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BUSH WHACKING |
Michael Brown: Now even the Tories want to give peace a chance You've got to hand it to Saddam. In one brisk, neat letter to Kofi Annan, he pulled the rug from right under George Bush's feet. There was the American president last week, playing the role of multilateralist, warning the world that Iraq had one last chance, through the UN – to avoid Armageddon. "If the
Iraqi regime wishes peace," he told us all in the General Assembly, "it will immediately
and unconditionally forswear, disclose and remove or destroy all weapons of mass
destruction, long-range missiles and all related And that, of course, is the point.
Saddam would do everything he could to avoid war. President Bush was doing everything
he could to avoid peace. And now the Iraqi regime has put the Americans into a corner. The arms inspectors are welcome back in Iraq.
No conditions. Just as the Americans asked. Be sure, too, that Saddam, that master of the post-agreement conditional clause, will have a few surprises for the UN inspectors when they do turn up in Baghdad. Will the UN boys be allowed to visit the Beast of Baghdad's palaces? Will they be waved through all checkpoints when
they want to visit Tuwaitha or any of the other horror factories in which the Iraqis once cooked up their biological weapons? In other words, George
Bush's latest war has been delayed by more than five months. Saddam, of course, must have his own
worries. Back in 1996, the Iraqis were already accusing the UN inspectorate of working with the Israelis. The United States, it emerged, was using the UN's Baghdad offices to bug Iraq's government communications. And once the inspectors were withdrawn in 1998 and the US and Britain launched "Operation Desert Fox", it turned out that virtually every one of the bombing targets had been visited by UN inspectors over the previous six months. Far from being an
inspectorate, the UN lads – though they didn't all know it – had been acting as forward air
controllers, drawing up an American hit list rather than monitoring compliance with
UN resolutions.
In reality, such a proposal would be both moral and highly ethical, but America's Arab allies would profoundly hope that such monitors are not also dispatched to Riyadh, Cairo, Amman and other centres of gentle interrogation. For Mr Bush's
sudden passion for international adherence to UN Security Council resolutions--
an enthusiasm which will not, of course, extend to Israel's flouting of UN resolutions of equal importance--is in
reality a cynical manoeuvre to provide legitimacy for Washington's planned invasion of Iraq. The tens of thousands of Iraqis
subject to "summary execution, and torture by beating, burning, electric shock, starvation, mutilation and rape" could provide the
evidence for any war crimes prosecution. Indeed, when the Americans Lawyers for the families of the victims are
even now appealing against a Belgian decision not to allow Israel's prime minister, Ariel Sharon--then the defence minister who was
judged "personally responsible" by Israel's commission of inquiry--to be tried for these mass murders. Saddam Hussein's own cynicism – for he could have given UN inspectors free rein years ago – will be matched by Mr Bush's cynicism. Saddam's letter to Mr Annan was a smart move, as contemptuous as it was inevitable. Stand by, then, for an equally contemptible response from President Bush. |
Copyright © Paul J. Balles 2002