By Jed Babbin on 3.14.02 @ 12:02AM
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan is again busily trying to provide cover for Saddam Hussein.
I have to admit that I hadn't heard of actress Sandra Bernhard
before she characterized President Bush's performance since 9-11
with those words. She apparently wanted to top Alec Baldwin's
statement that the 2000 election results were as damaging as 9-11.
He said that after the President's brother reminded him of his
promise to leave the country if Dubya were elected. Declamations by
Hollywood libs are quotable, if only to intersperse humor among
serious thoughts voiced by people who actually have the ability to
think. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan doesn't have the excuse of
being dumb. And his actions really are dismal and scary.
Mr. Annan seems to have a talent that I thought only the late
King Hussein of Jordan had: to pick the wrong side in virtually
every dispute. Earlier this week, he called Israeli occupation of
the West Bank and Gaza Strip "illegal." My guess is that he'd agree
with the Gallup Poll taken in nine Muslim countries last month.
Remember? Most of those guys believe that we Americans are
"ruthless, aggressive, conceited, arrogant, easily-provoked and
biased." Aren't you ashamed to be an American? Me neither.
You can blame the guy for trying. Especially when he's trying to
sell you down the river for the second time, and in the same way.
Last week, Mr. Annan announced that there should be no military
action against Iraq. Having delivered himself of that judgment, he
then met with the new Iraqi Foreign Minister to see how to restart
the inspections of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programs.
After a day of promising cooperation with each other, Mr. Annan and
one Naji Sabri -- the newest smiling liar from Saddam's clone farm
-- were apparently unable to agree on nothing more than meeting
again soon. For this we should all be grateful. But we should put
the blocks to more meetings, because things will definitely get
worse. Lots worse.
At the end of the 1991 Gulf War, the cease-fire agreement was
based on terms we imposed to ensure that Iraq wouldn't threaten the
world with weapons of mass destruction. There was to be
unrestricted, no-notice inspections of any place in Iraq for the
purpose of ensuring that Saddam's nuclear, biological and chemical
weapons programs, and his missile programs, were all rendered
harmless. But for years, the Iraqis moved their people and
equipment around, thwarting the inspectors and lying about pretty
much everything. The last time Mr. Annan ventured into the fray was
four years ago. In 1998, the Iraqis had so blatantly refused to
cooperate with the inspectors -- in fact had blocked them from
inspecting a number of sites -- that even the Clinton
administration had to admit there was a real problem. To head off
military action against Saddam, Annan hied himself off to
Baghdad.
"The
Greatest Threat," Ambassador Richard Butler's book about what
happened in Iraq in 1998, and the events that led up to it, tells a
very sad tale of Mr. Annan's actions that helped Iraq escape and
evade inspections. Ambassador Butler was the head of UNSCOM, the
U.N. Special Commission charged with conducting the inspections.
According to Butler's account, Mr. Annan and Mr. Saddam had a
friendly sit-down over a few Havana cigars, and came to an
agreement. Their agreement was set out in a seven-point memorandum,
most of which was eminently ignorable. But there was one part that
gave away the entire store.
The Iraqis had been refusing to let the UNSCOM inspectors enter
eight "presidential palaces" that they claimed were Saddam's
private space. The U.N. resolution on the inspections said Iraq was
required -- not asked, required -- to consent to inspections
anywhere, anytime. In the memorandum, Kofi gave away the right to
inspect these places unless the Iraqis agreed. Shortly after that,
Iraq threw the inspectors out.
Now, in these new meetings, Mr. Annan wants to reestablish the
Iraqi shell game. It is perfectly clear that nothing short of
removing Saddam will stop the Iraqis from pursuing these weapons
programs. Saddam is the only leader of a nation alive today who has
used chemical weapons in war. In the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s,
Iranian troops were attacked with poison gas several times. Saddam
also reportedly used them against Iraqi Kurds a few years
later.
Annan's actions could be understandable were the situation a bit
different. If there were any reason -- far less a good one -- to
believe that the inspectors would be able to go anywhere, anytime,
and report the results to the world, we might just make a go of it.
But there is absolutely no reason to believe this, simply because
Saddam is still in control.
Time is growing short. President Bush reportedly has said that
Saddam must be gone by 2006. We are now helping the Iraqi
opposition and presumably pursuing a number of covert operations.
But as Saddam perceives the threat to him becoming more imminent,
so does the danger from him. He has all the instincts of a cornered
rat, and must be expected to use whatever means at hand to save
himself without waiting for us to take our time in taking him
out.
In 1991, the Iraqis reacted to our attack by firing Scud
missiles at Israel. It was only because we put the heaviest
pressure imaginable on the Israelis, and because the Scuds were
largely ineffective, that Israel didn't counterattack. If it had,
our shaky coalition of Arab allies would almost certainly have
fallen apart. In this go-round, Saddam's missiles are far better,
and they will carry chemical and biological warheads. If those
missiles land in Israel, there is no way we can -- or should --
prevent the Israelis from responding. But we may be able to prevent
Israel from using nuclear weapons. If we can't, all bets are off,
everywhere.
The U.N. is supposed to be in the business of promoting peace.
If Annan's efforts could produce it, that would be one thing. But
promoting anything short of Saddam's removal dilutes support for
what we need to do and will also delay it, giving Saddam more time.
President Bush should send a strong message to Annan saying that we
will oppose any initiative not designed to rid the world of Saddam
Hussein.
topics:
Business, Hollywood, Military, Iraq, Iran, Israel, Nuclear Weapons