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<text id=93TT0139>
<title>
July 12, 1993: Broken Spirits
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
July 12, 1993 Reno:The Real Thing
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
IRAQ, Page 46
Broken Spirits
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Isolated and impoverished, Iraqis must endure Saddam and the
U.S. missile attack designed to unnerve him
</p>
<p>By LARA MARLOWE/BAGHDAD
</p>
<p> Saddam Hussein dies and goes to hell, begins a new joke making
the rounds in the Iraqi capital. Because his sins are so great,
Saddam is sent to a special section reserved for those doomed
to burn the longest. But the fear imposed by the Iraqi dictator's
secret police extends even to the netherworld. As Saddam is
dragged toward the flames, his fellow sinners break into a chant,
a variation of a political slogan often heard at official rallies
during the Gulf War. Instead of addressing George Bush with
defiant assurances of how much they love their leader, they
now direct their warning to God: "Allah, Allah, listen well,
we all love Saddam Hussein."
</p>
<p> Genuine expressions of love for Saddam are rare and hardly ever
spontaneous in postwar Iraq--especially in the aftermath of
the June 27 cruise-missile attack on Baghdad. Yet as they cleared
rubble and replaced shattered windows, Iraqis blamed Bill Clinton--not their own leadership--for the deaths of eight civilians,
including well-loved Iraqi artist Layla Attar. "People don't
understand why the Americans are still punishing them," said
a senior diplomat in Baghdad. "The economic sanctions and these
not-so-surgical strikes don't affect Saddam or his network.
The damage to his intelligence services was minimal."
</p>
<p> Still, the unexpected attack gave a psychological jolt to the
Iraqi leadership. Fearing further action by the U.S., the regime
backtracked on early threats of retaliation. On Thursday Deputy
Prime Minister Tariq Aziz told CNN, "We are not contemplating
an act of revenge...That's not going to serve our interests."
For Saddam, well known for his brash threats to unleash the
"mother of all battles" on the American-led Gulf War coalition,
Aziz's appeal for "normal, quiet relations with the United States"
must have been almost as painful as hellfire.
</p>
<p> Two missile attacks against Baghdad so far this year and the
economic deprivation wrought by almost three years of economic
sanctions have not led the Iraqi people to rise up against Saddam
Hussein. His people fear him; some hate him and ardently wish
for his death. But there are no signs of destabilization within
the regime. So why has the Iraqi regime changed tack? Sheer
exhaustion, it would seem. While Saddam's hold on power appears
secure, his subjects are hungry, his weapons of mass destruction
are dismantled, and his economy is a shambles. "They just don't
have the ability to retaliate," says a diplomat. "If they didn't
blow up planes and embassies or kidnap Americans during the
Gulf War, they're not going to start now. Saddam has realized
he has to come to some sort of modus vivendi with the West."
</p>
<p> Despite his missile attack, Bill Clinton is no match for George
Bush in Iraqi demonology. A new mosaic showing Bush's grimacing
face was recently laid at the entrance to Baghdad's al-Rasheed
Hotel so that visitors cannot help stepping on the former President's
face. BUSH IS CRIMINAL, it says in English and Arabic. Although
they show no hostility toward visiting Americans, Iraqis are
angry that they--not the government foisted upon them--are
the ones who always suffer. At the Lawyers' Union in Baghdad's
fashionable Mansour district, a white-haired attorney captures
Iraqis' twin resentments in his rage: "Did Bill Clinton have
to murder Layla Attar to prove how powerful he is?" he demands.
"Did that strike oust Saddam? No. So what's the point?"
</p>
<p> Another lawyer, seated beneath a towering portrait of Saddam
Hussein framed in gold Christmas-tree tinsel, makes a veiled
appeal for a more decisive solution: "The U.S. government knows
the right way. They know where everyone is. They know everything.
I can't believe they don't know how to do it." A middle-aged
working-class veteran of the wars with Iran and Kuwait, fearful
enough to ask that neither his name nor occupation be revealed,
claims that 70% of all Iraqis wish the Americans would kill
Saddam or at least "take Saddam and his Republican Guard to
the U.S. and leave us in peace."
</p>
<p> The Iraqi President's entourage, composed mostly of family members,
remains loyal. "They know very well that if anything happens
to him they will all be murdered," says a diplomat. And Saddam's
regime remains still very much in control. Despite the damage
wreaked by Tomahawk missiles on Iraqi Intelligence Service headquarters,
at least half a dozen intelligence services remain active. Nor
is it certain that the agency targeted was the most important
of these. Saddam's half brother, Sabawi Hassan Hussein, heads
the powerful Directorate of General Security. And another half
brother, Watban Ibrahim al-Hassan, is the Interior Minister.
