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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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jan_mar
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01259929.000
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<text>
<title>
(Jan. 25, 1993) A Spanking for Saddam
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jan. 25, 1993 Stand and Deliver: Bill Clinton
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
IRAQ, Page 44
A Spanking for Saddam
</hdr>
<body>
<p>But the U.S. raid failed to quell the Baghdad leader. How Clinton
treats him will depend on what the dictator does next--and
what he needs to prove.
</p>
<p>By JILL SMOLOWE - With reporting by Dean Fischer/Kuwait City,
William Mader/London and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
</p>
<p> George Bush is a man of caution, but not infinitely so.
Saddam Hussein sees violence as a useful tool. The two were
destined to fight again. With one eye on the history books and
another on the sandglass marking the final hours of his
presidency, Bush seemed determined to show Saddam Hussein one
last time that he was not to be trifled with. Saddam, fully
relishing the irony that his own reign would outlast that of his
chief nemesis, could not resist tweaking Bush. This time Bush
had no patience for the game and ordered a bombing raid that--at least briefly--forced Saddam to retreat.
</p>
<p> Beyond the personal animosity, though, Iraq and the U.S.
are engaged in a crucial showdown over international order.
Even as Iraqis mopped up after an allied bombing raid,
Washington and Baghdad exchanged fresh threats about whether
Iraq was or was not complying with U.N. requirements. Instead
of retreating Iraq challenged U.S. planes over the weekend in
the northern no-fly zone. After the U.S. shot down a threatening
MiG-29 Washington hinted at stronger retaliation. Coming just
days before Bush was to vacate the Oval Office, it was
impossible to ignore the raw personal edge that drove both
leaders' actions. But together they have bequeathed to Bill
Clinton his own tough question: What happens next?
</p>
<p> The allied air strike was intended to send Saddam a
political admonition to reform his behavior, rather than deliver
a crippling military blow. The modest raid by 110 U.S., British
and French warplanes on four missile sites and four command
posts in southern Iraq was, as one U.S. official noted, "a
spanking, not a beating"--and an inefficient one at that. The
attack destroyed only one of the missile batteries the U.S.
claimed were threatening allied aircraft in the skies over Iraq,
although officials insisted that all but one of the eight
targets were at least temporarily put out of action. More
important, they argued, the bombing demonstrated allied resolve
to enforce U.N. restrictions imposed after the Gulf War. Based
on past experience, Saddam may back down for a time, but the
raid neither damaged his hold on power nor diminished the
problem he poses for the incoming Clinton Administration. "This
business with Saddam," said White House spokesman Marlin
Fitzwater, "is not finished, I can assure you."
</p>
<p> The President-elect did not need the reminder. Dipping his
toe into the Iraqi morass the day of the raid, he stumbled. In
an interview with the New York Times, he called the raid "the
right thing to do," then seemed to open a small window for
Saddam: "If you want a different relationship with me, you could
begin by upholding the U.N. requirements to change your
behavior. I'm not obsessed with the man." The softer rhetoric
set off speculation that he might ease U.S. policy toward
Baghdad. Clinton angrily denounced what he called a
misinterpretation, and the tenor of the whole interview
indicates that he has no intention of departing from Bush's hard
line.
</p>
<p> But in the world of diplomacy, where perception and
precise language are everything, the incident pointed up
Clinton's unsure handling of foreign affairs. British officials
were particularly leery of one Clinton remark: "I always tell
everybody, I'm a Baptist; I believe in deathbed conversions."
Said a senior British diplomat: "We don't need a Southern
Baptist attitude, as we had with Jimmy Carter. We need
pragmatism."
</p>
<p> For Bush, the aim was more than a last-minute potshot at
his most intransigent rival. He wanted to send a message to
Saddam that even though he is about to leave office, the Gulf
War coalition remains firm in its demand that Iraq comply with
U.N. resolutions. Given the military options available, the
restraint of the operation shows the pains Bush took to ensure
that his key allies, Britain and France, would sign on and to
engage the support of the entire U.N. Security Council. By not
overreacting to an escalating series of provocations by Saddam,
the Western leaders reassured their electorates that they need
not fear resumption of a full-scale war. Bush's moves were also
calibrated to enlist the support of Arab allies, most important
Saudi Arabia, which are wary of another divisive confrontation.
</p>
<p> What Bush probably wanted most was what he has failed to
achieve all along: to provoke the Iraqi people into taking
matters into their own hands. This raid alone had little chance
of accomplishing that. But "if Saddam goes on playing the same
game, he can expect the same response," says a British diplomat.
"We hope some of those around him will see that the only
sensible alternative is to get rid of him."
