January 29, 2003 at 11:24 pm
A essay about the Hypocricy of the USA and its stance towards Iraq!
Helping Iraq Kill with Chemical Weapons:
The Relevance of Yesterday’s US Hypocrisy Today
by ELSON E. BOLES
You may feel disgusted by the hypocrisy of US plans to make war on Iraq and sickened at the inevitable slaughter of thousands of people. But if you could only vaguely recall the details of how deep the hypocrisy goes, then read on.
The US not only helped arm Iraq with military equipment right up to the time of the Kuwait invasion in 1989, as did Germany, Britain, France, Russia and others, but also sold and helped Iraq to integrate chemical weapons into their US-provided battle plans while fighting Iran between 1985-1988.
According to a New York Times article in August, 2002, Col. Walter P. Lang, a senior defense intelligence officer at the time, explained that D.I.A. and C.I.A. officials “were desperate to make sure that Iraq did not lose” to Iran. “The use of gas on the battlefield by the Iraqis was not a matter of deep strategic concern,” he said. One veteran said, that the Pentagon “wasn’t so horrified by Iraq’s use of gas.” “It was just another way of killing people _ whether with a bullet or phosgene, it didn’t make any difference.”
Now consider just how deceptive the recent comments from the White House are. In late September spokesman Ari Fleischer said that British Prime Minister Blair’s dossier of evidence is “frightening in terms of Iraq’s intentions and abilities to acquire weapons.” A few days later, while making his case against Saddam, President Bush said “He’s used poison gas on his own people.” Bush deceives because he hides the fact that US officials, including his father, had no qualms about helping Saddam gas Iranians. What is truly frightening are the US policies toward Iraq, the cover ups of those policies, and the US officials who personally profit in the millions of dollars from those policies. To whatever degree Saddam is a tyrant, he would not be that without the US government.
The question is not whether Saddam is willing to use chemical or other weapons of mass destruction again. The question is whether the US is currently selling and helping countries use weapons of mass destruction.
Details about Iraq killing Iranians with US-supplied chemical and biological weapons significantly deepens our understanding of the current hypocrisy. It began with “Iraq-gate” — when US policy makers, financiers, arms-suppliers and makers, made massive profits from sales to Iraq of myriad chemical, biological, conventional weapons, and the equipment to make nuclear weapons. Reporter Russ Baker noted, for example, that, “on July 3, 1991, the Financial Times reported that a Florida company run by an Iraqi national had produced cyanide — some of which went to Iraq for use in chemical weapons — and had shipped it via a CIA contractor.” This was just the tip of a mountain of scandals.
A major break in uncovering Iraqgate began with a riveting 1990 Nightline episode which revealed that top officials of the Reagan administration, the State Department, the Pentagon, C.I.A., and D.I.A., collectively engaged in a massive cover up of the USS Vincennes’ whereabouts and actions when it shot down an Iranian airliner in 1987 killing over 200 civilians. The “massive cover up” Koppel explained, was designed to hide the US secret war against Iran, in which, among other actions, US Special Operations troops and Navy SEALS sunk half of Iran’s navy while giving battle plans and logistical information to Iraqi ground forces in a coordinated offensive.
In continuing the probe, as Koppel explained in June, 1990, “It is becoming increasingly clear that George Bush [Sr.], operating largely behind the scenes throughout the 1980s, initiated and supported much of the financing, intelligence, and military help that built Saddam’s Iraq into the aggressive power that the United States ultimately had to destroy.”
A PBS Frontline episode, “The Arming of Iraq” (1990) detailed much of the conventional and so-called “dual-use” weapons sold to Iraq. The public learned from other sources that at least since mid-1980s the US was selling chemical and biological material for weapons to Iraq and orchestrating private sales. These sales began soon after current Secretary of State, Donald Rumsfeld traveled to Baghdad in 1985 and met with Saddam Hussein as a private businessman on behalf of the Reagan administration. In the last major battle of the Iran-Iraq war, some 65,000 Iranians were killed, many by gas.
Investigators turned up new scandals, including the involvement of Banca Nazionale del Lavoro (BNL), the giant Italian bank, and many of the very same circles of arms suppliers, covert operators, and policy makers in and out of the US government and active in those roles for years. The National Security Council, CIA and other US agencies tacitly approved about $4 billion in unreported loans to Iraq through the giant Italian bank’s Atlanta branch. Iraq, with the blessing and official approval of the US government, purchased computer controlled machine tools, computers, scientific instruments, special alloy steel and aluminum, chemicals, and other industrial goods for Iraq’s missile, chemical, biological and nuclear weapons programs.
