DUMMERSTON, Vt. -- It's been 10 years since Iraq
invaded Kuwait. Iraq has paid dearly for
that invasion ever since.
During the 43 days of combat of the Gulf War in
January and February 1991, 80 million tons of
bombs were dropped on Iraq. The U.S. and its allies
destroyed most of Iraq's civil infrastructure
in the process. Between the 1991 war and the nine
years of United Nations economic sanctions
and intermittent bombing by the U.S. and Britain
that followed, as many as two million Iraqis --
about half of them young children -- have died,
while Saddam Hussein stayed in power. The UN
sanctions that followed the Gulf War have been even
deadlier than the war itself. Since 1991, Iraq
has been prevented from the sale of most of its
oil production and from importing a substantial
amount of the food, medical supplies, building materials
and technological assistance it needs to
recover from the wartime destruction. In 1990, diseases
such as dysentery, tuberculosis, cholera
and typhoid were non-existent in Iraq. According
to UNICEF, thousands of cases have been
reported yearly since the UN embargo. Iraq once
had one of the lowest child-mortality rates in the
world. The death rate of children under five today
averages about 5,000 per month. Hospitals
suffer from chronic shortages of medicines and diseases
that are easily preventable or treatable are
flourishing. There's no definitive count of how
many have died from the nine years of the UN
embargo, but estimates range from 500,000 to more
than 1.5 million and that about half have been
children under age five. This suffering has been
rarely mentioned in the news media. The Clinton
and Blair governments are the main reason why the
sanctions still continue. Their general feeling is
that the longer they can keep them in place, the
better. This is in keeping with the long-standing but
unspoken goal of weakening Saddam enough to not
be a threat to his neighbors, but keeping him
strong enough to stay in power to stave off the
fundamentalists. The items for Iraq that the UN
sanctions committee -- which is dominated by the
U.S. and British representatives -- have held up
seem absurd. Heart-lung machines, water pumps, agricultural
supplies, fire-fighting equipment and
even detergent and wheelbarrows are on the "hold"
list of humanitarian supplies because they are
considered "dual use" items that could be turned
into weapons of mass destruction. Equipment for
restoring the telephone and electrical grid and
water treatment plants is also being held up by the
UN. To punish Saddam Hussein, millions of innocent
Iraqis have been condemned to live a nasty,
pre-industrial age existence. When Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright was asked in 1996
whether the deaths of hundreds of thousands of children
was an acceptable price for maintaining
sanctions on Iraq, Albright's response was "we think
the price is worth it." The callousness and
hypocrisy of this attitude is appalling. Saddam
has been portrayed as a diabolical fiend and a threat
to humanity because Iraq is developing nuclear,
chemical and biological weapons. Conveniently
forgotten is the fact that the U.S. still has over
31,000 tons of chemical weapons that it is in no
hurry to destroy and still has more nuclear warheads
than any other nation in the world. Of course,
in U.S. foreign policy, we always reserve the right
to have weapons of mass destruction for
ourselves and our friends, but not our enemies.
Earlier this year, the head of the UN humanitarian
program in Iraq resigned. Hans von Sponeck, a 36-year
UN veteran, told In These Times
magazine that the "oil-for-food" program created
by the UN Security Council is fundamentally
inadequate and has failed to meet its stated objectives.
"The net of empirical evidence is
increasingly dense," von Sponeck said. "We are not
just talking with our hearts, but we are also
talking with our minds. We can back up what we are
saying." Of the $8.2 billion that the UN has
made available in the last three phases of the oil-for-food
program, nearly $1.8 billion has been
placed on hold to prevent the purchase of "dual-use"
items. Von Sponeck said that action has
prevented the repair of water, sanitation and electrical
systems in Iraq, which in turn is contributing
to the needless deaths of thousands of people each
month due to contaminated water and poor
sanitary conditions. Can a civilized nation support
a policy that amounts to a slow-motion genocide
of a nation? The U.S. and British governments evidently
believe so. In the name of punishing a
dictator, they have allowed hundreds of thousands
of innocents to die without the slightest twinge
of remorse. After 10 years, Saddam Hussein still
rules a devastated nation while around 150
children die each day from starvation and disease
due to the economic sanctions meant to punish
him. Clearly, the UN sanctions aren't working and
must be lifted. All that prevents this is the
intransigence of the U.S. and Britain.
Randolph T. Holhut has been a journalist in New
England for more than 20 years. He edited "The
George Seldes Reader" (Barricade Books).