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CLASSIC QUOTES


"If the public knew the truth, the war would end tomorrow. But they don't know and they can't know."

- Former British Prime Minister David Lloyd George, to Manchester Guardian editor C.P. Scott, 1914
As quoted by Philip Knightly in his book
'The First Casualty: From the Crimea to Vietnam - Correspondent as
Hero, Propagandist and Myth-maker.'


"The Pentagon recently justified its’ position on censorship by insisting:
‘If we let people see that kind of thing, there would never again be any war.’"

- from ‘Military Blunders’ – article by Geoffrey Regan in ‘Night and Day’ (Mail on Sunday supplement) 23rd January 2000


"Individuals have international duties which transcend the national obligations of obedience…therefore [individual citizens] have the duty to violate domestic laws to prevent crimes against peace and humanity from occurring."

- Nuremberg War Crime Tribunal, 1950


"When a long train of abuses and usurpations [...] evinces a design to reduce them [the people] under absolute despotism, 
it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government."

- Thomas Jefferson, US Declaration of Independence


"Why of course the people don't want war. Why should some poor slob on a farm want to risk his life in a war when the best he can get out of it is to come back to his farm in one piece_ Naturally the common people don't want war: neither in Russia, nor in England, nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country."

- Hermann Goerring


"Beware the leader who bangs the drums of war in order to whip the citizenry into a patriotic fervor, for patriotism is indeed a double-edged sword. It both emboldens the blood, just as it narrows the mind. And when the drums of war have reached a fever pitch and the blood boils with hate and the mind has closed, the leader will have no need in seizing the rights of the citizenry. Rather, the citizenry, infused with fear and blinded by patriotism, will offer up all of their rights unto the leader and gladly so.  How do I know_ For this is what I have done. And I am Caesar."

- Julius Caesar


"What land has not seen Britain's crimson flag, the meteor of murder, but justice the plea_"

- Song lyric, anonymous, circa. 1820


"We must become the owners, or at any rate the controllers at the source, of at least a proportion of the oil which we require."

- British Royal Commission, agreeing with Winston Churchill's policy towards Iraq, 1913 [quote unconfirmed]


"What we want to have in existence, what we ought to have been creating in this time is some administration with Arab institutions which we can safely leave while pulling the strings ourselves; something that won't cost very much, which the Labour government can swallow consistent with its' principles, but under which our economic and political interests will be secure. [.....] If the French remain in Syria we shall have to avoid giving them the excuse of setting up a protectorate. If they go, or if we appear to be reactionary in Mesopotamia, there is always the risk that [King] Faisal will encourage the Americans to take over both, and it should be borne in mind that the Standard Oil company is very anxious to take over Iraq."

- Sir Arthur Hirtzel, Head of the British government's 'India Office Political Department.' 1919 [quote unconfirmed]


"Is there any man, is there any woman, let me say any child here, that does not know that the seed of war in the modern world is industrial and commercial rivalry_"

- Former US President Woodrow Wilson, 1919


"[I advocate] using poisoned gas against uncivilised tribes [and] against recalcitrant Arabs as an experiment. [I do not understand] the squeamishness about the use of gas [...] We cannot in any circumstamstances acquiesce in the non-utilisation of any weapons which are available to procure a speedy termination of the disorder which prevails on the frontier."

- Winston Churchill, then Secretary of State at the British War Office, authorising RAF Middle East Command to attack rebelling Iraqis with chemical weapons, 1919


"By no moral right may the ownership and control of the natural and material resources of a territory be regarded as the absolute monopoly of the people who happened to be settled there."

- Philip Snowden, Labour Party Chancellor, 1921 [quote unconfirmed]


"Give responsibility for the control of Iraq to the Royal Air Force, thus recognising the ability of air power to maintain effective control of a mandated territory with the maximum economy in the deployment of forces."

- Winston Churchill, Colonial Secretary of the British 'Middle East Department of the Colonial Office', speaking at the Cairo Conference, 1921


"The United States is the most powerful among the technically advanced countries in the world today. Its' influence on the shaping of international relations is absolutely incalculable. But America is a large country, and its people have so far not shown much interest in great international problems, among which the problem of disarmament occupies first place today.

This must be changed, if only in America's own interest. The last war has shown that there are no longer any barriers between the continents and that the destinies of all countries are closely interwoven. The people of this country must realize that they have a great responsibility in the sphere of international politics. The part of passive spectator is unworthy of this country and is bound in the end to lead to disaster all round."


- Albert Einstein, from an interview in the Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant, 1921


"The efficiency of the truly national leader consists mainly of preventing the people's attention from becoming divided, and of always concentrating it on a single enemy."

- Adolp Hitler, 'Mein Kampf' 1924


"Utter, boorish self-centred indifference to every living human struggle is the heart and soul of the imperialist psychology in the Labour [Party] aristocracy, looking on with contemptuous indifference to the curious, incomprehensible inferior races."

- R. Palme Dutt, Labour Monthly, March 1927 [quote unconfirmed]


"The conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society. Those who manipulate this unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible government which is the true ruling power of the country. [....] We are governed, our minds are molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we have never heard of. [....] It is they who pull the wires which control the public mind [....] in its sum total, [propaganda] is regimenting the public mind every bit as much as an army regiments the bodies of its soldiers. [....] If we understand the mechanism and motives of the group mind, is it not possible to control and regiment the masses according to our will, without their knowing it_ [....] Ours must be a leadership democracy administered by the intelligent minority who know how to regiment and guide the masses."

- Extracts from Edward Bernays' 'Propaganda', first published 1928


"First, they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out because I was not a socialist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew. Then they came for me, and there was no one left to speak for me."

- Pastor Martin Niemoller, who was arrested by the Nazis in 1937


"If war aims are stated which seem to be solely concerned with Anglo-American imperialism, they will offer little to people in the rest of the world. The interests of other peoples should be stressed. This would have a better propaganda effect."

- Private memo from The Council of Foreign Relations to the US State Department, 1941 [quote unconfirmed]


"The enemy aggressor is always pursuing a course of larceny, murder, rapine and barbarism. We are always moving forward with high mission, a destiny imposed by the Deity to regenerate our victims while incidentally capturing their markets, to civilise savage and senile and paranoid peoples while blundering accidentally into their oil wells."

- John Flynn, 1944


"The government of the world must be entrusted to satisfied nations, who wished nothing more for themselves than what they had. If the world government were in the hands of the hungry nations, there would always be danger. But none of us had any reason to seek for anything more. The peace would be kept by peoples who lived in their own way and were not ambitious. Our power placed us above the rest. We were like rich men dwelling at peace within their habitations."

- Winston Churchill, as cited by Noam Chomsky in 'Deterring Democracy'


"By hook or by crook the development of primary production of all sorts in the colonial territories and dependent areas in the Commonwealth and throughout the world is a life and death matter for the economy of this country."

- John Strachey, Labour Party minister for Food, 1947 [quote unconfirmed]


"Our strategic and security interests throughout the world will be best safeguarded by the establishment in suitable spots of 'Police Stations', fully equipped to deal with emergencies within a large radius. Kuwait is one such spot from which Iraq, South Persia, Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf could be controlled. It will be worthwhile to go to considerable trouble and expense to establish and man a 'Police Station' there."

- British Foreign Office, policy memo, 1947 [quote unconfirmed]


"It is not Russian military power which is threatening us, it is Russian political power."

- George Kennan, former Head of the US State Department Policy Planning Staff, October 1947, echoing sentiments held by the majority of post war planners and elected officials


‘We have about 50% of the world’s wealth but only 6.3% of its’ population. This disparity is particularly great as between ourselves and the peoples of Asia.  In this situation we cannot fail to be the object of envy and resentment. Our real task in the coming period is to devise a pattern of relationships which will permit us to maintain this position of disparity without positive detriment to our national security.  To do so, we will have to dispense with all sentimentality and day-dreaming; and our attention will have to be concentrated everywhere on our immediate national objectives.  We need not deceive ourselves that we can afford today the luxury of altruism and world benefaction. [....]  We should cease to talk about such vague and - for the far East - unreal objectives as human rights, the raising of living standards and democratisation. The day is not far off when we are going to have to deal in straight power concepts. The less we are then hampered by idealistic slogans, the better." 

- George Kennan, former Head of the US State Department Policy Planning Staff, Document PPS23, 24th February 1948, describing policy objectives as regards the Far East, though similar attitudes prevailed in most of the State Department as regards the rest of the world. Indeed Kennan, considered 'liberal' in his thinking was later fired. (To read Kennan's full statement, please click HERE).


"I came to America because of the great, great freedom which I heard existed in this country. I made a mistake in selecting America as a land of freedom, a mistake I cannot repair in the balance of my lifetime."

-  Albert Einstein, 1947


"Guatemala has become an increasing threat to the stability of Honduras and El Salvador. Its' agrarian reform is a powerful propaganda weapon; its' broad social program of aiding the workers and peasants in a victorious struggle against the upper classes and large foreign enterprises has a strong appeal to the populations of Central American neighbours where similar conditions prevail."

- Unidentified US State Deprartment official, 1954, cited by Noam Chomsky in 'What Uncle Sam Really Wants'. The US overthrew the Guatemalan government later that year, the first democratic government the country had ever had, and one that was actually modelled on Franklin Rossevelt's 'New Deal', and installed a brutal dictatorship, with attendant death squads, 'disappearances', mass torture and murder, which continue to this day.


"You have to pat them a little bit and make them think that you are fond of them."

- John Foster Dulles, former US Secretary of State, describing to former President Eisenhower how to keep Latin Americans in line, as cited by Noam Chomsky in 'What Uncle Sam Really Wants' - quote is undated but in the context of the chapter, estimated as 1955


"The target suffered a terminal illness before a firing squad in Baghdad."

- CIA officer testifying to US Senate hearing, after bloody CIA aided Ba'th Party coup overthrew Iraqi Prime Minister Abdel Kassem, 1963


"It was an operation where all the "t"s were really crossed. It was a great victory."

- James Critchfield, former head of the CIA's Middle East Desk, describing their involvement in the Ba'athist coup, 1963, quoted in 'Out of the Ashes' by Andrew and Patrick Cockburn


"Neither the foreign head of state (the Shah) nor the President nor Dr. Kissinger desired a victory for our clients (the Kurds). They merely hoped to ensure a level of hostilities high enough to sap the resources of the neighbouring state (Iraq). Even in the context of covert action, ours was a cynical enterprise."

- US Congressional Pike Report, describing President Nixon and US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger’s policy of arming the Kurds, 1972


"Covert operations should not be confused with missionary work."

- Kissinger describing why US withdrew aid to the Kurds, 1975


"Strikes at population targets (per se) are likely not only to create a counterproductive wave of revulsion abroad and at home, but greatly to increase the risk of enlarging the war with China and the Soviet Union. Destruction of locks and dams, however – if handled right – might offer promise. It should be studied. Such destruction does not kill or drown people. By shallow-flooding the rice, it leads after time to widespread starvation (more than a million) unless food is provided – which we could offer to do ‘at the conference table’."

- John McNaughton, US State Department Vietnam policy, as quoted in ‘The Mentality of the Backroom Boys.’ Article by Noam Chomsky, 1973


"They are using damage caused by [US} B-52 strikes as the main theme of their propaganda. This approach has resulted in the successful recruitment of a number of young men. Residents [....] say that the propaganda has been effective with refugees in areas which have been subject to B-52 strikes."

- Report by the CIA's Directorate of Operations, describing how Pol Pot used the American bombing of Cambodia as a tool for recruiting people to the Khmer Rouge, May 2nd, 1973, as quoted by John Pilger in 'Heroes'


"The US must carry out some act somewhere in the world which shows its’ determination to continue to be a world power."

- Henry Kissinger, post-Vietnam blues, as quoted in The Washington Post, April 1975


"In terms of the bilateral relations between the U.S. and Indonesia, we are more or less condoning the incursion into East Timor. The United States wants to keep its relations with Indonesia close and friendly. We regard Indonesia as a friendly, non-aligned nation - a nation we do a lot of business with."

- Unidentified US State Department official, quoted in The Australian, 22nd January 1976. One third of the entire population of East Timor, 200,000, was murdered by the Indonesian army, a genocide comparable, possibly worse, than Pol Pot's in Cambodia.


"A US commitment to the defence of the oil resources of the gulf, and to political stability in the region constitutes one of the most vital and enduring interests of the United States."

- Conclusion of US Senator Henry Jackson's Energy and Natural Resources Committee, 1977


"Though they spoke of terrible human suffering, reality was sealed off by their trite, lifeless vernacular: 'capabilities', 'objectives', 'our chips', 'giveaway'. It was a matter, too, of culture and style. They spoke with the cool, deliberate detachment of men who believe the banishment of feeling renders them wise and, more important, credible to other men. [....] They neither understood the foreign policy they were dealing with, nor were deeply moved by the bloodshed and suffering they administered to their stereotypes."

- Roger Morris, former US State Department staff member, describing Kissinger et al and their attitude to Vietnam and Cambodia, as quoted by John Pilger in 'Heroes'


"You have a survivability of command in control, survivability of industrial potential, protection of a percentage of your citizens, and you have a capability that inflicts more damage on the opposition than it can inflict on you. That's the way you can have a winner."

- George Bush Sr., explaining how to win a nuclear war to Los Angeles Times reporter Robert Scheer, 1980


"To put it in terms of a Chinese dialectic, United States policy is exactly to squeeze Vietnam to rely on the Soviet Union: then Vietnam will find the Soviet Union can not meet all its' needs. [....] If Vietnam suffers economic hardships, I think that is just great."

- Roger Sullivan, US National Security Council, addressing a US delegation who had travelled to the White House with a petition requesting the US Government to allow humanitarian assistance to be sent to Vietnam, as quoted by Anthony Barrett, The New Statesman, August 22nd 1980


"It would not have been possible for a political party to be more committed to a national home for the Jews in Palestine than was Labour."