However, the early reports on BNL’s activities and the startling revelations that the US government astonishingly knew that BNL was financing billions of dollars of purchases illegally, were rather comical in view of later revelations regarding who was involved. US government officials didn’t just know and approve, but some were employees at BNL directly or indirectly. It was Representative Henry Gonzalez (D-Texas) who relentlessly brought key information into the Congressional Record (despite stern warnings by the State Department to stop his personal investigation for the sake of “national security”).
Gonzalas revealed, for example, that Brent Scowcroft served as Vice Chairman of Kissinger Associates until being appointed as National Security Advisor to President Bush in January 1989. As Gonzalez reported, “Until October 4,1990, Mr. Scowcroft owned stock in approximately 40 U.S. corporations, many of which were doing busies in Iraq.” Scowcroft’s stock included that in Halliburton Oil, also doing business in Iraq at the time, which had also been run by current Vice President ##### Cheney for a time. Recall that this year President George Bush Sr. faced suspicion of insider trading in relation to selling his stock in Halliburton. The companies that Scowcroft owned stock in, according to Gonzalez, “received more than one out of every eight U.S. export licenses for exports to Iraq. Several of the companies were also clients of Kissinger Associates while Mr. Scowcroft was Vice Chairman of that firm.” Thus, Kissinger Associates helped US companies obtain US export licenses with BNL-finance so Iraq could purchase US weapons and materials for its weapons programs.
Many US business-men and officials made handsome profits. This included Henry Kissinger, the former Secretary of State under Richard Nixon, who was an employee of BNL while BNL was simultaneously a paying client of Kissinger Associates. Gonzalez reported that Mr. Alan Stoga, a Kissinger Associates executive, met in June 1989 Mr. Saddam Hussein in Baghdad. “Many Kissinger Associates clients received US export licenses for exports to Iraq. Several were also the beneficiaries of BNL loans to Iraq,” said Mr. Gonzalez. Kissinger admitted that “it is possible that somebody may have advised a client on how to get a license.”
Perhaps the most bizarre revelations about the involvement of former US officials concerned a Washington-based enterprise called “Global Research” which played a middleman role in selling uniforms to Iraq. It was run by, none other than Spiro Agnew (Nixon’s former VP who resigned to avoid bribery and tax evasion charges), John Mitchell (Nixon’s chief of staff and Watergate organizer), and Richard Nixon himself. In the mid-1980s, more than a decade after Watergate, Nixon wrote a cozy letter to former dictator and friend Nicolae Ceausescu to close the deal. Global Research, incidentally, swindled the Iraqis, who thought they were getting US-made uniforms for desert conditions. Instead they received, and discarded, the winter uniforms from Romania.
By late 1992, the sales of chemical and biological weapons were revealed. Congressional Records of Senator Riegle’s investigation of the Gulf War Syndrome show that that the US government approved sales of large varieties of chemical and biological materials to Iraq. These included anthrax, components of mustard gas, botulinum toxins (which causes paralysis of the muscles involving swallowing and is often fatal), histoplasma capsulatum (which may cause pneumonia, enlargement of the liver and spleen, anemia, acute inflammatory skin disease marked by tender red nodules), and a host of other nasty chemicals materials.
To top it all off, there is the question as to whether Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait was a set up. Evidence indicates that the US knew of Iraq’s plans — after all, the military and intelligence agencies of the two countries were working very closely. Newspaper reports about the infamous meeting between then-Ambassador Glaspie and Iraq officials, and a special ABC report in the series “A Line in the Sand,” indicated that, although the US officials told Iraq that it disapproved, they indicated that the US would not interfere.
Bear in mind the attitude of the US policy makers not only regarding Iraq’s use of gas against Iranians, but in general. Richard Armatige, then Asst. Sec. of Defense for International Security Affairs and now Deputy Secretary of State, said with a hint of pride in his voice that the US “was playing one wolf off another wolf” in pursuing our so-called national interest. This kind of cool machismo resembled the pride that Oliver North verbalized with a grin during the Iran-Contra hearings as “a right idea” with regard to using the Ayatollah’s money to fund the Contras. The setting up of Iraq thus would be very consistent with the goals and the character of US foreign policy in the Middle East: to control the region’s states either for US oil companies or as bargaining chips in deals with other strong countries, and to profit by selling massive quantities of weapons to states that will war with or deter those states that oppose US “interests.”
