US Takes Custody of Another Wayward Client
by
Jim Lobe
by Jim Lobe
At
last in U.S. military captivity, ousted former Iraqi president Saddam
Hussein will soon mark an important 20th anniversary, the kind of
anniversary that brings with it an appreciation of the ironies of
life, and politics.
His
captor, Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld, might also recall long-forgotten
memories or memories best forgotten of what he was doing exactly
20 years ago.
If
so, he will remember that he was in Baghdad, as a special envoy
from then-president Ronald Reagan, assuring his host that, to quote
the secret National Security Decision Directive (NSDD) that served
as his talking points: the United States would regard "any
major reversal of Iraq's fortunes as a strategic defeat for the
West."
So
began the effective resumption of close relations between Baghdad
and Washington that had been cut off by Iraq during the 1967 Arab-Israeli
War. Within a year, Washington would fully normalize ties with Saddam
and even suggest that the dictator had become a full-fledged "Arab
moderate," ready to make peace with Israel.
Of
course, the reason for this rapprochement nay, avid courtship
was the bad turn that the war between Iraq and Iran had taken
for Baghdad. A victory by Teheran, which seemed imminent, would
pose a major threat to US interests in the Gulf, such as access
to the region's oil.
It
was a question of the lesser of two evils, as explained succinctly
by Howard Teicher, who worked on Iraq as a member of Reagan's National
Security Council (NSC). "You have to understand the geo-strategic
context, which was very different from where are now," he told
the Washington Post earlier this year.
"Realpolitik
dictated that we act to prevent the situation from getting worse."
It
was presumably realpolitik that also persuaded Rumsfeld not to bring
up Iraq's use of chemical weapons with Hussein in their first meeting
Dec. 20, 1983, even though the administration knew about it.
(After
long insisting that he did raise the issue with Hussein, the recent
release of State Department memoranda obtained by the National Security
Archive has forced Rumsfeld to change his story. He did mention
the issue, among many others, when he met with then-foreign minister
Tariq Aziz separately.)
For
the next five years, Washington would quietly ensure that Saddam
got all the military equipment he needed to stave off defeat, even
precursor chemicals that could be used against Iranian soldiers
and Kurdish civilians.
Not
that Washington supported the use of chemical weapons, particularly
against civilians. It was more that the Reagan administration was
very reluctant to condemn their use by Iraq back then.
How
much more of this intimate relationship Saddam will recall when
he gets a public forum is undoubtedly a concern of many current
and past administration figures.
The
situation echoes the worries of former US president George H.W.
Bush over what Panamanian strongman Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega
might say in open court about his long and intimate connections
to US intelligence agencies when he surrendered to the U.S. military
after Washington's invasion of Panama in 1989.
Of
course, Noriega was recruited while he was still in the military
academy, and his rise to power was facilitated tremendously by those
ties.
He
was a paid agent from the beginning, and, while a rogue who did
not hesitate to intimidate and occasionally knock off a few dissidents
to keep things quiet, he was never the mass murderer and serial
invader of his neighbors that Saddam has been.
On
the other hand, Saddam was also a beneficiary of the CIA's help
even if he did not get the kind of sustained attention that Noriega
received and long before Rumsfeld's visit at that.
According
to an investigative report by Richard Sale of United Press International
(UPI) published last April, Saddam's first contacts date back to
1959, when the CIA backed an assassination attempt in which he took
part against then Iraqi prime minister Gen. Abd al-Karim Qasim,
the man who overthrew the western-backed monarchy the year before.
At
the time, Iraq as in 1982 was seen as a key strategic
asset, and Qasim's decision to withdraw from the Baghdad Pact and
subsequently get cozy with Moscow was seen by Washington as a potentially
disastrous setback.
Saddam,
an aspiring young Ba'athist tough, was handled on behalf of the
CIA by a local agent and an Egyptian military attaché, who
set him up in an apartment opposite Qasim's office, according to
Adel Darwish, author of Unholy
Babylon: The Secret History of Saddam's War, in an account
backed up to UPI by U.S. officials.
The
specific hit, however, was botched when Saddam "lost his nerve,"
according to another UPI source.
When
Qasim was finally overthrown in a Ba'ath Party coup whether the
CIA supported it is a matter of dispute, although the party's secretary-general
at the time said, "We came to power on a CIA train"
Saddam was back as head of the party's secret intelligence branch,
and, according to Darwish, was leading execution squads of Iraqi
National Guardsmen who were hunting down and killing suspected communists
included on lists provided by ... the CIA.
In
the early 1970s, then-president Richard Nixon tilted definitively
toward the Shah of Iran as the main protector of US interests in
the Gulf. It was not until 1979, when the Shah was overthrown and
Saddam installed himself as president of Iraq, that Washington once
again began taking an interest in Baghdad's internal affairs, although
no evidence of any link between Washington and Saddam's elevation
has come to light.
Washington's
standoffishness changed when the incoming Reagan administration
realized by late 1981 that Baghdad could lose the war with disastrous
consequences for US interests in the region.
In
early 1982, it removed Iraq from the State Department's list of
state sponsors of terrorism, making Baghdad eligible for billions
of dollars in agricultural credits and sales of "dual-use"
equipment goods, such as chemical precursors, sophisticated
communications equipment and technology that could be useful in
weapons programs, with both civilian and military uses.
As
the Iranians continued to shift the strategic balance, however,
the situation became more urgent. On Nov. 26, 1983, NSDD 114, which
remains classified, was signed by Reagan, even as US intelligence
had learned that Baghdad's forces were using chemical weapons to
stop the Iranian offensive.
Rumsfeld
was soon on his way to Baghdad in a trip that, by 1985, would result
in Washington supplying Saddam with some 1.5 billion dollars worth
of weapons equipment and technology, including items applicable
to Iraq's nuclear or biological-weapons program, such as anthrax
strains and pesticides.
At
the same time, the CIA was tasked to ensure that its former charge
not run short of either weapons or vitally needed intelligence on
the disposition of Iranian forces, a task, according to a 1995 affidavit
by Teicher, that then CIA director William Casey took to with abandon.
Casey,
for example, used a Chilean arms company, Cardoen, to supply Iraq
with cluster bombs that he thought would be particularly effective
against Iranian "human wave" tactics.
In
addition to the credit, equipment and covert military assistance,
Saddam also got diplomatic help from Washington at the United Nations
and elsewhere in fending off condemnations of his use of banned
weapons during the war, as well as efforts in Congress to cut off
US help.
The
CIA was still providing intelligence and other help when Saddam
used poison gas that killed some 5,000 Kurdish noncombatants in
Halabja in March 1988.
The
attack was part of the infamous Anfal campaign, which wiped out
dozens of northern Kurdish villages and that is certain to figure
prominently, along with a number of other particularly egregious
atrocities known to Washington at the time they were committed,
in any eventual trial against the former leader.
All
US support for Iraq ended two and a half years later when Saddam
invaded Kuwait under circumstances that have suggested to some observers
including, perhaps, Saddam himself that Washington
might have encouraged him to do so.
It
is almost certain that at that moment he remembered Rumsfeld's trip,
and it seems likely he would have reflected on it again Saturday.
Rumsfeld, however, might not have been so inclined.
December
16, 2003
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2003 Inter Press Service
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