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Position Paper
June 2001
U.S. Policy Toward Iraq:
Policy Alternatives
Prepared by Phyllis Bennis, Stephen Zunes, and Martha
Honey
(Note: Over the past several months Foreign
Policy In Focus has worked with a coalition of organizations and academics
to lay out a framework for a new, humane, and effective policy toward
Iraq. This consensus document proposes a set of alternative policies in
six specific areas. Twenty-six people participated in drafting this document.
While not all these participants agree with every recommendation, they
do endorse this document as providing a useful basis of a new U.S. policy
toward Iraq. See section titled About
Process and Participants.)
 
iraqStmt.pdf (122
kb)
Current
U.S.-UN policy regarding Iraq has failed and has largely lost credibility.
It is widely viewed internationally as reflecting U.S. (and, to a lesser
degree, British) insistence on maintaining a punitive sanctions-based
approach regardless of the humanitarian impact and it is increasingly
regarded as having failed to bring about either democratic changes in
Iraq or security for the Persian Gulf region. Numerous countries are challenging,
if not directly violating, the sanctions regime, and international support
has largely eroded.
The U.S. is the driving force behind UN policy, since Washington
wields effective veto power over any proposed changes. The U.S. is becoming
increasingly isolated in the world body, with only Great Britain remaining
in support of the American position. There is little question that a change
to a more humane and practical policy by the U.S. would quickly be accepted
by the UN Security Council as a whole.
U.S. policy toward Iraq has also failed to take into account
the consequences of widespread opposition in the Middle Eastacross
the region at the street level and increasingly at the governmental level
as well.
The administration of President George W. Bush has tacitly
acknowledged this failure through Secretary of State Colin Powells
advocacy of smart sanctions. The Bush position is often portrayed
as a major shift toward a more targeted and humane means of enforcing
a sanctions regime against the Iraqi government. However, since the new
formula is based upon ongoing UN Security Council supervision over Iraqs
oil exports and revenues and includes vigorous inspections of any and
all international commerce, it appears designed more to halt the growing
violations of the sanctions regime than to ease the suffering of the Iraqi
people. The Iraqi government has rejected the proposal and there appears
to be little support from foreign governments.
In the U.S., neither the current policy nor the proposed
modifications have much support, but there has been strong opposition
to ending the sanctions, based on charges that doing so would be considered
soft on Saddam Hussein. The result has become a largely politically
driven inertia, with the cost-benefit assessment limited to whether changing
the policy carries a higher or lower domestic political price than maintaining
the current failed policy.
Also of concern are U.S. policies that fall outside the
UN framework, such as the campaign of air strikes and the enforcement
of no-fly zones, which both violate international law and
harm the populations they are supposedly trying to protect, as well as
Washingtons renewed effort to support an armed Iraqi opposition
to the regime of Saddam Hussein.
The following provides a framework and a set of proposed
policy options around six key areas deemed central to U.S. policy toward
Iraq: arms control, economic sanctions, human rights, no-fly zones, the
Iraqi opposition, and depleted uranium.
Arms Control
FRAMEWORK:
The United Nations Special Commission on Iraq (UNSCOM)
was formed to oversee the dismantling of Iraqs potential for the
development of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and their delivery systems.
UNSCOM withdrew in December 1998 on the eve of Operation Desert Fox, an
intense four-day bombing campaign by the U.S. and Great Britain, and Iraq
has not permitted UNSCOMs return. The International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) has continued its inspection of Iraqi nuclear-related facilities,
as it has with other signatories of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
(NPT).
The Iraqi regime amassed significant conventional military
capacity and made serious efforts toward WMD capability before August
1990. The heavy bombing during the Gulf War in 1991 and the December 1998
attacks destroyed much of Iraqs conventional capacity, and UNSCOM
and the IAEA have thoroughly disempowered Iraqs WMD capacity. On
the conventional side, the military remains a power within Iraq but is
strategically weakened relative to surrounding countries. On the WMD side,
the last UNSCOM assessments in 1998 concluded that Iraq was free of nuclear
weapons and missiles, almost free of chemical weapons, and questionable
regarding biological weapons. Most weapons experts agree that the Iraqi
regime probably desires to rebuild its WMD capacity, if that were possible
(in part, because of Israels nuclear arsenal), but that it does
not have access to the materials to do so. Most strategic analysts acknowledge
that Iraq today is neither a threat either to the U.S. nor to Iraqs
neighbors. Reflecting that reality, the current disarmament goal should
be to prevent future rebuilding of the WMD programs rather than attempting
to finalize UNSCOMs accounting of Iraqs entire arsenal. In
short, the focus should be upon qualitative rather than quantitative WMD
disarmament.
