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1990
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<text>
<title>
(Oct. 01, 1990) Saddam's Strategies
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990 Highlights
The Gulf:Desert Shield
</history>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Oct. 01, 1990 David Lynch
</history>
<link 00582>
<link 00311>
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<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 50
THE GULF
Saddam's Strategies
</hdr><body>
<p>With most of the world arrayed against him, could the Iraqi
leader break the embargo -- or even achieve his goals in war?
</p>
<p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH -- Reported by William Dowell/Cairo and
Bruce van Voorst/Washington
</p>
<p> Does Saddam Hussein think he can break the ever tightening
blockade being imposed on Iraq by most of the rest of the
world? Failing that, might he actually believe he can achieve
his goals by going to war against the immensely powerful
ground, naval and air forces of the U.S. and its allies? Or
might he instead offer to negotiate a compromise solution to
the gulf crisis?
</p>
<p> The answer, paradoxically, seems to be yes on all three
counts. U.S. officials are concerned that Saddam may have found
in Iran, against which Iraq fought a bloody eight-year war, an
ally to help him punch a hole in the embargo. Nonetheless, they
think, and diplomats in Baghdad agree, that Iraq may soon
propose a new negotiated solution -- though on terms the U.S.
would find highly unacceptable.
</p>
<p> Should it come to war, however, American analysts see signs
that the Iraqi dictator is preparing a three-part scenario for
victory. To Western ears it sounds more like a script for
Gotterdammerung: most of Iraq would undoubtedly be bombed into
flaming ruins. But the U.S. and the West might well suffer
horrifying consequences too: economic ruin brought on by
superexpensive oil, biological as well as chemical-warfare
attacks on troops and civilians, and terrorist outrages on a
scale and of a deadliness never seen before.
</p>
<p> On the surface, a noose was tightening around Saddam's neck
last week. The U.N. Security Council prepared a resolution,
scheduled to be passed this week, extending the embargo to all
passenger and cargo flights in and out of Iraq. The move is
unlikely to have much practical effect; only a few supplies
from Libya, Yemen, North Korea and Vietnam are thought to be
reaching Baghdad by air. But it is one more sign of worldwide
solidarity against Saddam's aggression.
</p>
<p> Iraq, however, showed signs of digging in for a prolonged
confrontation. It reportedly increased its forces in and around
Kuwait to 360,000 men and 2,800 tanks. In addition, Iraq
stepped up the stridency of its rhetoric. Though Baghdad
officials insisted Iraq would not strike first, the
Revolutionary Command Council predicted "the mother of all
battles" and denounced the "dwarfs led by Bush and his two
servants [King] Fahd and Hosni [Mubarak]." Saddam conceded that
the U.S. is "the No. 1 superpower" but added that, nonetheless,
"we are confident that we can hurt America" in a war with Iraq.
</p>
<p> In Baghdad, however, TIME correspondent Carl Bernstein
picked up from Arab and Western diplomats some glimmerings that
Iraq might offer negotiations looking toward a withdrawal from
part -- though not all -- of Kuwait. One of Saddam's principal
advisers spoke hopefully of a possible compromise. "I don't say
it will be withdrawal," he said, but "everything is open for
the future."
</p>
<p> Washington has been anticipating such an offer, and American
expectations of the terms tally fairly closely with the
speculation in Baghdad. The gist: Iraq would keep Bubiyan and
Warba islands in the Persian Gulf and a portion of northern
Kuwait; that would give Iraq control of all the vast and rich
Rumaila oil field, part of which had been claimed by Kuwait.
But Iraqi troops would pull out of some 50% (Washington
musings) to 80% (Baghdad speculation) of Kuwait's pre-invasion
territory. In the version some American analysts expect, Saddam
would propose elections to choose a new government in the
portion of Kuwait that Iraq abandoned -- though with the lists
of those allowed to vote heavily rigged in Iraq's favor, for
example by excluding Kuwaiti refugees who might return and
including Iraqis who took their place.
</p>
<p> In any case, such an offer would fall far short of President
Bush's and the U.N.'s minimum terms for ending the
confrontation: unconditional Iraqi withdrawal from all of
Kuwait and restoration of the ruling al-Sabah family. Bush's
advisers do recognize that Saddam would need a fig leaf and
hint that his claims to the islands and the oil field could be
negotiated, but only after withdrawal. Since Iraq is aware of
that, an offer from Baghdad might be less of a serious attempt
to defuse the crisis than an effort to buy time and sow
disunity in the anti-Iraq coalition.
