blind eye to Iraq's pursuit of missiles and chemical weapons.
Says W. Seth Carus, a missile-proliferation expert at the Naval
War College Foundation: "The U.S. clearly decided to help Iraq
in its fight with Iran."
</p>
<p> But U.S. assistance apparently did not end when the war did
in 1988. Even after the potential misuse of CCC guarantees was
disclosed, and despite Iraq's worsening financial condition,
the Bush Administration approved an additional $500 million
credit line for this year under the same CCC program. Officials
argued that any previous problems involving diversion or misuse
of its guarantees had been solved.
</p>
<p> In spite of Saddam's noisy saber rattling this year,
Washington has done nothing to tighten controls over exports
of equipment with potentially dangerous applications. The State
Department has not declared Iraq a "country of concern," a
classification that would impose tighter export controls on a
long list of items that might have military applications. In
the absence of such a classification, the Commerce Department
is currently considering "on a case-by-case basis" 63
applications for licenses to export suspect equipment. The
department did belatedly drop Iraq from the itinerary of a
special aerospace trade mission by American firms to the Middle
East, but the Administration's stance is still ambivalent.
</p>
<p> U.S. officials claim that it is better to maintain good
relations with Iraq than to isolate it--the same argument
Bush has used to justify continued sales of high-tech equipment
to China. But Iraq is far more unpredictable and threatening.
Through benign neglect or conscious effort, Washington is
helping to make it possible for Saddam Hussein to pursue his
own vision of the power balance in the Middle East--a vision
distinctly counter to U.S. interests.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>