- Harold Wilson, former British Labour Party Prime Minister, 1981


"The American system is the most ingenious system of control in world history. With a country so rich in natural resources, talent and labour power the system can afford to distribute just enough wealth to just enough people to limit discontent to a troublesome minority. It is a country so powerful, so big, so pleasing to so many of its’ citizens that it can afford to give freedom of dissent to the small number who are not pleased. There is no system of control with more openings, apertures, flexibilities, rewards for the chosen. […] There is none that disperses its’ control more complexly through the voting system, the work situation, the church, the family, the school, the mass media – none more successful in mollifying opposition with reforms, isolating people from one another, creating patriotic loyalty."

- Howard Zinn,  from ‘A People’s History of the United States,’ first published 1981


"One hundred nations in the UN have not agreed with us on just about everything that's come before them, where we're involved, and it didn't upset my breakfast at all."

- Ronald Reagan, former US President, basking in the triumph that was the US invasion of Grenada, 1983


Q. "Mr. President, have you approved of covert activity to destablise the present government of Nicaragua_"

A. "Well, no, we're supporting them, the - oh, wait a minute, wait a minute, I'm sorry, I was thinking of El Salvador, because of the previous, when you said Nicaragua. Here again, this is something upon which the national security interests, I just - I will not comment."

- Ronald Reagan, former US President, Washington press conference, February 13th 1983, as quoted by John Pilger in 'Heroes'


" '[George] Kennan applied the same ideas to Latin America in a briefing for Latin American ambassadors in which he explained that one of the main concerns of US policy is the:
'…protection of our raw materials.'

Who must we protect our raw materials from_ Well, primarily the domestic populations, the indigenous population, which may have ideas of their own about raising the living standards, democratisation and human rights. And that's inconsistent with maintaining the disparity. How will we protect our raw materials from the indigenous population. Well, the answer is the following:

"The final answer might be an unpleasant one, but…we should not hesitate before police repression by the local government. This is not shameful, since the communists are essentially traitors. It is better to have a strong regime in power than a liberal government if it is indulgent and relaxed and penetrated by Communists."

Well, who are the communists_ 'Communists' is a term regularly used in American political theology to refer to people who are committed to the belief that:
'….the government has direct responsibility for the welfare of the people.'
I'm quoting the words of a 1949 State Department intelligence report which warned about the spread of this grim and evil doctrine.' "

- Noam Chomsky, 'Intervention in Vietnam and Central America: Parallels and Differences', 1st published 1985


"You Americans, you treat the Third World in the way an Iraqi peasant treats his new bride. Three days of honeymoon, and then it’s off to the fields."

- Saddam Hussein, at a 1985 meeting with US State Department officials, as later quoted in the Los Angeles Times, February 10th 1991


"After seeing 'RAMBO' last night, I know what to do the next time this happens."

- Ronald Reagan, former US President, as reported by Daily Express, July 2nd 1985


"Pictures of dead children don't go down well in the US."

- Unidentified US official, in an article describing the Reagan administration's support for the Contras in Nicaragua, specifically their request that the Contras refrain from using pressure-triggered mines that killed indiscriminately, Time Magazine, November 3rd 1986


"Negotiations are a euphemism for capitulation if the shadow of power is not cast across the bargaining table. [There is no] utopian, legalistic means like outside mediation, the United Nations, and the World Court, while ignoring the power element of the equation."

- George Schultz, former US Secretary of State, April 14th 1986, as cited in 'Rogue States', article by Noam Chomsky, 1999


"One of the things we would like to do is that we would like to become actively engaged in ending the [Iran/Iraq] war in such a way that it becomes very evident to everybody that the guy who is causing the problem is Saddam Hussein. If I were to talk to any other Muslim leader, they wouldn’t say Saddam Hussein is the problem. They’d say Iran is the problem……What we’re talking about is a process by which all of the rest of the Arab world comes quickly to realise that Iran is not a threat to them, Iran is not going to overrun Kuwait. Iran is not going to overthrow the government of Saudi Arabia. That the real problem in preventing peace in the region is Saddam Hussein. And we’ll have to take care of that".

- Colonel Oliver North, US Congressional Iran/Contra Hearings - 1987, North's personal tape of a conversation with Iran/Contra players Richard Secord, Albert Hakim and an Iranian government official in Frankfurt, 1985. North claimed in the hearings that he was lying to the Iranians.


"One of our few remaining hopes is that democrats and those who cherish values of justice, peace and freedom will voice their concern for the plight of the Kurds."

- Kurdish Leaders in a letter to Margaret Thatcher following the gassing of Kurds at Halabja, 16th August 1988. A British £340 million export credit deal with Iraq went through on September 5th 1988.


"[Eastern Europeans are] luckier than Central Americans [because] while the Moscow imposed government in Prague would degrade and huniliate reformers, the Washington made government in Guatemala would kill them. It still does, in a virtual genocide that has taken more then 150,000 victims. [....] One is tempted to believe that some people in the Whitehouse worship Aztec Gods - with the offering of Central American blood."

- Julio Godoy, former journalist for Guatemalan newspaper 'La Epoca', writing in 1989, the year after the paper's offices were blown up by government forces.


"Baghdad should not be expected to deliberately provoke military confrontations with anyone. Its’ interests are best served now and in the immediate future by peace. Revenues from oil sales could put it in the front ranks of nations economically. A stable Middle East is conducive to selling oil; disruption has a long-range adverse effect on the oil market which would hurt Iraq. Force is only likely if the Iraqis feel seriously threatened. It is our belief that Iraq is basically committed to a non aggressive strategy, and that it will, over the course of the next few years, considerably reduce the size of its’ military. Economic conditions practically mandate such action. There seems no doubt that Iraq would like to demobilise now that the war [with Iran] has ended. The Ba’ath Party argue that they should be allowed to invest in economic recovery and industrialisation so that they can become productive again and pay off their debts."

- ‘Iraqi Power and US Security in the Middle East’, a study issued in February 1990 by the Strategic Studies Institute of the US Army War College


"Secure supplies of energy are essential to our prosperity and security. The concentration of 65 percent of the world's known oil reserves in the Persian Gulf means we must continue to ensure reliable access to competitively priced oil and a prompt, adequate response to any major oil supply disruption."

- from 'National Security Strategy of the United States', White House publication, March 1990


"HANGED MAN WAS A ROBBER" - The Sun newspaper headline; story reportedly provided by Ml5

"WHEN INNOCENCE CAN EQUAL GUILT" - The Sunday Telegraph editorial

- March 1990, after Iraq arrested and later executed British journalist Farzad Bazoft, as he investigated explosions in a factory near Baghdad thought to be manufacturing missiles. As a student ten years earlier, Bazoft had stolen £500 from a building society, and served six months in jail.


"Aerosol DU (Depleted Uranium) exposures to soldiers on the battlefield could be significant with potential radiological and toxicological effects. [...] Under combat conditions, the most exposed individuals are probably ground troops that re-enter a battlefield following the exchange of armour-piercing munitions. [...] We are simply highlighting the potential for levels of DU exposure to military personnel during combat that would be unacceptable during peacetime operations. [...DU is..]... a low level alpha radiation emitter which is linked to cancer when exposures are internal, [and] chemical toxicity causing kidney damage. [...] Short term effects of high doses can result in death, while long term effects of low doses have been linked to cancer. [...] Our conclusion regarding the health and environmental acceptability of DU penetrators assume both controlled use and the presence of excellent health physics management practices. Combat conditions will lead to the uncontrolled release of DU. [...] The conditions of the battlefield, and the long term health risks to natives and combat veterans may become issues in the acceptability of the continued use of DU kinetic penetrators for military applications."

- excerpts from the July 1990 Science and Applications International Corporation report: ' Kinetic Energy Penetrator Environment and Health Considerations', as included in Appenix D - US Army Armaments, Munitions and Chemical Command report: 'Kinetic Energy Penetrator Long Term Strategy Study, July 1990'

These documents state clearly and equivocally that the US army was well aware of the radioactive and toxic dangers of Depleted Uranium ammunition long before the first shots of the war were fired.


"We do not have any defence treaties with Kuwait, and there are no special defence or security commitments to Kuwait."

- Margaret Tutweiller, US State Department spokeswoman, 24th July 1990, nine days before Iraq's invasion of Kuwait


"President Bush is an intelligent man. He is not going to declare an economic war against Iraq. […] I admire your extraordinary efforts to rebuild your country. I know you need funds. We understand that, and our opinion is that you should have the opportunity to rebuild your country. But we have no opinion on Arab-Arab conflicts like your border disagreement with Kuwait. James Baker [US Secretary of State] has directed our official spokesmen to emphasise this instruction […] when we see the Iraqi point of view that the measures taken by the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait are, in the final analysis, tantamount to military aggression against Iraq, then it is reasonable for me to be concerned."

- April Glhtmlie, US Ambassador to Iraq, in conversation with Saddam Hussein, US State Department transcripts, 25th July 1990, eight days before the invasion


HAMILTON: "Do we have a commitment to our friends in the Gulf in the event that they are engaged in oil or territorial disputes with their neighbours_"

KELLY: "As I said, Mr. Chairman, we have no defence treaty relationships with any of the countries. We have historically avoided taking a position on border disputes or on internal OPEC deliberations, but we certainly, as have all administrations, resoundingly called for the peaceful settlement of disputes and differences in the area."

HAMILTON: "If Iraq, for example, charged across the border into Kuwait, for whatever reason, what would be our position with regard to the use of US forces_"

KELLY: "That, Mr. Chairman, is a hypothetical or a contingency, the kind of which I can't get into. Suffice it to say, we would be extremely concerned, but I can not get into the realm of 'what if...' answers."

HAMILTON: "In that circumstance, is it correct to say, however, that we do not have a treaty commitment which would obligate us to engage US forces_"

KELLY: "That is correct."

- Question and answer session between US Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs John Kelly and Representative Lee Hamilton, July 31st 1990, two days before the invasion. French researcher Pierre Salinger claimed in his 1991 book 'Secret Dossier - The Hidden Agenda behind the Gulf War' that this exchange was broadcast on the BBC World Service and heard in Iraq.


"Obviously, I didn't think, and nobody else did, that the Iraqis were going to take ALL of Kuwait."

- April Glhtmlie, accidentally revealing US compicity, interview with The New York Times, 20th September 1990, seven weeks after the invasion


"Just watch. Everything…everything."

- George Bush, in response to press enquiry if US enforcement of sanctions would include food and essentials, 14th August 1990


"We agreed with the American side that it was important to take advantage of the deteriorating economic situation in Iraq in order to put pressure on that country’s government to delineate our common border. The CIA gave us its' view of appropriate means of pressure, saying that broad co-operation should be initiated between us, on condition that such activities are co-ordinated at a high level."

- Memo submitted by Iraq to the UN in late August 1990, after their invasion of Kuwait. Dated 22nd November 1989, it was a record of a meeting between William Webster, Director of the CIA, and Kuwaiti officials. The CIA disputed the memo’s authenticity, but many experts have since vouched that it was genuine.


"That's a nice list of targets, but that's not enough. [...] [It is also important to target] ...what is unique about Iraqi culture, that they put very high value on, that psychologically would make an impact on the population and regime. [….] If push came to shove, the cutting edge would be downtown Baghdad. If I want to hurt you, it would be at home, not out in the woods someplace."

- General Michael Dugan, US Airforce Chief of Staff , as quoted in The Washington Post, 15th September 1990. He was removed from his post shortly afterwards by US Secretary of Defence Dick Cheney, describing Dugan's comments as '...inappropriate...'


"We’re dealing with Hitler revisited."

- Former US President George Bush, describing Saddam Hussein, October 15th, 1990. Bush later retracted the statement under criticism that it belittled the Holocaust.


"That was the most expensive ‘no’ vote you ever cast."

- US Ambassador Pickering to Yemeni Ambassador Abdallah Saleh al-Ashtol, after Yemen voted against Resolution 678, 29th November 1990. The US $70 million aid package to Yemen was cancelled the following day. 900,000 Yemeni migrant workers were later expelled from Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Yemen's economy was devastated as a result.


"We have only friendship for the people in Iraq."

- George Bush, November 1990


"Every Iraqi soldier bleeding from every orifice....."

- General Norman Schwarzkopf, describing his war aims, November 1990


"We didn’t see anything to indicate an Iraqi force in Kuwait of even 20% the size the administration claimed."

- Peter Zimmerman, formerly of the US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, and an unidentified Defence Intelligence Agency analyst, examining Soviet Satellite photos of the allegedly huge Iraqi troop build up, article by Jean Heller 'Public doesn't get the picture with satellite photos', The St. Petersburg Times, 6th January 1991


"It is said by some that you do not understand just how isolated Iraq is and what Iraq faces as a result……but unless you withdraw from Kuwait completely and without condition, you will lose more than Kuwait……the choice is yours to make. What is at stake demands that no opportunity be lost to avoid a certain calamity for the people of Iraq [....] Iraq is already feeling the sanctions mandated by the UN. Should war come, it would be a far greater tragedy for you and your country [....] I write this letter not to threaten, but to inform."

- George Bush’s letter to Saddam Hussein, 9th January 1991


"I would like to tell you in all sincerity and seriousness that we would have no problems implementing legitimacy and the rules of justice and fairness if these principles were to be honoured with regard to all regional conflicts. [….] However, we do not want to see these principles implemented with regard to a single issue….this would mean double standards were at work. If you are willing to work to achieve peace, justice, stability and security in the whole region, then you would find us at the forefront of those willing to co-operate with you in this regard."

- Tariq Aziz, Iraqi Foreign minister, in conversation with US Secretary of State James Baker in Geneva, 9th January 1991. Baker announced at the press conference afterwards: "The conclusion is clear. Saddam Hussein continues to reject a diplomatic solution."