</p>
<p> Inconspicuous amid these events, but extremely worrisome to
the U.S., were four Iraqi tankers that last week turned up at
the Iraqi terminal of Mina al-Bakr. By week's end three had
been filled with the first oil loaded there since the invasion
of Kuwait. American analysts fear that these tankers could take
their oil to the Iranian terminal at Kharg Island, hugging the
Iranian coast rather than venturing out into the international
waters of the Persian Gulf, where they would be stopped by
warships enforcing the embargo. Iran could then export their
oil by passing it off as its own. An alternate script calls for
Iraq to rebuild and pump oil through a 25-mile pipeline
crossing its border into Iranian territory.
</p>
<p> U.S. intelligence officials estimate that Iraq could smuggle
out 500,000 bbl. of oil a day through Iran. Though that would
be less than one-fifth of Iraq's pre-embargo exports of 2.7
million bbl. a day, it would still earn the Saddam regime $10
million a day (figuring a price of $30 per bbl., below the
current market, minus a $10 cut for Iran). Iraq could then use
the cash to buy grain and other foods that could also be
smuggled from Iranian ports by truck into Iraq.
</p>
<p> U.S. officials claim to have certain knowledge that Iran and
Iraq have discussed just such a scheme although Tehran is still
publicly vowing to abide by the sanctions. It also contends
that Iraq proposed to Iran last week that the two countries
relink their oil pipelines. Iran did not immediately reply.
</p>
<p> Would Iran really help its once deadly enemy Iraq, and why?
The Tehran government appears to be split into at least two
factions, and has been sending out conflicting signals. On
Sept. 15 the national security council voted to continue
respecting the embargo, but the next day two-thirds of the
Majlis, Iran's parliament, voted to approve a call by Ayatullah
Ali Khamenei for a jihad (holy war) against the U.S. It is in
part a question of whether Iran's leaders hate Saddam Hussein
or Uncle Sam more, in part a problem of where the nation's
pragmatic interests lie -- and of whom it expects to win.
</p>
<p> Iran wants Western help to rebuild its shattered economy,
but is unlikely to receive such assistance if it violates the
embargo. On the other hand, an American victory over Iraq could
give the U.S. sufficient leverage in the Middle East to greatly
reduce Iran's influence -- and its bargaining power over oil
prices. President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani figures the best
way to get America's growing military presence out of the
Middle East is to get Iraq out of Kuwait, so he is believed to
favor observing the embargo. His reasoning is likely to be
reinforced by Syrian President Hafez Assad, who visits Tehran
this week. Whether that line will prevail, however, is by no
means certain.
</p>
<p> "If Iran starts helping Iraq sell its oil," says a White
House official, "that would be a mortal blow to the sanctions.
We would have to change our whole approach." Aerial laying of
mines over the tankers' probable routes constitutes the mildest
likely American response. The U.S. also might attack and
possibly sink the tankers; if oil was smuggled out by pipeline,
U.S. planes would bomb the portion of the pipeline on Iraqi
soil.
</p>
<p> Either move, of course, could touch off war. Otherwise,
American officials do not plan any military action, unless
there is some extreme Iraqi provocation, at least until
mid-November. They will reassess then whether the embargo is
working; if it is starting to leak badly, they may lower the
level of Iraqi provocation that would touch off a U.S. military
strike.
</p>
<p> Paradoxically, war could also come if the embargo is so
successful that it prods Saddam Hussein into lashing out to
avoid slow strangulation of his country. In any case, however
and whenever fighting might begin, some Bush Administration
officials believe Saddam really thinks he could win. Says one:
"When he says he can beat the forces arrayed against him, he
means it."
</p>
<p> How would the Iraqi dictator expect to achieve victory?
Three ways:
</p>
<p> By destroying Western economies. American analysts believe
Iraq would immediately launch missile attacks on Saudi Arabian
oil facilities. Some of the most critical, notably the pumping
center and oil field at Abqaiq and the loading facilities at
Ras Tanura, are within range of missiles fired from Kuwait.
Those missiles would be fitted not just with chemical but with
biological warheads. American experts believe that besides
mustard and nerve gases, Iraqi warheads could spread powders
that, when inhaled, cause anthrax and botulism, two diseases
that can be fatal in two to three days. U.S. troops in Saudi
Arabia are being inoculated against anthrax. Underlining U.S.
worries, CIA Director William Webster last week mentioned the
biological warfare threat publicly for the first time in a
speech in New York.
</p>
<p> Iraqi missiles would not have to blow up many of the oil
facilities; scattering enough poison gas and anthrax or
botulism powder to make it impossible for workers to labor
there would also disrupt production. Says a U.S. analyst: "With
a shortfall of only 1 million bbl. of oil a day, now the price
has gone to $35 [from $18 before the invasion of Kuwait].
