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From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Sid Shniad
Sent: Tuesday, September 28, 2010 1:55 PM
Subject: After the journey - a UN man's open letter to Tony Blair


http://www.newstatesman.com/middle-east/2010/09/iraq-humanitarian-sanctions


The New Statesman
23 September 2010 

After the journey - a UN man's open letter to Tony Blair

Hans von Sponeck <http://www.newstatesman.com/print/201009230011#> 

Hans von Sponeck, UN humanitarian co-ordinator from 1998-2000, demands
answers from the former prime minister to a simple question: Why is Iraq in
such a mess? 

Dear Mr Blair,

You do not know me. Why should you? Or maybe you should have known me and
the many other UN officials who struggled in Iraq when you prepared your
Iraq policy. Reading the Iraq details of your "journey", as told in your
memoir, has confirmed my fears. You tell a story of a leader, but not of a
statesman. You could have, at least belatedly, set the record straight.
Instead you repeat all the arguments we have heard before, such as why
sanctions had to be the way they were; why the fear of Saddam Hussein
outweighed the fear of crossing the line between concern for people and
power politics; why Iraq ended up as a human garbage can. You preferred to
latch on to Bill Clinton's 1998 Iraq Liberation Act and George W Bush's
determination to implement it.

You present yourself as the man who tried to use the UN road. I am not sure.
Is it really wrong to say that, if you had this intention, it was for purely
tactical reasons and not because you wanted to protect the role of the UN to
decide when military action was justified? The list of those who disagreed
with you and your government's handling of 13 years of sanctions and the
invasion and occupation of Iraq is long, very long. It includes Unicef and
other UN agencies, Care, Caritas, International Physicians for the
Prevention of Nuclear War, the then UN secretary general, Kofi Annan, and
Nelson Mandela. Do not forget, either, the hundreds of thousands of people
who marched in protest in Britain and across the world, among them Cambridge
Against Sanctions on Iraq (CASI) and the UK Stop the War Coalition. 

You suggest that you and your supporters - the "people of good will", as you
call them - are the owners of the facts. Your disparaging observations about
Clare Short, a woman with courage who resigned as international development
secretary in 2003, make it clear you have her on a different list. You
appeal to those who do not agree to pause and reflect. I ask you to do the
same. Those of us who lived in Iraq experienced the grief and misery that
your policies caused. UN officials on the ground were not "taken in" by a
dictator's regime. We were "taken in" by the challenge to tackle human
suffering created by the gravely faulty policies of two governments - yours
and that of the United States - and by the gutlessness of those in the
Middle East, Europe and elsewhere who could have made a difference but chose
otherwise. The facts are on our side, not on yours.

Here are some of those facts. Had Hans Blix, the then UN chief weapons
inspector, been given the additional three months he requested, your plans
could have been thwarted. You and George W Bush feared this. If you had
respected international law, you would not, following Operation Desert Fox
in December 1998, have allowed your forces to launch attacks from two no-fly
zones. Allegedly carried out to protect Iraqi Kurds in the north and Iraqi
Shias in the south, these air strikes killed civilians and destroyed
non-military installations.

I know that the reports we prepared in Baghdad to show the damage wreaked by
these air strikes caused much anger in Whitehall. A conversation I had on
the sidelines of the Labour party conference in 2004 with your former
foreign secretary Robin Cook confirmed that, even in your cabinet, there had
been grave doubts about your approach. UN Resolution 688 was passed in 1991
to authorise the UN secretary general - no one else - to safeguard the
rights of people and to help in meeting their humanitarian needs. It did not
authorise the no-fly zones. In fact, the British government, in voting for
Resolution 688, accepted the obligation to respect Iraq's sovereignty and
territorial integrity.

I was a daily witness to what you and two US administrations had concocted
for Iraq: a harsh and uncompromising sanctions regime punishing the wrong
people. Your officials must have told you that your policies translated into
a meagre 51 US cents to finance a person's daily existence in Iraq. You
acknowledge that 60 per cent of Iraqis were totally dependent on the goods
that were allowed into their country under sanctions, but you make no
reference in your book to how the UK and US governments blocked and delayed
huge amounts of supplies that were needed for survival. In mid-2002, more
than $5bn worth of supplies was blocked from entering the country. No other
country on the Iraq sanctions committee of the UN Security Council supported
you in this. The UN files are full of such evidence. I saw the education
system, once a pride of Iraq, totally collapse. And conditions in the health
sector were equally desperate. In 1999, the entire country had only one
fully functioning X-ray machine. Diseases that had been all but forgotten in
the country re-emerged.