Existing U.S. policy, which plays a key role in the development
of UN policy, has undermined actual disarmament progress by maintaining
an all-stick/no-carrot approach to the economic sanctions and by ignoring
the regional and supplier components of arms control. By contrast, a partial
lifting of sanctions in return for partial compliance would have allowed
an incentive for greater Iraqi cooperation and would have avoided the
current stalemate, which has resulted in a sanctions regimes that disproportionately
impacts the civilian population and yet fails to win Iraqi compliance
with demands for international inspections outside the NPT.
Article 14 of UN Security Council (UNSC) Resolution 687
(the sanctions resolution) identifies the goal of establishing in
the Middle East a zone free of weapons of mass destruction and all missiles
to deliver them, and the objective of a global ban on chemical weapons.
But this UN goal, which the U.S. formally endorsed, remains an unfulfilled
ideal in the context of regional Middle East security. As of 2000, 20%
of the $80 billion international arms trade is imported by the six pro-Western
monarchies of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). Rather than working
toward regional arms control, the U.S. remains the largest supplier of
arms of all kinds to this already arms-glutted region.
ALTERNATIVE U.S. POLICY PROPOSALS:
- The U.S. should continue a unilateral ban on arms transfers to Iraq.
- The IAEA and the UN (through the Conference on Disarmament and through
Security Council-appointed inspectors and those drawn from the chemical
weapons treaty organizations) should conduct regular inspections inside
Iraq, along Iraqs borders, andwith the voluntary consent
of the relevant governmentsinside its immediate neighbors (Turkey,
Iran, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Syria). The inspections would be designed
to identify and halt any efforts by Iraq or its neighbors to build new
WMDs or to import material to do so. This would involve the establishment
of an inspection agency modeled after the UN Monitoring, Verification
and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC) and empowered, by agreement from
all governments in the region, with the right to make spot-checks, especially
at border crossings.
- The U.S. should encourage the establishment of a regional security
regime for all eight littoral states of the Persian Gulf (the six GCC
states plus Iran and Iraq) that could include such confidence building
measures as: a regional early warning network, arms control, a regional
cooperation framework comparable to the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, other conflict-prevention protocols, and a regional
open skies policy.
- The U.S. should, as prescribed by Article 14 of UNSC Resolution 687,
initiate negotiations among the major arms supplying nations to stop
all advanced arms transfers to Iraqs neighborsincluding
Turkey, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, and Kuwaitand should
set an example by immediately announcing a moratorium on such arms transfers.
- The U.S. should initiate, or support others initiating, Article 14
negotiations involving all Middle East countries regarding the creation
of a Middle East WMD-free zone covering all WMDs, including Israels
uninspected nuclear arsenal. Arms control, including the elimination
of WMD programs, should also become a priority in the U.S.-led peace
process between Israel and its neighbors.
Economic Sanctions
FRAMEWORK:
Economic sanctions imposed under UNSC Resolution 687 were
ostensibly designed to pressure Iraq to cooperate with UNSCOM in finding
and eliminating Iraqs WMD programs. Although UNSCOM and the IAEA
were in fact able to find and eliminate the vast majority of Iraqs
WMD programs, the sanctions have failed to insure the Iraqi governments
complete cooperation, and, ten years later, there is no indication that
economic sanctions are even slightly effective in advancing disarmament
goals. Meanwhile, innocent Iraqi civilians are suffering as a result.
The economic sanctions imposed on Iraq over the last decade
are the most comprehensive and tightly enforced of any sanctions regime
in recent history. The U.S. position of linking the sanctions to the end
of Saddam Husseins regime has significantly undermined the legitimacy
of the UNs more limited goal of imposing sanctions until the UN
could verify that Iraq had ended its WMD production. Combined with the
devastation caused by the 1991 bombing during Operation Desert Storm,
the sanctions regime has left the Iraqi leadership weakened in military
capacity and in international credibility (though in the Middle East,
the latter is rapidly being reversed). Domestically, however, sanctions
have served to significantly strengthen the regime. This has occurred
because sanctions have: restricted the outside influences, access, and
contacts of ordinary Iraqis; made the population dependent on the government
for the supply of the minimal food and medicine available; and destroyed
Iraqs middle class, traditionally the social group in the forefront
of efforts to promote regime changes in the Arab world.
