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------- Forwarded message follows -------
From:                   "Nan Lin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:                     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                Memo on the Margin - "Trying Diplomacy in Iraq"
Date sent:              Tue, 8 Jan 2002 12:42:33 -0500

January 8, 2002

Trying Diplomacy in Iraq
Memo To: Zbigniew Brzezinski
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: Jon Basil Utley Defends Iraq

What a wise man you are, Dr. Brzezinski! The more I see of you in the
national news media lately, the more I am persuaded you have eclipsed
Henry Kissinger as our most important intellectual on matters of
national security. I saw you and Dr. Kissinger interviewed by Wolf
Blitzer on CNN's Sunday LateEdition and in the discussion on how to
break the deadlock in the Middle East, I think you ran circles around
Henry. But I was really delightfully surprised at your response when a
lady phoned in a question on whether or not there might be some
diplomatic way to deal with Saddam Hussein so we could avoid war with
Iraq. Henry thought it might be a good idea to go to war with him now
as long as we have so many of our troops already stationed there, what
with the Taliban and all. A penny save is a penny earned, I guess.
You, on the other hand, said you thought war could be avoided if
Baghdad were willing to permit intrusion inspections. Now that's at
least a start. If I were the President, I would ask you and a few
other like-minded wise men, like Jack Kemp, to start that ball
rolling, perhaps including a trip to Baghdad. The Republican War Party
would not like the idea, because it prefers war to diplomacy, but it
might save lots of lives -- and lots of pennies, too. I see the
Pentagon is now asking for another $20 billion for its war on
terrorism.

If our Commander-in-Chief decides to take the Kissinger path instead
of yours, at least I hope he would clear up a few points for the
American people on exactly why it is necessary. Here is an article
written last week by Jon Basil Utley, a top-tier foreign-policy
analyst who I'm sure you know. It ran in the English-language internet
edition of Pravda. I'm advised it was the most read article of the
week at the site.

* * * * *

2002_01_03

JON BASIL UTLEY: THE SEVEN BIG LIES ABOUT IRAQ

ONE - It's Saddam's fault that half a million children died since the
economic blockade, Saddam could feed his people if he cared instead of
using his money to buy weapons: "More than one million Iraqis have
died -- 500,000 of them children -- as a direct consequence of
economic sanctions... As many as 12% of the children surveyed in
Baghdad are wasted, 28% stunted and 29% underweight." - UN FAO,
December 1995.

ANSWER - Nearly all oil sales money has been allocated through United
Nations inspectors, subject to nearly 40% reduction for reparations
and UN expenses, and subject to Washington's veto and foot dragging -
usually months for even the simplest decision. Washington has allowed
food and medicine imports, but almost nothing else. For nearly ten
years it blockaded chlorine to sanitize the water and any equipment to
rebuild the electricity grid, sanitation and irrigation facilities.
Even pencils for school children were prohibited. (A New York Times
editorial 2/11/01 reports, "currently American diplomats are holding
up billions of dollars of imports needed for civilian transportation,
electric power generation...and even medical treatment.") Finally the
Europeans rebelled at the cruelty and shamed Washington into allowing
such imports, (New York Times, 12/6/00). Until oil prices increased
last year, sales ran about $4 billion yearly minus about 35% withheld
by the UN that left $2.6 billion divided by 20 million population =
$130 per year per person = 36 cents per day per person for food,
medicine. Obviously, Iraq needed to rebuild its agriculture and
transport infrastructure to feed itself, but this was prevented by
Washington.

Washington blockaded supplies to rebuild Iraq's bombed oil production
and refining facilities for the past ten years, although it went to
war supposedly to assure oil supplies for the world. Iraq is now also
getting substantial monies through sales of smuggled oil, especially
since the price of oil went up and the rest of the world tires of the
American blockade. No doubt some of this goes for weapons purchases.

TWO - If Iraq allowed inspections for WMD (weapons of mass
destruction), Washington would remove the blockade. Iraq must prove
that it has no WMD and that it won't manufacture any in the future.

ANSWER - There's no connection between inspections and sanctions on
Iraq and consequently no incentive for Iraq to comply. Equally, no
nation can "prove" a negative, that it's not doing something.
Biological and chemical weapons can be made, "in a large closet which
is all the space you need to mix deadly chemical weapons....Chemical
and biological weapons are the great equalizers against our atomic
weapons." (Time, "Everyman a Superpower," 11/24/97). Re inspections,
Reuters reported 12/13/99: "The (European) aim was to prevent the
United States and Britain from imposing arms requirements that Iraq
could not meet and thus keeping the sanctions in place for years to
come." And AFP 12/13/99: "French diplomats retorted that by insisting
on full cooperation, the council would give the United States an
excuse to refuse to suspend sanctions on the flimsiest grounds."
Madeleine Albright declared in 1997: "We do not agree with the nations
who argue that if Iraq complies with its obligations concerning
weapons of mass destruction, sanctions should be lifted." Clinton went
one step further when he said, "sanctions will be there until the end
of time, or as long as he [Saddam] lasts." The Bush Administration has
not repudiated these statements. Scott Ritter, former head of the UN
arms inspection team in Iraq, on the NBC "Today" Show, 12/17/98,
explained: "Washington perverted the UN weapons process by using it as
a tool to justify military actions, falsely so....The U.S. was using
the inspection process as a trigger for war."