You refuse to acknowledge that you and your policies had anything to do with
this humanitarian crisis. You even argue that the death rate of children
under five in Iraq, then among the highest in the world, was entirely due to
the Iraqi government. I beg you to read Unicef's reports on this subject and
what Carol Bellamy, Unicef's American executive director at the time, had to
say to the Security Council. None of the UN officials involved in dealing
with the crisis will subscribe to your view that Iraq "was free to buy as
much food and medicines" as the government would allow. I wish that had been
the case. During the Chilcot inquiry in July this year, a respected diplomat
who represented the UK on the Security Council sanctions com-mittee while I
was in Baghdad observed: "UK officials and ministers were well aware of the
negative effects of sanctions, but preferred to blame them on the Saddam
regime's failure to implement the oil-for-food programme."

No one in his right mind would defend the human rights record of Saddam
Hussein. Your critical words in this respect are justified. But you offer
only that part of this gruesome story. You quote damning statements about
Saddam Hussein made by Max van der Stoel, the former Dutch foreign minister
who was UN special rapporteur on human rights in Iraq during the time I
served in Baghdad. You conveniently omitted three pertinent facts: van der
Stoel had not been in Iraq since 1991 and had to rely on second-hand
information; his UN mandate was limited to assessing the human rights record
of the Iraqi government and therefore excluded violations due to other
reasons such as economic sanctions; and his successor, Andreas Mavrommatis,
formerly foreign secretary in Cyprus, quickly recognised the biased UN
mandate and broadened the scope of his review to include sanctions as a
major human rights issue. This was a very important correction.

Brazil's foreign minister, Celso Amorim, who in the years of sanctions on
Iraq was his country's permanent representative to the UN, is not mentioned
in your book. Is that because he was one of the diplomats who climbed over
the wall of disinformation and sought the truth about the deplorable human
conditions in Iraq in the late 1990s? Amorim used the opportunity of his
presidency of the UN Security Council to call for a review of the
humanitarian situation. His conclusion was unambiguous. "Even if not all the
suffering in Iraq can be imputed to external factors, especially sanctions,
the Iraqi people would not be undergoing such deprivations in the absence of
the prolonged measures imposed by the Security Council and the effects of
war."

Malaysia's ambassador to the UN, Hasmy Agam, starkly remarked: "How ironic
it is that the same policy that is supposed to disarm Iraq of its weapons of
mass destruction has itself become a weapon of mass destruction." The
secretary general, too, made very critical observations on the humanitarian
situation in Iraq. When I raised my own concerns in a newspaper article,
your minister Peter Hain repeated what the world had become accustomed to
hearing from London and Washington: it is all of Saddam's making. Hain was a
loyal ally of yours. He and others in your administration wrote me off as
subjective, straying off my mandate, not up to the task, or, in the words of
the US state department's spokesman at the time, James Rubin: "This man in
Baghdad is paid to work, not to speak!"

My predecessor in Baghdad, Denis Halliday, and I were repeatedly barred from
testifying to the Security Council. On one occasion, the US and UK
governments, in a joint letter to the secretary general, insisted that we
did not have enough experience with sanctions and therefore could not
contribute much to the debate. You were scared of the facts.

We live in serious times, which you helped bring about. The international
security architecture is severely weakened, the UN Security Council fails to
solve crises peacefully, and there are immense double standards in the
debate on the direction our world is travelling in. A former British prime
minister - "a big player, a world leader and not just a national leader", as
you describe yourself in your book - should find little time to promote his
"journey" on a US talk show. You decided differently. I watched this show,
and a show it was. You clearly felt uncomfortable. Everything you and your
brother-in-arms, Bush, had planned for Iraq has fallen apart, the sole
exception being the removal of Saddam Hussein. You chose to point to Iran as
the new danger.

Whether you like it or not, the legacy of your Iraq journey, made with your
self-made GPS, includes your sacrifice of the UN and negotiations on the
altar of a self-serving alliance with the Bush administration. You admit in
your book that "a few mistakes were made here and there". One line reads:
"The intelligence was wrong and we should have, and I have, apologised for
it." A major pillar of your case for invading Iraq is treated almost like a
footnote. Your refusal to face the facts fully is the reason why "people of
good will" remain so distressed and continue to demand accountability.

Hans von Sponeck is a former UN assistant secretary general and was UN
humanitarian co-ordinator for Iraq from 1998 until he resigned in protest in
March 2000.




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