The sanctions regime itselfmost notably the lack
of access to the massive funds required for infrastructure repair and
replacementis responsible for the deaths of thousands of the most
vulnerable Iraqis, particularly children. Funds generated through gray
and black markets in smuggled oilestimated at up to a half billion
dollars each year in the hands of the Iraqi governmentare not always
made available to the civilian population and, even under the best of
circumstances, would be insufficient to meet a significant fraction of
the domestic needs of Iraqs 23 million people. Official U.S. statements
blaming the Iraqi regime for the humanitarian crisis in the country are
exaggerated, not because the top leadership of the regime makes the well-being
of its citizens its top priority, but because the regime does not have
the financial ability to significantly improve their lot. (It should be
noted, as well, that while staying in power remains the top goal, sustaining
a level of physical well-being for the population as a whole has been
part of Baath Partys political survival strategy since it
came to power.) Although it is true that the regime has callously diverted
much of its own funds away from civilian use and toward political and
military investment, this cannot justify the continuation of an international
sanctions regime that is directly responsible for much of the human suffering.
A full 25% of Iraqs legal oil revenues that go into the UNs
escrow account are diverted by the UN Compensation Commission. This Commission
adjucates claims made by Kuwait and other parties for damages suffered
during Iraqs invasion and occupation. Although the principle of
compensation is a sound one, sending money to a wealthy country like Kuwait
should be secondary to preventing the deaths of innocent children in Iraq.
What is needed to rebuild Iraqs devastated social
fabric is a massive infusion of cash for the multibillion-dollar reconstruction
effort. A sanctions regime that attempts to control a countrys economy
from the outside simply will not provide such funds; the artificial economy
created from such outside control cannot survive. Ironically, the U.S.-backed
economic sanctions have created in Iraq one of the tightest centralized
economic systems of any country in the world.
The black market in Iraq, a virtual inevitability under
any tight sanctions regime, has further distorted the Iraqi economy. Pre-sanctions
Iraq had one of the narrowest wealth-poverty gaps in the region, but the
small sector of black marketeers who have profited enormously from the
sanctions regime now fuel new and continuing social tensions. Among the
Iraqi population, responsibility for economic and social deprivation is
largely blamed on the sanctions; when the sanctions are lifted, extraordinary
pressure is likely to be directed at the Baathist leadership, in
contrast to the current level of passive acquiescence to the regime. In
short, an end to the sanctions regime would likely weaken, not strengthen,
Saddam Husseins rule.
The sanctions are imposed in the name of the UN, but in
fact have little international support. Numerous countries, including
important U.S. allies, are challenging, if not directly violating, the
sanctions, and international legitimacy has long since eroded. There is
little question that once Washington seeks an end to the economic sanctions,
the rest of the UN member states will join in supporting that new stance.
The sanctions currently have and will continue to have
a residual effect on U.S. companies, particularly oil companies, competing
with European and Asian companies for access to the post-sanctions Iraqi
market. The new Bush administration is contending with two competing factions
within the administration regarding Iraqi policy: those who oppose sanctions
on free trade grounds and those who still demonize the Iraqi regime.
The current sanctions resolution, UNSC 1284, passed reluctantly
by the Security Council in December 1999, continues the problems of earlier
sanctions resolutions in that it fails to delineate steps toward gradual
compliance and does not acknowledge examples of partial compliance but
rather includes only open-ended demands that cannot clearly be satisfied.
It also does not provide for the actual lifting of economic sanctionsonly
their temporary suspension. Under this scenario, the default position
of reimposed sanctions remains, absent continuing affirmative decisions
by the Security Council, thus preventing Iraq access to the large-scale
(oil company) investments required to rebuild its infrastructure. UNSC
1284s failure should be recognized and new discussions opened for
a post-sanctions UN policy toward Iraq.
ALTERNATIVE U.S. POLICY PROPOSALS:
- There should be a delinking of military sanctions from economic sanctions.
- There should be an immediate end to the diversion of the 25% of oil-for-food
funds that currently goes to the Compensation Commission, until such
time as UNICEF and other international agencies can certify that Iraqs
humanitarian crisis is over.
- There should be an immediate end to the UNs control of contracts
on imports. The UN committee responsible for overseeing military sanctions
should be notified of contracts when those contracts are being sent
for fulfillment. If the U.S. or any other Security Council member has
concerns regarding the possibility of dual use for a particular item,
the item should remain in the contract and fulfillment should be implemented,
but a mechanism should be created to notify UN monitors in Iraq to impose
a higher level of tracking to insure appropriate end-use of the item.