"If Kuwait grew carrots, we wouldn't give a damn."

- Lawrence Korb, former US Assistant Secretary of Defence, January 1991


"I venture to say that if Kuwait produced bananas, instead of oil, we would not have 400,000 American troops there today."

- US Congressman Stokes (Ohio), 12th January 1991


"[Bombing missions were a] turkey shoot…it’s almost like you flipped on the light in the kitchen at night and the cockroaches start scurrying, and we’re killing them."

- US Pilot Colonel Richard White, quoted in The Independent, 6th February 1991


"It wasn't really a war. A war is when TWO armies are fighting."

- Bill Hicks, American comedian, from the album 'RELENTLESS', released in 1992


"It's a paradox that the UN, who authorised the use of force in the Gulf, are totally unable to stop it."

"The American military machine is in full flood....diplomacy has gone out of the window. The Americans have got the ability, with the British, to drag this out at the United Nations. They've got the ability to interpret United Nations Resolutions as they want, until they are satisfied that they have destroyed the Iraqi military machine. And it's quite clear, from talking to UN delegates here that that's absolutely what they intend to do."

"I'm up at the United Nations at the moment, which is due to go into session fifteen minutes ago and hasn't. Quite frankly the United Nations doesn't matter anymore. Somebody said to me a couple of hours ago, perhaps they should sell the building for the time being to the Japanese, and they can turn it into a pizza parlour. And they were serious."

- Keith Graves, UN correspondent for the BBC, three separate reports for BBC television news, February 27th-29th 1991


"There has been and continues to be a concern regarding the impact of DU on the environment. Therefore, if no-one makes a case for the effectiveness of DU on the battlefield, DU rounds may become politically unacceptable and thus be deleted from the arsenal. I believe we should keep this sensitive issue in mind when action reports are written."

- Lt. Col. M.V. Ziehmn, Los Alamos National Laboratory memorandum, 1st March 1991


"Political meetings with them would not be appropriate for our policy at this time."

- Richard Boucher, US State Department spokesman, 14th March 1991, in reference to the US refusal to even meet with the Iraqi democratic opposition leaders whilst the Iraqi rebellion was brutally crushed in the South of the country


"This is a new kind of war which understands and takes advantage of technological advances. The situation is deteriorating rapidly and it will get worse in the months ahead."

- Save The Children ‘Iraq Situation Report,’ March 1991


"You asked me to travel, as a matter of urgency, to Iraq. It should be said at once that nothing we had seen or read had quite prepared us for this particular form of devastation which has now befallen the country. [...] Most means of modern life have been destroyed. [...] The authorities are as yet scarcely able to measure the dimensions of the calamity, much less respond to its' consequences. The recent conflict has wrought near apocalyptic results; Iraq has been relegated to a pre-industrial age.

All electrically operated installations have ceased to function. Food can not be preserved, water can not be purified, sewage can not be pumped away. Nine thousand homes are destroyed or damaged beyond repair. The flow of food through the private sector has been reduced to a trickle; many food prices are already beyond the purchasing power of most Iraqi families. The mission recommends that sanctions in respect of food supplies should be immediately removed.

Drastic international measures are most urgent. The Iraqi people face further catastrophe, epidemic and famine, if massive life supporting needs are not met. The long summer is only weeks away. Time is short."

- Martti Ahtisaari, UN Under Secretary for Administration and Management, March 20th 1991. Ahtisaari was the first UN official to visit post-war Iraq.


"The time of reconstruction and recovery should not be the occasion for vengeful actions against a nation forced to war as a result of a dictator's ambition."

- James Baker, US Secretary of State, addressing US Congress, March 1991


"That's not really a number I'm terribly interested in."

- General Colin Powell, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, on being asked his assessment of Iraqi military and civilian casualties, April 1991


"In every city we visited, we documented severe damage to homes, electrical plants, fuel storage facilities, civilian factories, hospitals, churches, civilian airports, vehicles, transportation facilities, food storage and food testing laboratories, grain silos, animal vaccination centres, schools, communication towers, civilian government office buildings, and stores. Almost all facilities we saw had been bombed two or three times, ensuring that they could not be repaired. Most of the bridges we saw had been bombed from both ends."

- Adeeb Abed and Gavrielle Gemma, Independent Commission of Inquiry staff members, fact find finding trip to Iraq, April 3rd-14th 1991


"All possible sanctions will be maintained until Saddam Hussein is gone."

- Marlin Fitzwater, White House Press Spokesman, May 1991


"Iraqis will be made to pay the price while Saddam Hussein is in power. Any easing of sanctions will be considered only when there is a new government."

- Robert Gates, US National Security Advisor, Los Angeles Times, 9th May 1991


"[Britain will veto any UN attempt to weaken sanctions] for so long as Saddam Hussein remains in power."

- John Major, British Prime Minister, 10th May 1991


"Gulf lesson one is the value of air power...[....]...it was right on target from day one. The Gulf war taught us that we must retain combat superiority in the skies. [....] Our air strikes were the most effective, yet humane, in the history of warfare."

- George Bush, 29th May 1991


"Many of the targets were chosen only secondarily to contribute to the military defeat of Iraq. [...] Military planners hoped the bombing would amplify the economic and psychological impact of international sanctions on Iraqi society. [....] Because of these goals, damage to civilian structures and interests, invariably described by briefers during the war as 'collateral' and unintended, were sometimes neither. [....] They deliberately did great harm to Iraq's ability to support itself as an industrial society."

- from 'Allied Air War Struck Broadly in Iraq; Officials Acknowledge Strategy Went Beyond Purely Military Targets,' Article by Barton Gellman, The Washington Post, 23rd June 1991


"Saddam Hussein can not restore his own electricity. He needs help. If there are political objectives that the UN coalition has, it can say: 'Saddam, when you agree to do these things, we will allow people to come in and fix your electricity.' It gives us long-term leverage."

- US Colonel John A. Warden III, as quoted in Gellman's artcicle, The Washington Post, 23rd June 1991


"What were we trying to do with the sanctions_ Help out the Iraqi people_ No, what we were doing with the attacks on the infrastructure was to accelerate the effect of sanctions."

- Unidentified Pentagon planner, as quoted in Gellman's article, The Washington Post, 23rd June 1991


"There is a clear and undeniable humanitarian need in Iraq. It is absurd and indefensible for the UN to pay for these needs when numerous other urgent crises and disasters, from Bangladesh to the Horn of Africa, cry out for our attention. Iraq has considerable oil reserves and should pay to meet these needs itself."

- UN field study of water and sanitation, food, health and energy; submitted by the Secretary General to the Sanctions Committee, 22nd July 1991


"Sooner or later, Mr. Bush argued, sanctions would force Mr. Hussein's generals to bring him down, and then Washington would have the best of all worlds: an iron-fisted Iraqi junta without Saddam Hussein. [A return to the days when Saddam's] iron fist held Iraq together, much to the satisfaction of the American allies Turkey and Saudi Arabia."

- Thomas Friedman, article in The New York Times, July 1991. Two years later, in a rare moment of brutal honesty, Friedman wrote : "It has always been American policy that the iron-fisted Mr. Hussein plays a useful role in holding Iraq together."


"[Iraq is like a medieval city under siege]….cut off from outside assistance; its’ population deprived of adequate food, water, medical care and the means to produce for its’ subsistence, is condemned to perish. It is only a matter of time."

- Warren J. Hamerman, International Progress Organisation, in testimony before the UN Organisation on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities’ 43rd session, 13th August 1991


"Unless sanctions are eased quickly, Iraq will face malnutrition, disease and a food emergency unprecedented in modern times."

- Michael Priestly, UN official, quoted in The Independent, 3rd September 1991


"Is it your aim to destroy Iraqi industry or implement resolution 687_ If your aim is to carry out 687, then you have our approval. But if your objective is to annihilate Iraqi industry and deny Iraq the chance of becoming a prosperous industrial country, that would be a different matter."

- Tariq Aziz, Deputy Iraqi Prime Minster, statement published in Baghdad newspapers in response to continued US threats of new attacks if Iraq fails to comply with weapons disclosure, October 1991


"In the most lackadaisical and morally laid back way, we are killing people…..small, brown children beyond the reach of our shrivelled imaginations."

- Edward Pearce, Journalist, article in ‘The Guardian’ entitled ‘Death and Indecency in a time of Cholera,’ 25th October 1991


"Millions of innocent people are suffering and that is intolerable. They are the last in the nutcracker. They have not been able to influence events, but my God they are being squeezed. […] There is no way the infrastructural problems can be solved by the agencies alone."

- Lord Judd, director of OXFAM, 20th November 1991


"The US has always regarded international laws as an annoying encumbrance, unless they can be used to advantage against an enemy."

- Professor Noam Chomsky, Author, ‘Deterring Democracy’ 1991


"What has been destroyed is through the peaceful means of inspection. It is that way to destroy weapons, and not through bombing and attacks."

- Rolf Ekeus, UNSCOM Weapons Inspectors Chairman, March 1992


"[The need for the agreement of every member of the Committee]….makes the work much more difficult……you could not necessarily respond very efficiently to the needs of the population."

- Peter Hohenfeller, Former Chairman of the Sanctions Committee, May 20th 1992


"Unborn children of the region [are] being asked to pay the highest price, the integrity of their DNA.’

- Ross B. Mirkarimi, The Arms Control Research Centre, from his report: ‘The Environmental and Human Health Impacts of the Gulf Region with Special Reference to Iraq.’ May 1992


"The results of our study contradict this claim [that use of precision weapons had produced limited damage to the civilian population] and confirm that the casualties of war extend far beyond those caused directly by warfare."

- Dr. Eric Hoskins, Harvard University health specialist, in his report ‘Children, War and Sanctions,’ June 1992


"The situation which the Iraqi people is suffering is extremely tragic…..all the medical contributions of humanitarian organisations and bodies meet only a small proportion of the actual needs of drugs and medical services. […] It appears that the work of the Sanctions Committee and the way it performs the tasks entrusted to it under the provision of SCR 661 are orientated towards the obstruction or rejection of any request by Iraq that enters into the area of essential civilian needs of a humanitarian nature, which has led to the increasing danger faced by vulnerable categories."

- Iraqi UN Ambassador Abd al-Amir al-Anbari, report to the UN Secretary General of a study prepared by the Iraqi Ministry of Foreign Affairs on the workings of the Sanctions Committee, July 1992


" [There is]…nothing to prevent the Iraqi government using its' own resources to pay for humanitarian supplies."

- Douglas Hogg, Minister of State at the British Foreign Office, February 1993. Hogg does not mention that all Iraqi exports are still prohibited and all assets still frozen.


"The measures taken by the world community are not aimed at the Iraqi people. Iraq may import, and indeed does, foodstuffs, medicines and essential civilian consumer goods."

- Ronald Newman, head of the Northern Gulf Bureau of the US State Department, February 1993


"Three years of sanctions have created circumstances in Iraq where the majority of the civilian population are now living in poverty. The greatest threat to the health and well-being of the Iraqi people remains the difficult economic conditions created by internationally mandated sanctions and by the infrastructural damage wrought in the 1991 military conflict. […] One fundamental contradiction remains: that politically motivated sanctions (which by definition are imposed to create hardship) can not be implemented in a manner which spares the vulnerable."

- Dr. Eric Hoskins, UNICEF commissioned report, later shelved, February 1993


"It is inconceivable that Saddam Hussein could remain in power if he complied with all UN resolutions."

- Dee Dee Myers, Whitehouse spokeswoman, March 1993


"[To swallow the US case]…as it stands requires a leap of faith and a complete suspension of political cynicism."

- The New York Times, commenting on Madeleine Albright’s attempts to justify the latest Cruise missile attacks, June 27th 1993


"We will not hesitate to use force if necessary…..[but the West]…has no quarrel with the Iraqi people. They have suffered enough."

- Douglas Hurd, British Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, June 1993


"It is a country whose economy has been devastated….above all by the continued sanctions….which have virtually paralysed the whole economy and generated persistent deprivation, chronic hunger, endemic under-nutrition, massive unemployment and widespread human suffering. A vast majority of the Iraqi population is living under the most deplorable conditions and is simply engaged in a struggle for survival. A grave humanitarian tragedy is unfolding….the nutritional status of the population continues to deteriorate at an alarming rate. Large numbers of Iraqis now have food intakes lower than those populations in the disaster stricken African countries."

- Food and Agriculture Organisation / World Food Programme report 'Food Supply Situation and Crop Outlook in Iraq', July 1993


"[Iraq is]…18.8 million people in a refugee camp, one third of which are children – of whom at least 100,000 are now dead, not from war but from hunger."

- Health expert Dr. Salman Rawaf, July 1993


"We do not believe that an independent Kurdistan is possible."

- Douglas Hurd, on Turkish television, January 1994


"Our interests lie in reverting to Soviet alliances [with Iraq] because that’s where the money is."

- Unidentified Russian diplomat, January 1994, quoted in ‘The Scourging of Iraq’ by Geoff Simons.


"The claim by the Western governments that food and drugs flow freely into Iraq is not true. I have seen telexes and documents that showed clearly that the British and the American government interfered with the flow of crucial drugs into Iraq. That is unquestionable. […..The sanctions] would not be lifted even if Iraq satisfies the UN Security Council on every single sanction report….the Americans are making it clear that the sanctions are not going to be lifted under any circumstances."

- Tim Llewellyn, BBC Middle East correspondent speaking at a meeting of the Council for the Advancement of Arab-British Understanding, 16th February 1994


"The Iraqi government complies with UN resolutions not because they have seen the error of their ways, but because they are in such desperate straits."

- Unidentified Western diplomat, March 1994, quoted in ‘The Scourging of Iraq’ by Geoff Simons


"The stakes are too high to give Mr. Hussein the benefit of the doubt, or to let our policy be dictated by commercial interests or simple fatigue. [Compliance with UN resolutions is] a cynical tactic."