</p>
<p> Saddam's main motive, however, is survival. "Saddam has
convinced himself he won the Gulf War," says Laurie Mylroie, a
fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. "He
wants to mark his victory by humiliating Bush in the closing
days of his Administration." Saddam also may have been testing
Clinton's mettle by warning that he, Saddam, was capable of
stirring up trouble to divert the President-elect from his
domestic agenda. Upstaging Clinton's Inaugural preparations was
hardly a gambit to win and influence Friends of Bill.
</p>
<p> But Saddam's primary audience was elsewhere. His
chest-pounding provocations were a classic
barbarians-at-the-gate strategy, designed to deflect attention
from the dismal economic situation at home, heightened by U.N.
sanctions, that has left Iraqis hunting daily for food. His
police apparatus has reasserted its grip since the war, so
citizens harbor few doubts that Saddam is still in charge. But
he may have cause to worry about his 400,000-man armed forces.
Kurds and other opponents have spread stories of anti-Saddam
moles within the armed forces, particularly those stationed far
from Baghdad. "I think a substantial portion of the military is
dissatisfied with him," says a U.S. government expert on Iraq.
By creating a crisis, Saddam is able to keep his army on alert
and out of politics.
</p>
<p> For audiences beyond his borders, the aim is to shatter
the Gulf War coalition, weaken resolve at the U.N. and
transform the U.S. into the bully. "He may sense that the unity
of the sanctions regime is starting to fray," says a State
Department official. "The Russians have lots of things at home
on their minds, and the Europeans have the Balkans." Saddam
wants to ease the constraints imposed on his sovereignty and
remove the conflict from the U.N. context: within those
corridors, Iraq is putting itself forward as accommodating. "In
our culture, once somebody comes to you with military threats,
you don't respond. If someone comes to us in a nice way, we
respond," Iraqi Ambassador Nizar Hamdoon insists. Would Saddam?
"Yes."
</p>
<p> Saddam is particularly interested in exploiting Arab
perceptions that the West applies an anti-Muslim double
standard. He massages Arab resentment that the same allied
forces that retaliate so quickly against Iraq remain indifferent
to the Serbian slaughter of Bosnia's Muslims and turn a blind
eye to Israel's expulsion of more than 400 Palestinians. Said
the Turkish daily Cumhuriyet: "How could the U.S. start this
operation against the background of public opinion horrified by
events in Bosnia? With 10,000 women raped and people jammed into
internment camps in Bosnia, this bombing is inexplicable."
</p>
<p> For Iraq's close neighbors, particularly the Kuwaitis,
there are more specific worries. Saddam failed to meet a U.N.
deadline to remove six police posts that remain on Kuwaiti soil.
The diplomatic community is not very hopeful that Bush's air
strike will have much influence on the situation. "I don't think
it will cause Saddam much pain," noted a Western envoy in
Kuwait. "And I doubt it will deter him. He has a long history
of miscalculations." Adds a Kuwaiti businessman: "We are behind
the U.S. action, but we believe that Saddam will continue to
defy the U.N."
</p>
<p> From the Western vantage point, the raid was inevitable,
as it became the only way to make Saddam abide by U.N.
strictures. Saddam's movement of missiles into both the southern
and northern no-fly zones late last year was provocation enough.
But he virtually invited retaliation when he banned flights by
U.N. inspectors and staged cross-border salvage raids into
Kuwait last week on four successive days.
</p>
<p> The allies responded to none of this with haste. Plans for
the raid began months before Christmas. Bush, in phone
consultations with British Prime Minister John Major and French
President Francois Mitterrand, agreed that the violations of the
no-fly zones could not go unanswered. Top military staff at all
three defense ministries were instructed to draft a variety of
options, ranging from a strike on one no-fly zone to a major
assault on Iraq's airfields, missile bases and
control-and-command structure. During Bush's New Year's Eve
visit to Riyadh, he enlisted the cooperation of King Fahd.
</p>
<p> British, French and U.S. ambassadors to the U.N. were
instructed to consult their Chinese and Russian colleagues on
the Security Council about preparing an ultimatum for Saddam.
Bush spoke with Russian President Boris Yeltsin, while Secretary
of State Lawrence Eagleburger contacted his Chinese counterpart.
With their acquiescence, the ultimatum was delivered on Jan. 6,
and a day later the allies settled on a limited strike. To keep
Saddam guessing, they fueled press speculation that the attack
might be massive.
</p>
<p> Then the game began in earnest, as the mission was called
off a first time, when Saddam seemed to remove the missiles,
and again last Tuesday because of inclement weather. By
Wednesday, the skies had largely cleared, and the allies needed
only to wait for darkness. When the mission was complete, the
allies had suffered no casualties. Iraq reported that 19 people,
including two civilians, were killed and 15 wounded. Saddam
threatened, "We will inflict great humiliation on the infidels."
</p>
<p> Saddam's game is hardly over. But if he has taken heart
from talk of weak resolve on Clinton's part, he will be
disappointed. The incoming President is likely to pursue the
same course as Bush.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>