America’s
Peacetime Crimes Against Iraq
by
Anthony Gregory
Recently
by Anthony Gregory: Obama
= Bush and Clinton at the Same Time
Invisible
War: The United States and the Iraq Sanctions
by Joy Gordon (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2010), 359
pages
Between the
Gulf War and the Iraq War, the United States enforced a comprehensive
sanctions policy against the Iraqi people, under the auspices of
the United Nations. Whereas the hot conflict of 1990 and the one
that has run from March 2003 to this day have occupied American
attention, the sanctions, beginning even before Operation Desert
Storm and persisting until Shock and Awe, implemented by three presidential
administrations, were largely ignored. Trade restrictions simply
do not elicit the primetime excitement that bombs and aircraft do.
Yet the devastation from depriving a nation of international trade
is easily comparable to that of war.
On the eve
of the Iraq War, moderate voices for peace even insisted
that the sanctions were working in undermining Saddams
regime and preventing it from rearming as though such were
worthy U.S. goals in the first place. But putting that question
aside, the prospect of all-out war struck many Americans as imprudent,
displeasing, perhaps even immoral even as many of those same
Americans defended the sanctions regime and advocated their continuation
in lieu of war.
But more principled
voices for nonintervention, and those aware of the enormity unleashed
by the sanctions, had been protesting them for years. Indeed, as
a practical matter, the sanctions ran counter to defending American
lives on U.S. soil. Osama bin Laden cited the sanctions on Iraq,
among other U.S. policies, as a main motive behind the attacks of
September 11. Perhaps no single example of such policies is more
horrific than the sustained and systematic destruction of Iraqi
economic life which is to say, Iraqi life that took
place in the peacetime era between the two wars. To
this day, thanks to the sanctions as well as the wars, the Iraqis
have never [come] close to restoring the standard of living
that most Iraqis had up to 1990, according to Joy Gordon,
whose new book, Invisible War: The United States and the Iraq
Sanctions, is a powerful and rather comprehensive treatment
of the topic.
War by
other means
The sanctions
began in August 1990, in response to Iraqs invasion of Kuwait.
During the actual Gulf War, 160,000 bombs were dropped on Iraqi
forces and infrastructure. A UN envoy soon found 75 percent of the
water access and 85-90 percent of the electricity infrastructure
destroyed. The bombing and sanctions demolished Iraqs relatively
modern economy, turning the nation into a third-world country, and
preventing it from recovering. Between August 1990 and December
1995, food prices increased by 4,000 to 5,000 times.
The result
of these policies was mass devastation:
The destruction
from the 1991 bombing campaign of electric generating plants,
water purification, and sewage treatment facilities resulted in
cholera and typhoid epidemics. In 1990 the incidence of typhoid
was 11.3 per 100,000 people; by 1994 it was more than 142 per
100,000. In 1989 there were zero cases of cholera per 100,000
people; by 1994 there were 1,344 per 100,000.
Meanwhile,
major surgeries fell to 30 percent of the pre-sanctions level.
Most terribly, child mortality rates skyrocketed. Although there
is disagreement over the data, the majority of the studies
over the course of the sanctions regime strongly suggest that, for
the period from 1990 to 2003 ...at least 500,000 children
died of malnutrition and disease who would most likely have otherwise
lived.
All in all,
according to 1990 testimony before Congress, the sanctions
eliminated 90 percent of Iraqs imports and 97 percent of its
exports. As a result, per capita income went from $3,510 in 1989
to $450 in 1996. Iraqs GDP, which had been $54 billion
in 1979, sank to $10 billion in 1993.
At first,
the goal was to pressure Iraqi forces to retreat from Kuwait. But
sometime after the war began, the goal shifted to one of general
containment and disarmament at least as far as the UN Security
Council was concerned while the U.S. government and Britain
upheld the more ambitious goal of regime change. That was a bipartisan
policy in America. Bill Clinton said in 1993, There is no
difference between my policy and the policy of the [George H.W.
Bush] Administration.... I have no intention of normalizing relations
with [Saddam Hussein]. And as his secretary of State Madeleine
Albright made clear in 1997, We do not agree ... that if Iraq
complies with its obligations concerning weapons of mass destruction,
sanctions should be lifted.
But if the
goal was regime change, the policy was virtually destined to fail.
Gordon writes, If Saddam Hussein was supposed to be motivated
by self-interest, and wanted sanctions to end, then there was
no reason for him to comply with the demands of the Security Council,
since sanctions could not be removed without U.S. agreement and
the United States repeatedly made clear that it would never remove
them while Hussein was in power.
In a chapter
called The Magnitude of Catastrophe, Gordon documents
the extent of that destruction and finds that only the combination
of war, restrictions on imports, central planning of exports, and
a systematic undermining of Iraqi infrastructure could produce the
calamity that occurred. The destructive policies, such as the bombing
of Iraqs water treatment facilities and the UN ban on the
importation of chlorine, worked together. Or take, for example,
the ceiling on oil exports: once the ceiling on oil sales was lifted,
Iraq was blocked from obtaining the equipment necessary to increase
oil production. Or consider the blocked contracts for electrical
equipment: even if Iraq had been allowed to buy the equipment and
chemicals for water and sewage treatment, there was not sufficient
electricity to power the plants.