- Warren Christopher, US Secretary of State, 29th April 1994


"Working in paediatric departments in Iraq has become a daily nightmare. Hospitals depend entirely on irregular and spasmodic donations brought in by charities which are like a drop of water on parched earth. In the diabetic clinic we have to divide four small bottles of insulin between 20 or 30 children while trying to clam their parents’ terror. For children with leukaemia to begin treatment, parents are forced to send money to buy drugs from Jordan. Parents sell their belongings and even their homes, and after bringing in the drugs the children are dying from uncontrolled infection."

- Dr. Harvey Marcovitch, British physician, in a letter to The Times: ‘Saddam’s atrocity…or ours_’ and quoting an Iraqi doctor, May 31st 1994


"The difficulty with cut-off points is that all the Iraqis have to do is sit back and be good boys.’

- Unidentified British official, September 13th 1994, quoted in ‘The Scourging of Iraq’ by Geoff Simons after Rolf Ekeus of UNSCOM announces his intention to commence a six month weapons monitoring period, after a which a recommendation for lifting sanctions could be made.


"We do want Iraq to see light at the end of the tunnel……without progress Iraq can conclude it is not worth co-operating."

- Rolf Ekeus, UNSCOM, September 1994


"Before any individual or company can talk to an Iraqi buyer, they must apply for a licence to negotiate. Licences to negotiate can take three to four weeks to issue. Only when the licence is issued can you start talking without breaking the law. Once the buyer and seller agree [a price] the seller must then apply for a supply licence, which can take up to twenty weeks to issue. In the meantime the Iraqi Dinar is suffering daily devaluation and inflation beyond control. Twenty weeks later the seller receives the supply licence by which time the buyer’s situation has changed. This forces the buyer to cancel the order, or, at best, reduce the quality or quantity of the goods in order to raise the hard currency needed to finance the purchase. But [the Sanctions Committee insist that] any change to the application means that the entire process must start again."

- Unidentified British businessman describes the tortuous process of attempting to send medical supplies to Iraq, October 1994, quoted in ‘The Scourging of Iraq’ by Geoff Simons


"We will not allow Saddam Hussein to defy the will of the US and the international community."

- Bill Clinton, 6th October 1994


"They [the Iraqis] have done an excellent job. Our commission is convinced it’s all over. It is watertight. We have faith in the work we have done."

- Jaako Ylitalo, Chief UNSCOM field officer in Baghdad, 13th October 1994


"[There would still be an] …Iraqi threat when British and American soldiers have gone home…..Saddam’s mailed fist will still be over Kuwait and her neighbours."

- Douglas Hurd, in response to Iraq’s official recognition of Kuwait as a sovereign state, 15th October 1994


"There is no occasion for doing Saddam Hussein any favours at the present time."

- Warren Christopher, whilst the US threatens Iraq with fresh air attacks, 16th October 1994


"We recognise this area as vital to US interests and we will behave, with others, multilaterally when we can and unilaterally when we must."

- Madeleine Albright, US Ambassador to the UN, describing unauthorised bombing and air patrols of Iraq by US aircraft to the UN Security Council, 21st October 1994


"Sanctions will never be lifted because the US and Britain do not trust Saddam not to pose a threat."

"[Sanctions cannot be lifted] …whatever the degree of Iraqi compliance with UN resolutions as long as President Saddam remains in power."

"Washington is determined to maintain sanctions and avoid discussion of the underlying issues."

- Two articles in The Guardian and one from ‘Gulf Newsletter’, November 1994


"A severe deterioration is detectable in all the hospitals visited by MAI. The team had not expected to see such an extreme reduction of resources, given the desperate situation of the hospitals in April; further deterioration had been hard to imagine. Basic medicines are absent, routine surgery impossible, and more and more equipment is breaking down and put out of use because of the unavailability of spare parts. Children are referred to Baghdad because treatment is unavailable at their local hospital, but the Baghdad hospitals can not provide for them either."

- Medical Aid For Iraq report, December 1994


" [Not]…a timely action….neither helpful nor constructive…"

- Christine Shelley, US State Department spokeswoman, rebuking a French initiative to lift sanctions, 6th January 1995


"This is a leopard that has not changed its’ spots. Pressure has got us to where we are now and it needs to be maintained."

- Unidentified British Foreign Office official, in response to French initiative, 24th February 1995


"Any modification of the sanctions regime that ameliorates the pressure that Saddam Hussein must feel is not at this time warranted."

- Mike McCurry, Whitehouse Spokesman, March 1995


"We are determined to ensure that the whole of Iraq’s biological capability is detected and destroyed before there can be any question of adjustment to the sanctions regime….we shall continue with good reason to approach sanctions rigorously in the interest of Iraq’s peoples."

- John Major, British Prime Minister, March 1995


"Being in casualty is like living in a nightmare. The severe shortage of drugs means we can do very little to help. Children die in front of me. The parents ask why and I can not answer them. Each night I pray for the embargo to be lifted."

- Dr. Tariq Abbas Hady, quoted in an article in The Sunday Times, 12th March 1995


"[There is no point in adopting a resolution merely as]…..a public relations tool enabling the US and Britain to continue blaming Iraq for hardships caused by sanctions."

- Unidentified French and Russian diplomats describe Resolution 986 (The Oil-For-Food Programme), quoted in The Independent, 14th April 1995


"Our conclusion, and what we will present to the Security Council, is that we feel confident that, with the exception of the biological area, Iraq will not be able to develop any weapons of mass destruction or long range missiles without being detected by the international controls."

- Rolf Ekeus, May 1995


"Soldiers may be incidentally exposed to DU from dust and smoke on the battlefield. The Army Surgeon General has determined that it is unlikely that these soldiers will receive a significant internal DU exposure. Medical follow-up is not warranted for soldiers who experience incidental exposure from dust or smoke."

"Since DU weapons are openly available on the world arms market, DU weapons will be used in future conflicts. The number of DU patients on future battlefields probably will be significantly higher because other countries will use systems containing DU."

"DU is a low-level radioactive waste, and, therefore, must be disposed of in a licensed repository."

"No international law, treaty, regulation, or custom requires the United States to remediate the Persian Gulf war battlefields."

- Bewildering and contradictory excerpts from the SAME report by the US Army Environmental Policy Institute: 'Health and Consequences of Depleted Uranium use in the US army', June 1995


"This is a matter that we do not contemplate because we are with the people of Iraq as much as we can until the long night of their suffering ends."

- King Hussein of Jordan, in response to US pressure to close his border with Iraq, 18th August 1995


"The Iraqi leadership declared to me that its’ policy from now on is 100% implementation of the cease-fire arrangements. [SCR 687] So, with that, the Security Council, all members without exception, should have no choice about lifting the embargo."

- Rolf Ekeus, quoted in The Times, 24th August 1995


‘I am filled with shame and anger at myself, at my cowardice, my silence, my complicity with those, who, despite their claims to the contrary, have killed hundreds of thousands of civilians, without incurring the wrath of the [war crimes] tribunal of The Hague, implacably going about their dirty, evil work.’

- Yves Bonnet, Deputy French Prime Minister, describing a recent visit to Iraq, 25th August 1995


"Alarming food shortages are causing irreparable damage to an entire generation of Iraqi children. After 24 years in the field, mostly in Africa starting with Biafra, I didn’t think anything could shock me, but this was comparable to the worst scenarios I have ever seen."

- Dieter Hannusch, Chief Emergency Support Officer, World Food Programme, WFP news update 26th September 1995


"There are actually more than four million people, a fifth of Iraq’s population, at severe nutritional risk. That number includes 2.4 million children under five, about 600,000 pregnant/nursing women and destitute women heads of households, as well as hundreds of thousands of elderly without anyone to help them. 70% of the population has little or no access to food…..nearly everyone seems to be emaciated. We are at the point of no return in Iraq. The social fabric of the nation is disintegrating. People have exhausted their ability to cope."

- Mona Hamman, WFP Regional Manager, WFP news update, 26th September 1995


"We simply do not know if he is testing us, planning an attack on Kuwait or planning to murder more of his own people. Any action by him is madness, but then he’s mad, so who knows_"

- Unidentified Pentagon official, September 1995, as quoted in ‘The Scourging of Iraq’ by Geoff Simons


"Believe me, it contains very sophisticated technology."

- Unidentified Washington spokesman describing a corroded ‘gadget’ that was fished out of the Tigris river, Baghdad, 11th October 1995, as quoted in ‘The Scourging of Iraq’ by Geoff Simons


"It is generally agreed that Iraq has already destroyed all of its’ weapons of mass destruction, either under UN supervision, or in anticipation of allied bombing raids."

- Article in The Guardian, 4th October 1995


"Our policy is to keep Iraq in its’ box."

- Unidentified Western diplomat, article in The Guardian, 18th October 1995, as quoted in ‘The Scourging of Iraq’ by Geoff Simons


"What's the point of having this superb military that you're always talking about if we can't use it_"

- Madeleine Albright, to General Colin Powell who, strangely, was arguing that to deploy US troops required a political objective, as quoted in Powell's book 'My American Journey', 1995.


"[Deliberate destruction of public service infrastructure, notably electrical-power generation and distribution facilities, so as to] .........degrade the will of the civilian population."

- 'Cruise Missiles: Proven Capability Should Affect Aircraft and Force Structure Requirements' -  Document 95-116. Washington, DC: General Accounting Office, 1995


"The solution lies in adequate food supplies in the country, restoring the viability of the local currency, and creating conditions for the people to acquire adequate purchasing power. But these conditions can only be fulfilled if the economy can be put back in proper shape enabling it to draw on its' own resources, and that clearly can not occur as long as the embargo remains in force."

- UN Food and Agricultural Organisation, 1995


" 'The United States shifted its' deterrent strategy from the defunct Soviet Union to so-called 'rougue states' such as Iraq, Libya, Cuba and North Korea.' AP reported. The study advocated that the US exploit its' nuclear arsenal to portray itself as "...irrational and vindictive if its' vital interests are attacked. [That] should be part of the national persona we project to all adversaries. [...] It hurts to portray ourselves as too fully rational and cool headed. [...] The fact that some elements [of the US government] may appear to be potentially out of control can be beneficial to creating and reinforcing fears and doubts within the minds of an adversary's decision makers."

- Excerpt from US Strategic Command report ' Essentials of Post Cold War Deterrence,' 1995, as reported by Associated Press and later cited in 'Rogue States', article by Noam Chomsky, 1999. The report resurrected former US President Richard Nixon's 'Mad-Man' theory of the 1970's, designed to prevent the Soviets from interfering in US policy.


"Depleted Uranium is more of a problem than we thought when it was developed. But it was developed according to standards and was thought through very carefully. It turned out perhaps to be wrong."

- Brent Scowcroft, former US National Security Advisor, 'Riding The Storm' - Channel 4 documentary, 3rd January 1996


"The level of malnutrition is on a par with famine ravaged countries like Sudan."

- John English, British Red Cross, 29th January 1996


"The only people who are told what is going on are the Americans and the British. We have asked them for a copy of the draft agreement and a copy of the 20 conditions they have set, but we have not been given anything."

- Unidentified member of the Sanctions Committee, describing US and UK insistence on new conditions for Resolution 986, article in The Guardian, April 1996


Stahl:

"The question is, are they [sanctions] missing the mark_ ….We have heard that half a million children have died. I mean, this is more children than died in Hiroshima. Is the price worth it_’

Albright:

"This is a very hard choice, but the price….we think the price is worth it."

- Interviewer Leslie Stahl questions Madeleine Albright, CBS Television ’60 Minutes’, 12th May 1996


"It would be hard to imagine sanctions being lifted whilst Saddam Hussein is still in power."

- Malcolm Rifkind, British Foreign Secretary, quoted in The Guardian, 21stt May 1996


"Ministers deliberately misled Parliament, but did not intend to mislead Parliament."

- Conclusion of Lord Chief Justice Scott's 'British Arms to Iraq' Inquiry, June 1996


"[It was]..the rigorous implementation of a flexible interpretation."

- Michael Heseltine, former British MP, on being asked during the Scott inquiry why Britain was exporting ‘dual-use’ items to Iraq in breach of the government’s own ban on military sales.


"One of the charges at the time was that in some way, because I had been Foreign Secretary, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Prime Minister, I must have known what was going on."

- John Major, in response to Lord Chief Justice Scott’s ‘ British Arms to Iraq’ enquiry, 1992


"Iraqis are congenital liars."

- Article in The Observer, 9th June 1996


"[Iraq is trying ] …to turn this humanitarian exception into a partial lifting of sanctions."

- James Rubin, US spokesman at the UN, justifying the US rejection of Iraq’s plans for food distribution under Resolution 986


"Limited but clear objectives…to make Saddam pay a price for the latest act of brutality, reducing his ability to threaten his neighbours and America’s interests."

- Bill Clinton, justifying renewed US air strikes, 3rd September 1996


"It’s all very helpful for oil prices, and with the winter coming and low stocks, the price strength will remain."

- Irene Himona, oil analyst with Societe Generale Strauss Turnbull, quoted in The Independent, 3rd September 1996


"Sanctions, as is generally recognised, are a blunt instrument. They raise the ethical question of whether suffering inflicted on vulnerable groups in the target country is a legitimate means of exerting pressure on political leaders whose behaviour is unlikely to be affected by the plight of their subjects."

- Nizar Hamdoon, Iraqi Ambassador to the UN, addressing the Security Council, and quoting the UN Secretary General’s observation made in 1995, 29th September 1996


"By so grudgingly acquiescing in it [implementing Resolution 986] the US in effect concedes what others have long proclaimed: prolonged sanctions do not punish President Saddam, only his people…..The US has floundered about without any discernible plan for the future of Iraq. As long as that is so, sanctions will come under the increasing assault of moral imperatives."

