-Caveat Lector-

http://www.arabnews.com/Article.asp?ID=17942

Rumsfeld key player in Iraq policy shift
By Robert Windrem


State Department cables and court records reveal a wealth of information on
how US foreign policy shifted in the 1980s to help Iraq. Virtually all of
the information is in the words of key participants, including Donald
Rumsfeld, now secretary of defense.

The new information on the policy shift toward Iraq, and Rumsfeld�s role in
it, comes as The New York Times reported Sunday that United States gave Iraq
vital battle-planning help during its war with Iran as part of a secret
program under President Reagan � even though US intelligence agencies knew
the Iraqis would unleash chemical weapons.

The covert program involved more than 60 officers of the Defense
Intelligence Agency who helped Iraq in its eight-year war with Iran by
providing detailed information on Iranian military deployments, tactical
planning for battles, plans for airstrikes and bomb-damage assessments, the
Times said.

The Times said it based its report on comments by senior US military
officers with direct knowledge of the program, most of whom spoke on
condition of anonymity.

Iraq and neighboring Iran waged a vicious war from September 1980 to August
1988. An estimated 1 million people were killed and millions more were
dislocated by the fighting.

Scope of the relationship: It has been known for some time that the United
States provided intelligence assistance to Iraq during the war in the form
of satellite photography to help the Iraqis understand how Iranian forces
were deployed. But the full scope of the program had not been known until
now, the Times said.

The cables and court records obtained by NBC News reveal the scope and
nature of Rumsfeld�s role in shaping US policy.

Although US officials deny that the United States looked the other way while
Iraq used American intelligence data to plan chemical weapons assaults
against Iran in the 1980s, there is evidence in declassified State
Department cables and court records to indicate that even though the United
States was aware that Iraq had used chemical weapons against Iranian troops,
it was ready to help Iraq in thwarting Iranian �human-wave� attacks.

The Iraqis used chemical weapons mainly to halt the Iranian �human wave�
attacks beginning in 1983, although they also used cluster bombs and fuel
air explosives.

Iranian victory top concern: President Reagan and then-Vice President Bush
personally sent advice to Saddam Hussein, both directly and through
intermediaries, a NSC staff member said.

Indeed, the record shows that in 1983, Rumsfeld � then President Reagan�s
special envoy to the Middle East, now secretary of defense � told senior
Iraqi officials that the use of poison gas �inhibited� normal relations
between the two countries.

Nevertheless, at those same meetings in Baghdad with Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein and then-Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz, Rumsfeld stated the
Reagan administration was so concerned about an Iranian victory that it
offered Saddam unspecified assistance.

Specifically, Rumsfeld�s trip was the subject of several State Department
cables from 1983. Some of the language from the cables is redacted, and much
of what remains is couched in diplomatic-speak.

But in a January 1995 affidavit in a civil case involving Iraqi arms sales,
NSC staff member Howard Teicher provides the most detailed discussion of the
rationale behind the Iraq tilt. Moreover, Teicher, who accompanied Rumsfeld
to Baghdad in 1983, lays out in the affidavit how both President Reagan and
then-Vice President Bush personally delivered military advice to Saddam
Hussein, both directly and through intermediaries.

Policy shift began in �82: According to Teicher, the tilt towards Iraq began
in the spring of 1982, about 18 months after Iraq invaded Iran in hopes of a
quick victory over the Iranian mullahs. Iran, however, used the advantage of
its huge population to gain the upper hand, raising fears in the Reagan
administration of an Iranian surge through southern Iran and into Kuwait and
Saudi Arabia.

�In the Spring of 1982, Iraq teetered on the brink of losing its war with
Iran,� wrote Teicher in the affidavit. �In May and June, 1982, the Iranians
discovered a gap in the Iraqi defenses along the Iran-Iraq border between
Baghdad to the north and Basra to the south. Iran positioned a massive
invasion force directly across from the gap in the Iraqi defenses. An
Iranian breakthrough at the spot would have cut off Baghdad from Basra and
would have resulted in Iraq�s defeat.

�United States Intelligence, including satellite imagery, had detected both
the gap in the Iraqi defenses and the Iranian massing of troops across from
the gap. At the time, the United States was officially neutral in the
Iran-Iraq conflict. President Reagan was forced to choose between (a)
maintaining strict neutrality and allowing Iran to defeat Iraq, or (b)
intervening and providing assistance to Iraq.�

Reagan, writes Teicher, decided to intervene secretly against Iran.

This, also from the Teicher affidavit:

�In June, 1982, President Reagan decided that the United States could not
afford to allow Iraq to lose the war to Iran. President Reagan decided that
the United States would do whatever was necessary and legal to prevent Iraq
from losing the war with Iran. President Reagan formalized this policy by
issuing a National Security Decision Directive (�NSDD�) to this effect in
June, 1982. I have personal knowledge of this NSDD because I co-authored the
NSDD with another NSC Staff Member, Geoff Kemp. The NSDD, including even its
identifying number, is classified.�

�CIA Director [William] Casey personally spearheaded the effort to ensure
that Iraq had sufficient military weapons, ammunition and vehicles to avoid
losing the Iran-Iraq war,� the affidavit continued. �Pursuant to the secret
NSDD, the United States actively supported the Iraqi war effort by supplying
the Iraqis with billions of dollars of credits, by providing US military
intelligence and advice to the Iraqis, and by closely monitoring third
country arms sales to Iraq to make sure that Iraq had the military weaponry
required.�

Moreover, says Teicher, the US actually provided military advice to the
Iraqis, relaying US intelligence to Saddam from the highest levels of the US
government, from President Reagan and then-Vice President Bush, father of
the current president.

