1. WHY GO TO WAR WITH IRAQ NOW? When
asked at a Congressional Armed Services Committee hearing about what is
now compelling the US to "take precipitous actions" against Iraq,
Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld said, "What's different? What's different
is 3,000 people were killed." Is there a link to Al Qaeda and the
events of 9/11? So far, the administration has produced no evidence
(see question #5 on links to Al Qaeda).
The administration also
says Iraq every day is getting closer to having nuclear weapons. At a
September 7 news conference, President Bush cited an International
Atomic Energy Agency report as evidence that Hussein is only six months
away from acquiring nuclear weapons. Later that month the IAEA stated
that no such report exists. On October 4, the CIA released a report
stating that Iraq does not possess nuclear weapons or the materials for
making them, but could acquire nuclear weapons by 2010. The report also
says that Iraq's ability to produce and store chemical weapons is
probably less than it was before the Gulf War, but that its ability to
produce biological weapons agents has grown in the last decade.
Emerging
from a meeting of members of the Senate Intelligence Committee with CIA
Director George Tenet, Senator Richard Durbin (D-Ill) said that the
report does not tell the whole story and that some information that
could weaken the Bush administration's case against Iraq remains
classified. According to the Associated Press, Durbin commented, “It is
troubling to have classified information which contradicts statements
made by the administration.”
2. IS SADDAM HUSSEIN A THREAT TO THE UNITED STATES OR OTHER COUNTRIES? Hussein
has never attacked the United States, but has been accused of using
chemical weapons against Kurds within Iraq and against Iran during the
Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s. He launched Scud missiles against Israel
during the 1991 Gulf War. He has not launched attacks against any
nation since.
Most observers believe that the threat is less
than it was in 1991, when Iraq invaded Kuwait. The former head of the
UN inspection team, Scott Ritter, states that 90 to 95 percent of
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction were confirmed destroyed and that
there is no evidence that Iraq retained any of its weapons or capacity
for producing them. Due to 12 years of UN sanctions, Iraq is now an
impoverished country, making a large-scale weapons program far less
feasible, Ritter said.
The current weapons inspectors have found
no evidence of a restarted nuclear weapons program or of biological
weapons. The inspectors did find 12 empty warheads that could be used
for firing chemical weapons and trace amounts of thiodiglycol, which
can be used to make mustard gas. Inpectors destroyed the thiodiglycol.
They also discovered that Iraq possessed ballistic missiles whose range
went beyond prescribed limits. As of February 28, 2003, Iraq had begun
destroying these missiles under supervision by inspectors.
According
to Brookings Institute analyst Michael O'Hanlon, Hussein has not funded
Al Qaeda or other Islamic fundamentalist terrorists that target the US,
but has given money to anti-Israeli terrorists. O'Hanlon said that
Hussein has not passed weapons of mass destruction to those terrorists.
The CIA report released October 4, 2002, says that Hussein has weapons
that can target his neighbors, but none that can reach the US or
Western Europe.
3. WILL WAR WITH IRAQ MAKE US SAFER? Will
we be safer going to war and removing Saddam Hussein from power?
General Brent Scowcroft, who served as national security adviser to
President Bush's father, warned that a war on Iraq could overwhelm US
efforts to defeat global terror groups and risks a "conflagration in
the Middle East."
West Virginia Senator Robert Byrd warned that
an Iraq war could result both in a civil war among Kurdish, Sunni, and
Shiite factions in Iraq and in neighboring states. Faced with his
removal from power and potential death, many observers believe Saddam
Hussein might be pushed into using whatever weapons he may have at his
disposal. Judging by his actions during the Gulf War, if attacked,
Hussein is likely to attack Israel. Israeli leaders have said they
would be less reluctant to retaliate, if attacked, and Israel is known
to possess nuclear weapons.