- Nizar Hamdoon, Iraqi Ambassador to the UN, addressing the Security Council, 29th September 1996


"The majority of the population are living below the poverty line and malnutrition is rampant with over 50% of women and children receiving half their calorific needs."

- UN Information Centre, 20th October 1996


"It is hard to think of a more grave breach of child rights in modern history than the suffering and death of hundreds of thousands of children under the age of five caused by a political dispute between 'their' government and the international community. The [UN] Security Council shoulders a large measure of responsibility for these violations by maintaining sanctions without taking strong measures to prevent this suffering."

- Centre For Social and Economic Rights (New York), 1996


"The full ramifications…specifically the time lag between the initial flow of oil and the actual delivery of foodstuffs, are only now becoming clear. I have had strong concerns about the pace at which the provisions of SCR 986 are being implemented. […] The amount actually available for operational and administrative expenses has been very limited. Several agencies have used their own funds to meet these costs. It appears unlikely that all the humanitarian goods in the distribution plan will be delivered and distributed within the initial 180 days established by the resolution."

- Kofi Annan, UN Secretary General, 10th March 1997


"We do not agree with those nations who argue that if Iraq complies with its’ obligations concerning weapons of mass destruction, sanctions should be lifted."

- Madeleine Albright, addressing a symposium on Iraq at Georgetown University, USA, 26th March 1997


"Children will continue to die after the agreement, since it does not correspond to the minimum needs of the civilian population. It is a temporary and feeble measure, and it should not be characterised as otherwise."

- Iraqi Minister for Foreign Affairs Al-Sahaf describing Resolution 986 to the UN Sub-commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities, 25th April 1997


"We are not saying Saddam is totally respectful of human rights, but he is the one who is supporting us. Saddam is better than the UN and he is much better than Turkey."

- Ahmet Vurgun, Kurdish refugee crossing to the border from Turkey into Iraq to seek sanctuary, as witnessed by the UN High Commissioner for Refugess, May 1997


"Saddam Hussein is the reason God created Cruise Missiles. Cruise Missiles are simply the only way to deal with him. [...] If and when Saddam pushes beyond the brink, and we get that one good shot, let's make sure it's a head shot."

- Thomas Friedman, New York Times columnist, from his article 'Head Shot,' 6th Novermber 1997


"Sanctions will be there until the end of time, or as long as he [Hussein] lasts."

- Former US President Bill Clinton, quoted in The New York Times, 23rd November 1997


"The Arab Monetary Fund has estimated the value of destroyed infrastructure and economic assets attributable to the 1991 Gulf war at $232 billion."

- Dr. Eric Hoskins, in his report ‘Political Gain and Civilian Pain’, December 1997


"Britain has been a major force in world affairs for several centuries. No British Patriot should be willing to give up that status."

- Tony Blair, British Prime Minister, 1997


"[I advocate] bombing Iraq over and over and over again."

- Thomas Friedman, New York Times columnist, from his article 'America's Multiple Choice Quiz,' 31st January 1998


"The United States did want Saddam Hussein to go, they just didn't want the Iraqi people to take over."

- Peter Jennings, ABC News, 7th February 1998


"I am willing to make a bet to anyone here that we care more about the Iraqi people than Saddam Hussein does."

-  Madeleine Albright, open meeting in Town Hall, Columbus, Ohio, 18th February 1998.  Over a million Iraqis had died from sanctions and bombing at the time of her statement.


"If we have to use force it is because we are America! We are the indispensible nation. We stand tall, and we see further into the future."

- Madeleine Albright, NBC Televsion 'Today' show, 19th February 1998


"The new Oil-For-Food deal could solve the humanitarian crisis. It could pay for the food and medicines that the Iraqi people need so badly…could restore clean water and proper sanitation to hundreds and thousands of Iraqis, restore electricity to their homes and help the farmers increase their output."

- Robin Cook, British Foreign Secretary, article in The Guardian, entitled ‘Saddam is to Blame,’ 20th February 1998 (Cook does not mention the other 21.5 million strong population.)


"The US has to make clear to Iraq and US allies that [....] America will use force, without negotiation, hesitation or UN approval."

- Thomas Friedman, New York Times columnist, from his article 'Craziness Pays,' 24th February 1998


"We wish him well, and when he comes back we will see what he has brought and how it fits with our national interest."

- Madeleine Albright, describing UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's diplomatic mission to Iraq, February 1998. On Annan's return, having reached an agreement with the government of Iraq, Albright re-iterated: "It is possible he will come with something we don't like, in which case we will pursue our national interest."


"To say they [UNSCOM] have found enough weapons to kill the world several times over is equivalent to the statement that a man who produces a million sperm a day can thus produce a million babies a day. The problem in both cases is one of delivery systems."

- Dr. Julian Perry Robinson, Science Policy Research Unit, rebuffing British prime Minister Tony Blair’s assertions about the threat of Iraqi weapons, article in The Independent, 7th March 1998


"Gas masks are not required […] and are not distributed to Embassy staff. [The Embassy is]….not even interested in finding a source for gas masks… [due to UNSCOM’s presence in Iraq and]…the fact that biological and chemical warheads are very ineffective."

- Jim Larocco, US Ambassador to Kuwait, briefing US businessmen visiting Kuwait, as quoted in The Independent, 7th March 1998


"Saddam Hussein already has the resources to enable the Iraqi health service to function properly. The government shares your concerns about the humanitarian situation in Iraq and has sympathy for the people of Iraq. Sanctions are aimed at the Iraq regime and not at them."

- Middle East Department of the British Foreign Office, responding to a letter from an anti-sanctions campaigner, 18th May 1998


"The truth of the matter is that the government of Iraq has no role, however small, which allows it to respond to the allegations contained in claims. It is unable to give its’ legal and objective opinion on claims, even when those are exaggerated. The Compensation Commission decides which claims should be settled, who is authorised to submit a claim, what should be considered direct losses, and what constitutes sufficient proof. […] These measures create a legal screen which conceals the systematic subjugation of the Iraqi people. There are no reasonable grounds for this collective punishment of the Iraqi people. If this is not done [the verification of claims in accordance with international law and the rules of justice and equity] the compensation process will become simply an organised operation to strip the Iraqi people of their property, which they desperately need in order to rebuild their society and economy."

- Tariq Aziz, Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister expressing concerns about reparations / compensations being paid to Kuwait from the proceeds of Resolution 986, in a letter to Secretary General Kofi Annan, 27th May 1998


"We are looking at ways now, together with the Americans, of the possibility of removing Saddam Hussein altogether."

- Tony Blair, addressing the House of Commons, July 1998


"It is important to note the order of magnitude of the weapons retained by Iraq; two thirds of the operational missile force [and] more than one half of the chemical weapons."

- Richard Butler, Chairman of UNSCOM, article in The Guardian quoting a comment made by him in June, 5th August 1998


"If this were a five lap race, we were halfway into the fifth lap. Why stop the race when you’re getting toward the finishing line_ [I am]…mystified by Baghdad’s action when resolution of several issues was near. The inspectors were apparently close, in the areas of missiles and chemical weapons, to being able to declare Iraq had complied with UN resolutions.’"

- Richard Butler, in an extraordinary about-face, quoted in The Independent, 6th August 1998


"If Iraq does not honour its’ agreements then it would be profoundly wrong for the international community to reward its’ intransigence by lifting sanctions regardless."

- Robin Cook, article in The Times, 8th August 1998


"The discussions were certainly long winded, alternately chilling or tedious in their subject matter: exactly how many Iraqi warheads were filled with Anthrax spores before they were destroyed in 1992_ Was a donkey, used in a biological experiment, tethered to a car or not_ How many punctures were there in the tyres of an Iraqi convoy taking weapons to destruction pits seven years ago_"

- Article in The Independent describing the UNSCOM / Iraq negotiations, 9th August 1998


"Saddam Hussein has wrestled himself to the ground. He is stuck in a box and he has thrown away the key."

- Madeleine Albright, quoted in the Financial Times, 10th August 1998


"I’m somebody who doesn’t support the continuation of sanctions….I think they’re a horrible tool…..sanctions only punish the people of Iraq, they don’t punish this [Iraqi] regime."

- Scott Ritter, former team leader UNSCOM, who resigned in protest of the "…US and UK interference in my work…" BBC Radio 4, 29th September 1998


"We are in the process of destroying an entire society. It is as simple and as terrifying as that. It is illegal and immoral."

- Denis Halliday, former UN Humanitarian Aid Co-Ordinator, in his resignation speech, 30th September 1998


"4000 to 5000 children are dying every month due to the impact of sanctions because of the breakdown of water and sanitation, inadequate diet, and the bad internal health situation."

- Denis Halliday, 14th October 1998


"Sanctions are inhuman and what we are doing can not redress that inhumanity."

- Margaret Hassan, CARE International Baghdad, quoted in The Independent, 15th October 1998


"I personally believe, as I think a lot of security Council members believe with 100% certainty, that Iraq being fully disarmed is never going to be possible. At the end of the day the Security Council must decide whether Iraq is disarmed to the extent that it is not a threat to its’ neighbours, that it has no weapons of mass destruction, and that it has no capacity to make weapons of mass destruction."

- Kofi Annan, quoted in the International Herald Tribune, 19th October 1998


"[This figure would only have] …helped in preventing further deterioration of the humanitarian situation."

- Kofi Annan, report to the Security Council describing the lack of revenue available under the Oil-For-Food programme, 19th November 1998


"The most I can say is that in a number of key areas the [oil-for-food] program has stopped the situation from getting worse. In other areas it has slowed down the rate of deterioration."

- Benon Sevan, Executive Director of the Office of the Iraq Program in the U.N. Secretariat, November 1998


"We have allowed Saddam to sell oil to buy as much food and medicine for the Iraqi people as necessary."

- Tony Blair, November 1998


"A strong, sustained series of air strikes [….] to attack Iraq's nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs. Their purpose is to protect the national interest of the United States, and indeed the interests of people throughout the Middle East and around the world."

- Bill Clinton, describing ‘Operation Desert Fox’, 17th December 1998. Tony Blair, live on television, stood in front of a Christmas tree to make his statment that Britain was attacking Iraq


" [There is]…No question…[that ‘Desert Fox’ was unlawful] … It is illegal to attack with bombs targets in a sovereign country without direct authorisation from the Security Council."

- Lord Dennis Healey, Former British Foreign Secretary, quoted in the Daily Telegraph, 21st December 1998


"World-wide, poverty is the main determinant of malnutrition and child mortality. Hence it is not surprising that artificially induced poverty by economic embargo produces the same results. Deprivation and excess deaths are real in Iraq, and I can personally attest to the devastating effects of the embargo on ordinary life from having been a member of three UN food and nutrition missions. Sanctions are not the humane alternative to war that they are purported to be, and if there were justice in this world these actions promoted by the US and Britain in the name of the UN would be seen as the crime against humanity that they are."

- Dr. Peter Pellet, Professor of Nutrition at the University of Massachusetts, quoted in The Guardian Weekly, 10th January 1999


"[They were] surely intended and understood to be a message of contempt for the Security Council. This action is in fact a call for a lawless world in which the powerful will rule. The powerful happen to be the United States and Britain, which is by now a pathetic puppy dog that has abandoned any pretence of being an independent state."

- Professor Noam Chomsky, article in ‘Frontline’ magazine, 13th January 1999


"Since Iraq can not meet even the existing UN oil sales quotas because of the low price of crude, the practical effect would be small. But the political effect would be huge: Britain would be free of claims that it is punishing the Iraqi people."

- Article in The Times, describing the gesture of lifting the cap on Iraqi oil sales under Resolution 986, and Britain’s support for it, 14th January 1999


"To keep pumping and exporting its’ oil, Iraq must upgrade and update its’ entire production sector. But Washington has refused to entertain such a possibility, just as it has rejected efforts to bring new fields into production."

- Article in The Irish Times, describing US pressure on Iraq, 14th January 1999


"With Saddam rattled, now is the time to really rattle his cage. Turn up the volume on 'Radio Free Iraq' to extra loud and call for his ouster twenty four hours a day: "All Saddam, all the time." Take steps to have Saddam declared a war criminal by the UN. Blow up a different power station in Iraq every week, so no-one knows when the lights will go off or who's in charge. Offer a reward for removing Saddam from office. Use every provocation by Saddam to blow up another Iraqi general's home

- Thomas Friedman, New York Times columnist, from his article 'Rattling the Rattler,' 24th February 1998


"This month US policy will kill 4,500 children under the age of five in Iraq, according to UN studies. This is not foreign policy – it is state sanctioned mass murder that is nearing holocaust proportions."

- Professor Noam Chomsky, Edward Hermann, Edward Said and Howard Zinn, letter to The Independent, 21st January 1999


"The US regrets any civilian casualties, but has no independent evidence that any Iraqis were killed."

- Ken Bacon, US Pentagon spokesman describing US missiles that struck the al-Jumhuriya residential district of Basra, and ‘unidentified’ missiles hitting the village of Abu-Khasib, January 25th 1999. The UN reported that 17 people had been killed, approx. 100 injured and approx. 45 houses damaged or destroyed.


"We have to continue making these air strikes in order to carry on with our humanitarian work."

George Robertson, British Minister of Defence (later to become the head of NATO), BBC Television, 28th January 1999


"The continual TV images of the West’s high-technology systems causing death and destruction to people in the Third World will not be tolerated forever by civilised people."

- General Michael Rose, former UN Force Commander in Bosnia condemning ‘Desert Fox’ and the ongoing air offensive, January 1999


"We bought seven years and that’s not bad….the longer we can fool around in the [Security] Council and keep things static the better."

- Unidentified US official with ‘..responsibility for Iraq…’, as quoted in The Washington Post, 28th January 1999


"We simply can not let two [UN] member states continue to pervert the UN into a weapon of mass destruction."