Backchannel advice: �The United States also provided strategic operational
advice to the Iraqis to better use their assets in combat,� says Teicher�s
affidavit. �For example, in 1986, President Reagan sent a secret message to
Saddam Hussein telling him that Iraq should step up its air war and bombing
of Iran. This message was delivered by Vice President Bush who communicated
it to Egyptian President Mubarak, who in turn passed the message to Saddam
Hussein.

President Reagan maintained the covert program after Iraq's use of chemical
weapons became known, officials familiar with the program told The New York
Times.

�Similar strategic operational military advice was passed to Saddam Hussein
through various meetings with European and Middle Eastern heads of state. I
authored Bush�s talking points for the 1986 meeting with Mubarak and
personally attended numerous meetings with European and Middle East heads of
state where the strategic operational advice was communicated.�

Critical to Iraqi success was finding a way to overcome Iran�s human wave
attacks which persisted throughout the war, although Teicher�s affidavit
gives no indication that the United States condoned the use of chemical
weapons, which were used against those human-wave attacks. Nevertheless, the
US government certainly was aware of how important it was to Iraq to stop
those human wave attacks. US intelligence officers never opposed such action
because they considered Iraq to be struggling for its survival and feared
that Iran would overrun the crucial oil-producing Persian Gulf states, the
Times reported.

CIA implicated: In his affidavit, Teicher said he �personally attended
meetings in which CIA Director Casey or CIA Deputy Director [Robert] Gates
noted the need for Iraq to have certain weapons such as cluster bombs and
anti-armor penetrators in order to stave off the Iranian attacks.

Teicher said his notes, memoranda and other documents in his files showed or
tended to show that the CIA, �including both CIA Director Casey and Deputy
Director Gates, knew of, approved of, and assisted in the sale of non-US
origin military weapons, ammunition and vehicles to Iraq.�

Teicher�s comments about an Iraqi tilt are borne out in the declassified
State Department documents related to Rumsfeld�s 1983 Baghdad trip, although
not in such detail.

�Presidential message�: President Reagan authorized Rumsfeld to travel to
Baghdad as part of a trip throughout the Middle East, the arrangements being
made between the US Interests Section in Baghdad and then-Iraqi Foreign
Ministry Undersecretary Mohammed Sahhaf, according to State Department
documents obtained by the National Security Archives under the Freedom of
Information Act. [Sahhaf is now Iraqi Foreign Minister.]

The visit, which included meetings with Aziz and Saddam Hussein, was laid
out in cables sent by the Interests Section and Rumsfeld himself to George
Shultz, then the secretary of state.

Rumsfeld informed the Interests Section that he was �pleased with the
positive response�to your sounding,� adding that he would �probably be
carrying a presidential message for Saddam [cq].� Arrangements were made for
a visit on the night of Dec. 19-20, 1983.

State Department officials who met with Sahhaf noted that �perhaps the
greatest benefit of the visit would be the establishment of direct contact
between an envoy of President Reagan and President Saddam Hussein.�

�A thoughtful man�: Iraq�s Tariq Aziz told Rumsfeld that he would find
Saddam �a thoughtful man who analyzed and learned from experience.�

Rumsfeld did carry a conciliatory letter from Reagan to Saddam. The letter
has not been released, but parts of it were quoted in the State Department
cables. Saddam at one point expressed �great pleasure� at the letter, and
Aziz quoted Reagan as saying �the Iran-Iraq war could pose serious problems
for the economic and security interests of the US, its friends in the region
and in the free world.�

Rumsfeld first met with Tariq Aziz, then foreign minister on Dec. 19.
Rumfeld laid out the shared interests of the two countries, telling Aziz:
�While there were a number of differences of view between us, we also see a
number of areas of common interest. We both desire regional peace, stability
and correcting regional imbalance.�

In a response, described by a member of Rumsfeld�s team as �eloquent,� Aziz
said renewed US-Iraqi ties were possible. Aziz told Rumsfeld that he would
find Saddam �a thoughtful man who analyzed and learned from experience.�

US sympathy with Iraqi aims: Rumsfeld lamented that it was unfortunate an
entire generation of Iraqis and Americans were growing up without contact
with each other and promised the United States �would approach our allies in
terms of specific instances where they are either directly or indirectly
providing weapons which enable Iran to continue the war, and would try to
foster strategic understanding of the dangers of focusing on narrow,
short-term interests.�

NBC: Iraqi envoy warns the US

Rumsfeld�s own notes of the meeting, � notes that presumably included the
specifics of what the United States could do to help Iraq beyond asking US
allies to end arms exports to Iran � were sent separately to the Secretary
of State, and were edited by the State Department�s Freedom of Information
Act Office. However, what was released indicates American empathy with
Saddam�s intentions.

