SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Stop the War! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jerry manning who wrote (12741)4/12/2003 7:51:23 PM
From: Ed Huang  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 21614
 
Yes sir, please give proof that the US Government issued clear warnings to Saddam prior to his invasion of Kuwait in 1990(not after the invasion). Your info is appreciated.



To: jerry manning who wrote (12741)4/12/2003 8:01:26 PM
From: Doug R  Respond to of 21614
 
The whole dispute started because Kuwait was slant-drilling. Using equipment bought from National Security Council chief Brent Scowcroft's old company, Kuwait was pumping out some $14-billion worth of oil from underneath Iraqi territory. Even the territory they were drilling from had originally been Iraq's. Slant-drilling is enough to get you shot in Texas, and it's certainly enough to start a war in the Mideast.
Even so, this dispute could have been negotiated. But it's hard to avoid a war when what you're actually doing is trying to provoke a war.
The most famous example of that is the meeting between Saddam and the US Ambassador to Iraq, April Glaspie, five days before Iraq invaded Kuwait. As CIA satellite photos showed an Iraqi invasion force massing on the Kuwaiti border, Glaspie told Hussein that "the US takes no position" on Iraq's dispute with Kuwait.
A few days later, during last-minute negotiations, Kuwait's foreign minister said: "We are not going to respond to [Iraq]....If they don't like it, let them occupy our territory....We are going to bring in the Americans." The US reportedly encouraged Kuwait's attitude.
Pitting the two countries against each other was nothing new. Back in 1989, CIA Director William Webster advised Kuwait's security chief to "take advantage of the deteriorating economic situation in Iraq to put pressure on Iraq.'' At the same time, a CIA-linked think tank was advising Saddam to put pressure on the Kuwaitis.
A month earlier, the Bush administration issued a secret directive that called for greater economic cooperation with Iraq. This ultimately resulted in billions of dollars of illegal arms sales to Saddam.
The Gulf War further destabilized the region and made Kuwait more dependent on us. US oil companies can now exert more control over oil prices (and thus boost their profits). The US military got an excuse to build more bases in the region (which Saudi Arabia, for one, didn't want) and the war also helped justify the "need" to continue exorbitant levels of military spending. Finally, it sent a message to Third World leaders about what they could expect if they dared to step out of line.

thirdworldtraveler.com

12.4.90: Saddam Hussein meets with four US senators including Robert Dole. Dole reassures Hussein that the US press is "…spoiled and conceited…" and that Congressional sanctions issues did not reflect Bush administration sentiment. Dole tells Hussein that a Voice of America broadcaster who had been critical of Iraq had been fired. This is a lie.

CIA official Charles Eugene Allen, National Intelligence Officer for Warning, has his biweekly report on developing trouble spots suspended, and his staff at the Pentagon and National Intelligence Council shrunk after his repeated warning that Iraq would invade Kuwait. (Source: New York Times 24.1.91)

5.90: In regard to overproduction of oil, Iraq accuses Kuwait of economic warfare.

6.90: Iraq sends envoys to several Arab states with appeals for new oil quotas. Kuwait refuses and rejects pleas for a summit.



JULY 1990

10th: A Summit takes place, and new quotas are set, but the following day Kuwait announces that it will increase oil production substantially by October. Ali Al Bedah, a Kuwait pro-democracy activist later stated:

"I think if the Americans had not pushed, the Royal Family would never have taken the steps that it did to provoke Saddam."

Dr. Mussama Al Mubarak, Political Science Professor at Kuwait University stated:

"I don’t know what the government was thinking, but it adopted an extremely hard line, which makes me think that the decisions were not Kuwait’s alone. It is my assumption that, as a matter of course, Kuwait would have consulted on such matters with Saudi Arabia and Britain, as well as the United States."

17th: Saddam publicly accuses the US and Kuwait of waging economic war against Iraq. The next day Iraqi troops begin massing on the Kuwaiti border.

24th: US State Department spokes woman Margaret Tutweiller tells US reporters:

"We do not have any defence treaties with Kuwait, and there are no special defence or security commitments to Kuwait."

25th: Saddam Hussein tries to clarify US policy. US Ambassador April Glaspie travels to Iraq and informs him:

"We have no opinion on Arab-Arab conflicts, like your border disagreement with Kuwait. James Baker [US Secretary of State] has directed our official spokesmen to emphasise this instruction."

Norman Schwarzkopf convenes CENTCOM commanders for an exercise which simulates an Iraqi drive into Kuwait.

