¿Containment or War in Iraq?

A perspective I think should be considered which is under reported and not
well understood by the anti-war crowd.

Live free or die, Michael S.

Deadlier Than War
By Walter Russell Mead

Wednesday, March 12, 2003; Page A21 The Washington Post

Those who still oppose war in Iraq think containment is an alternative -- a
middle way between all-out war and letting Saddam Hussein out of his box.

They are wrong.

Sanctions are inevitably the cornerstone of containment, and in Iraq,
sanctions kill.
In this case, containment is not an alternative to war. Containment is war: a
slow, grinding war in which the only certainty is that hundreds of thousands
of civilians will die.
The Gulf War killed somewhere between 21,000 and 35,000 Iraqis, of whom
between 1,000 and 5,000 were civilians.
Based on Iraqi government figures, UNICEF estimates that containment kills
roughly 5,000 Iraqi babies (children under 5 years of age) every month, or
60,000 per year. Other estimates are lower, but by any reasonable estimate
containment kills about as many people every year as the Gulf War -- and
almost all the victims of containment are civilian, and two-thirds are
children under 5.
Each year of containment is a new Gulf War.
Saddam Hussein is 65; containing him for another 10 years condemns at least
another 360,000 Iraqis to death. Of these, 240,000 will be children under 5.
Those are the low-end estimates. Believe UNICEF and 10 more years kills
600,000 Iraqi babies and altogether almost 1 million Iraqis.
Ever since U.N.-mandated sanctions took effect, Iraqi propaganda has blamed
the United States for deliberately murdering Iraqi babies to further U.S.
foreign policy goals.

Wrong.

The sanctions exist only because Saddam Hussein has refused for 12 years to
honor the terms of a cease-fire he himself signed. In any case, the United
Nations and the United States allow Iraq to sell enough oil each month to
meet the basic needs of Iraqi civilians. Hussein diverts these resources.
Hussein murders the babies.
But containment enables the slaughter. Containment kills.
The slaughter of innocents is the worst cost of containment, but it is not
the only cost of containment.
Containment allows Saddam Hussein to control the political climate of the
Middle East. If it serves his interest to provoke a crisis, he can shoot at
U.S. planes. He can mobilize his troops near Kuwait. He can support
terrorists and destabilize his neighbors. The United States must respond to
these provocations.
Worse, containment forces the United States to keep large conventional forces
in Saudi Arabia and the rest of the region. That costs much more than money.
The existence of al Qaeda, and the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, are part of the
price the United States has paid to contain Saddam Hussein.
The link is clear and direct. Since 1991 the United States has had forces in
Saudi Arabia. Those forces are there for one purpose only: to defend the
kingdom (and its neighbors) from Iraqi attack. If Saddam Hussein had either
fallen from power in 1991 or fulfilled the terms of his cease-fire agreement
and disarmed, U.S. forces would have left Saudi Arabia.
But Iraqi defiance forced the United States to stay, and one consequence was
dire and direct. Osama bin Laden founded al Qaeda because U.S. forces stayed
in Saudi Arabia.
This is the link between Saddam Hussein's defiance of international law and
the events of Sept. 11; it is clear and compelling. No Iraqi violations, no
Sept. 11.

So that is our cost.
And what have we bought?

We've bought the right of a dictator to suppress his own people, disturb the
peace of the region and make the world darker and more dangerous for the
American people.

We've bought the continuing presence of U.S. forces in Saudi Arabia, causing
a profound religious offense to a billion Muslims around the world, and
accelerating the alarming drift of Saudi religious and political leaders
toward ever more extreme forms of anti-Americanism.

What we can't buy is protection from Hussein's development of weapons of mass
destruction. Too many companies and too many states will sell him anything he
wants, and Russia and France will continue to sabotage any inspections and
sanctions regime.

Morally, politically, financially, containing Iraq is one of the costliest
failures in the history of American foreign policy. Containment can be
tweaked -- made a little less murderous, a little less dangerous, a little
less futile -- but the basic equations don't change. Containing Hussein
delivers civilians into the hands of a murderous psychopath, destabilizes the
whole Middle East and foments anti-American terror -- with no end in sight.
This is disaster, not policy.
It is time for a change.

Walter Russell Mead is senior fellow for U.S. foreign policy at the Council
on Foreign Relations and author most recently of "Special Providence:
American Foreign Policy and How It Changed the World."
© 2003 The Washington Post Company

Well, I finally seem to be subscribed to the new Yahoo list! I
thought I was subscribed before, but found out I wasn't. It's nice to be
back. 8)

  Michael, thanks for posting this. I concur entirely. Some things
are worse than open war, even though they draw less opposition from
libertarians due to their less dramatic nature. But we would do well to
remember the alternatives and not simply be "anti-war" without proposing a
better alternative of our own.

Yours in liberty,
        <<< Starchild >>>

At 3:09 PM -0800 3/16/03, tradeprnt@... shared: