2000 Press Releases
OP-ED Piece for Tenth Anniversary of Iraq's Invasion of Kuwait by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
August 2, 2000
Ten
years ago today, Saddam Hussein violated international law and betrayed
pledges made to Arab leaders by launching a brutal invasion of Kuwait.
The world bore witness as Iraqi tanks, troops, and gunships carried out
unprovoked aggression against a neighboring Arab nation.
During
the invasion and subsequent occupation, the Iraqi regime perpetrated
systematic atrocities against the Kuwaiti people. Torture, mutilation,
rape and murder were used as deliberate weapons of intimidation and
terror. The Iraqi forces looted Kuwaiti museums, businesses, and homes.
They pillaged its industries, ravaged its environment, and took
thousands of its residents hostage.
The world responded to Saddam Hussein’s invasion with nearly unprecedented unity and resolve.
The
United Nations Security Council voted to impose an embargo on trade
with Iraq. More than twenty nations – including many Arab states --
committed troops or other resources to deter further aggression.
President Bush declared that the occupation of Kuwait must not stand.
For
almost six months, the world explored diplomatic means for resolving
the crisis. The Security Council approved a series of Resolutions
exhorting Iraq to respond to global norms. The Secretary General and
other world leaders urged Saddam Hussein to pull his forces back to
within Iraqi borders. United States Secretary of State James Baker met
with his Iraqi counterpart in a last ditch effort to prevent conflict.
But
Saddam Hussein refused to depart from his menu of bluster and lies --
or from the lands his troops had so brutally and unlawfully occupied.
Given no choice, the international coalition that had been assembled
struck and liberated Kuwait.
The end of the war could have been
the beginning of Iraq’s recovery and reintegration into the family of
nations. All that was required was for Saddam Hussein to meet the
requirements insisted upon by the Security Council. These were designed
not to punish Iraq, but rather to prevent renewed aggression, and to
gain an accounting of the more than 600 Kuwaitis missing after being
abducted by Iraqi forces during the war.
If Baghdad had simply
met these obligations, the UN’s economic sanctions would long ago have
been lifted. Instead, Saddam lied repeatedly to UN weapons inspectors
and sought to conceal and preserve his capacity to build weapons of
mass destruction. As a result, the UN-required process of disclosure,
inspection, and monitoring that should have taken months to establish
instead took years and is still not complete.
This illustrates
the fundamental choice Saddam has had throughout the past decade. He
has always had the option to comply with the UN requirements, cease to
be a military threat to his neighbors, end his people’s isolation, and
enable Iraq to once again become a normal, law-abiding country. But he
has stubbornly refused to follow this path.
Instead, he has
chosen to defy the UN, rebuild his military to the extent he can, and
exploit the suffering of Iraqi civilians in order to gain sympathy for
lifting sanctions.
This is why Saddam so long opposed efforts,
led by the United States, to establish an “oil for food” program to
ease the impact of sanctions upon the Iraqi people. It is why he chose
to squander Iraq’s limited resources on building more than 70 new
palaces for himself and his cronies, rather than on the health and
education of Iraqi children. And it is why he has relentlessly sought
to portray his regime as a victim, instead of admitting that Iraq’s
suffering is the result of his own aggression, lies, and ruthless
ambition.
Saddam still thinks his strategy will succeed. He is
determined to continue crushing all signs of opposition within Iraq. He
is counting on the world community to forget his past use of chemical
weapons, his preparations for launching warheads containing biological
arms, and his efforts to build nuclear bombs.
He is encouraged
by his success in seducing some governments and NGOs to embrace his
disingenuous arguments. He hopes his people’s suffering will worsen, so
the pressure for lifting sanctions will heighten, and the revenues he
needs to rebuild his weapons of mass destruction will once again begin
to flow.
The problem for Saddam is that the facts are not on
his side. The UN sanction have never prohibited or limited the amount
of food or medicine Iraq could import. And the oil for food program has
now been expanded to the point where the Iraqi government says it plans
to export more oil by the end of the year than it did prior to the Gulf
War.
As a result, the availability of food to Iraqi civilians
has risen significantly. And in Northern Iraq, which is subject to
sanctions but not to Saddam’s misguided administrative control, child
mortality rates are lower now than they were a decade ago.
In
addition, the Clinton Administration is devoting additional personnel
to the job of processing sanctions-related export requests at the UN,
so that legitimate goods may be shipped without undue bureaucratic
delay.
Much has changed since August 2, 1990, but there is one
constant, and that is the brutal duplicity of Saddam Hussein. His
victims include his Arab neighbors, Iraqi Kurds and Shiites, political
dissidents, and his own citizens. He wants the world to forget what
happened ten years ago, and to ignore his prevarications in the decade
since, but we must not.
We must honor the memory of those who
died as a result of Saddam’s aggression by vowing not to permit it to
happen again. We must maintain our resolve to lift the siege Saddam has
imposed upon the Iraqi people. And we must strive for the day that will
surely come when we can welcome Iraq’s return as a full participant and
partner in the international community.