THREE - Iraq wouldn't let the UN/US monitors inspect possible WMD
production or storage sites. That's why America started bombing.

ANSWER - Iraq did so from 1991 until 1998, but Washington still
wouldn't lift the trade blockade. Scott Ritter, the former UNSCOM
inspector, told CNN on 2/18: "In terms of large_scale weapons of mass
destruction programs, these had been fundamentally destroyed or
dismantled by the weapons inspectors as early as 1996, so by 1998 we
had under control the situation on the ground." Then in 1998,
Washington also demanded access to the Iraqi government's personnel
files, the basis of the its power structure. Saddam saw that U.S.
demands were just always increased with no hope of sanctions being
lifted.

FOUR - It's Iraq's fault that the blockade continues. America has
nothing against Iraq's people, only against its government.

ANSWER - Britain and Washington have introduced a "peace plan"
demanding that Iraq must allow inspections in return for nothing.
Russia and France have introduced a plan (vetoed by Washington)
allowing for immediate lifting of sanctions in return for continued,
ongoing WMD inspections. Washington has already often stated its
policy of no relief from the blockade no matter what Iraq does, as
long as Saddam stays in power. This is typical Washington policy
(denounced by former Pres. Jimmy Carter) of demanding rulers follow
policies to get themselves killed or at least thrown out of power (and
then tried for "war crimes") and then starves the nations' civilians
on and on for years while nothing changes.

FIVE - The United Nations ordered sanctions and Washington is just
enforcing them.

ANSWER - Most nations in the world want them lifted for non_military
goods. It is the U.S. veto that prevents lifting of the sanctions
(UPI, 11/1/00). Imposed in 1990, many nations argue that they were
never intended to last for years and are one of the most brutal
sanction regimes in modern history. The crippling trade embargo is
incompatible with the UN charter as well as UN conventions on human
rights and the rights of the child (BBC News Online, 9/30/00).
Unilaterally attacking Iraq is totally unconstitutional and illegal
under United Nations Charter and Nuremberg Judgements.

SIX - If we don't bomb Iraq, Saddam will use his WMD against us or his
neighbors or Israel.

ANSWER - Saddam is rational. He had these weapons during the First
Gulf War and didn't use them because he feared our threats of
consequences even when his nation was being decimated. Israel has some
200 atomic bombs and can well defend itself. It has already threatened
Iraq with their use if Iraq attacks with WMD. Meanwhile, Washington
arms all Iraq's neighbors (except Iran), and Turkey bombs and invades
Iraq at will.

SEVEN - Saddam gassed his own people.

ANSWER - Didn't our government also do that at Waco? The C2 gas used
by the FBI killed children who couldn't fit into gas masks and then
created an explosive mixture which triggered fire and immolation, (see
super documentary, "Waco," nominated for an Academy Award). Remember
how often Americans were lied to in order to get us into wars. For the
First World War, it was stories that German soldiers ate Belgian
babies. For the Iraq war it was lies about babies being thrown out of
incubators, "testified" to at a Congressional Committee by a "mystery"
witness who later turned out to be the daughter of the Kuwaiti sheik's
ruling family who is Ambassador in Washington. It was all lies. Then
we were told there were aerial photographs of the Iraqi Army massed on
Saudi Arabia's border ready to attack. They were never released; they
apparently were lies too. How do we know we weren't also lied to about
the gassing?

CONCLUSION - Look at the above and think how America is now hated. No
wonder many Arabs engage in suicide missions. The American military is
so unpopular in Saudi Arabia that the government hides our airmen away
in desert bases to keep them out of sight from its citizenry. (A CNN
reporter from Time magazine once said that the dream of glory for many
young Saudis was to die in battle killing Americans - and that's among
Saudis, or "friends"). How the world sees us was reported by The Wall
Street Journal's European edition editor (2/24/98): "What came up most
were charges of American hypocrisy. The U.S. wants to bomb Iraq over
its violations of UN directives, but won't take any action against the
Israelis for theirs (e.g. occupation of part of Lebanon and
settlements in Palestine)."

If Washington showed justice and fairness in its policies, then it
would not be creating sworn and desperate enemies who, in former
Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick's words, "define themselves as being
Enemies of America." The best security for Americans is not to make so
many enemies.

ADDENDUM - (Evidence from Kosovo of similar Washington tactics against
civilians).

The Boston Globe (5/16/99) reported: "In planning the 1991 Persian
Gulf War, U.S. officers found 12 bridges for the movement of Iraqi
troops in and out of Kuwait. U.S. planes bombed those bridges over and
over, with little effect. So they bombed every bridge in Iraq, 160 in
all, about two_thirds of them far from Kuwait. After a while, all
bridges were seen and treated equally. Similarly, now in Belgrade, it
seems, all military agencies are seen and treated as if they were of
equal importance. The Pentagon announced last week that three_quarters
of the targets hit in this air war, 270 out of 380, have been
'strategic targets.' Only 110 have been directly connected to the
soldiers and militias in Kosovo."

* * * * *


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