The problem that Armatige refers to was the fact that by 1990, the US and allied arming of Iraq had given Iraq a decisive military edge over Iran, which upset the regional “balance.” The thinking among the US hawks was Iraq’s military needed to somehow be returned to its 1980 level. An invasion of Kuwait would enable the US to do that.
But initially many arms suppliers opposed the war on Iraq because they had been making huge profits from arms sales to Saddam’s regime during the 1980s. Indeed, one US official interviewed expressed his disappointment with Iraq’s invasion and the subsequent Gulf War because the relationship with Iraq could have continued to be “very profit…uh mutually profitable.”
Bush Sr. and others expected that after the war, Saddam would capitulate to US designs on the region. With a heeled Saddam, the interests of arms suppliers, defense contractors, and the many US oil corporations could be renewed. Iraqi would have to re-arm itself and invest in oil drilling and processing facilities that were destroyed by US forces. And to pay for all that, Iraq would have to sell oil cheap, which served the interests both of the giant oil corporations and the American public who had begun buying GM SUVs en masse. It would be good for US business.
The invasion today is, above all, to renew US firm’s access to Iraqi oil. As reported recently in the New York Times, former CIA director R. James Woolsey, who has been one of the leading advocates of forcing Hussein from power, argues that, “It’s pretty straightforward, France and Russia have oil companies and interests in Iraq. They should be told that if they are of assistance in moving Iraq toward decent government, we’ll do the best we can to ensure that the new government and American companies work closely with them. If they throw in their lot with Saddam, it will be difficult to the point of impossible to persuade the new Iraqi government to work with them.”
His views are of course supported by the new Iraqi government-in-waiting. Faisal Qaragholi, the “petroleum engineer who directs the London office of the Iraqi National Congress (INC), an umbrella organization of opposition groups that is backed by the United States” says that “Our oil policies should be decided by a government in Iraq elected by the people.” Ahmed Chalabi, the INC leader, put it more bluntly and sadi that he favored a U.S.-led consortium to develop Iraq’s oil fields, which would replace the existing agreements that Iraq has with Russia and France. “American companies will have a big shot at Iraqi oil,” Chalabi said.
Note also that Bush and company have a personal stake in unilateral action. According to Leroy Sievers and the Nightline Staff at ABC, “##### Cheney’s Halliburton Co. had interests in Iraqi oil production after the [Gulf ] war.”
Thus, following the Gulf War, Cheney, Bush Sr. and others didn’t expect that Saddam would refuse to abide by US interests and join the so-called “family of nations.” This is really what President Bush Jr meant when he said at a cabinet meeting on Sept. 24, 2002 that he intends “to hold Saddam Hussein to account for a decade of defiance.”
There is no shock about any of this, nor of the sordid assortment of officials and individuals directly or indirectly involved — from the infamous US-based international arms dealer Sarkis Songhanalian and former Gen. Secord, to Oliver North and Richard Nixon — and many others. They had been part of covert US arms and drug deals and Mafia dating back decades. Iraqgate was in fact also part of Irangate, and both are about a shadow government that circumvents domestic and international laws in arming regimes and terrorist organizations to enhance the profits of US businessmen and corporations.
The public learned since the mid-1980s that the shadow government folks played all sides of various wars, and made curious business alliances. Profits were good, but there were also ideological reasons. While arming Iraq and putting proceeds into their pockets, the covert operators also armed Iran. Israel of course, had also been arming Iran since the Ayatollah came into power in order to counter Iraq. The US soon joined these operations after Regan came to power.
Oliver North, Bush Sr., Robert McFarlane, and Gen. Secord, and others purchased from the CIA spare parts for US-made weapons and more than two thousand TOW missiles, which the CIA had purchased at discount rates from the Pentagon. Secord and North sold the weapons and parts to Iran in exchange for cash and the release of US hostages in Lebanon.
In public, Ronnie Reagan repeatedly condemned negotiations with terrorists in principle and even stated on national TV that there had been no negotiations with terrorists. He went back on air a few months later and said that while he still didn’t believe “in his heart” that the US had negotiated with terrorists, the facts told him “otherwise.” He escaped impeachment because he “couldn’t remember” signing detailed instructions for sales of weapons to Iran and for the diversion of money to the Contras.
