|
|
Shaking Hands With the Butcher’ By Paul Harris This article was
originally published in YellowTimes.Org There is a wonderful
photograph floating around the Internet these days. It is not a fake; it is not
doctored; it is real. It shows the smiling face of a much younger Donald
Rumsfeld shaking hands with the Butcher of Baghdad. This photo was taken
December 20, 1983, when Rumsfeld was sent to Iraq as a special envoy of Ronald
Reagan. It has come to light recently as part of a series of documents that have
been declassified and that tell the tale of an obnoxious U.S. policy that was
every bit as indefensible as the present U.S. policy. And during this period
of renewed friendship, it was well known to the U.S. that Saddam Hussein had
invaded Iran and had long-range nuclear aspirations that probably included an
eventual nuclear weapon capability. It was also known that terrorists were being
harbored in Baghdad, that the human rights of Iraqi citizens were being abused,
that Saddam possessed chemical weapons and had probably used them on his own
people as well as on the Iranians. The declassified
documents include a lot of material that reports on two Rumsfeld trips to
Baghdad, on Iraq's use of the chemical weapons, and decision directives signed
by President Reagan that reveal the specific U.S. policies for the region:
preserving oil access, expanding U.S. ability to exert military influence in the
area. They also include a
U.S. cable recording the conversation between Rumsfeld and Saddam on the day
this photo was taken. Rumsfeld apparently told CNN during an interview on
September 21, 2002 that he had cautioned Saddam about the use of chemical
weapons during this meeting but the transcript shows this is not the case. There is also a
National Security Decision Directive dated April 5, 1984, which calls for an
"unambiguous" condemnation of the use of chemical weapons, although it
does not mention Iraq. What it does state, though, is a stress on protecting
Iraq from Iran's "ruthless and inhumane tactics" and ensuring a plan
of action to avert an Iraqi collapse. In 1984, the United
States and Iraq consulted about a resolution proposed to the United Nations by
Iran, in regard to Iraq's chemical weapons. The Iranian resolution was presented
to the Security Council and called for a condemnation of Iraq's use of these
weapons. Iraq conveyed to the United States that it wanted a lower-level
response that did not name any country in regard to the chemical warfare; the
U.S. supported this request. Astoundingly, there is
also a U.S. document that publicly condemns the use of chemical weapons in the
Iraq-Iran war, without naming names. Ayatollah Khomeini had refused to end
hostilities until Saddam Hussein was ejected from power. The written and public
U.S. response was: "The United States finds the present Iranian regime's
intransigent refusal to deviate from its avowed objective of eliminating the
legitimate government of neighboring Iraq to be inconsistent with the accepted
norms of behavior among nations." Well, pardon me. Did I miss the point
where the legitimate government of Iraq became the illegitimate government? Did
I miss the memo that said eliminating governments is acceptable for the United
States but no one else? The United States
claimed to be officially neutral during the Iraq-Iran war and claimed that it
provided arms to neither side. Well, not directly maybe. Arms were shipped to
Iran via Israel and various countries in Europe, Asia, and South America.
Initially, the Iraqis started with a Soviet-supplied arsenal but needed more as
the war raged. By mid-1982, Iraq was on the defensive and the United States
decided that an Iranian victory would not be in U.S. interests. So they
accelerated contact with Baghdad, removed Iraq's name from a State Department
list of nations supporting terrorism, pressured the Export-Import Bank to
provide Iraq with financing and to enhance its credit standing to allow it to
obtain loans from other international financial institutions. The United States
Agriculture Department provided taxpayer guaranteed loans to Iraq for the
purchase of American commodities. Although formal
relations with Iraq were not established until November 1984, the U.S. had begun
several years earlier to provide Iraq with intelligence and military support (in
secret, and contrary to official U.S. neutrality policies) on direct order of
Ronald Reagan. And about this time, the U.S. began to funnel weaponry and
military equipment to Iraq. It came either through intermediary nations or by
deliberately turning a blind eye to the obvious; for instance, in April 1984 the
State Department willingly accepted the declaration of Bell Helicopter Textron
that the helicopters they were selling to Iraq's Ministry of Defense were not in
any way configured for military use. No doubt they were for covering the morning
traffic reports for Radio Baghdad. During the spring of
1984, the U.S. reconsidered its policy of selling nuclear-related equipment and
knowledge to Iraq. The documents reveal the U.S. was certain that even after the
conflict with Iran was ended, Iraq would continue to develop its nuclear program
up to the point of possessing nuclear weapons. Although Iraq resides in a
dangerous part of the world, no one had blinked when Israel stockpiled a large
cache of nuclear weaponry because proliferation was not a priority for Reagan's
administration. Throughout the earlier part of the 1980s, the Reagan White House
had downplayed Pakistan's nuclear program in order to avoid congressionally
mandated sanctions against Pakistan. This was to ensure that the U.S. could
continue to provide massive military assistance to Pakistan in return for its
support of the Afghanis who were fighting the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. What makes this whole
matter so perverted is that the current U.S. administration uses against Iraq
exactly what a former U.S. administration gave to Iraq. Bush and Rumsfeld
describe Iraq in stark, moralistic terms to persuade a skeptical world that a
premeditated and pre-emptive attack on Iraq is just. They claim that this all
arises because Saddam has nasty weapons, although the U.S. administration,
partly with the assistance of Rumsfeld, looked the other way during the time
that Saddam may actually have been using those nasty weapons. In Reagan's days
in office, chemical warfare conducted by a country with which the U.S. wanted to
be friendly was a potential embarrassment but they found a way around that
obstacle. Now, a past history of chemical warfare is enough reason for the Bush
government to wipe away the former position of the United States that the
"objective of eliminating the legitimate government of neighboring Iraq
(is) inconsistent with the accepted norms of behavior among nations." At least now we can all see clearly that the morals of the United States are only those of convenience. |
|