His name is Bert Sacks - a soft-speaking soul ablaze with compassion. I've
written about
his activism before in this space. He sent an email to inform me of indications
that the
United States may be on the verge of launching yet another bomb attack
on Iraq, and about
the passing of a Seattle activist with whom I was acquainted. (Anci Koppel
- God rest your
soul).
Sacks has been to the devastated Iraq several times, breaking federal law
by bringing
medicine and toys to those Iraqi children who have not been killed by the
economic
sanctions. The feds are threatening him and another gentle spirit
named Randall Mullins with a $10,000 and $11,000 fine.
When Anci first learned of this travesty carried out in the name of
American law and order, she said: "If what those guys did is criminal -
bringing food, medicine, and toys to Iraq - then I want to be criminal,
too." Bert reminded me that she was one of the first to join what has
become a regular group of Americans who openly violate the sanctions
in an act of civil disobedience.
Today, Sacks and a delegation of other concerned American citizens are
heading off to Iraq.
Bert sent me 10 reasons why it's important for the good people of this
nation, especially in
an election season, to look at what's going on in Iraq.
"August marks 10 years of sanctions on Iraq. UN sanctions began on Aug.
6, 1990. This
date is also the 55th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima, where an
estimated 140,000
Japanese died.
"According to UNICEF, 500,000 Iraqi children would be alive today if 1990
conditions in Iraq
had continued through 1998. (You check the source list for these facts
at
www.scn.org/ccpi/10reasons.html).
"Rep. Tony Hall, just back from Iraq, wrote 'The prime killer of children
under 5 years of age
- diarrhea diseases - has reached epidemic proportions and they now strike
four times more
often than they did in 1990. Holds on contracts for the water and sanitation
sector are a
prime reason for the increases in sickness and death'."
Of the 18 holds on contracts, he wrote, all but one was placed by the United States.
"Iraq's polluted water is due to the intentional destruction of civilian
infrastructure during the
Gulf War. This was done, according to Col. John Warden of the Pentagon,
for 'long-term
leverage'. People say: 'You didn't recognize that it was going to have
an effect on water or
sewage,' said the (Pentagon) planning officer. 'Well, what were we trying
to do with
(UN-approved economic) sanctions - help out the Iraqi people? No. What
we were doing with
the attacks on infrastructure was to accelerate the effect of sanctions.'
"Bombed infrastructure followed by economic sanctions is a weapon of mass
destruction
(WMD). Foreign Affairs magazine reported that sanctions have killed more
than all 'weapons
of mass destruction' put together. To be a credible threat, a WMD must
be useable.
Imagine a WMD so deadly that it kills 10 Vietnam-veteran walls full of
children - and no one
notices. ABC, CBS and NBC did not give a word of coverage to UNICEF's 1999
report of
500,000 children's deaths.
"As Nobel Peace Laureate Mairead Maguire observed, 'Sanctions are the economic
nuclear
bomb.'
"Respected voices are speaking out and need to be heard. In an editorial
from April, The
Economist wrote: 'If, year in, year out, the UN were systematically killing
Iraqi children by
air strikes, Western governments would declare it intolerable, no matter
how noble the
intention. They should find their existing policy just as unacceptable.'
"A former head of UNSCOM, a former UNSCOM weapons inspector, a former UN
assistant
secretary general, two former top UN aid coordinators in Baghdad, religious
leaders, 70
Congressmen and women, the New England Journal of Medicine...and several
newspapers
have reported on or editorialized against the sanctions policy on Iraq.
"Truthful reporting can stop more deaths in Iraq. Hans von Sponeck, the
last oil-for-food
program coordinator who resigned in protest over sanctions, said '(There
is) disinformation,
distortion, misinterpretation, wherever you look ... but the finest example
of distorted
information is a State Department report... .'
"US/UK policy cannot stand the light of day. It is the job of responsible
media to shed that
light. Tomorrow, the lives of yet another 150 Iraqi kids will be at stake'."
Isn't that reason enough?
Sean Gonsalves is a Cape Cod Times staff writer and syndicated columinist.