Gordon writes,
The perversity
and irony of the sanctions regime, imposed under the auspices
of international law, is that it may have done more human damage
than Saddam Husseins persecution of ethnic groups and human
rights combined.
Imperialistic
central planning
How did the
program work? Initially, the UN forbade all member nations to import
any Iraqi goods, and required them to prohibit their nationals from
shipping any goods or sending funds to either Iraq or Kuwait. From
August 1990 to March 1991, that included food. The program soon
came to involve a labyrinth of UN agencies as well as the
establishment of an entirely new agency within the UN. Beginning
in August 1991, Iraq was allowed to export up to $1.6 billion every
six months to trade for food and medicine. All humanitarian goods,
food, and medical equipment would be purchased through the 661
Committee, which came to possess extremely broad responsibilities
for the overall implementation of the sanctions regime. The
661 Committee, made up of 15 delegates, few of whom had expertise
in economic development, emergency relief, oil, or any other of
the committees substantive areas of work, made about
6,000 decisions a year about what would be allowed into Iraq. From
1990 to 1995, that was the sole legal means for Iraq to import
any goods. By 1995, food was so scarce that an Iraqi government
rationing program provided 1,100 calories per person per day.
And before
Iraq could buy any goods, it would have to present a distribution
plan, giving a
detailed
description of the areas of need in each sector.... The plan then
listed every single item to be purchased, how it would be used,
and where it would be used: every piece of equipment for electrical
production, and the specific power plant where it would go; every
chemical or instrument for water treatment, and the specific laboratory
or plant where they would be used; every dose of vaccine for poultry
and cattle, and every syringe, needle and scissors for veterinarians;
and so forth.
Even as Iraqi
imports were controlled in this totalitarian manner, so too was
its principal export, oil. By determining how much oil could be
sold, the United States and UN exercised total domination over the
Iraqi economy. Altogether, war and sanctions meant an 85 percent
decline in oil production. In 1995, the UN set up the Oil-for-Food
Program, in response to problems with and criticisms of the initial
sanctions regime, but the control was still cruel and becoming of
a total state. The Oil-for-Food Programme originally allowed
imports totaling $130 per person per year. Together with existing
imports, which averaged $20 per person per year, total imports came
to $150, well below the level of the poorest Arab countries.
Moreover,
Iraq never handled any of the funds. The proceeds of all oil
sales were deposited in [a UN] account and all payments to vendors
were made from this account. The U.S. meddling with oil prices
through a socialist scheme of retroactive pricing also
interfered greatly with trade with Iraq. The chief economist
at the American Petroleum Institute asked, How can you do
business if you dont know what the price is?
The United
States calling the shots
Although done
through the UN, the sanctions were essentially a U.S. policy. The
United States exercised singular influence over every aspect of
the structure and extent of the sanctions. The Multinational
Interception Force, which enforced the policy, for its entire
history was under the command of U.S. naval officers. The
United States first created the policy by intimidating and bribing
member nations to vote for it offering aid to Colombia, Ethiopia,
and Zaire to vote for the sanctions; making deals with China and
the Soviet Union; and canceling aid to Yemen for refusing to go
along. Then, by exercising its veto power over the implementation
of the sanctions, the United States would put a hold
on various importation contracts blocking agricultural goods,
childrens milk, food-packaging materials, raw cotton, and
glue. The United States even blocked the purchase of salt
on the grounds that it could be used for the salinization of leather,
which contributed to Iraqi industry. These holds were at times
both absurd and devastating: Vehicles in general were targeted
by the United States on the grounds, for example, that a vehicle
that could carry a bulldozer could conceivably be used by the military
to carry a tank.... Sixty percent of transportation contracts on
hold were for accessories such as tires, car batteries, or spare
parts, making it impossible to maintain or repair whatever vehicles
there were.
This dual
use rationale for blocking items that could supposedly be
used for both civilian and military purposes was taken to obscene
levels. The United States blocked a contract for 1,000 water
tankers on the grounds that they were lined with stainless steel
and therefore were WMD dual use. A catering
truck was blocked because it was refrigerated. Propellant
used to make inhalers was disallowed. Vaccines were blocked, because
it was supposed to be possible to turn the weak viruses into biological
weapons. Pesticides were blocked because Iraq might extract
chemical components ... to make chemical weapons. Although
the UN monitored how imports were used, the United States insisted
on blocking such important goods outright. And although the holds
were supposedly for security reasons, the United States was willing
to reverse itself to benefit nations that went along with its sanctions
policy.
All the while,
Congress was content to allow the executive branch to handle the
sanctions, blindly accepting State Department propaganda and only
occasionally speaking up insofar as it concerned the disarmament
of Iraq and regime change. Only a few legislators spoke in behalf
of the devastated Iraqi people. Gordon provides a very good chapter
on congressional dynamics. Of course, even with the Democrats running
both houses of Congress until 1995, for the most part they
had little interest in the humanitarian situation.