- Denis Halliday, quoted in The Seattle Post Intelligencer, 12th February 1999


"The gravity of the situation is indisputable and can not be overstated. The magnitude of the humanitarian needs is such that they can not be met within the context of the parameters set forth in SCR 986 and succeeding SCR 1153…..nor was the programme intended to meet all the needs of the Iraqi people. [….] Given the present state of infrastructure, the revenue required for its’ rehabilitation is far above the funding level available under SCRs 986 and 1153. [….] Under current conditions the outlook will remain bleak and become more serious with time. The humanitarian situation will continue to be a dire one in the absence of a sustained revival of the Iraqi economy."

- Conclusion of the UN humanitarian panel set up in late January to additionally assess needs of the 986 program, March 1999


"For a force supposedly protecting civilians, the American and British jets controlling the skies above Iraq go about their task in a peculiar manner. Their near daily attacks on the "perceived danger" of Iraqi air defences have disrupted the distribution of food and medicine, cut off the flow of oil that pays for those supplies and, on occasion, killed the people they are supposed to be protecting."

- Article in The Economist, 6th March 1999


" [It is] a mini undeclared war." - Unnamed US State Department official

"It’s a strategy we fell into….it’s not one we originally planned, but it’s working very, very well for us." - Unnamed military official

- Article in The Washington Post describing new US guidelines that allow almost daily bombing, and govern how planners select Iraqi targets and how pilots responded to Iraqi actions, 7th March 1999


"Imagine the official (and thereby mainstream media) reaction if the following sentence were to appear in a prominently placed article in an Iraqi daily:

'Iraqi officials admit they have little idea what's going on inside the United States, and attempts to organise American dissidents into an effective anti-Clinton fighting force have been disastrously unsuccessful.'

Or maybe: 'But if Iraq lets up the pressure on him, Iraqi officials say, Clinton would soon be out bullying his way around the Americas, perhaps armed with nuclear or biological weapons.'

Or possibly: 'Occasionally, as in the United States, pinprick air attacks may be needed to keep opponents in line."

Or this whopper: "The hundreds of Iraqi airstrikes on the United States since the zones were established are made in self-defence or occasionally in retaliation for U.S. flight violations of the zones, Iraqi officials are careful to emphasise.' "

- Eddy Tews, EAT THE STATE web site editorial, 1999


"In a confidential paper sent to the UN with the authority of the British Foreign Office Minister Derek Fatchett, the government admits "….the needs of the Iraqi people are not being met by the Oil-For-Food programme."

- Article in The Observer, 28th March 1999


"There is adequate provision, under the Oil-For-Food deal for food and medical supplies to reach those in need."

- Derek Fatchett, responding to anti-sanctions campaign letter, March 1999


"Despite revenue under Oil-For-Food being less than we had hoped, it still ought to be sufficient to meet the immediate needs of the Iraqi people."

- Carol Hinchley, British Foreign Office staff member, responding to anti-sanctions campaign letter, March 1999


"If you assume lets say for the sake of argument, 2 billion dollars twice a year for 22 million people, then you are getting a per capita figure per year of 180, just under 180 dollars. Now I ask you, 180 dollars per year_ That’s not a per capita income figure, that is the figure out of which everything has to be financed: from electrical services to water and sewerage, to food, to health, the lot. Now if you have 180 dollars and then the press ask me: ‘…do you consider that adequate for survival…_’ I can say at the very best, that the nose is just above the water, so that you are not drowning, but over the course of years, the nose is increasingly touching that water and many people are already drowning. So it is not a figure that we can really take lightly or accept as adequate."

- Hans Von Sponeck, Humanitarian Aid Co-ordinator for Iraq, presentation to members of the Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility delegation, Baghdad, 2nd April 1999


"Saddam now hoards vast quantities of medical supplies rather than distributing them to his people."

- George Robertson, British Minister of Defence, 6th March 1999


"You have heard, I’m sure about the so-called overstocking [of medicine]. If you get from someone a mono-causal explanation, then start getting suspicious. It is not, I repeat not, and you can check this with my colleagues, a pre-meditated act of withholding medicines from those who should have it. It is much, much, more complex than that."

- Hans Von Sponeck, Humanitarian Aid Co-ordinator for Iraq, presentation to members of the Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility delegation, Baghdad, 2nd April 1999


"Right now we are setting the stage for depriving another generation of the opportunity to become responsible national and international citizens of tomorrow, and that might be the most serious htmlect of it all."

- Hans Von Sponeck, Humanitarian Aid Co-ordinator for Iraq, presentation to members of the Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility delegation, Baghdad, 2nd April 1999


"I have no doubt at all that we will win. This is a battle over the values of civilisation."

- Tony Blair, justifying the bombing of the former Yugoslavia, April 1999


"I hold the member states [of the Security Council] responsible for the sanctions regime on Iraq. I hold them responsible for the genocide that is now existing in Iraq. I hold them responsible for resolutions and implementing resolutions that undermine the spirit and the content of the UN Charter, which undermine the Declaration of Human Rights, which undermine the Convention of the Rights of the Child, and other provisions of international law which provide for economic and social well-being, and so on. I mean we have the ironic situation where Saddam Hussein himself has undermined the human rights, political rights of his own people. We in the UN and the Security Council have taken away many of the remaining rights, such as food, housing, education, opportunities, employment, well being. That’s what we’ve done. It’s a tremendous irony that the UN itself is taking away the rights of the Iraqi people."

- Denis Halliday, in an interview with Miriam Ryle and Grant Wakefield, London, 17th April 1999


"We must teach our children to resolve their conflicts with words, not weapons."

- Bill Clinton, utter hypocrisy and public relations spiel after the shootings at the Columbine High School, Denver, USA, 17th April 1999.


"The complexity of the humanitarian situation in Iraq poses major challenges, as there is little experience with the type of problems encountered when the whole spectrum of basic services starts to fail, as is happening in Iraq. The slow collapse of the electricity infrastructure has consequences that are rippling through every htmlect of life in Iraq, and provides a good example of how weaknesses in one sector can affect all other sectors. The erratic quality of supply and increasingly frequent unscheduled power outages [....] leads to the spoilage and waste of medicines and vaccines [....] [to] losses in rice and other crops requiring continuous irrigation where farmers were dependent on electrical pumps. Water treatment plants are unable to maintain output of treated water, and the reduction in pressure of water mains brings greater risk of cross-contamination to water in the distribution network."

- Un Secretary General's review of 'Oil-for-Food', 28th April 1999


"We have changed neither our policy nor our attitude in any way whatsoever."

- James Foley, US State Department spokesman, 17th June 1999


"There are two steps in the economic rehabilitation of Iraq and the Iraqi people. One is the lifting of sanctions and the second is the reconstitution of the economy. The economy cannot be reconstituted from the outside, it has to be reconstituted from within. The Iraqi government and the Iraqi people have to take control of their economy and their way forward. This resolution [1194] gives no hope for that.

I just wish people would see the transparency of this effort. It's not serious arms control; it's not serious anything. This is hypocrisy at the highest levels and I am disturbed by it.

‘[In] having Congress pass the Iraq Liberation Act they have politicised this. They have taken it out of the realm of reality and put it in the realm of politics, tying the administration's hands. How can you pursue a policy of arm's control and disarmament in Iraq under the blanket of international law when your policy of regime removal is the exact opposite of that_

What I am worried about is the fact that our policies are just continuing the suffering of innocent people and actually bringing the Middle East to the brink of yet another war. From an American's perspective it's going to cost American lives. And that's something I think the American people have no clue about. They are sitting here thinking Saddam and anti-Saddam thoughts, the evil of the Iraqi tyranny, etc. They don't understand that our policies are killing six-thousand kids a month. Every time I speak and bring that fact up people are like: "What_" They are just totally divorced from the reality of what is happening in Iraq.

Our job was to disarm Iraq as quickly as possible. My job was to find weapons -- we undertook an intensive intelligence campaign to gather information on where these weapons were. Then we needed to send inspections teams to Iraq to find these weapons. The US didn't like that. Simply put: they didn't want that kind of resolution because if you disarm Iraq you lift the sanctions. The last thing the US wanted to do was lift sanctions. Sanctions are a vehicle of containment."

- Scott Ritter, Former UNSCOM Chief Inspector in an interview by members of the 'Fellowship of Reconciliation' Nicholas Arons, Doug Hostetter, Clayton Ramey, and Seattle 'FOR' member Bert Sacks, June 25th 1999


"Never happen. We'd never get it through the Security Council."

- Ewan Buchanon, former UNSCOM inspector, in response to Grant Wakefield's telephone question: 'If global disarmament is the genuine policy of organisations such as UNSCOM, why are you not inspecting the weapons of mass destruction possessed by the United States_', June 1999.


"I won’t talk about ‘Gateway’…..it’s not something I’m prepared to talk about in public."

- Richard Butler, former UNSCOM Chairman, refusing to elaborate about the US supplied building in Bahrain, code-named ‘Gateway’ where UNSCOM short burst transmissions were beamed to a satellite, splitting into two transmissions, one for the US National Security Agency at Fort Meade, and one for the UN in New York. BBC Panorama investigation, July 1999


"The very concern that UNSCOM always had about eavesdropping was that somehow that eavesdropping would be used in an illegitimate way, and when push came to shove that is exactly what happened. You can have all the satellite photographs in the world, but there’s nothing like being on the ground, and UNSCOM had access on the ground, and everyone needed UNSCOM to do their bidding. The very facilities that the concealment team were most interested in were the facilities that were bombed [during ‘Desert Fox’]. Those facilities, many of which the US didn’t even know about in 1991, were only collected as a result of UNSCOM’s access on the ground."

- William Arkin, Special Advisor to the UN, BBC Panorama investigation, July 1999


"Large amounts of food and medicine arriving in Iraq are sub-standard, damaged or unusable."

- Benon Sevan, UN Exceutive Director, quoted by Associated Press, 6th August 1999


"[According to administration officials] the United States has seen no indication that Baghdad has resumed its’ chemical and biological weapons programs."

- The Washington Post, 15th July 1999


"My question would be…what for_ Is that humanitarian needs_ Or are we getting into suggestions about rebuilding the Iraqi economy, which is a very different question for the Security Council."

- Peter Burleigh, US Ambassador to the UN, responding to the news that the $5.2 billion Iraqi oil cap is to be lifted, 22nd July 1999


"President Saddam Hussein has been caught red handed smuggling vital supplies of baby milk and medical supplies meant for Iraqi children."

- The Sunday Telegraph, 22nd August 1999.

The story actually had been reported by a Kuwaiti official to Associated Press on August 17th. A ship bound for Dubai had been intercepted and the Kuwaitis found ‘….75 cartons of talcum powder, 25 cartons of baby bottles and 25 tons of cotton seed for livestock.’ The condition of the goods was not reported. Within 5 days the talcum powder, according to the ‘Sunday Telegraph’, had mysteriously transformed into baby milk, itself a peculiar irony as UNICEF had just recommended to the Iraqi government that they remove baby milk substitutes from the ration and promote exclusive breast feeding.


"I think it’s the end of war myself. I think they’ve gotten to the point where they’re killing their own people, which is ridiculous. Any kind of intelligent animal would stop at a point like that."

- Dr. Rosalie Bertell, anti-DU campaigner and uranium expert, Tonight with Trevor McDonald – Investigation into Depleted Uranium ammunition, ITV, 26th August 1999


"If they turn on the radars we're going to blow up their goddamn SAMs [surface-to-air missiles]. They know we own their country. We own their airspace... We dictate the way they live and talk. And that's what's great about America right now. It's a good thing, especially when there is a lot of oil out there we need."

- Air Force Brigadier General William Looney, head of the US Central Command's Airborne Expeditionary Force, Washington Post, 30th August 1999


"Information on Depleted Uranium did not come from Iraqis, did not come from a foreign government, but the hazards, the known problems came from the United States own army team assigned to clean it up in Iraq. What we found can be explained in three words: OH MY GOD."

- Dr. Doug Rokke, former Pentagon DU expert, as quoted in 'Paying the Price' - a film by John Pilger, ITV, 1999


"Payback…[for Iraqi]…provocations…’ (meaning the Iraqis have seen the planes on radar) ‘…usually comes hours later and miles away, and may be delivered by a different aircraft. ‘On many days the attack planes go directly to a target and drop bombs as a response to a perceived provocation earlier in the day, or even the day before.’ "

- Article in The Washington Post, describing US bombing rationales and quoting an unnamed Pentagon official, 30th August 1999


"Please remove the humanitarian discussions from the rest in order to really end a silent human tragedy. […] Don't play the battle on the backs of the civilian population by letting them wait until the more complex issues are resolved."

- Hans von Sponek, The United Nations news service, 21st September 1999


" [The US is] ….disrupting the Oil-For-Food programme upon which millions of people depend for their survival."

- Kofi Annan, quoted in The Washington Post, 25th October 1999


"Killing the innocent does not defeat terror; it feeds terror. You are making new enemies when what you need are friends."

- Madeleine Albright, in a stunning display of hypocrisy, addressing leaders of the American Muslim community at a special 'Iftaar' Dinner, New York, 21st December 1999


"Our policy is to get rid of Saddam, not his regime."

- Richard Haas, former Director of Middle East Affairs on the National Security Council, as quoted in 'Out of The Ashes : The Resurrection of Saddam Hussein' by Andrew and Patrick Cockburn, 1999


' "A common current pretense is that Saddam's crimes were unknown, so we are now properly shocked at the discovery. [...] This posture is a cynical fraud. UN reports of 1986 and 1987 condemned Iraq's use of chemical weapons. US Embassy staffers in Turkey interviewed Kurdish survivors of chemical warfare attacks, and the CIA reported them to the State Department. Human rights groups reported the attrocities at Halabja and elsewhere at once. Secretary of State George Schultz conceded that the US had evidence on this matter. An investigative team sent by the Senate Foreign Realtions Committee in 1988 fround "...overhwelming evidence of the extensive use of chemical weapons against civilians..." charging that Western acquiesence in Iraqi use of such weapons against Iran had emboldened Saddam Hussein to believe - correctly - that he could use them against his own people with impunity - actually against Kurds, hardly 'the people' of this tribal based thug.

