‘I.S.O. JIMMY CARTER’: BEST CASE, SADDAM EXPECTS TO BE REWARDED FOR NOT INVADING KUWAIT; WORST CASE, IT’S WAR
(Washington, D.C.): Saddam Hussein’s threatening moves
of the past few days — and the renewed threat they pose
to Kuwait — should be a cold shower for President
Clinton and his national security team. After all, it
demonstrates in the most graphic way imaginable the
contempt with which the world’s despots now hold America
and its leadership.
Like the other members of what the Center for Security
Policy has called the Radical Entente(1) — folks like
Somalia’s Aideed, Serbia’s Milosevic, Haiti’s Cedras,
North Korea’s Kim dynasty, China’s gerontocracy, and the
Russian imperialists — Saddam has clearly read Mr.
Clinton’s policies: The United States is no
longer seen as a deterrent to aggressive agendas; to the
contrary, its hapless policies are now inviting and
rewarding them.
Clinton’s Chickens Come Home to Roost
Let there be no mistake about it: The combined effect
of presidential disinterest in security policy, the
dismantling of vital defense capabilities and
institutions and the chronic inability to define and
adhere to a principled course of action in international
affairs have left American interests and allies around
the world dangerously exposed.
Saddam Hussein’s latest military moves may signal the
imminent resumption of hostilities with Kuwait and its
allies. Alternatively, they may be a calculated move to
secure the immediate lifting of economic sanctions
against and other concessions to Iraq — a response he
has reason to expect, notwithstanding the Clinton
Administration’s initial bluster, given its own past
practice and that of its diplomatic subcontractor, Jimmy
Carter.
So Learn the Lessons, Already
Either way, a few lessons that should have been
learned long ago are now painfully clear:
- The United States could very well find
itself engaged in two simultaneous regional
conflicts in distant parts of the globe.
Thanks to the draconian cuts in Pentagon
investment, operations and maintenance in recent
years — cuts that go well beyond those
contemplated by the Bottom-Up Review, a plan that
itself would not permit the United States to
fight two wars at the same time — the United
States would be unable to cope with any
appreciable problem in Haiti and mount a
concurrent major operation in the Persian Gulf.
It should go without saying that this situation
also makes transparently obvious why it is absurd
to contemplate further overtaxing the U.S. force
structure by deploying American troops on the
Golan Heights. - The need for America to be able to
project power quickly to distant parts of the
world is only increasing, not waning.
The United States currently lacks the in-theater
capability credibly to attack and defeat a
renewed Iraqi attack against Kuwait. It needs,
for example, to be able to exploit the unique
potential of the B-2 bomber to strike swiftly,
decisively and anywhere in a country like Iraq.
It also needs to have troops in the region
capable of constituting a defense on the
ground — not just at sea. The folly of past
— and continuing — decisions deferring
acquisition of greatly enhanced airlift and
sealift capabilities is painfully obvious. - The importance of timely intelligence and
the will to respond to early warning.
According to press reports, the Iraqi troop
build-up has been occurring for a week. If so,
the fact that the United States has only begun to
respond to this threat is a powerful reminder of:
the continuing need for effective strategic and
tactical intelligence in the post-Cold War world;
the necessity for human sources and methods as
well as sophisticated technical intelligence
means; and the readiness to initiate
long-lead-time actions necessary to respond —
even if that requires doing so on the basis of
preliminary or inconclusive information. - It was a gross strategic error to allow
Saddam Hussein to remain in power at the end of
the Gulf War.(2)
The United States has only itself — and some of
its more short-sighted regional allies — to
blame for making this mistake. No effort should
be spared now to bring Saddam’s reign of terror
to a swift end. - The prospect that Saddam Hussein was
close to getting international sanctions lifted
— and may yet do so — is further evidence of
the recklessness of dismantling the United
States’ limitations on the overseas sale of
strategic technologies and the multilateral
export control regime. There is already
abundant evidence that Saddam Hussein is
successfully rebuilding his military-industrial
complex.(3)
In the absence of a complete policy reversal by
the Clinton Administration, the danger posed by
Iraqi capabilities and those of other tyrants
exploiting vanishing Western strategic export
controls will become infinitely greater. - Last, but hardly least, the United States
can no longer tolerate a situation in which it,
its forces overseas and its friends in the Middle
East (like Israel, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia) and
beyond remain utterly vulnerable to missile
attack. Saddam Hussein did not
effectively exploit that vulnerability the last
time. There is no guarantee that he — or his ilk
— will not do so in the future. In fact, there
is every reason to believe one or more of them will,
with devastating consequences for American
interests and allies.
The Bottom Line
The only way to deal with the present crisis
is to mobilize and deploy significant ground forces to
the Persian Gulf at once. Saddam is believed to
be moving some 26,000 troops toward Kuwait. At least
one-third that number should be dispatched immediately to
the Gulf. Such forces are critical to restoring
deterrence and giving the United States the wherewithal
to defeat Saddam’s forces should it be necessary to do so
once again.
Under no circumstances should the United
States try to “buy off” Saddam — with or
without Jimmy Carter’s meddling. This policy in
North Korea, China, Bosnia and Haiti has already
contributed to the present crisis. It will be infinitely
worse if the U.S. now agrees, in the face of Saddam’s
latest blackmail, to lift sanctions, allowing oil sales,
imports of sensitive technology, etc. The mind reels at
what further outrages such a policy would inspire in the
Persian Gulf and beyond.
– 30 –
1. For more on the Radical
Entente, see the Center for Security Policy’s Decision
Briefs: Will the Senate Give
Russia A Subsidy To Serve As the Radical Entente’s
‘Fed-Ex’ Service? (
href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=93-D_79″>No. 93-D 79, 15 September
1993) and A Good Week for the ‘Radical
Entente’: Outlaw Nations Likely Emboldened By Ineffectual
Western Responses (
href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=93-D_28″>No. 93-D 28, 2 April
1993).
2. In this regard, see the Center
for Security Policy’s recommendations contained in such
products as: ‘Wake-Up Calls’ on Terrorism:
Saddam’s Plot, Clinton’s Response Reveal Shape of Things
To Come (No.
93-D 54, 28 June 1993); Clinton’s New
Mideast ‘Containment’ Strategy: Start By Punishing Saddam
for Trying To Kill George Bush (
href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=93-D_41″>No. 93-D 41, 21 May 1993);
Saddam’s ‘Cheating,’ Who’s ‘Retreating’? End of His
Tyranny is Only Hope for Compliance (
href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=92-D_83″>No. 92-D 83, 27 July
1992); Wanted: Saddam Hussein, Dead or Alive
(No. 91-P 49, 12 June
1991); On To Baghdad! Liberate Iraq
(No. 91-P 16, 27
February 1991) and Don’t Let Saddam Get Away
With Murder (No.
91-P 11, 14 February 1991).
3. See for example an article
entitled “CIA: Iraq Dodges U.N. Monitoring,” in
today’s Washington Times.
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