|
August
12, 2002, 9:00 a.m.
Dont Start the
Second Gulf War
The case against war with Iraq.
By Doug Bandow
President George W. Bush says that he
hasn't made up his mind about "any of our policies in regard to
Iraq," but he obviously has. To not attack after spending months
talking about the need for regime change is inconceivable.
Unfortunately, war is not likely to be the simple and certain procedure
that he and many others seem to think.
Lots of arguments have been offered on
behalf of striking Baghdad that are not reasons at all. For instance,
that Saddam Hussein is an evil man who has brutalized his own people.
Certainly true. But the world is full
of brutal regimes that have murdered their own people. Indeed,
Washington ally Turkey's treatment of its Kurds is scarcely more gentle
than Iraq's Kurdish policies.
Moreover, the U.S. warmly supports the
royal kleptocracy next door in Saudi Arabia, fully as totalitarian, if
not quite as violent, as Saddam's government. Any non-Muslim and most
women would probably prefer living in Iraq.
Also cited is Baghdad's conquest of
Kuwait a dozen years ago. It is a bit late to drag that out as a
justification for invading Iraq and overthrowing Saddam. He is far
weaker today and has remained firmly contained.
Richard Butler, former head of the U.N.
Commission on Iraq, complained to the Senate Foreign Relations that Iraq
had violated international law by tossing out arms inspectors. In fact,
there are often as many reasons to flout as to obey U.N. rules.
Washington shouldn't go to war in some abstract pursuit of
"international law."
Slightly more plausible, at least, is
the argument that creating a democratic system in Iraq would provide a
useful model for the rest of the Mideast. But that presupposes democracy
can be easily planted, and that it can survive once the U.S. departs.
Iraq suffers from significant internal
stresses. Convenient professions of unity in pursuit of democracy from
an opposition once dismissed by Mideast special envoy and retired Gen.
Anthony Zinni as "silk-suited, Rolex-wearing guys in London"
offer little comfort and are likely to last no longer than have similar
promises in Afghanistan.
Also problematic are Kurdish demands
for autonomy and Shiite Muslim resistance to the central government. One
defense official told the Washington Post: "I think it is
almost a certainty that we'd wind up doing a campaign against the Kurds
and Shiites." Wouldn't that be pretty?
There are external threats as well.
Particularly worrisome would be covert and possibly overt action by
Iran, with which Baghdad fought a decade-long war and which might see
intervention against a weakened Iraq as an antidote to serious political
unrest at home.
Indeed, the U.S. backed Baghdad in its
conflict with Iran and decided not to depose Saddam in 1991, in part out
of fear of Iranian aggression throughout the Gulf should Iraq no longer
provide a blocking role. Keeping the Iraqi Humpty Dumpty together after
a war might not be easy.
Moreover, while Americans might see
America's war on Iraq as a war for democracy, most Arabs would likely
see it as a war for Washington. If the U.S. deposes Saddam, but leaves
in place friendly but despotic regimes elsewhere such as Egypt,
Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia few Arabs would take America's democracy
rhetoric seriously. Nor should they. Yet to go to war against everyone,
including presumably Iran, Syria, and maybe others, would have
incalculable consequences.
Saddam's complicity in September 11
would present a good argument for devastating retaliation for an act of
war, but there's no evidence that he was involved. All that exists is a
disputed meeting, which might not have occurred, in the Czech Republic
between hijacker Mohammed Atta and an Iraqi official.
Certainly Saddam shed no tears over the
thousands who died on that tragic day, but he has never been known to
promote groups which he does not control. In contrast to Osama bin
Laden, Saddam Hussein is no Muslim fanatic looking forward to his
heavenly rewards; moreover, he heads a government and nation against
which retaliation is simple.
Probably the best, at least the most
fearsome, argument for overthrowing Saddam is the prospect of Baghdad
developing weapons of mass destruction. Yet if nonproliferation should
be enforced by war, Washington will be very busy in the coming years.
The problem is not just countries like
Iran and North Korea, which seem to have or have had serious interest in
developing atomic weapons. It is China, which could use them in any
conflict with the U.S. over, say, Taiwan. And India, Pakistan, and
Russia, which face unpredictable nationalist and theological currents,
enjoy governments of varying instability, and offer uncertain security
over technical know-how as well as weapons.
Potentially most dangerous is
Pakistan's arsenal. The government of Pervez Musharraf is none too
steady; Islamabad long supported the Taliban and its military and
intelligence forces almost certainly contain al Qaeda sympathizers. It
is easy to imagine nuclear technology falling into terrorist hands.
An Iraqi nuclear capability seems less
frightening in comparison. Saddam would not use them against America,
since to do so would guarantee his incineration. Israel possesses a
similarly overbearing deterrent.
Would Baghdad turn atomic weapons over
to al Qaeda or similarly motivated terrorists? Not likely.
First, it would be extraordinary for
Saddam to give up a technology purchased at such a high price. Second,
Baghdad would be the immediate suspect and likely target of retaliation
should any terrorist deploy nuclear weapons, and Saddam knows this.
Third, Saddam would be risking his own
life. Al Qaeda holds secular Arab dictators in contempt and would not be
above attempting to destroy them as well as America.
Of course, the world would be a better
place without Saddam's dictatorship. But there are a lot of regimes that
should, and eventually will, end up in history's dustbin. That's not a
good reason to initiate war against a state which poses no direct,
ongoing threat.
Especially since war often creates
unpredictable consequences. Without domestic opposition military forces
to do America's dirty work, Washington will have to bear most of the
burden. The task will be more difficult and expensive without European
support and Saudi staging grounds.
If Iraq's forces don't quickly crumble,
the U.S. might find itself involved in urban conflict that will be
costly in human and political terms. If Baghdad possesses any weapons of
mass destruction, Saddam will have an incentive to use them against
America, Israel, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia since Washington would be
dedicated to his overthrow.
Further, the U.S. would be sloshing
gasoline over a combustible political situation in friendly but
undemocratic Arab regimes stretching from North Africa to Southeast
Asia. Israelis and Palestinians are at war, America continues to fight
Taliban and al Qaeda forces in Afghanistan as the pro-western government
teeters on chaos, fundamentalist Muslims rule western Pakistan, and
Muslim extremists are active a dozen other countries. Yet the
administration wants to invade Iraq. Riots in Egypt, a fundamentalist
rising in Pakistan, a spurt of sectarian violence in Indonesia, and who
knows what else could pose a high price for any success in Iraq.
War is a serious business. Making war
on a country which does not threaten the U.S. is particularly serious.
Even if the optimists who think a campaign against Iraq would be easy
are right, and we can only hope they are, war should be a last resort.
As House Majority Leader Richard Armey warned, an unprovoked attack
"would not be consistent with what we have been as a nation or what
we should be as a nation."
There's certainly no hurry to go to
war. Nothing is different today from September 10, 2001, or any time
since Iraq was ousted from Kuwait. Observes Jim Cornette, formerly an
expert in biological warfare with the Air Force: "We've bottled
[Saddam] up for 11 years, so we're doing okay."
There are times when Washington has no
choice but to fight. Iraq is not such a place and now is not such a
time.
Doug Bandow is a senior fellow at the
Cato Institute and a former Special Assistant to President Ronald
Reagan. |