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Pastimes : Clown-Free Zone... sorry, no clowns allowed

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To: Raymond Duray who wrote (191935)9/13/2002 10:32:59 PM
From: Les H  Read Replies (3) of 436258
 
I thought your link was crap. Most of his argumentive style consists of changing the subject to another incident or another country. The issue is Iraq's compliance. Iraq was defeated and hostilities ceased according to terms agreed upon. They should provide assurances that they aren't a threat to their neighboring states and to refrain from exacerbating the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Here is a list of the UN resolutions that Iraq has to adhere to.

iraqfoundation.org

It's disingenuous to think that you're going to be able to rely on only sources outside the intelligence services. You need antagonistic sources to do a safety inspection. I don't know that Iraq is any near-term threat, but they need to force the UN to enforce their previous resolutions re: Iraq.

I got tired after refuting the first several points in your link.

(1) re: Iraq's invasion of Kuwait.

Iraq tried to extort $ 10 B from Kuwait prior to the invasion.
See Tariq Aziz's remarks in the interview.

pbs.org

It wasn't the first time. Iraq had previously taken territory from
Kuwait in the 70s.

lcweb2.loc.gov@field(DOCID+iq0023)

You might also check the following web site regarding oil prices.
At the time before mid-1990, oil prices were rising for over a year.
Perhaps, the author meant that Iraq attacked Kuwait for driving prices
down four years earlier.

wtrg.com

The low price point also coincides with the end of the Iran-Iraq war.
Saudi Arabia and Kuwait forced down the price of oil to starve Iran and
Iraq of funds to keep fighting. If anything, the attack by Iraq appears
to be an attempt at retribution against Kuwait and to wipe off the $ 15
billion they owed Kuwait.

2. re: imminent threat to Saudi Arabia

If you read the above interview on frontline, Powell admitted that the
Iraqi buildup didn't appear to be an immediate threat to Saudi Arabia.
I think action was justified to roll back Iraq to its original borders.
Economic sanctions and positioning a large number of foreign troops in
Saudi Arabia wouldn't have worked either. We've seen how little economic
sanctions have done to dislodge Saddam with just 20% of the world's oil
reserves. We've also seen how sensitive the Middle East is to the
stationing of US troops in large numbers.

3. re: Kurdish uprising and appeasement

This isn't particularly relevant to whether Saddam is an external threat.
The Washington Post article "Did Saddam Snooker Schwarzkopf?" covered this
story. Based on misinformation, Bush assumed that Saddam would put down
the rebellion, and then be overthrown in a military coup. Bush should've
assumed that Saddam would carry out a purge of the military after the war.

fas.org

4. re: UN SR 688

The reason it goes ignored is that troops aren't sent in to enforce it.
Subsequent UN or NATO actions since have involved UN troops or peacekeepers
on the ground.

At this point, I got tired of correcting his piece I gave up.
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