Insiders considered these trades “business as usual.” Former General Secord, for instance, unashamedly told Congressional investigators during the Iran-Contra hearings that his arms-dealing firm, the “Enterprise,” which sold the TOWs to other brokers and then to Iran, was a legitimate profit-making business. And as we all know, at the other end of the deal, North channeled a portion of the proceeds from those sales through Swiss banks and to the terrorist Contras in Honduras. Their job was to overthrow the Sandinista regime that overthrew the brutal 43-year Somoza family dictatorship supported by the US.
Again, in legal terms, the scandal was not only that Reagan’s administration circumvented the Boland Amendment which outlawed military support to the Contras, but also that the CIA had also mined the harbors of Nicaragua. When the US was taken to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and convicted of violating international laws, President Reagan disregarded this conviction saying the ICJ had no jurisdiction over the United States.
Bush Jr. has stated the following reasons for invading Iraq, all of which are accurate except the last: (1) Iraq used chemical weapons, (2) Iraq tried to build nuclear weapons, and (3) the US tried to bring Iraq into the “family of nations” (said first by Bush Sr). He is correct that Iraq was willing to use chemical weapons and has been trying to build nuclear weapons for years. Of course, he just fails to mention that the US was willing to sell, and to help Iraq use, chemical weapons of mass destruction and that his friends profited handsomely in so doing. He also fails to note that today Hussein is not seen as an immediate threat by it’s Arab neighbors, none of whom have called for his ouster, and that Iraq has only a shadow of the power it had in 1990. There is no evidence to support Bush or Blair’s claims that Iraq has and is preparing to use chemical or biological weapons.
Lastly, what about Bush Jr.’s third contention, that the US had tried to bring Saddam into the “family of nations?” In view of the thousands upon thousands of women, children, and men butchered with US battle plans and arms, as well as arms from Europe, one could only characterize that family as being composed of unscrupulous, profiteering, vile accomplices to mass murder. Perhaps this is also a reason why the Bush administration opposes the formation of the World Court and needs US politicians and military personel exempt from international law.
Elson E. Boles is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Saginaw Valley State University University in Michigan.
He can be reached at: boles@svsu.edu
By: Arabella-Cox - 2nd February 2003 at 13:44
RE: Have a Read Of This
“Please, you are out of the loop general and it’s on a need to know basis only.”
Please… this could all be over very quickly… Bush can take his irrefuteable evidence, hand it to the weapon inspectors, they can go straight to the incriminating evidence and Bobs your uncle… the weapons inspectors show the world what the US “knows”.
Of course there is no smoking gun and all the US has is no evidence of the destruction of all the things they thought he had.
“We saw you with a car yesterday and we think you had a bomb in there too, now you don’t have either and can’t tell us where the bomb went… you are under arrest.” What are the chances of a conviction unless they plant some evidence?
By: Arabella-Cox - 31st January 2003 at 21:03
RE: Have a Read Of This
Actually most “voluntary” militaries don’t like to fight wars. And that’s a good thing, notice only a few countries have “voluntary” soldiers. In fact it’s an open American military attitude of not wanting to fight wars for the sake of fighting wars (if that’s the case, you can take American dominance literally). But, if asked to do the unavoidable (this being in the context from political perspective) then of course they want to win wars and do it overwhelmingly. Who in their right mind don’t want that? History have taught the US that the shorter the war the better for BOTH sides.
By: mongu - 31st January 2003 at 20:22
RE: Have a Read Of This
I do find it interesting that the doves on this one are the military men – like Powell. Maybe they know what war can really be like.
By: Arabella-Cox - 30th January 2003 at 19:15
RE: Have a Read Of This
[updated:LAST EDITED ON 30-01-03 AT 07:17 PM (GMT)]No need to highlight the “nervous” part. Maybe you’re ignorant of what’s going on, i’ll inform you. One of Bush’s agenda on the US military is to make them controlled by the civilian bosses. Because in the last decade, Clinton let the military decay, with no civilian leadership except a list of things to do, and let generals become even more powerfull. So, yes civilian bosses need to take leadership, not just politics. Rightly so. Of course in times of wars, civilians shouldn’t set operations but only strategic objectives. But during all other times, the civilians should be in control. The very next few quotes, you can see that Storming Norman is quite bitter about certain things and rightly so due to his service loyaties…but saying that Rumsfield, being the secretary of defense shouldn’t be in control…please. The fact is Rumsfield puts the Army down in terms of future force structures, so obviously it’s going to piss off some generals. Also, if you notice, most if not all retired generals are so eager to know whats going on even though they’re retired. Because they want to continuously feel respected and more directly in control. Very dangerous mind set if you ask me. In the military, if you’re retired, you’re retired, unless asked upon for consultation you shouldn’t interfere since any info you have is already ages old even if you’ve just retired yesterday. After saying that, its fine for retired military personnel to voice concerns, like all Americans they have the right to. But the constant recurring thing i’ve hear from these people is “Show ME the info”. Please, you are out of the loop general and it’s on a need to know basis only.