Osama bin Laden cited US military
presence in Saudi Arabia and support for various Arab regimes in his
call for jihad against the US. A war against Iraq is likely to inflame
anti-American sentiment among Arabs and other Muslims, according to a
number of experts, including Scowcroft. According to the New York
Times, European anti-terrorism experts have found evidence that Islamic
militants have been recruiting hundreds of fellow Muslims to carry out
attacks in the event of a war against Iraq.A full-scale war against
Iraq, ouster of Saddam Hussein, and occupation would allow the US to
eliminate any weapons of mass destruction. Would the world be more
secure? A number of the Iraqi opposition leaders mentioned as members
of a post-Saddam government are accused of playing roles in Iraq's
atrocities. Among them is Nizar al-Khazraji, the top commander of the
Iraqi army from 1980 to 1991, who is currently under investigation by
the Danish government for war crimes. He's accused of carrying out the
1988 poison-gas attacks that killed thousands of Kurds in northern
Iraq. Gen. Mahdi al-Duleimi, who claimed to Newsweek that his proposal
for toppling Saddam has won high marks from the Bush administration, is
accused of carrying out chemical weapons attacks as a general during
the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s.
4. WHAT IS THE NEW BUSH DOCTRINE? On
September 20, President Bush unveiled a new National Security Strategy
that for the first time asserts the US right of “preemption" and
"defensive intervention," even where no “imminent threat” exists. “We
will not hesitate to act alone, if necessary” the strategy declares,
and states that “the best defense is a good offense.” General John
Shalikashvili, in his introduction to the new plan, says that it is a
necessary adjustment to the newly unpredictable world context.
The
new policy has met with criticism from US allies. “The only superpower
wants to make all the rules," said an editorial in the Japanese daily
Asahi Shimbun. Newspapers from Paris to Dublin compared the US stance
to Roman imperialism.
While the strategy document affirms that
“America must stand firmly for the nonnegotiable demands of human
dignity and the rule of law,” the doctrine actually breaks with five
centuries of international law, violates the UN Charter, and threatens
to escalate the level of global conflict, according to a wide range of
legal, military, and public policy experts, including Yale law
professor Bruce Ackerman and General Brent Scowcroft. A preemptive
strike against Iraq would mark the first exercise of the new strategic
policy. READ MORE
5. DOES SADDAM HUSSEIN HAVE LINKS TO AL QAEDA? So
far no evidence of such a link has been produced, although members of
the Bush administration have stated that there are links. According to
a State Department report earlier this year, Hussein has not been
involved in any terrorist plots against the West since his alleged
attempt to assassinate President Bush's father during his 1993 visit to
Kuwait. Hussein's regime is secular, and Muslim fundamentalists
represent a threat to his power.
6.WHAT WOULD WAR LOOK LIKE? Many
analysts say that a second invasion of Iraq will be much more difficult
than the first one. During the 1991 Gulf War, the US military sought
only to expel the Iraqi force from territory it had invaded. Achieving
the goal of "regime change" would likely require intense fighting in
Hussein's home territory of Baghdad.
Fighting in Baghdad,
Iraqi soldiers would blend in with civilians and use them as human
shields, according to Sharif Ali bin Al Hussein, a spokesperson for the
opposition Iraqi National Congress, and British Member of Parliament
George Galloway, who recently met with Hussein. Such guerilla fighting
would make thousands of American deaths likely, as well as high
casualties among Iraqi civilians. On notice that their survival was at
stake, Hussein's military would likely fight bitterly.
In a
Wall Street Journal opinion piece, General Brent Scowcroft, national
security advisor to President Bush senior during the Gulf War,
predicted that an attack on Iraq would likely prompt Hussein to use
whatever weapons of mass destruction he has against Israel, a nuclear
power, which in turn could unleash nuclear weapons on Iraq. Scowcroft
warned that an American invasion of Iraq could create an “Armageddon in
the Middle East.”
