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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bob Mohebbi who wrote (524202)1/15/2004 6:24:46 AM
From: tonto  Respond to of 769667
 
This is a good explanation of our sales to Iraq and the misconception by so
many of what we actually sold Iraq.

Where Iraq Purchased Weapons 1973-2002
The purpose of this post is to address one of the many mythical claims about
the United States popularized by some Leftists who would have us believe
that the United States is the cause of most of what is wrong with the world.
The myth under examination here is the claim that the United States played
an important role in arming Saddam Hussein. The data comes from the
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute in the form of a table of
the value of arms imported by Iraq from 1973 through 2002. (PDF format)

Figures are trend-indicator values expressed in US $m. at constant (1990)
prices.

Note: The SIPRI data on arms transfers refer to actual deliveries of major
conventional weapons. To permit comparison between the data on such
deliveries of different weapons and identification of general trends, SIPRI
uses a trend-indicator value. The SIPRI values are therefore only an
indicator of the volume of international arms transfers and not of the
actual financial values of such transfers. Thus they are not comparable to
economic statistics such as gross domestic product or export/import figures.

...

Imported weapons to Iraq (IRQ) in 1973-2002

Country $MM USD 1990 % Total

USSR 25145 57.26
France 5595 12.74
China 5192 11.82
Czechoslovakia 2880 6.56
Poland 1681 3.83
Brazil 724 1.65
Egypt 568 1.29
Romania 524 1.19
Denmark 226 0.51
Libya 200 0.46
USA 200 0.46
South Africa 192 0.44
Austria 190 0.43
Switzerland 151 0.34
Yugoslavia 107 0.24
Germany (FRG) 84 0.19
Italy 84 0.19
UK 79 0.18
Hungary 30 0.07
Spain 29 0.07
East Germany (GDR) 25 0.06
Canada 7 0.02
Jordan 2 0.005
Total 43915 100.0
I made my own percentage calculations. Also, the original PDF document has
the amounts by year but I extracted out only the final total column. Note
that post-1990 sales listed under "USSR" probably refers to Russia or
perhaps Russia plus former USSR states.

Given the US's position as largest arms merchant in the world the fact that
it ties Libya for 9th place with only 0.51% of Iraq's total arms imports
makes it obvious that the United States was not an important source of arms
for Saddam's regime, that the US didn't even seriously try to be, and that
US arms sales gave the US little or no leverage over Saddam.

In a report published in 1998 Anthony Cordesman places an even lower
estimate on US arms exports to Iraq. See page 22 of this PDF which shows the
US selling Iraq $5 million in arms in the late 1980s. Cordesman's report has
many charts which also show just how far Iraq's economy fell during the war
with Iran and afterward.

Iraq seemed to be on the edge of sustained economic development in 1979. It
was a nation of 12.8 million people with a per capita income well in excess
of $10,000 in constant $US 1994. However, its economy was dependent on oil
wealth and construction and infrastructure oriented with massive distortions
in the state and agricultural sector.

By 1986, the worst year of the Iran-Iraq War in economic terms, Iraq's per
capita income was down to $2,174, and its population was up to 16.2 million.

By 1991, the last year for which we have hard data on the Iraqi economy in
market terms, Iraq's per capita income was down to $705, and its population
was up to 17.9 million. Iraq's GNP in constant $1994 had dropped from $48.3
billion in 1984 to $16.3 billion.

Iraq's current per capita income is probably under $1,000. The World Bank
estimates that its population will climb from 21.0 million in 1995 to 24.5
million in 2000, 28.4 million in 2005, and 32.5 million in 2010.

US policy in the 1980s favored a stalemate in the Iran-Iraq war. But the US
role in ensuring that outcome was very small as compared to the roles played
by the USSR, France, China, and other countries in making sure Saddam's
regime was not overrun. What intelligence and other assistance the US
provided to prevent Iranian victory pales in comparison to the roles played
by several other countries.

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