- There should be a lifting of economic sanctions. This must include
the removal of obstacles to the economic rehabilitation of Iraq, including
abolishing the UNSC 661 Sanctions Committee. This body reviews all oil-for-food
contracts and is currently holding up over $2 billion in humanitarian
supplies. Furthermore, the UN escrow account should be closed simultaneously
with Baghdads acceptance of the regional disarmament and inspection
regime described above. Although there are some widespread and legitimate
concerns that the Iraqi regime might use some of these funds to rearm
and to enhance its repressive apparatus, strict monitoring and pressures
on potential suppliers should keep such potential abuses to a minimum.
Human Rights
FRAMEWORK:
Serious violations of political and civil rights have been
a feature of the Iraqi regime since it came to power over twenty years
ago. Unfortunately, U.S. government initiatives to challenge past or present
Iraqi human rights violations have little credibility, because: 1) the
U.S. continued to provide military, diplomatic, and economic support to
Iraq throughout the periods of the worst Iraqi violations (including the
Anfal campaign in the late 1980s) without seriously challenging the Iraqi
regimes repression; 2) the U.S., through its enforcement of UN sanctions
and its continued bombing, is itself responsible for ongoing human rights
violations against the Iraqi people, which have caused far more civilian
deaths than the total directly attributable to the Iraqi regime; and,
3) the current U.S. policy of singling out Iraq for its human rights violations
while supporting other repressive regimes in the region casts doubt on
the sincerity of Washingtons stated concern for universally recognized
human rights.
The goal of any human rights campaign should be a focus
on accountability based on international law and enforced by appropriate
international institutions. The U.S. record on human rights toward Iraq
and toward the Middle East in general has damaged U.S. credibility to
the point where U.S. leadership would likely prove counterproductive.
Similarly, though there are indeed aspects of Iraqs human rights
records that are qualitatively worse than even those of its autocratic
neighbors, failure to simultaneously promote human rights throughout the
entire region will make any efforts to hold the Iraqi regime accountable
for its human rights abuses appear more like a political vendetta than
an effort based upon legitimate moral and legal foundations.
ALTERNATIVE U.S. POLICY PROPOSALS:
- The U.S. should support the dispatch of UN human rights monitors
to Iraq, as mandated by UNSC Resolution 688 to investigate human rights
conditions of Iraqi civilians, including violations by any party of
political, civil, economic, social, or cultural rights. Investigation
should includepolitical prisoners; torture and executions; prohibitions
on free speech, opposition political organizations, etc.; denial of
adequate food, clean water, health care, and education; restrictions
on travel; and, other denials of basic rights. Such investigations,
whether in a tribunal form orotherwise, should be focused on establishing
accountability for violations, regardless ofperpetrator, and should
be an ongoing monitoring program to protect the Iraqi population.
- The U.S. should support international initiatives (tribunals or other
forums) designed to holdindividuals and governments (Iraq, U.S., and
others) accountable for violations of all categories of human rights
in Iraq or occupied Kuwait. A timeline from the mid-1980s to the present
would provide a framework for a tribunal or other accountability process
to investigate the most egregious allegations of violations of international
law and/or UN resolutions. A major focus would be violations of the
laws of war, which would include Iraqs invasion and occupation
of Kuwait, its use of chemical weapons, and its failure to account for
missing prisoners-of-war. Other focuses would include violations of
civil and political rights, which would include the Iraqi regimes
widespread use of arbitrary arrest, torture, extrajudicial killings,
and forced relocation or expulsion from homes, as well as violations
of economic and social rights including the impact of economic sanctions.
- The U.S. should initiate internal investigations to determine the
accountability of U.S. officials responsible for crafting or implementing
policies in Iraq that have violated the human rights of the Iraqi population
and should take steps to prevent such policies from being imposed in
the future. Such an investigation should analyze violations of the laws
of war, which would include attacks against nonmilitary and retreating
Iraqi troops by allied forces during the Gulf War and the ongoing bombing
of Iraq. There should also be a focus on large-scale violations of economic,
social, and cultural rights from the allied bombing andsanctions regime,
including the denial of a civilian populations access to sufficient
food, water,medicine, and education, as well as the destruction of educational,
medical, and cultural institutions.
- All of the above should be part of a shift in U.S. policy toward
making the promotion of human rights a higher priority in Americas
relationship with all countries of the Middle East region.
