I found this interesting article by two people who have worked there. I thought I share it with those who may be interested.
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THE HOSTAGE NATION
Hans von Sponeck
and Denis Halliday
Guardian
Thursday November 29, 2001
A major shift is occurring in US policy on Iraq. It is obvious that
Washington wants to end 11 years of a self-serving policy of
containment
of the Iraqi regime and change to a policy of replacing, by force,
Saddam Hussein and his government.
The current policy of economic sanctions has destroyed society in Iraq
and caused the death of thousands, young and old. There is evidence of
that daily in reports from reputable international organizations such
as
Caritas, Unicef, and Save the Children. A change to a policy of
replacement by force will increase that suffering.
The creators of the policy must no longer assume that they can satisfy
voters by expressing contempt for those who oppose them. The problem is
not the inability of the public to understand the bigger picture, as
former US secretary of state Madeleine Albright likes to suggest. It is
the opposite. The bigger picture, the hidden agenda, is well understood
by ordinary people. We should not forget Henry Kissinger's brutally
frank admission that "oil is much too important a commodity to be left
in the hands of the Arabs".
How much longer can democratically elected governments hope to get away
with justifying policies that punish the Iraqi people for something
they
did not do, through economic sanctions that target them in the hope
that
those who survive will overthrow the regime? Is international law only
applicable to the losers? Does the UN security council only serve the
powerful?
The UK and the US, as permanent members of the council, are fully aware
that the UN embargo operates in breach of the UN covenants on human
rights, the Geneva and Hague conventions and other international laws.
It is neither anti-UK nor anti-US to point out that Washington and
London, more than anywhere else, have in the past decade helped to
write
the Iraq chapter in the history of avoidable tragedies.
The UK and the US have deliberately pursued a policy of punishment
since
the Gulf war victory in 1991. The two governments have consistently
opposed allowing the UN security council to carry out its mandated
responsibilities to assess the impact of sanctions policies on
civilians. We know about this first hand, because the governments
repeatedly tried to prevent us from briefing the security council about
it. The pitiful annual limits, of less than $170 per person, for
humanitarian supplies, set by them during the first three years of the
oil-for-food programme are unarguable evidence of such a policy.
We have seen the effects on the ground and cannot comprehend how the US
ambassador, James Cunningham, could look into the eyes of his
colleagues
a year ago and say: "We (the US government) are satisfied that the
oil-for-food programme is meeting the needs of the Iraqi people."
Besides the provision of food and medicine, the real issue today is
that
Iraqi oil revenues must be invested in the reconstruction of civilian
infrastructure destroyed in the Gulf war.
Despite the severe inadequacy of the permitted oil revenue to meet the
minimum needs of the Iraqi people, 30 cents (now 25) of each dollar
that
Iraqi oil earned from 1996 to 2000 were diverted by the UN security
council, at the behest of the UK and US governments, to compensate
outsiders for losses allegedly incurred because of Iraq's invasion of
Kuwait. If this money had been made available to Iraqis, it could have
saved many lives.
The uncomfortable truth is that the west is holding the Iraqi people
hostage, in order to secure Saddam Hussein's compliance to
ever-shifting
demands. The UN secretary-general, who would like to be a mediator, has
repeatedly been prevented from taking this role by the US and the UK
governments.
The imprecision of UN resolutions on Iraq - "constructive ambiguity" as
the US and UK define it - is seen by those governments as a useful tool
when dealing with this kind of conflict. The US and UK dismiss
criticism
by pointing out that the Iraqi people are being punished by Baghdad. If
this is true, why do we punish them further?
The most recent report of the UN secretary-general, in October 2001,
says that the US and UK governments' blocking of $4bn of humanitarian
supplies is by far the greatest constraint on the implementation of the
oil-for-food programme. The report says that, in contrast, the Iraqi
government's distribution of humanitarian supplies is fully
satisfactory
(as it was when we headed this programme). The death of some 5-6,000
children a month is mostly due to contaminated water, lack of medicines
and malnutrition. The US and UK governments' delayed clearance of
equipment and materials is responsible for this tragedy, not Baghdad.
The expectation of a US attack on Iraq does not create conditions in
the
UN security council suited to discussions on the future of economic
sanctions. This year's UK-sponsored proposal for "smart sanctions" will
not be retabled. Too many people realize that what looked superficially
like an improvement for civilians is really an attempt to maintain the
bridgeheads of the existing sanctions policy: no foreign investments
and
no rights for the Iraqis to manage their own oil revenues.
The proposal suggested sealing Iraq's borders, strangling the Iraqi
people. In the present political climate, a technical extension of the
current terms is considered the most expedient step by Washington. That
this condemns more Iraqis to death and destitution is shrugged off as
unavoidable.
What we describe is not conjecture. These are undeniable facts known to
us as two former insiders. We are outraged that the Iraqi people
continue to be made to pay the price for the lucrative arms trade and
power politics. We are reminded of Martin Luther King's words: "A time
has come when silence is betrayal. That time is now."
We want to encourage people everywhere to protest against unscrupulous
policies and against the appalling disinformation put out about Iraq by
those who know better, but are willing to sacrifice people's lives with
false and malicious arguments.
The US Defense Department, and Richard Butler, former head of the UN
arms inspection team in Baghdad, would prefer Iraq to have been behind
the anthrax scare. But they had to recognize that it had its origin
within the US.
British and US intelligence agencies know well that Iraq is
qualitatively disarmed, and they have not forgotten that the outgoing
secretary of defense, William Powell, told incoming President George
Bush in January: "Iraq no longer poses a military threat to its
neighbours". The same message has come from former UN arms inspectors.
But to admit this would be to nail the entire UN policy, as it has been
developed and maintained by the US and UK governments.
We are horrified by the prospects of a new US-led war against Iraq. The
implications of "finishing unfinished business" in Iraq are too serious
for the global community to ignore. We hope that the warnings of
leaders
in the Middle East and all of us who care about human rights are not
ignored by the US government. What is now most urgently needed is an
attack on injustice, not on the Iraqi people.
Hans von Sponeck was UN humanitarian coordinator for Iraq from 1998 to
2000; Denis Halliday held the same post from 1997 to 1998.
djhalliday@msn.com
von_sponeck@yahoo.com
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