The chair of the committee, Claiborne Pell, introduced the Prevention of Genocide Act of 1988, denouncing silence "...while people are gassed..." as "...complicity," much as when "...the world was silent as Hitler began a campaign that culminated in the near extermination of Europe's jews. [...] We can not be silent to genocide again."

The Reagan administration strongly opposed sanctions and insisted that the matter be slienced, while extending its' support for the mass murderer. In the Arab world "...the Kuwaiti press was amongst the most enthusiastic of the Arab media in supporting Baghdad's crusade against the Kurds..." journalist Adel darwish reports.

Saddam was also called upon to perform the usual services of a client state: for example, to train several hundred Libyans sent to Iraq by the US so they could overthrow the Qaddafi government, former Reagan White House aide Howard Teicher revealed." '

- as cited in 'Rogue States', article by Noam Chomsky, 1999


"The attack on Yugoslavia constitutes the most brazen international aggression since the Nazis attacked Poland to prevent `Polish atrocities' against Germans."

- Walter Rockler, former prosecutor at the post World War II Nuremberg trial of Nazis, as cited by the International Action Centre, 1999


"I asked myself why should any, but especially children under five, suffer so much and die in such numbers_"

- Margarita Skinner, UNICEF, January 2000


"Economic sanctions imposed on rogue states are imperfect weapons that require constant evaluation but are still legitimate tools to fight oppressive regimes. […] We must continue to assess and reassess the tools we have available to respond and to ensure that sanctions, when used, are used in the best possible way for the best possible results. […] Our effort to improve the effectiveness of sanctions on behalf of peace and respect for human rights remains a work in progress. […] We cannot be satisfied as long as innocent populations are suffering as a result of repressive or lawless leaders. [...] Saddam Hussein has repeatedly failed to take advantage of the UN "oil-for-food" program designed to provide income to purchase humanitarian supplies. […] The case for continued sanctions against Saddam Hussein is overwhelming. There is no greater enemy to public health in Iraq than he."

- Madeleine Albright, article in Annals of International Medicine, published by the American College of Physicians, 16th January 2000 (Shortly before being promoted to US Secretary of State, Albright had stated: "Sanctions remain one of the most powerful weapons in our armoury.")


"I’m delighted that I've been invited out here today to salute you, who, in my view, are doing the Lord's work."

- former US President George Bush Sr., addressing US air crews of the 332nd Air Expeditionary Group stationed at Ahmad al-Jaber air base in Kuwait who conduct over flights and bombing missions on Iraq, as reported by Agence France Press, 19th January 2000


"The most important problem in our view is the increasingly precarious situation of the public infrastructure."

- Beat Schweizer, International Committee of The Red Cross, Agence France Press, 23rd January 2000


"An impasse over [weapons] inspections is actually the best realistic outcome for the United States. [....] [The] most dangerous scenario is the possibility that Hussein will co-operate [....which could...] spell the end of sanctions."
- Daniel Byman, RAND Corporation analyst, as quoted in Foreign Affairs, Jan/Feb issue, 2000


Yesterday morning, on C-Span (1), David Leavey, chief spokesperson for the National Security Council, headed by Sandy Berger, justified our actions against Austria by saying that where a country has "...values..." different from those of the United States, we have a right to act against them.

In a meeting sponsored by the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., officials said that NATO should be expanded to go beyond its original geographical boundaries and go beyond limited purposes of defense. He said that if, for example, a country were to deny us access to its' "...natural resources..." that should be sufficient reason for NATO to proceed against that country.

- C-SPAN, 9th February 2000


"As a UN official, I should not be expected to be silent to that which I recognize as a true human tragedy that needs to be ended. How long [should] the civilian population, which is totally innocent on all this, be exposed to such punishment for something they have never done_ The very title that I hold as a humanitarian coordinator suggests that I cannot be silent over that which we see here. [The Oil-for-Food] program does not guarantee the minimum that a human being requires, which is clearly defined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. My support, my commitment is for the Iraqi people as a group of deprived people whose tragedy should end."

- Hans Von Sponeck, former UN Humanitarian Aid Co-ordinator for Iraq, in his resignation speech, The Jordan Times, 13th February 2000


"Good. I think an article in the Iraqi press praising his approach to his work is ample evidence of his unsuitability of this post. His job is to work on behalf of Iraqi people and not the regime and we look forward to an able manager who will maximize the benefits of the oil-for-food programme."

- James Rubin, U.S. State Department spokesman, geefully describing Von Sponeck’s departure, 13th February 2000


"Infanticide masquerading as policy."

- Minority Whip David E. Bonior, Democrat - Michigan, describing sanctions, as quoted by Associated Press, 16th February 2000.


"It’s not the bulls we have a problem with, it’s the vaccine that goes with them."

- James Rubin, US State Department spokesman, justifying the US block on Iraq's attempt to import breeding bulls as the accompanying vaccines could, Rubin claimed, be used to make weapons of mass destruction, March 2000


"Once sanctions are lifted, Iraq will have to undertake a reconstruction effort conservatively estimated at $50 - $100 billion just for essential infrastructural utilities, from a GDP base, which, even including the 'grey' and 'black' economies is less than $13 billion in nominal terms. Improvements to the 'Oil-for-Food' formula should benefit the Iraqi economy. [....] However, this will only help to bolster a basic safety welfare net, rather than herald a return to normality. To achieve the latter, sanctions will have to come to an end."

- Economist Intelligence Unit, 8th March 2000


"[The oil-for-food programme] has not halted the collapse of the health system and the deterioration of water supplies, which together pose one of the gravest threats to the health and well being of the civilian population. Aid can be no substitute for a country's entire economy. It can never meet all the basic needs of 22 million people nor ensure the maintenance of a whole country's crumbling infrastructure."

- 'Iraq - A Decade of Sanctions' - report by the International Committee of the Red Cross, 14th March 2000


"I think the targeting of innocent civilians is the worst thing about modern conflicts today. And the extent to which more and more people seem to believe it is legitimate to target innocent civilians to reach their larger political goals, I think that's something that has to be resisted at every turn."

- Bill Clinton, hypocrisy of the highest level, speaking about the ongoing tensions between India and Pakistan, Hyderabad House - New Delhi, India,  21st  March 2000


"Human rights principles have been consistently subordinated to political considerations in the [UN Security] Council's approach to Iraq. [A] radical re-design of the sanctions regime [is required]."

- Global Policy Forum, Human Rights Watch, Menonite Central Committee, Save the Children (UK), and others in a letter to the Security Council, 22nd March 2000


"We are in danger of losing the argument, or the propaganda war - if we haven't already lost it - about who is responsible for this situation in Iraq: President Saddam Hussein, or the United Nations."

- Kofi Annan, UN Secretary General, in a statement to the Security Council, 24th March 2000


"I am very angry that it takes such a long time for failed policy to be rectified."

- Hans Von Sponeck, former UN Humanitarian Aid Cordinator for Iraq, as quoted by Agence France Press, 27th March 2000


" [Iraq is] the only instance of a sustained increase in mortality in a stable population of more then 2 million in the last 200 years."

- Professor Richard Garfield, Epidemiologist, April 2000


"Slowly, inoxerably, a generation is being crushed in Iraq. Thousands are dying, thousands more are living stunted lives, and storing up bitter hatreds for the future. If, year in and year out, the UN were systematically killing Iraqi children by air strikes, Western governments would declare it intolerable, no matter how noble the intention. They should find their existing policy just as unacceptable. In democracies, the end does not justify the means."

- The Economist, editorial 'All wrong in Iraq', 8th April 2000


"The eyes of the world aren't on [....]  Iraq. The RAF and the US air force can bomb whatever they like, and no one will listen when Saddam's officials say that civilians have been killed. As for the people dying of malnutrition and disease, that is an attested fact. We dig deep into our pockets at the thought that Ethiopians might soon start dying again of hunger, but Iraqis...._ It's because we don't see them. Our governments pour contempt and scorn on those who call attention to these things. If people could hear and see what is being done in their names in Iraq, they would be outraged. But they don't, so it continues."

- John Simpson, BBC World Affairs Editor, article in The Sunday Telegraph 'Inhumane war that puts us all to shame,' 30th April 2000


"When I was in Boston a few days ago to meet with the Editor of the Boston Globe, I was told not to refer, even, to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights or to the UN Charter because it has no meaning in that newspaper. Well....how terrible, how frightening when one is warned not to refer to something which is meant to protect us and to give us a better life."

- Hans Von Sponeck, former UN Humanitarian Aid Co-ordinator for Iraq, describing US media control, May 6th 2000


"I deeply believe that sanctions as now applied to Iraq have been utterly counterproductive for this disarmament purpose."

- Richard Butler, former UNSCOM chairman, BBC radio 'Talking Point', 4th June 2000


"I thought it was possible to meet the minimum needs of Iraqis even with sanctions in place. I was wrong. [....] Some 167 Iraqi children are dying every day. Maybe the sanctions were once defensible as a temporary measure, but after nine years they are violating international law. [About the Oil-For- program]..Instead of being about saving children's lives, it's about saving face. In all my years at the UN, I had never been exposed to the kind of political manoeuvring and pressure that I saw at work in this program. We're treating Iraq as if it were made up of 23 million Saddam Husseins, which is rubbish."

- Hans Von Sponeck, former Humanitarian Aid Co-ordinator for Iraq, interviewed by Stephen Handleman in The Toronto Star, 25th June 2000


"The prime killer of children under five years of age - diarrhoeal diseases - has reached epidemic proportions. [....] Holds on contracts for the water and sanitation sector are a prime reason for the increases in sicknesses and death."

- US Congressman Tony Hall, letter to US Secretary of State Albright, 28th June 2000 (17 of 18 contracts for this sector were being blocked by Washington at the time of Hall's letter)


"The outlook for Iraq is pretty awful. It will take virtually all of the 21st century for Iraq to re-emerge as a regional power. You can rebuild the infrastructure in 20 years or so, but not the people."

- Professor Anoush Ehteshami, Dir. of Middle East Studies, Durham University, Agence France Press report, 25th July 2000


"Sanctions haven't exactly crippled Saddam, but they've put the Iraqi people through hell. Sanctions do not a policy make; they are a holding pattern."

- Tony Karon, Time.com - Time Magazine website - 25th July 2000


"[Economic sanctions] simply aren't working other than to harm the ordinary Iraqi people."

- Richard Butler, former UNSCOM chairman, UPI report, 2nd August 2000


"Ten years on, Iraq's people still suffer grievously from sanctions which the US and Britain alone try to justify."

- Editorial from The Guardian, 2nd August 2000


"Economic sanctions on Iraq are] cruel, ineffective and dangerous. They are cruel because they punish exclusively the Iraqi people and the weakest among them. They are ineffective because they don't touch the regime, which is not encouraged to co-operate, and they are dangerous because they accentuate the disintegration of Iraqi society."

- Hubert Vedrine, French Foreign Minister, reported by Reuters, 2nd August 2000


"Short term emergency assistance is no longer appropriate to the scale of this crisis. Additional far-reaching steps are desperately needed in order to comply with human rights and humanitarian principles. The deterioration in Iraq's civilian infrastructure is so far-reaching that it can only be reversed with extensive investment and development efforts."

- Human Rights Watch, Save the Children (UK) and four other NGOs in a letter to the UN Security Counci, 4th August 200l


"Iraq has taken [on] an autistic stance and the US is fine with the actual sanctions. There are important factors at play that keep the issue deadlocked in the mid and maybe long term."

- 'A Western diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity', Christian Science Monitor, 14th August 2000


"[Sanctions are] a humanitarian disaster comprable to the worst catastrophes of the past decades [and are] unequivocally illegal [under international law]."

- Marc Bossuyt, Belgian Professor of Law, in a report to the UN Subcommission on Human Rights, as quoted by Associated Press, 16th August 2000


"[The UN Sub Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights says economic sanctions on Iraq have] condemned an innocent people to hunger, disease, ignorance and even death."

- Report by Reuters, 18th August 2000


"Failing to secure supplies will result in a shortage of pure drinking water for much of the population. This could lead to increased incidents, if not epidemics, of disease and certain pure-water dependent industries becoming incapacitated" [...] Full degradation of the water treatment system probably will take at least another six months."

Extracts from 'Iraq Water Treatment Vulnerabilities'  - a seven-page document prepared by the US Defence Intelligence Agency, issued the day after the war started and circulated to all major allied Commands. It stated that Iraq had gone to considerable trouble to provide a supply of pure water to its population. It had to depend on importing specialised equipment and purification chemicals, since water is "...[...] heavily mineralised and frequently brackish".

During allied bombing campaigns on Iraq the country's eight multi-purpose dams had been repeatedly hit, simultaneously wrecking flood control, municipal and industrial water storage, irrigation and hydroelectric power. Four of seven major pumping stations were destroyed, as were 31 municipal water and sewerage facilities - 20 in Baghdad, resulting in sewage pouring into the Tigris. Water purification plants were incapacitated throughout Iraq.

- Document acquired by Professor Thomas J Nagy, Professor of Expert Systems at George Washington University, article published September 17th, 2000 in the Sunday Herald (Scotland)


"It should now become the policy of the British government that sanctions other than those directly relevant to military or military related equipment should be lifted. The removal of non-military sanctions will not prejudice the policy of containment."

