Monday, August 19, 2019
The Persian Gulf War Was NOT Iraqs Fault :: essays research papers fc
At 2:00 A.M. (local time) on August second 1990, Saddam Hussein sent the Iraqi military across the border into Kuwait, and sparked a war whose repercussions are still being felt. Today what eventually became known as the Persian Gulf War, featured the largest air operation in history; and a senseless destruction paralleled only to Danzig or Hiroshima. Even though Saddam was the one who physically invaded Kuwait, is balking at United Nations resolutions, and is generally known as a tyrant. He should not be destroyed . The Gulf War was nothing more than the United States attempting to establish, as former President Bush so aptly termed, the ââ¬Å"New Orderâ⬠. The United States supported Saddam Hussein and the Baââ¬â¢ath regime prior to the Kuwaiti invasion. They even gave Saddam a ââ¬Å"Green Lightâ⬠to go ahead and invade. If Saddam were to leave power Iraq would either be plunged into a Lebanon style civil war or face another ruler no better than Saddam himself. The United States is contemplating another invasion of Iraq, however it is having a difficult time of gaining support of the Arab countries. While many people in this country believe Saddam Hussein should be destroyed, that he is a totalitarian dictator and gross human rights violator. He is, in fact, a stabilizing force in his country and the Middle-East, standing up to the only remaining superpower. The consensus currently prevalent in this country is that Saddam Hussein, the leader of Iraq, is a totalitarian dictator, thirsty for blood and prestige, who seems dedicated to disobeying the United States. It would seem Iraq is intent on keeping United Nation inspectors out of its own country, although technically ââ¬Å"Iraq barred only American members of the inspection teams from carrying on their workâ⬠(Nelan 54). The Iraqi ââ¬Å"Dictatorâ⬠seems to have decided he would rather be bombed than inspected. He apparently has no regard for the international community, and yet still wants them to lift sanctions. Also the Iraqi: ââ¬Å"government stopped Ritter from investigating sensitive sites, calling him a spy and complaining that his team was too ââ¬ËAnglo-Americanââ¬â¢... the Iraqis also revealed Ritter was looking for evidence Iraq tested chemical and biological weapons on humans - charge Baghdad called ââ¬Ëa shear lieââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ (Watson 34). Those reports of human testing are obviously false. ââ¬Å"[E]ven Saddams strongest foes, including the C.I.A. seems to doubt them(Watson 34)â⬠. In fact, the only testing done by Iraq was on dogs. There were no inspectors around when the U.S. committed the crimes at Tuskegee, or when hundreds of servicemen were exposed to radiation during the atomic tests in the sixties. The Iraqi ââ¬Å"dictatorâ⬠has stayed in power for some 6 years since sanctions were imposed.
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