No-Fly Zones
FRAMEWORK:
The U.S., Great Britain, and France unilaterally initiated
no-fly zones in northern and southern Iraq ostensibly in response
to popular concern over the humanitarian crisis generated by the Iraqi
governments severe repression of the Kurdish and Shia communities
following their March 1991 antigovernment uprisings. The two no-fly zones
were originally designed to protect these areas from Iraqi air strikes
by banning all Iraqi military flights. These no-fly zones have no precedence
in international law and no authorization from the United Nations. France
has subsequently quit the enforcement efforts.
Subsequently, the U.S. and Britain escalated their military
role to include assaults on antiaircraft batteries that fired at allied
aircraft enforcing the zones. This role was escalated still further when
antiaircraft batteries were attacked simply for locking on their radar
screens on allied aircraft, even without firing. Then, the Clinton administration
began attacking radar installations and other military targets within
the no-fly zone, even when they were unrelated to alleged Iraqi threats
against U.S. aircraft. Now, the new Bush administration has escalated
things still further, targeting radar and command-and-control installations
well beyond the no-fly zone.
According to 1994 and 1996 State Department reports, the
creation and military enforcement of no-fly zones have not successfully
protected the Iraqi Kurdish and Shia populations. The fact that
the U.S. and UK routinely allow the Turkish Air Force to conduct bombing
raids against Kurdish targets in the northern no-fly zone indicates that
there is not a genuine concern about protecting this vulnerable minority.
U.S.-UK air strikes have also failed to accurately pinpoint Iraqi military
targets. In 1999 alone, UN officials documented 144 civilians killed in
the U.S.-UK bombing raids. Enforcement of the no-fly zones is increasingly
viewed by many in the U.S. Air Force as both strategically useless and
too costly in terms of personnel and funding.
U.S. military enforcement of no-fly zones is not authorized
by the UN and is therefore a violation of international law. Internationally,
many governments, particularly in Europe and in the Arab world, are strongly
opposed. Most of Washingtons Middle Eastern allies are reluctant
supporters and face growing domestic pressure to end support for the U.S.-UK
flights. Particularly troubling for some gulf states with restive Shia
populations of their own, is the fear that the no-fly zone for the Shia
areas of southern Iraq could lead to the breakup of the country along
sectarian lines.
ALTERNATIVE U.S. POLICY PROPOSALS:
- The U.S. must stop the bombings and end military enforcement of the
no-fly zones.
- The U.S. should call on Turkey to respect its own borders and to keep
its air force and ground troops out of Iraqi territory.
- The U.S. should encourage other third parties (such as the European
Union, Jordan, Qatar, and France) to work through the UN to initiate
discussions with the Iraqi government regarding protection of the Iraqi
Kurdish population and other threatened communities within the no-fly
zones in Iraq. Since the EU is already involved in discussions regarding
Turkeys treatment of its Kurdish minority, broadening those talks
in such a way as to include protecting the rights of Iraqi as well as
Turkish Kurds might be a useful beginning.
Iraqi Opposition
FRAMEWORK:
A centerpiece of U.S. policy, particularly since the new
Bush administration has come to office, has been Washingtons efforts
to bolster political and military opponents of Saddam Hussein, both within
Iraq and in exile. The 1998 Iraq Liberation Act, which called for direct
U.S. support for Iraqi opposition groups, was largely designed to placate
claims that the Clinton administration was soft on Iraq.
The Kurds in Iraq, like those in surrounding states, have
long faced discrimination and sometimes savage repression, especially
after nationalist uprisings. Despite this, Kurdish groups have over the
years been in negotiations with Baghdad over access to various rights
and privileges. The U.S. in recent decades has a record of seducing, then
abandoning, Kurdish leaders and their movements and thus is poorly positioned
to claim the moral high ground of protecting the Iraqi Kurds.
Today the Iraqi Kurdish leadership from both major parties is actively
cooperating with the Iraqi regime regarding the income from oil sold through
Turkey and other matters of mutual interest.
There has also been serious opposition to Saddam Husseins
regime within the countrys Arab majority. However, the Iraqi regime
has largely succeeded in squelching most serious internal opposition,
and the only opposition organization with a functional base of support
inside the country, the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution, is
closely tied to Iran. The exiled opposition figures are seriously divided.
Most have little or no credibility inside Iraq, and a large component
represent a range of unsavory characters from corrupt bankers to supporters
of the ousted monarchy. The Iraqi National Congress, based in London,
is a coalition of exile groups without a clear political agenda and is
united largely in the search for access to U.S. aid money.
