Questions For April Glaspie: No More Illusions about Mideast ‘Opportunities’
(Washington, D.C.): In anticipation of
a Senate Foreign Relations Committee
hearing today with April Glaspie, the
former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq, the
Center for Security Policy urged the
Committee to address the $64 billion
question: How can the
United States avoid repeating in the
post-war Middle East the mistake it so
clearly made in Iraq prior to
Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait?
The Center believes that Amb. Glaspie
has been wrongly assigned exclusive
responsibility for the failed U.S. policy
of coddling Saddam Hussein. In her
regrettable meeting with the Iraqi despot
in July 1990 — in which she allegedly
told him the “United States had no
view of Arab-Arab territorial
disputes” such as his with Kuwait —
as with her Foreign Service career more
generally, she merely exemplified
an attitude toward the Arab world
prevalent in the State Department’s Near
East and South Asia
(NESA) Bureau.
Simply put, the NESA party line holds
that no matter how despotic, how
ruthless or how anti-Western Arab
strongmen may be, there are
“opportunities” for
making common cause with them that will
advance U.S. interests in the region.
While Amb. Glaspie is a
particularly assertive proponent of this
view, Secretary of State Baker and others
in the State Department under this
Administration — and its predecessors —
must share in the blame for translating
it into a policy that wooed Saddam
Hussein with such generous concessions
as:
- removing Iraq from the list of
state-sponsors of terrorism; - approving unwise technology
transfers and commercial credits,
much of which wound up adding to
Iraq’s dangerous military
capabilities; - re-flagging ships to protect
Iraq’s cash flow and fund its war
with Iran; and - resumption of diplomatic
relations at the ambassadorial
level.
In hindsight, it is clear that
this policy approach was seriously
flawed. What is of immense importance,
however, is understanding why it
was flawed — especially insofar
as the United States is now being urged
to repeat such an approach toward other
Arab strongmen.
Accordingly, the Center recommends
that members of the Foreign Relations
Committee pursue the following line of
questioning with Amb. Glaspie and other
Administration officials:
- Amb. Glaspie, you seemed to
believe that an important
“opportunity” existed
to advance U.S. interests by a
forthcoming policy toward Saddam
Hussein. Did you in fact believe
this to be the case and if so,
why? - Obviously, such an
“opportunity” was not
realized. To what do you ascribe
that failure — was it our fault
or Saddam’s? - If you believe that Saddam
Hussein was responsible for this
lost “opportunity,” do
you believe that it was the
result of some change in his
policy or behavior? If so, what
evidence do you have of such a
change? - In fact, is it not true that
fundamentally the policies and
behavior he exhibited in invading
Kuwait were of a piece with his
earlier behavior — brutally
repressive at home and lawlessly
aggressive abroad? - Consequently, would it not be
more accurate to say that we
had been deluded insofar as we
minimized the dangers inherent in
such abiding policies and
behavior and that we ultimately
paid dearly for indulging in such
delusions? - Is it not the case that we
stand in jeopardy of repeating
these mistakes in chasing
will-of-the-wisp
“opportunities” for a
convergence of U.S. interests
with other Arab strongmen —
whose fundamental policies and
behavior are equally unchanged
and reprehensible as those of
Saddam Hussein — for
example Syria’s Hafez el Assad
and the radical leadership of the
Palestine Liberation
Organization? - Should we not view the
concessions now being made to
Assad — for example, acceding to
his conquest of Lebanon,
encouraging billions in foreign
aid to Syria from the Gulf states
and consideration of a permanent
Syrian military presence in Saudi
Arabia — as troublingly akin to
concessions previously and
regrettably made to Saddam? - As a knowledgeable specialist in
Arab affairs, what substantive
difference can you discern
between the ambitions, policies
and behavior of Assad and those
of Saddam Hussein?
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