The UN itself
is to blame as well, but, notably, most other member nations, the
elected members of the Security Council, and the humanitarian organizations
within the UN tended to protest the policy as framed by the United
States and to an extent Britain. UN agencies produced damning reports
of the humanitarian disaster. UN secretaries general complained.
Starting in 1991, nations such as India, Zimbabwe, Ecuador, Cape
Verde, and Morocco proposed reforms to allow for more humanitarian
aid. In 1999, UN panels issued reports finding that the Oil-for-Food
Program could not be sufficiently reformed to deal with the horror.
In 2000, delegates from more than 20 nations, at this point even
including the United States and Britain, gave presentations urging
reform. But at every turn, the United States either prevented
the reforms from being adopted or undermined their implementation
after they had been adopted.
As for the
well-publicized Oil-for-Food scandal, Gordon has a whole chapter
detailing the facts, showing that the corruption involved was overblown
compared with the destruction and corruption of the sanctions policy
itself. Even without the Oil-for-Food corruption, the Iraqi people
would have been virtually no better off. And even here, the United
States is hardly blameless: By far the greater part of Iraqs
illicit funds came from ongoing trade with Jordan, Turkey, and Syria....
The United States blocked any punitive action by the Council against
either Jordan or Turkey. The amount of misallocated money
involved in the scandal was dwarfed, for example, by the waste and
mismanagement of Iraqi funds by the Coalition Provisional Authority
established by the United States in 2003:
From 1990
to 2003 Iraq averaged about half a billion dollars in illicit
trade annually. By contrast, in fourteen months of occupation,
the U.S.-led occupation authority depleted $18 billion in funds,
a good deal of it on questionable contracts with little justification,
but much of it just an outright giveaway of cash.
None of this
is to defend the Iraqi government, which Gordon writes about extensively
in one chapter. Some people mistakenly place all the blame on Saddams
regime for its corruption and cruelty; the Iraqi state did exacerbate
the problem but not as much as is often believed. The more
serious failings concerned the basic structure and policies of the
Iraqi government itself: the centralization, the reliance on oil
income, reliance on imports and on foreign professionals, and the
reliance on advanced technology. Indeed, the centralized nature
of the Iraqi state and the widespread public dependency upon it
meant that its bankruptcy under the sanctions regime impoverished
the whole country. Gordon credits the government for some of its
rationing and subsidy efforts, but it is telling that one of the
effective and positive things the Iraqi government did was to allow
the expansion of the private sector in health care, to compensate
for the states inability to meet health care needs.
Philosophical,
legal, and political lessons
Gordon finishes
with a couple of chapters exploring the implications for international
law and political and ethical philosophy. Libertarians will not
be overimpressed by the sanctions incompatibility with UN
guarantees such as the right to health care, but they
will find very compelling the discussion of the Geneva Convention,
war crimes, and the like. Gordon finds little legal recourse for
the Iraqi people in the form of prosecution or judicial oversight
of the Security Council. The sanctions, she concludes, probably
do not rise to the level of genocide or a crime
against humanity but it seems to me this does
not constitute a vindication of the sanctions, but rather a failure
of international law. She comes to a rather encouraging libertarian
conclusion: It may be that, in the end, there is a particular
risk posed to humanity by international governance, whose
institutions entail the risk of a new form of global violence.
But there
is so much to learn from this tragic and disgusting episode. Conservatives
need to recognize that totalitarianism and socialistic central planning
are indeed not just an abstract threat under the banner of the Democratic
Party, but are a reality of U.S. policy, especially as it
concerns foreign affairs. They must come to grips with the evil
and systematic destruction and terror that are unleashed in the
name of U.S. national security upon innocent people in other countries.
Liberals should learn that central economic control and restrictions
of free trade contain the seeds for near-genocidal levels of cruelty
and oppression; that allowing international bodies to govern trade
is far from a panacea but is rather a tool of imperialism; that
no political party and no state American, international,
or Iraqi can be trusted not to put political interests above
the human right to engage in economic exchange. The Iraqis have
been brutalized by the U.S. government for 20 years now, and neither
their own government, for all its monopolization of public services,
nor the United Nations, for all its high rhetoric, has done much
other than worsen their misery. The rest of us can learn about the
extent of death and destruction meted out by our own government,
in our own name, and come to see why so many in the world would
hate us and be willing to kill us not for our freedom, but
for Washington, D.C.s, war on the freedom of others. Invisible
War is a very important book about a very important topic, a
topic at risk of being neglected and forgotten, as have so many
other atrocities commited by the U.S. empire.
Reprinted
from The Future of Freedom Foundation.
April
1, 2011
Anthony
Gregory [send him mail]
is a research analyst at the Independent
Institute. He
lives in Oakland, California. See his
webpage for more articles and personal information.
Copyright
© 2011 Future of Freedom Foundation
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