Imagine the impact of the loss of a big portion of Saudi
Arabia's 7 million bbl. a day." Conceivably, the price could
reach as high as $100, far more than enough to cause both a
crippling recession, with widespread joblessness, and ruinous
inflation throughout the industrial world. The U.S. would
certainly retaliate with devastating bombing of Iraq. From
Saddam's viewpoint, says one American expert on the Middle
East, "the West bombs Baghdad, and he bombs the New York Stock
Exchange." The Iraqi dictator would be betting that his nation
could stand the physical destruction longer than the U.S. and
allies could take the economic punishment.
</p>
<p> By attacking Israel. U.S. analysts have already detected the
movement of missiles toward areas of western Iraq from which
they could hit Jerusalem and Tel Aviv in five minutes.
Americans fear that Iraq could launch a salvo of 50 to 60
missiles, accompanied by an aircraft attack. Saddam, they say,
would try to make it appear that the U.S. and Israel had
provoked the attack, possibly by having an Iraqi aircraft drop
a bomb on Baghdad.
</p>
<p> Iraq would pay a fearful price. "The Israelis would wipe out
Baghdad," says an American analyst -- assuming the U.S. did not
beat them to it. But Israeli involvement would cause an
enormous upheaval in the Arab world. "No American would be safe
anywhere in the region," says one U.S. official. Saddam would
also be betting that America's Arab allies, such as Egypt and
Syria, would either switch sides or face popular outrage strong
enough to overthrow their governments.
</p>
<p> By igniting terrorism. U.S. intelligence is picking up
indications of an Iraqi terrorist network being set up. "People
are moving; gear is under way," says one source. The attacks
would not be confined to the Middle East; they would hit
targets in Europe, Japan and the U.S. Nor would the terrorists
confine themselves to the classic means of bomb and bullet;
they too might resort to biological warfare. Some analysts
conjure up nightmare visions of a light plane scattering
anthrax powder around the Washington area.
</p>
<p> There are some indications that these scenarios are more
than American paranoia. Bassam Abu Sharif, an adviser to Yasser
Arafat, the head of the pro-Iraq Palestine Liberation
Organization, visited Baghdad last week. Abu Sharif reports
that if war comes, Saddam is threatening to strike Israel and
oil-loading installations throughout Saudi Arabia and the gulf
states.
</p>
<p> Such threats certainly cannot be lightly dismissed. Saddam
Hussein is said to believe that he personally could survive
even a war as terrible as he plans, hiding in one of several
secret Soviet-built bunkers in Baghdad while most of Iraq goes
up in flames. He may be wrong in that calculation, and in
believing that Iraq could take the pounding longer than the
U.S. and its allies could withstand economic devastation and
the arrival back home of thousands of body bags. But proving
him wrong might be possible only by paying a ghastly price.
</p>
<p> Saddam has often been compared with Adolf Hitler. It would
be no comfort at all to those making the comparison if he too
died in a bunker amid the blazing ruins of his capital at the
end of a war in which he had loosed fearful bloodshed and
destruction on the world.
</p>
<p>IRAQ'S TOTAL FORCES
</p>
<p>1,000,000 troops
5,500 tanks
3,500 artillery pieces
200 multiple launchers
500-800 surface-to-surface missiles
500 combat aircraft
</p>
<p>IRAQ'S FORCES IN KUWAIT
</p>
<p>360,000 troops
2,800 tanks
</p>
<p>ALLIED FORCES IN THE PERSIAN GULF NOW
</p>
<p>U.S. 150,000 troops, 52 ships, 700 aircraft
Britain 5,000 troops, 10 ships, 5 air squadrons
France 5,000 troops, 9 ships
Gulf Arab Forces* 10,000 troops
Saudi Arabia 55,000 troops (total armed forces)
Egypt 5,000 troops
Syria 4,000 troops
Pakistan 2,000 troops
Bangladesh 2,000 troops
Morocco 1,200 troops
</p>
<p>Canada, Greece, Italy, Netherlands, Spain and Belgium supply a
total of at least 10 ships
</p>
<p>*Gulf Cooperation Council (Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman, U.A.E.,
Qatar and Kuwait).
</p>
<p>HOW IRAN COULD HELP IRAQ GET OIL OUT
</p>
<p> BY TANKER. It is possible for tankers to hug the Iranian
coast and make their way to Iran's oil export terminal at Kharg
Island.
</p>
<p> BY PIPELINE. Iraq could build a 25-mile (40-km) pipeline
from Basra across the Iran border to Abadan. The oil could then
be exported.
</p>
<p> BY TRUCK. Iraq could ship its oil overland by truck to an
Iranian oil junction.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>