One of the new Bush administrations first actions
was a reenergized embrace of military support for the Iraqi contras,
with some officials going so far as to compare them to the victorious
Nicaraguan contras. Such a policy is fraught with dangers. First, any
democratic forces inside the country risk losing their credibility if
they accept U.S. government money. Second, such a strategy signals a U.S.
commitment to an illegal policy of overthrowing a foreign government.
Top Bush administration officials, including Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld,
and Paul Wolfowitz, have been supporters of the Iraq Liberation Act. Such
a policy antagonizes U.S. allies and is a clear violation of international
and U.S. law, as well as a number of treaty obligations. Third, despite
the greatly reduced power of Saddam Husseins military as a result
of the war, the sanctions, and the inspection regime, the Iraqi government
still has an armed force quite capable of crushing virtually any internal
rebellion. Encouraging armed resistance would simple lead to more killings
and destruction without loosening the regimes grip on power. Indeed,
some top Pentagon officials, including former U.S. Central Command head
General Anthony Zinni, argue that the opposition is simply incapable of
seriously weakening, let alone overthrowing, the Iraqi regime.
ALTERNATIVE U.S. POLICY PROPOSALS:
- There should be no U.S. support for armed Iraqi opposition groups.
Since the 1998 Iraq Liberation Act does not include specific requirements
for implementing its provisions, the White House can and should reverse
its current position of support for the act and announce its intention
to disregard it.
- The U.S. should reassert its commitments to abide by the UN Charter
and other international legal prohibitions against efforts to overthrow
other countries governments.
- U.S. funds should be provided only to Arab League, European Union,
UN, or other multilateral efforts to provide economic and humanitarian
aid to civil society organizations and humanitarian institutions inside
Iraq; Washington should provide no funds to unilaterally selected recipients
or campaigns, including propaganda or political campaigns.
- The best way to protect Kurdish interests would be through a reconciliation
process aimed at establishing a nondiscriminating regional autonomy
agreement with the Iraqi Kurds and guaranteeing that, with the lifting
of sanctions, the regions economic well-being is protected. The
fact that the leaders of both Kurdish parties are currently engaged
in ongoing dialog and negotiations with the Baghdad regime makes such
an effort viable.
Depleted Uranium and Other Health
and Environmental Concerns
FRAMEWORK:
The uncertainty regarding the dangers of depleted uranium
(DU) for U.S. veterans of the Gulf War and their children, and most recently
for European peacekeeping troops exposed to DU weapons in the Balkans,
has made it one of the top domestic consequences of the Gulf War. There
is considerable anecdotal evidence that DU is also responsible for dramatic
growth rates incertain cancers and other health problems among the civilian
population in southern Iraq near the area where allied forces used DU
weapons. Recently revealed Pentagon concerns from 1991-92 about the deleterious
health threats and the likelihood of plutonium contamination from DU ammunition,
warrants a serious, epidemiologically sound study to definitively determine
whether DU has a causal link to leukemia, other cancers, or other aspects
of Gulf War Syndrome.
The fears regarding DU have been magnified by the Pentagons
refusal to initiate such a comprehensive study, its resistance to providing
background information to NATO-member governments concerned about post-Balkans
indications of a link, and its overall lack of concern regarding the health
of the U.S. veterans who fought in the Gulf War. In such an atmosphere,
it has become virtually impossible to dispassionately examine the separate
roles of DU, the fumes from oil fires that spread across Kuwait, the chemical
weapons components that may have been released when U.S. troops destroyed
Iraqi storehouses, and the vaccine cocktail administered to GIs, let alone
the effect of their interactions.
ALTERNATIVE U.S. POLICY PROPOSALS:
- The U.S should support efforts by the UN and other appropriate international
agencies to investigate long-term effects of weapons of mass destruction
and other toxic weapons including depleted uranium, deployed in the
Iraq theatre of conflict since 1980.
- The Pentagon should immediately provide completely open acess to its
research and development findings regarding DU for scientists, veterans'
organizations, journalists, and other interested parties in the United
States, Europe, the Middle East or elsewhere.
- The U.S. should support international efforts to remove sources of
ongoing contamination that may be continuing to harm civilian populations
throughout Iraq and in neighboring countries.
- The Pentagon should undertake a large-scale epidemiological survey
of all the U.S. GIs who served in the gulf region.
- The U.S. should support a moratorium on the production and use of
chemical, biological, and radiological weapons, and should support additional
studies on the long-term effects of these weapons, including DU.
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