�I indicated our desire to have the war mediated and ended peacefully
without further escalating tension in the Middle East. I offered our
willingness to do more�� according to Rumsfeld�s notes. Eight lines of text
laying out the specifics were redacted.

Indication of support: In a talking-points memo prepared by the State
Department, Rumsfeld was asked to note that the United States hoped for a
peaceful solution to the Iran-Iraq war, but to also deliver the following
message to Saddam: �The [United States government] recognizes Iraq�s current
disadvantage in a war of attrition since Iran has access to the Gulf while
Iraq does not would regard any major reversal of Iraq�s fortunes as
strategic defeat for the west,� a clear indication of which side the US was
prepared to support.

Division plagues the opposition

The talking points memo also noted that it was �possible� that Iraq would
suggest to Rumsfeld that �the US could lift restrictions on some military
items Iraq wishes to purchase from third parties.�

Other issues in the Middle East, ostensibly the main reason for Rumsfeld�s
trip, were also laid out in the memo, but were viewed as secondary. In one
discussion, however, Rumsfeld was asked to seek Saddam�s personal advice on
dealing with Syria.

Israeli offer of aid to Iraq: In his affidavit, Teicher noted that Rumsfeld
was carrying a letter offering help from then-Israeli Foreign Minister
Itzhak Shamir. �Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir asked Rumsfeld if
the United States would deliver a secret offer of Israeli assistance to
Iraq. The United States agreed. I traveled with Rumsfeld to Baghdad and was
present at the meeting in which Rumsfeld told Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq
Aziz about Israel�s offer of assistance. Aziz refused even to accept the
Israelis� letter to Hussein offering assistance, because Aziz told us that
he would be executed on the spot by Hussein if he did so.�

Bush faces harsh warning on Iraq

Rumsfeld did note that United States �efforts to assist were inhibited by
certain things that made it difficult for us, citing use of chemical
weapons, possible escalation in the Gulf and human rights.�

In fact, the United States knew that Iraq has used poison gas against
Iranian troops a few months before and that Iraq was building its own
chemical weapons infrastructure. Iraq would use chemical weapons against
Iran and later against the Kurds, for the remainder of the Iran-Iraq war,
the most notorious being the bombing of the Kurdish town of Halabja in 1988.

Human wave attacks: Repeatedly, Rumsfeld made clear that US interests
coincided with Iraq�s in the war.

Nevertheless, Rumsfeld said the United States opposed an Iranian victory and
noted that �we [are] improving our contingency planning with Gulf states as
to our goal of keeping the Straits [of Hormuz] open.� If Aziz responded
regarding American concerns regarding Iraqi chemical weapons development, it
was not noted.

Aziz and Rumsfeld did discuss the fearsome nature of Iran�s human wave
attacks. Rumsfeld wrote that Aziz told him the Iranian forces �essentially
mount human-wave assaults with the so-called Khomeini Guards (young people
with a piece of paper in their pockets that is their ticket to Paradise).
Heaving themselves forward until they break and run as a result of the
return fire. Tariq [Aziz] said he felt the war was over in the strategic
sense in that Iraq will not lose.�

Repeatedly, Rumsfeld made clear that US interests coincided with Iraq�s in
the war. He wrote in his own note to Shultz, �I said I thought we had areas
of common interest, particularly the security and stability in the Gulf,
which had been jeopardized as a result of the Iranian revolution. I added
that the US had no interest in an Iranian victory; to the contrary. We would
not want Iran�s influence expanded at the expense of Iraq. As with all
sovereign nations, we respect Iraq�s independence, sovereignty and
territorial integrity.�

Greetings from Saddam: �Saddam Hussein showed obvious pleasure with the
President�s letter and Rumsfeld�s visit ... �

>From the Teicher affidavit: When Rumsfeld met with Saddam the following
morning, accompanied by State Department Arab experts Robert Pelletreau and
William Eagleton, Iraqi television videotaped the opening greetings and
delivery of President Reagan�s letter to the Iraqi leader. Saddam was
dressed in military uniform, a pistol on his hip. Rumsfeld conveyed his
pleasure at being in Baghdad.

While there was no discussion of US military help to Iraq, Rumsfeld
reiterated to Saddam the United States� intention of eliminating arms
deliveries to Iran, stating �The US and Iraq shared interests in preventing
Iranian and Syrian expansion.� He said the US was urging other states to
curtail arms sales to Iran and believed it had successfully closed off
US-controlled exports by third countries to Iran.

For Saddam, the tenor and tone of Rumsfeld�s visit was a major positive.

�Saddam Hussein showed obvious pleasure with the President�s letter and
Rumsfeld�s visit and in remarks,� Teicher�s affidavit says. �[It] removed
whatever obstacles remained in the way of resuming diplomatic relations but
did not take the decision to do so.�

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to