-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the March 22, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

"SMART SANCTIONS": NEW TACTIC IN U.S. WAR AGAINST IRAQ

By Richard Becker

On March 7, Secretary of State Colin Powell appeared before 
the House International Relations Committee outlining plans 
to step up military aggression against Iraq. Powell called 
for a "three basket" approach: maintaining sanctions, 
enforcing the U.S.-imposed "no-fly zones" and supporting CIA-
backed Iraqi opposition forces.

He also announced a new policy of allowing U.S. planes to 
strike at "facilities or other activities going on in Iraq 
that we believe are inconsistent with our obligations." In 
the past, U.S. air strikes were supposedly limited to "Iraqi 
air defense challenges to U.S. or British planes patrolling 
no-fly zones in Iraq."

There has been a great deal of discussion in recent weeks, 
much of it emanating from Powell himself, about shifting to 
a policy of "smart sanctions" against Iraq. During his trip 
through the Middle East in February, Powell advocated 
"humane, smart sanctions," which he said would "target 
Saddam Hussein, not the Iraqi people."

Iraqi Foreign Minister Mohammad Said al-Sahaf responded by 
asking rhetorically, "If we are now talking of 'smart 
sanctions,' does that mean that the sanctions of the past 10 
and a half years have been stupid ones?"

Since Powell returned from the Middle East, strong 
opposition had been heard from within the Bush 
administration to anything but increased hostility against 
Iraq. The Times of London carried a headline, "Powell out of 
step over sanctions." Powell's March 7 testimony before 
Congress was designed to refute any such notion.

Powell's "smart sanctions" proposals, moreover, were never 
meant as a humanitarian gesture, but rather as a way to 
maintain the deadly blockade of Iraq.

TURN IRAQ INTO 'A BACKWARD AND WEAK STATE'

The UN sanctions, which the U.S. insists on keeping in place 
10 years after the Gulf war, have killed more than 1.5 
million Iraqis. As designed, the blockade has devastated 
Iraq, destroyed much of its infrastructure and civilian 
economy, and set the country back many decades.

On Jan. 9, 1991, then-Secretary of State James Baker had 
said, "Iraq will be turned into a backward and weak state." 
The intense bombing campaign that began a few days later and 
the sanctions that have continued ever since were intended 
to turn Baker's threat into a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Now, much of the world has turned against the sanctions. 
Even some of the most compliant, pro-U.S. regimes in the 
Middle East are opposing sanctions, opening trade and other 
relations with Iraq. Deep anger over the sanctions, and the 
U.S. role in oppressing the Palestinian people, has gripped 
the entire region.

Powell proposes changing the outward form of sanctions by 
"de-linking" economic from military sanctions. At the same 
time, he has made it clear that there is no change in the 
objective: keeping Iraq in a weakened state until its 
present government is overthrown and replaced by one that 
will accept the dictates of Washington.

What Powell wants might be called "sanctions with a human 
face."

Powell told the House committee on March 7: "I think the 
characterization that we are easing up or giving up is quite 
incorrect. The sanctions were starting to fall apart. Saddam 
Hussein and the Iraqi regime had successfully put the burden 
on us as denying the wherewithal for civilians and children 
in Iraq to live and to get the nutrition and health care 
they needed.

"What we've been trying to do for the last six weeks is to 
see how we could stabilize the collapsing situation and find 
some basis of stabilization that would bring the [pro-
sanctions] coalition back together."

Powell later added, "We're also undertaking a fuller review 
of other things that can be done to promote a regime 
change."

'SMART SANCTIONS' = COLONIALISM

Coinciding with Powell's appearance, a liberal think-tank 
called the Fourth Freedom Foundation issued a report on what 
"smart sanctions" might look like. The principal author is 
David Cortright, former executive director of the anti-war 
group SANE/Freeze, now reborn as a consultant to the foreign 
policy makers of U.S. imperialism.

The report notes Powell's call for smart sanctions in its 
preface. "Our aim," say the authors, "is to provide a 
technical study that spells out the meaning of a smart 
sanctions strategy and is helpful to UN policy makers as 
they respond to the dilemmas of sanctions in Iraq."

The report, "Smart Sanctions: Restructuring UN Policy in 
Iraq," outlines the problem as follows: "After more than a 
decade of controversy, the United Nations sanctions regime 
in Iraq faces an unprecedented crisis."

Note that from the authors' point of view it's the policy--
not the people of Iraq--that is confronting a crisis.

"The comprehensive trade embargo, previously one of the 
tightest in history, is unraveling in dramatic fashion," the 
report continues. It outlines several reasons for this, 
including the resumption of civilian air flights to Baghdad, 
an increase in "unauthorized trade," and Syria's new free 
trade zone and reopened oil pipeline from Iraq.

"Despite these dilemmas, the United Nations has an enormous 
stake in preventing the collapse of its policy in Iraq," the 
report adds.

In fact, the vast majority of the UN member states and the 
world's people want the murderous sanctions against Iraq to 
be ended. It is the U.S. ruling class and its political 
servants, including the authors of this study, who are 
committed to "preventing the collapse" of the sanctions.

The study, which according to a number of media reports 
reflects Powell's viewpoint, includes such provisions as:

Revamp the current embargo in favor of a sharpened sanctions 
system aimed at two key targets--the control of financial 
resources generated by the export of Iraqi oil, and the 
prohibition against imports of weapons and dual-use goods;

Maintain strict controls on Iraqi oil revenues and military-
related imports, but permit trade in civilian consumer goods 
to flow freely;

Contract out to commercial companies the responsibility of 
certifying and providing notification of civilian imports 
into Iraq;

* Permit the ordering and contracting of civilian goods on 
an as-required basis rather than in 180-day phases;

* Maintain UN financial controls;

* Continue to channel all Iraqi oil revenues through the UN 
escrow account;

* Contract with an independent multinational oil-brokering 
firm, through which all records and payments for permitted 
oil purchases would pass, to manage the sales of Iraqi oil 
and monitor any illegal surcharge payments;

*Establish a new compensation mechanism to provide economic 
assistance to neighboring states and begin paying Iraq's 
external debt;

* Freeze the personal financial assets of Saddam Hussein and 
his family, of senior Iraqi political and military 
officials, and of those associated with weapons production 
programs;

* Tighten land-based monitoring by establishing at major 
border crossings into Iraq fully-resourced Sanctions 
Assistance Missions, modeled on the UN sanctions experience 
in Yugoslavia;

* Establish a system of electronic tagging of approved dual-
use imports;

* Create a special investigative commission to track down 
and expose sanctions violators;

* Assist member states in establishing effective penalties 
for companies and individuals that violate the ban on 
exporting weapons and dual-use items to Iraq; and

* Require Iraqi-bound cargo flights to submit to UN 
inspection.

"No single element of this smart sanctions package stands 
alone in wielding sufficient coercive clout," the study 
says. "But linked together such controls provide a tightened 
sanctions regime."

THREAT OF MILITARY ESCALATION

The chance of Iraq voluntarily accepting such a plan is 
exactly zero. This proposal is an obvious and outrageous 
plan to reduce Iraq to the status of a permanent colony. And 
since the United States dominates the UN, it is clear who 
the real colonizing power would be.

If such a proposal is formally made through the UN Security 
Council, or if it is raised unilaterally--as was done with 
the "no-fly zones"--by the U.S. and rejected by Iraq, then 
new military action may well follow. Some top Bush 
administration officials, including Secretary of Defense 
Donald Rumsfeld--who really should be called secretary of 
war--and his chief assistant Paul Wolfowitz, have already 
openly called for a U.S. invasion of Iraq.

For the past half-century, a strategic objective of the U.S. 
ruling class has been to secure its unfettered and 
unchallenged domination over the oil-rich Gulf region. The 
"smart sanctions" is just one more tactic aimed at achieving 
that goal. The anti-sanctions movement must unmask this 
poisonous fraud, and renew the demand to unconditionally 
lift the genocidal sanctions against Iraq.

Richard Becker has visited Iraq twice with the Iraq 
Sanctions Challenge project of the International Action Center.

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to 
copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document, but 
changing it is not allowed. For more information contact 
Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011; via e-mail: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] For subscription info send message to: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://www.workers.org)





------------------
This message is sent to you by Workers World News Service.
To subscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To unsubscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Send administrative queries to  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Reply via email to