Ironically, it was him that wanted to go all the way to Baghdad during the Gulf War….so, you get the drift of what’s going on?
By: serendib - 30th January 2003 at 18:50
RE: Have a Read Of This
Sauron,
At least you are honourable enough to admit that you haven’t seen war in your lifetime. People who have been to war are much more sceptial about going to war; they have seen the carnage and despair firsthand.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/2705275.stm
Stormin’ Norman: Don’t rush into war
Former US Gulf War commander Norman Schwarzkopf has said a new war with Iraq has not yet been justified.
General Schwarzkopf, who became known as “Stormin’ Norman” during the 1991 Gulf War, called for United Nations weapons inspectors to be given more time to assess whether Iraq had any illegal weapons.
“I think it is very important for us to wait and see what the inspectors come up with, and hopefully they come up with something conclusive,” he said in an interview with the Washington Post.
Interviewed at his home in Tampa, Florida, the 68-year-old retired general said he would like “better information” before he supported an invasion of Iraq.
“The thought of Saddam Hussein with a sophisticated nuclear capability is a frightening thought,” he said.
“Now, having said that, I don’t know what intelligence the US Government has.”
‘Nervous’ about Rumsfeld
US President George Bush, speaking in his annual State of the Union address late on Tuesday, said he would present fresh evidence to the UN next week about Iraq’s weapons programme.
General Schwarzkopf praised his former comrade-in-arms, US Secretary of State Colin Powell, but said he was “somewhat nervous” about comments made by the Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld.
“When he makes his comments, it appears that he disregards the Army,” he was quoted as saying.
“He gives the perception when he’s on TV that he is the guy driving the train and everybody else better fall in line behind him – or else.”
General Schwarzkopf led US troops to victory in a UN-sanctioned allied military operation that followed Iraq’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait.
He served under President George Bush senior. At the time, Colin Powell was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and current Vice President ##### Cheney was defence secretary.
He remains close to the Bush family and campaigned in Florida with Mr Cheney during the 2000 presidential election, the Washington Post said.
By: Sauron - 30th January 2003 at 06:34
RE: Have a Read Of This
Not a day in the military Sam for which I am grateful. If there are war stories to be to told, you or someone else will have to tell them.
Those are good names you mentioned. I doubt if any of them would give Boles the time of day. Certainly not Mr. Scowcroft.
Regards
Sauron
By: serendib - 30th January 2003 at 05:22
RE: Have a Read Of This
http://www.nhgazette.com/chickenhawks.html
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/85770_russell06.shtml
Of course who are we to question the likes of Gen.Norman Schawrzkopf, Gen.Anthony Zinni, Gen.Brent Snowcroft, Gen.Colin Powell, and Gen.Wesley Clark who have been advocating restraint. For all we know these gents concerns might be “propaganda” as well.
By the way, how many years did you serve in the military Sauron? Or are you a mythical character just like your namesake from Lord of the Rings?
I hope Scooter has some “war stories” for us as well.
Sam.
By: Sauron - 30th January 2003 at 04:29
RE: Have a Read Of This
Types like Boles are a dime a dozen in US universities. They crank out s**t like this constantly. They are esentually the hard core left who live comfortably in the US and feel guilty about it.
They and the Hollywood ‘limo’ liberals have taken to calling themselves “progressives” which is a term not used in the US for some time but has found favour again. New or old, the smell is the same.
Regards
Sauron
By: Arabella-Cox - 30th January 2003 at 00:25
RE: Have a Read Of This
just more propaganda……..
By: Snapper - 29th January 2003 at 23:56
RE: Have a Read Of This
What did you expect from a warmongering prick trying to write his name into history books?
HONESTY???????????