7. WHY AREN'T OUR ALLIES STANDING WITH US ON THIS WAR? Britain's
prime minister Tony Blair is the only national leader supporting US
plans for an invasion of Iraq. Blair said “The threat is real,” and
urged action against Hussein. The lonely posture of the US and Britain
stands in sharp contrast to the Gulf War, in which the US was part of a
coalition of allies that provided military and diplomatic support and
80 percent of the funding for the war.
In September 2002, Iraq
acquiesced to calls from many world leaders, including the Bush
administration, for renewed and unfettered UN inspections. Our allies
welcomed this development and urged the US to wait for the outcome of
the inspections. The Bush administration has dismissed the offer and
renewed its calls for invasion.
Political leaders and press
throughout the world have described the US stance as imperialist and a
threat to world stability. US plans for unilateral action against Iraq
“are introducing chaos in international affairs,” said Nelson Mandela.
(See question #4 on Bush doctrine). German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder
has repeatedly said Germany would take no part in an invasion of Iraq.
Many analysts have attributed Schoeder's recent election victory to his
stance on Iraq.
Opposition to a US invasion of Iraq is
widespread among both citizens and governments throughout the world. On
February 15, millions of people gathered in cities around the world to
protest a US war on Iraq in what has been called the largest day of
protest in world history.
Political leaders and press throughout
the world have described the US stance as imperialist and a threat to
world stability. US plans for unilateral action against Iraq “are
introducing chaos in international affairs,” said Nelson Mandela. (See
question #4 on Bush doctrine). France promises to veto any war
resolution in the UN Security Council.
German Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder has repeatedly said Germany would take no part in an
invasion of Iraq. Many analysts have attributed Schoeder's re- election
to his stance on Iraq.
Opposition to a US invasion of Iraq is
widespread among both citizens and governments throughout the world. On
February 15, millions of people gathered in cities around the world to
protest a US war on Iraq in what has been called the largest day of
protest in world history.
New
cost estimates for a war with Iraq leave the Bush Administration's
original estimate of $50-100 billion far behind. A short war with Iraq
could cost the world one percent of its economic output over the next
few years and more than $1 trillion by 2010, Australian researchers
said in a recent report. The compounding effects of rising oil prices,
extra budget spending and economic uncertainty could cut $173 billion
from the world economy in 2003 alone, reported the researchers,
together with Reserve Bank of Australia board member Warwick McKibbin,
and the Center for International Economics executive director, Andrew
Stoeckel. A longer war could more than triple the costs, they said. .
Yale University economist William Nordhaus, focusing on cost to the US
economy, estimates that if the US achieves a quick and smooth victory,
the war's US cost could be as low as $120 billion, but any
complications could bring the total cost to the US economy to as much
as $1.6 trillion. www.truthout.org/docs_02/022103F.htm
Officials
at the Pentagon initially estimated the initial US military costs of a
war with Iraq at $50 billion. The Democratic staff of the House Budget
Committee estimates the war would cost between $48 and $93 billion.
Lawrence Lindsey, Bush's chief economic advisor, told the Wall Street
Journal in mid-September that the US might spend more than $100 billion
to wage a war against Iraq.
The proposed objectives for the war
are the disarmament of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction and regime
change, operations that military experts say would require hundreds of
thousands of U.S. troops on the ground. Assuming US forces prevail, in
the aftermath there would be peace-keeping and nation-building costs,
estimated by Taxpayers for Common Sense as ranging from $10 to $20
billion per year.
Operation Desert Storm, the 1991 war against
Iraq led by US and Allied forces, cost $80 billion (in current US
dollars) with 80 per cent of those costs paid by the Allies. So far
there is no evidence that other nations are willing to share the
financial burden of the current proposed assault on Iraq. In addition
to financial costs, there are of course potentially significant costs
in human life—military and civilian—and severe damage to the
environment. MORE
9. WHAT WOULD WE BE FIGHTING FOR? The
Bush Administration says the Iraq regime is “actively developing
weapons of mass destruction” and needs to be disarmed. Additionally,
President Bush seeks “regime change” in Iraq.