</p>
<p> The mood in Baghdad is one of despair and humiliation. "I am
hungry, he is hungry, all the people in Iraq are hungry," says
Abbas, a vendor in Baghdad's Arabi Street market, where Iraqi-made
plastic sandals, shampoo and deodorant are almost the only goods
to be found. "We want to eat. We don't care about politics."
An Iraqi journalist says the U.S. was mistaken if it thought
the Iraqi people could be driven to overthrow their government.
"The policy has backfired. People's only concern now is to feed
their children. The game played by the West has served the regime,
because when you starve people they don't think about anything
else."
</p>
<p> Economic sanctions, even more than the missile attacks, have
trained Iraqis' anger on the U.S. and the U.N. "The U.S. said
it wanted to defend Saudi Arabia," says the white-haired lawyer.
"Fine. The U.S. expelled Iraq from Kuwait. Fine. But starving
18 million Iraqis is too much." Negotiations on the export of
Iraqi oil are scheduled to resume July 7. The Iraqi government
has until now rejected U.N. resolutions that would enable it
to sell $1.6 billion worth of oil abroad; more than two-thirds
of the proceeds would go to war reparations to Kuwait and for
U.N. expenses in Iraq. Officials argue that the remaining few
hundred million dollars would scarcely alleviate food shortages.
The Health Ministry claims that it needs $3 billion a year for
medical imports alone.
</p>
<p> Physical isolation also weighs heavily on Iraqis. Hostile neighbors--Turkey, Iran, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia--surround them. Even
once friendly Jordan has distanced itself from Saddam since
the Gulf War. International flights are banned under the sanctions,
and the 621-mile trek across the burning desert to Amman is
the only way out of the country. A recently imposed exit tax
of 15,000 dinars (more than $200 at black-market rates) a person,
nearly 20 times the average monthly salary, has made travel
virtually impossible for most Iraqis.
</p>
<p> "Iraq is like a criminal sentenced to a very long prison term,"
says a diplomat in Baghdad. "Whatever they do, it's not enough
to make a difference." Under Security Council Resolution 687,
the U.N. could reconsider economic sanctions if Iraq destroyed
its weapons of mass destruction. "But the U.N. keeps raising
the bar they have to jump over," says another diplomat. "Now
they are being required to comply with more resolutions passed
after 687." Outstanding issues include U.N. insistence on helicopter
flights over Baghdad and the placing of surveillance cameras
in weapons facilities.
</p>
<p> Iraqi officials say they have been trying to settle their differences
with the U.S. since Bill Clinton was inaugurated. "Some of us
thought Clinton would concentrate on domestic policy and ease
the pressure on us," says a high-ranking Iraqi official. But
Saddam's charm offensive, which included a pledge not to challenge
aircraft over no-fly zones in southern and northern Iraq, found
no favor in Washington. "The Iraqis were hoping that sooner
or later, if they did not provoke Washington, the U.S. and its
Arab allies would realize they need a strong Iraq to counterbalance
Iran," says a diplomat in Baghdad. The Iraqis were bitterly
disappointed by the new U.S. policy of "dual containment" enunciated
by Martin Indyk, senior director for Near East and South Asian
affairs at the National Security Council. He smashed Iraqi hopes
that the West and other Arabs would once again build Iraq up
as a bulwark against Iran. Indyk argued that Iraq and Iran were
equally inimical to American interests in the Middle East, and
suggested that the U.S. back the ineffective Iraqi opposition-in-exile.
</p>
<p> But if Iraq was seeking better relations with the U.S., why
would it plot to assassinate George Bush? Though most found
the circumstantial evidence compiled by U.S. intelligence to
be compelling, Iraqi officials claim the plot was fabricated
by the Kuwaitis and seized upon by Clinton to raise his standing
at home--a suspicion widely shared by foreign diplomats in
Baghdad, who harbor reservations about U.S. Ambassador Madeleine
Albright's presentation to the Security Council. "The proof
given by the Americans was not very convincing," said the senior
diplomat. "Confessions of people still on trial are not acceptable."
</p>
<p> "In the 2 1/2 years since the Gulf War, American policy toward
Iraq has been ineffective," notes a European diplomat. "They
were aiming to get Saddam Hussein out of power. They have not.
They wanted to compensate Kuwait and finance U.N. operations
through oil sales; they have not. Furthermore, American propaganda
has failed to convince the Iraqi people that the sanctions are
the fault of their own government."
</p>
<p> So despite the Tomahawks that hit Baghdad last week, Saddam
is likely to remain in power, even as his people become more
dispirited. Says a diplomat in Iraq: "The more you beat him,
the stronger he becomes." That is a dilemma Bill Clinton seems
no closer to resolving than George Bush was.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>