"When the real thing came, the only way they could tell the real intelligence from the practice intelligence was the little ‘t’ in the corner of the paper…’t’ for training" (Source: New York Daily News 29.9.90)

Schwarzkopf runs elaborate war games pitting 100,000 US troops against Iraqi divisions.

The Emir of Kuwait finally agrees to a mini summit with Iraq on 31st July but sends the Prime Minister in his stead with a written note not to concede anything:

"This is also the opinion of our friends in Egypt, Washington and London. Be unwavering your discussions. We are stronger than they think." (Source: Dr. Michael Emery, Professor of journalism at California State University)

28th + 29th: The CIA predicts that an Iraqi Invasion will take place on the 2nd of August, according to the Senate Intelligence Committee (Source: Philip Agee, Z Magazine, Nov.1990)

30th: King Hussein of Jordan takes a delegation to Kuwait to discuss Iraqi/ Kuwait relations as Iraqi troops mass on the border. Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheik Sabah Ahmed Al-Jaberb al-Sabah tells the Jordanians:

"We are not going to respond […] if they don’t like it, let them occupy our territory […] we are going to bring in the Americans."

31st: The Defence Intelligence Agency detects Iraqi forces moving fuel, water, and ammunition to troops on the border. On the same day, Assistant US Secretary of State John Kelly tells a House Sub-committee hearing:

"We have no defence treaty relationships with any of those countries. We have historically avoided taking a position on border disputes or on internal OPEC deliberations."

Kelly is questioned in the House by Representative Lee Hamilton.

Hamilton: "If Iraq, for example, charged across the border into Kuwait, for whatever reason, what would be our position with regard to the use of US forces? [….] In that circumstance, is it correct to say [….] that we do not have a treaty commitment which would oblige us to engage US forces?

Kelly: "That is correct."

firethistime.org



To: jerry manning who wrote (12741)4/12/2003 8:11:59 PM
From: Doug R  Respond to of 21614
 
1989

In March, the CIA director reported to Congress that Iraq was the largest chemical weapons producer in the world.

The State Dept reported that Iraq continued to develop chemical and biological weapons, as well as new missiles

The Bush administration that year approved dozens of export licenses for sophisticated dual-use equipment to Iraq's weapons ministry.

In October, international banks cut off all loans to Iraq. The Bush administration responded by issuing National Security Directive 26, which mandated closer links with Iraq, and included a $1 billion loan guarantee.

This loan guarantee freed up cash for Iraq to buy and develop WMDs.

This directive was suspended only on August 2, 1990, the day Iraq invaded Kuwait.

One US firm reportedly contacted the Commerce Dept. two times, concerned that its product could be used for nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles. Bush's Commerce Dept requested and received written guarantees from Iraq that the equipment was only for civilian use.

1990

Between July 18 and August 1 (the day before the invasion), the Bush Administration approved $4.8 million in advanced technology sales to Iraq's weapons ministry and to weapons labs that were known to have worked on biological, chemical and nuclear weapons.

So when US ambassador April Glaspie told Saddam the US did not have an official position on disputes between Arab countries, is it any wonder that he thought the US would look the other way when he invaded Kuwait? After this close and very supportive relationship with the Republican administrations throughout the 1980s?



We all know about the Gulf War. But I want to bring in one more piece of history here, from after the Gulf War.

Dick Cheney, before becoming Vice President, was CEO of Halliburton Corp. from 1995 until August 2000, when he retired with a $34 million retirement package.

According to the Financial Times of London, Halliburton in that time period sold $23.8 million of oil industry equipment and services to Iraq, to help rebuild its war-damaged oil production infrastructure. For political reasons, Halliburton used subsidiaries to hide this. [4]

More recently, the Washington Post on June 23, 2001, reported that figure was actually $73 million.

The head of the subsidiary said he is certain Cheney knew about these sales.

Halliburton did more business with Saddam Hussein than any other US company.

Asked about this by journalists by ABC News in August 2000, Cheney lied and said "I had a firm policy that I wouldn't do anything in Iraq, even arrangements that were supposedly legal." [5]

ithaca.edu



To: jerry manning who wrote (12741)4/12/2003 8:21:49 PM
From: Doug R  Respond to of 21614
 
A Discreet Way of Doing Business with Iraq
FT.com site; Nov 3, 2000
BY CAROLA HOYOS, UNITED NATIONS CORRESPONDENT

article source the Financial Times

Millions of dollars of US oil business with Iraq are being channelled discreetly through European and other companies, in a practice that has highlighted the double standards now dominating relations between Baghdad and Washington after a decade of crippling sanctions.