There is an
enormous amount of speculation about other possible causes. Many
American congressional leaders, former US military and civilian
officials, veterans, civic groups, religious organizations and
international policy-makers have suggested alternative motivations for
war. These include access to oil in the region, the expansion of
American power in the Middle East, the perceived financial benefits of
war to US corporate interests, and ties between arms manufacturers and
defense contractors to the Bush Administration, as well as the
well-known links to energy companies.
10. WHAT ALTERNATIVES ARE THERE TO WAR? Inspections: Inspections
have in the past successfully thwarted Iraq's use and development of
weapons of mass destruction. Saddam Hussein has not used biological,
chemical, or nuclear weapons since these inspections were introduced
following the 1991 Gulf War. UN inspectors, led by neutral parties,
offers the best hope for security, according to Scott Ritter, former
head of the UN weapons inspection team. Inspections were resumed in
November 2002, and Chief Inspector Hans Blix reported in January 2003
that Hussein had so far cooperated fairly well, but that a number of
questions remain. Both Blix and Mohamed El Baradei, chief inspections
for nuclear weapons, urged that inspections be given more time.
In
February, France and Germany, with the support of Russia, began
drafting a plan to disarm Iraq without war by deploying UN troops to
Iraq, tripling the number of inspectors, extending the “no-fly zones”
over northern and southern Iraq to include the entire country, and
keeping in place US forces already deployed to the region to force
Baghdad to cooperate. By supporting this plan, US could declare a
victory without war, saving thousands of US and Iraqi lives and
billions of dollars, and promoting world perception of the US as tough
but fair.
As former President Jimmy Carter argued in a January
statement, “The cost of an on-site inspection team would be minuscule
compared to war, Saddam would have no choice except to comply, the
results would be certain, military and civilian casualties would be
avoided, there would be almost unanimous worldwide support, and the
United States could regain its leadership in combating the real threat
of international terrorism."
The Rule of Law: “Great
nations compete in peace instead of prepare for war,” President Bush
said in a speech in June 2002. The Bush administration's new military
strategy emphasizes the danger of rogue states and terrorists, entities
difficult to target with direct military force. However, other methods
exist. In helping found the United Nations, the United States helped
create a framework of international law to prevent aggression and
promote peaceful cooperation among nations.
A number of
international treaties for preventing terrorism, limiting weapons of
mass destruction, and bringing international criminals to justice have
been developed in recent years. These include the International
Criminal Court, the International Convention on the Suppression of the
Financing of Terrorism, the International Convention for the
Suppression of Terrorist Bombing, the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty,
the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, and measures to strengthen the
Biological Weapons Convention. So far the Bush administration has
withdrawn from, refused to sign, or worked actively to undermine
international support for all of these measures. What is needed is for
the United States to build international support for the rule of law.
The US, which is the world's largest exporter of weapons, could also
take the lead in promoting controls on international trade in weapons.
These steps could help eliminate weapons of mass destruction not just
from Iraq but from the entire world.
Promoting Peace: "I
think the United States must be humble," Bush said during a televised
presidential debate prior to the 2000 elections. "We must be proud and
confident of our values, but humble in how we treat nations that are
figuring out how to chart their own course." Many leaders are now
challenging the President to live up to those words. “Our great nation
now has the opportunity to express leadership in the world by forging a
foreign policy that seeks to reconcile and heal the world's divisions,”
said Frank Griswold, presiding bishop of the US Episcopal Church, as he
expressed his church's opposition to unilateral war against Iraq. Rabbi
Michael Lerner proposes a strategy for preventing terrorism that
includes making “… America the leading voice championing an ethos of
generosity and caring for others—leading the world in ecological
responsibility, social justice, open-hearted treatment of minorities,
and rewarding people and corporations for social responsibility.”
These
resources are provided by YES! magazine as part of our mission to
encourage active engagement in creating a more just, sustainable, and
compassionate world.
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