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<text id=90TT3288>
<link 91TT0120>
<link 90TT3480>
<link 90TT2299>
<title>
Dec. 10, 1990: Deadline:Jan. 15
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990 Highlights
The Gulf:Desert Shield
</history>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Dec. 10, 1990 What War Would Be Like
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 26
COVER STORIES
Deadline: Jan. 15
</hdr><body>
<p>Iraq gets an ultimatum -- leave Kuwait in six weeks or face the
threat of war. Washington's nightmare is that Saddam will
partially comply.
</p>
<p>By MICHAEL KRAMER
</p>
<p> There was a stroke! Or two, to be precise. With a war
resolution in hand, George Bush last week took steps to begin
a high-level dialogue with Saddam Hussein. Less than 18 hours
after the Security Council authorized the use of force against
Iraq if Saddam fails to comply with the U.N.'s call for an
unconditional withdrawal from Kuwait by Jan. 15 -- a triumph
for U.S. diplomacy -- Bush made a surprise announcement. Iraq's
Foreign Minister would be welcome at the White House during the
week of Dec. 10, and Secretary of State James Baker could meet
with Saddam in Baghdad thereafter.
</p>
<p> By giving content to the "one last chance" aspect of the
latest U.N. resolution, Bush had, for the time being at least,
confounded his domestic opponents -- especially those on
Capitol Hill. Few will dispute the President's assertion that
he is attempting to "go the extra mile for peace." Few will
seek to constrain his handling of the crisis, at least not
until the Baker-Saddam meeting is concluded -- and by then it
may be too late to again cry "Wait!"
</p>
<p> But what exactly will the U.S. and Iraq talk about?
Everything and nothing, it seems. During his midday press
conference last Friday, Bush said Baker would be prepared "to
discuss all aspects of the gulf crisis," words that appeared
to telegraph the possibility of a face-saving compromise. But
there "can be no face-saving," Bush added only minutes later.
Baker's will not be a "trip of concession," the President
insisted. His sole purpose will be to make sure Saddam
"understands the commitment of the U.S." to "implementing to a
T . . . the United Nations position." That would mean Bush and
Baker are ready only to discuss the manner and timing of Iraq's
capitulation.
</p>
<p> Whether Saddam would be receptive to that message remained
highly doubtful. In a tough statement at week's end, the Iraqi
government agreed to the proposed meetings but referred to Bush
as "arrogant" and an "enemy of God." Baghdad also vowed to
bring up the Palestinian question and other Arab grievances at
the talks.
</p>
<p> If Bush's elaboration accurately reflects his real
intentions, then the diplomatic shuttling to come is probably
best viewed as a clever public-relations exercise, a dance
designed to convince audiences at home and abroad that the
anti-Saddam coalition has exhausted every possibility for a
peaceful resolution to the crisis before going to war. "When
[Bush] saw us last month," says a senior Kuwaiti official, "we
were told we would hear and see a lot of things that might be
upsetting but that he was not going to give in and that in the
end it will be important for the world to believe we have
spared no effort to bring Saddam to his senses."
</p>
<p> If long-term gulf stability is the Administration's primary
goal, then last week's highlight was Bush's assertion that the
"status-quo ante will not be enough." Since Aug. 8 the
President's stated objective has been to get Iraq out of
Kuwait. Period. Now Bush has publicly indicated what he has
told allied leaders privately: he will not allow Iraq's awesome
ability to wage war to remain intact.
</p>
<p> The anti-Saddam coalition has three options if it wants to
neutralize the worst of Saddam's war-fighting capacity:
</p>
<p> War would do it, but at what cost? Some military commanders
believe the conflict might be over quickly and with minimal
casualties, but a messy horror is also possible. Depending on
the outcome, Bush could pay a heavy political price -- defeat
in 1992 -- or come away a hero headed for an easy re-election
even if the economy is faltering.
</p>
<p> Containment is possible, at least theoretically. If Saddam
pulls out peacefully, the U.S. and its allies can continue the
embargo on military shipments to Iraq and perhaps create a
regional security structure. But the Saudis recoil at the
prospect of an enduring foreign-troop presence on their soil,
even for the purpose of defending their kingdom, and a new
region-wide defense pact is easier to conjure than to craft.
The Kuwaitis would welcome an American presence indefinitely,
but even they would prefer to avoid the complications that
would invariably attend an open-ended effort to keep Saddam at
home.
</p>
<p> Negotiation could do the trick, but what would Saddam give
up, and what would he demand in return? Bush has ruled out a
territorial compromise -- the Kuwaiti islands Iraq covets, for
example -- and he repeated that stance to the exiled Kuwaiti
Emir in a phone call shortly after his press conference. But
the Kuwaitis themselves had been willing to discuss leasing
some territory to Iraq before the Aug. 2 invasion. Such a deal
might still be possible if, say, Saddam were willing to
downsize his military and destroy his weapons of mass
destruction.
</p>
<p> However the next six weeks play out, the Administration's
real nightmare is that Saddam will get "too smart," in the
words of a senior U.S. official. "If we get down to the war
wire, what if Saddam pulls out from most but not all of
Kuwait's territory? We and everyone else say that that would
be an unacceptable outcome, that it would be a victory for
Saddam. Well, it's not so clear."
</p>
<p> The partial-pullout scenario contemplates Saddam retreating
to the northern third of Kuwait, an area of few people but some
oil. The Rumaila field, whose southern tip reaches into Kuwait,
has long been a sore point for Baghdad. Saddam has accused
Kuwait of slant drilling -- siphoning oil from the Iraqi
portion of the field through equipment located in Kuwait, an
allegation the Kuwaitis deny. "Do you want to know what would
probably happen if Saddam retreated to that remote part of
Kuwait?" asks a White House aide. "The coalition not only
wouldn't go to war to drive Iraq out, it would go piff."
</p>
<p> Will Saddam proceed shrewdly? Might he seize on Baker's
visit to claim victory and retreat? Those who have dealt with
him most closely in the past, his Arab neighbors, think not.
"He believes in American weakness and sees everything through
that prism," says an Egyptian official. For example, according
to Administration officials, the Iraqis saw the firing of U.S.
Air Force chief of staff Michael Dugan as an act that might
precipitate a military coup against Bush. Similarly, Baghdad
is reported to have understood the President's budget troubles,
Republican setbacks in the midterm elections and even Margaret
Thatcher's ouster as signs that the anti-Saddam coalition is
fraying.
</p>
<p> If these reports are accurate -- and no one has ever claimed
that Saddam appreciates the untidiness of democracy -- then
Baghdad undoubtedly took further comfort from the parade of
skeptics counseling delay before Sam Nunn's Senate Armed
Services Committee last week. Echoing other experts, a former
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, David Jones, said that the
economic embargo was "biting heavily" and that if the sanctions
"work in 12 to 18 months . . . the trade-off of avoiding war
with its attendant sacrifices and uncertainties would . . . be
more than worth it."
</p>
<p> If Saddam runs true to type, he may see Bush's diplomatic
overture as further proof that the coalition has neither the
resolution nor the stamina to stay the course against him. If
so, he will stiff James Baker as he has other emissaries -- and
war will be inevitable.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>