Though legal, leading US oil service companies such as Halliburton, Baker Hughes, Schlumberger, Flowserve, Fisher-Rosemount and others, have used subsidiaries and joint venture companies for this lucrative business, so as to avoid straining relations with Washington and jeopardising their ties with President Saddam Hussein's government in Baghdad.

By submitting their contracts to the UN via mainly French subsidiaries, many of which do little more than lend their name to the transaction, the companies are treated as European, rather than US or Japanese, applicants.

In 1998 the UN passed a resolution allowing Iraq, the world's sixth largest oil producer, to buy spare parts for its dilapidated oil industry.

Since then, only two of the 3,058 contracts for oil industry parts that have been submitted to the UN have officially come from US companies. But the facts behind these figures tell a very different story.

US companies have in fact submitted contracts worth at least $100m to the UN for approval to supply Iraq with oil industry spare parts, through their foreign subsidiaries. Some informed estimates put that value as high as $170m.

They have used, or allowed, associated companies, mainly in France, but also in Belgium, Germany, India, Switzerland, Bahrain, Egypt and the Netherlands, to put the contracts through.

"It is a wonderful example of how ludicrous sanctions have become," says Raad Alkadiri, analyst at the Petroleum Finance Company, a Washington-based consulting firm. "On the one hand you have the
Americans, who do not want to be seen trading with Iraq, despite the fact that it is above board and legitimate, because that would contradict their image of being tough towards Iraq.

On the other hand you have the Iraqis, who on the technocratic level would like to buy the best stuff on the market - in many cases that comes from the US - but politically have to be able to say they are refusing to deal with US companies," he said.

Halliburton, the largest US oil services company, is among a significant number of US companies that have sold oil industry equipment to Iraq since the UN relaxed sanctions two years ago.

From 1995 until August this year Halliburton's chief executive officer was Dick Cheney, US secretary of defence during the Gulf war and now Republican vice-presidential running mate of George W.Bush.

From September 1998 until it sold its stake last February, Halliburton owned 51 per cent of Dresser-Rand. It also owned 49 per cent of Ingersoll-Dresser Pump, until its sale in December 1999. During the
time of the joint ventures, Dresser-Rand and Ingersoll-Dresser Pump submitted more than $23.8m worth of contracts for the sale of oil industry parts and equipment to Iraq. Their combined total amounted to more than any other US company; the vast majority was approved by the sanctions committee.

Mr Cheney is not the only Washington heavyweight to have been affiliated with a company trading with Iraq. John Deutch, a former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, is a member of the board of Schlumberger, the second largest US oil services company.

Schlumberger has submitted at least three contracts for well-logging equipment and geological software via a French subsidiary, Services Petroliers Schlumberger, and through Schlumberger Gulf Services of Bahrain.

Some of the companies, such as General Electric and Dresser-Rand, say that not only political considerations shape their decision to do business through their European offices.

"It is customary for GE to do its business for the Middle East out of its European offices," says Louise Binns, a GE spokeswoman, who
acknowledged that GE does business with Iraq. Other companies the FT contacted admitted doing business with Iraq, either directly or through their subsidiaries.

US companies that use foreign associates can also reduce the risk of their contracts being blocked by France and Russia in retaliation for blocks by the US.

The US is behind nearly all the $289m of contracts delayed by the sanctions committee, which has received $1.7bn of contracts. These delays were ostensibly intended to prevent transfer to Iraq of dual-use technology that could be adapted for military purposes.

"Washington doesn't want to enable the Iraqi economy to recover, therefore it keeps the infrastructure very weak," a UN diplomat said.

However, Iraq is the US's second biggest Middle Eastern oil supplier after Saudi Arabia, making Washington uneasily dependent on Iraq's steady oil flow. Using this influence as an oil provider, as well as the ties it has developed with US business, Iraq has tried to acquire lobbying power in the US.

Despite the US business ties to Iraq, however, fear of official US disapproval of contacts with Baghdad has also prompted one US ally - Japan - to do its trade through third parties.

Tomen, the Japanese company supplying industrial transport equipment to Iraq, submits its contracts through its French subsidiary, Tomen France.

US companies have themselves been among those which have suffered from the US practice of blocking contracts. But they have an edge when it comes to arguing for the approval of their contracts, diplomats say.

By temporarily dropping their guise as European companies, they have managed to reverse the blocks by going directly to US officials, rather than having their case argued by the European mission on behalf
of their subsidiary.

At least two US companies have recently managed to reverse Washington's objections over their contracts. In an exchange of letters between company officials and one UN mission, seen by the FT, it became clear the US companies had resolved its case directly with Washington. Few non-US companies have been able to exercise similar influence.

Copyright © Financial Times group