- Menzies Campbell, Foreign Affairs spokesperson, Liberal Democrat Conference, 18th September 2000


"Malnutrition, especially child malnutrition, is often caused by factors other than those related to food. Poor water supply both in quality and quantity as well as inadequate sanitation are keys causative factors of frequent and repeated infection resulting in infant and child malnutrition throughout the country. Other important factors include the lack of general nutrition and health education, overcrowding and poverty. Siginificant improvement in the health and nutrition status of the vulnerable population, and of children and mothers from these households in particular, can not be achieved without improving these contributing factors."

- UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, September 2000


"You can not dictate government policy by blockades. That can't be right."

- Prime Minister Tony Blair, speaking without any trace of irony about the ongoing fuel price protests in the UK, BBC news, 3rd November 2000


"A politician is an acrobat. He keeps his balance by saying the opposite of what he does."

- Maurice Barres


"Sanctions are having little effect on the regime; the only people suffering are the poorest. After 10 years sanctions have failed to produce the desired result. It is time they were lifted. Whatever the options are, they have to be better than the current stalemate."

- John Nicol, former RAF pilot who was shot down over Iraq in 1991 and tortured by the regime, quoted in The Observer, 19th November 2000


"Whilst the amount of food that is being provided to every man, woman and child may be sufficient, the sad fact is that the average poor Iraqi household has become so poor that they can't afford to eat all the food they get for free. [....] For many of these people, the food rations they get on a monthly basis represent the major part of their household income. [....] So they can't just eat it - because they have other needs, as we all know. [....] [Such as] clothes, travel..."

- Tun Myat, UN Humanitarian Aid Coordinator for Iraq, in an interview with VOICES UK, describing how civilians have to barter their food ration for other goods and services, 13th January 2001


``I have some reservations on the so-called 'oil-for-food'. I would like it to read 'oil-for-food, democracy and freedom' [for the Iraqi people]. Why do we treat the Iraqi people as vegetables_ We are not treating them like human beings. Humans need not only food. They are not cattle, they are a nation, we would like to hear the voice of the Iraqi people."

-  Suleiman al-Shaheen, Kuwaiti Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, 16th January 2001


"The sanctions are humanly catastrophic, morally indefensible and politically ineffective. They are a failed policy and must be changed."

- Julian Filochowski, Director of CAFOD, launching a report by leading European Catholic aid agencies, 6th February 2001


"We have succeeded, because we stopped the talking about Iraqi children, and instead are taking about weapons of mass destruction, not sanctions to hurt civilians."

- US Secretary of State Colin Powell, describing his plans for new 'smart sanctions', House International Relations Committee, 7th February 2001


" A senior UN official in the Middle East has accused the United States of imposing unnecessary suffering on the Iraqi people for its' own political ends. Voicing a sense of anger and disillusionment that the UN's humanitarian programme has been undermined, the official said that he could not think of a single success in the policy "...except in killing children...." and believed that the only reason sanctions were still in force in their present form was because no-one could be seen to back down."

- 'UN officials round on Americans as "real villains" ' , article in The Times, 21st February 2001


"To recover from its' eleven years under the sanctions battering ram - which has crushed the country's industrial and agricultural infrastructure - Iraq needs the freedom, and overseas investment, of a huge reconstruction effort. [....] The British proposal of 'smart sanctions' offers an htmlirin where surgery is called for."

- The Economist magazine, 24th February 2001


"The maintenance of a comprehensive embargo on Iraq is a disproportionate act in international law when the deleterious effect on the civilian population and children is so clear. A whole generation of young people have 'lost' their childhood and prospects for the future."

- Save The Children Fund, 28th February 2001


"My first reaction to the 'smart sanctions' proposals is that they reflect a growing awareness, even in Whitehall, that business as usual is not acceptable. Real 'smart sanctions' are not just about reducing holds - which have reached an all time high. Both the social and the economic engines must be re-started, not by tinkering with the edges. The Foreign Office will say that there should be no return to financial management by Baghdad. I don't think one can allow the re-starting of the economy, and at the same time have a rigid control through a bank account managed from outside. There can be no progress without risk. One must have some courage.

The smartest approach would be the immediate lifting of economic sanctions, a return to dialogue with Iraq, and thoughts about how the arms control agenda can be tackled realistically - dealing with sellers as well as buyers."

- Hans Von Sponeck, former UN Humanitarian Aid Co-ordinator for Iraq, phone message February 2001, as quoted by VOICES UK newsletter, April 2001


"I say that Kuwait has no objection to the launching of a call to lift the economic sanctions from Iraq."

- Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah, Kuwaiti Foreign Minister, as quoted by Reuters, 20th March 2001


"It's a balance of terror."

- John Prescott, Deputy UK Prime Minister, responding to VOICES UK activist Tim Buckley's statement that UN reports clearly showed that hundreds of thousands of children had been killed by sanctions, as quoted in VOICES April 2001 newsletter. Prescott asked Buckley if he wanted sanctions lifted, which Buckley affirmed. Prescott responded: "Jesus Christ!"


"Iraq will be free to meet all of its' civilian needs without impediment."

- Unidentified UK official, describing the US / UK proposed 'smart sanctions', as quoted in The Guardian, 17th May 2001


"Although the country would be able to import more, it would still be denied the free movement of labour and capital that it desperately needs if it is at last to start picking itself up. Iraq needs massive investment to rebuild its' industry, its' power grids and its' schools, and needs cash in hand to pay its' engineers, doctors and teachers. None of this looks likely to happen under 'smart sanctions'."

- The Economist magazine, 26th May 2001


"The US plan [of 'smart sanctions'] will not revive Iraq's devastated economy while control over Iraq's oil revenues remains in the hands on the UN, and foreign investment and credits are still prohibited."

- Financial Times, 28th May 2001


"In reality, this is a change of perceptions."

- Unidentified US official, as quoted by The Fiancial Times, 28th May 2001


"The proposals the UK has made to the UN Security Council will, as presently forseen, not lead at all to a betterment of the human condition in Iraq. What is proposed at this point in fact amounts to a tightening of the rope around the neck of the average Iraqi citizen. US and UK representatives at the UN Security Council argue that their proposals are tantamount to lifiting most, if not all, restrictions on the import of civilian goods. Consequently, any continued suffering by the Iraq people will be on account of the government in Baghdad. This is not only false but malicious. A genuine international contribution to ending the tragedy in Iraq will only come when economic sanctions are lifted."

- Denis Halliday and Hans Von Sponeck, former UN Humanitarian Aid Co-ordinators forn Iraq, in a joint statement on 'smart sanctions', 29th May 2001


" 'It won't improve life for the ordinary Iraqi. It will be a dole, a hand-out to Iraq as whole,' said an officer with a high profile aid agency who requested anonimity. 'It will do nothing to tackle the real issue - how to stimulate the internal economy and allow civil society to come back.'"

- Financial Times, in an article describing 'smart sanctions', 1st June 2001


"People ought to read the resolution before they comment on a weakening [of sanctions]"

- Colin Powell, US Secretary of State, Agence France Press, 3rd June 2001


"There can be little doubt that the resumption of normal economic activity would benefit the Iraqi people, but this can not happen while the Iraqi regime continues to defy UN resolutions."

- Brian Wilson, British Foreign Office minister, responding to an enquiry from British MP Paul Keeton, 4th June 2001


"We'll work with the Russians,'" US National Security Advisor Condoleeza Rice said. " I'm sure that we'll come to some resolution there, because it is important to restructure these sanctions to something that work.''

The CIA reported earlier this year that the Iraqi leader was more secure than ever in power, despite the destruction of his forces in the war, the suffering of his people and the decade of sanctions. Ms. Rice said this was not a failure of US policy:
`"This has been a successful period, but obviously we would like to increase pressure on him and we're going to go about doing that.''

- Article in The Australian, revealing that the US administration was undeniably aware of the immense suffering caused to civilians by sanctions, even describing them as 'successful' whilst conceding they hadn't worked to destabalise the Ba'ath regime, July 31st 2001


"[Sanctions were] systematically destroying Iraqi society".

- French President Jacques Chirac, November 12th 2001, as quoted by Agence France Press, November 20th 2001


"The Security Council began to streamline its vetting procedures in March 2000, when the total value of blocked contracts stood at about 1.7 billion dollars. In his letter, [Executive Director of the Oil-For-Food program] Benon Sevan said a total of 1,854 contracts were now on hold, worth a total 4.956 billion dollars. They included orders for 4.28 billion dollars worth of humanitarian supplies and for 676 million dollars worth of oil industry equipment."

- From 'UN alarmed by contract blocking of Iraq oil-for-food programme', reported by Agence France Press, 9th January 2002


"The time has come to get rid of a sanctions system that doesn't work, to put in place a system that restricts military goods only,  and which might then oblige Saddam Hussein to re-admit arms control inspectors into his country. [....] Because of the large black market that he's running, the sanctions are having little impact on Saddam. But they are still affecting the ordinary people."

- Richard Butler, former UNSCOM chairman, article in The Australian, 10th January 2002


"In 30 years in Washington I've never seen anything quite like it. They're being treated like enemies because of a policy disagreement."

-  Richard Perle, US Defense Policy Board Chairman, describing the US State Deptartment decision to suspend funding to the Iraqi National Congress [in opposition to Saddam Hussein] citing financial irregularities. Article in The Wall Street Journal, 10th January 2002

The INC had been pledged $97 million and were given a January 15th deadline to produce accounts. The State Deptartment announcement came 10 days ahead of schedule. The INC informed them that undercover sources in Iraq would be compromised by full disclosure.


"By March 1995, Chalabi, al-Samurrai and the Kurds were ready to launch a coup attempt and an uprising. But when the appointed day arrived, they received a cable from the then national-security adviser Tony Lake telling them they couldn't expect backing from Washington. Bob Baer, the CIA agent on the ground with them, says in a forthcoming book that even when their offensive racked up stunning results over the next few days, the NSC [National Security Council] and CIA just didn't want to know about it. After that, the Iraqi opposition's faith in American backing largely evaporated."

- Article in Newsweek, detailing one of the Iraqi opposition's attempts to overthrow Saddam Hussein, 21st January 2002


"None of this is to defend Saddam, but frankly, the problem the Americans have with Saddam is not that he's a sick, murdering, inhumane bastard with an appalling human rights record and a callous indifference to the suffering of his own people and a passionate interest in the suffering of other people, but that he's not THEIR sick, murdering, inhumane bastard with an appalling human rights record and a callous indifference to the suffering of his own people and a passionate interest in the suffering of other people."

- Justin Moran on 'redbrick.dcu.ie' debate, 7th August 2002


"WHITEHOUSE REJECTS WEAPONS INSPECTIONS."

- Headline in The Independent, 3rd September 2002, describing a decision which prompted almost no discussion of what the past 11 years of sanctions, which, according to hundreds and hundreds of statements by various US administartions, had been all about.


White House spokesman Ari Fleischer, [...] said the war must go ahead because "Saddam has not lived up to his promise to allow inspectors into the country". He was then asked if the war would still go ahead if Saddam did allow them into the country, and Fleischer answered: "The policy of the US is regime change, with or without inspectors."

- from 'Don't look now - Saddam is drowning kittens,' article by Mark Steel, 5th September 2002, succinctly laying down the actual bottom line


"It is not the threat of weapons of mass destruction and the capacity to coerce that disturbs us; rather, it is important that it be wielded by the proper hands: ours or our client's."

- Noam Chomsky, from 'Deterring Democracy', 1991


"We the people of the United Nations determine to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, which twice in our lifetime has brought untold sorrow to mankind, and to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women, and of nations large and small, and to establish conditions under which justice and respect for the obligations arising from treaties and other sources of international law can be maintained, and to promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom."

- Article 1, Charter of the United Nations


"A nation that is boycotted is a nation that is in sight of surrender. Apply this economic, peaceful, silent, deadly remedy and there will be no need for force. It is a terrible remedy. It does not cost a life outside the nation boycotted, but it brings pressure upon the nation which, in my judgement, no modern nation could resist."

- Former US President Woodrow Wilson, speaking on economic sanctions in Versailles in 1919


The "deadly" remedy of sanctions are thus clearly intended to kill civilians.  As such, they are illegal under international law :

ADDITIONAL PROTOCOLS TO THE GENEVA CONVENTIONS, 1977 (Specifically PROTOCOL 1, PART IV, SECTION 1, CHAPTER III, ARTICLE 54)
THE UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS, 1948

INTERNATIONAL COVENANT ON CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS, 19th December 1966
CONVENTION ON THE ELIMINATION OF ALL FORMS OF DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN, 18th December 1979
CONVENTION ON THE PREVENTION AND PUNISHMENT OF THE CRIME OF GENOCIDE, 12th January 1951
INTERNATIONAL COVENANT ON ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL RIGHTS (Specifically Article 1)

They additionally violate the following:

CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD, 20th November 1989
International Conference on Nutrition / World Declaration on Nutrition, Food and Agricultural Organization/World Health Organization, 1992
United Nations General Assembly Resolution 44/215 [22nd December 1989] - 'Economic measures as a means of political and economic coercion against developing countries'
The Constitution of the World Health Organization, 1946
The US' own legal code, specifically
TITLE 18, 2331, which defines 'International Terrorism' as:
"...acts dangerous to human life [....] that appear intended to coerce a civilian population or to influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion."


"The process of creating and entrenching highly selective, reshaped or completely fabricated memories of the past is what we call "indoctrination" or "propaganda" when it is conducted by official enemies, and "education," "moral instruction" or "character building," when we do it ourselves. It is a valuable mechanism of control, since it effectively blocks any understanding of what is happening in the world. One crucial goal of successful education is to deflect attention elsewhere – say, to Vietnam, or Central America, or the Middle East, where our problems allegedly lie – and away from our own institutions and their systematic functioning and behaviour, the real source of a great deal of the violence and suffering in the world. It is crucially important to prevent understanding and to divert attention from the sources of our own conduct, so that elite groups can act without popular constraints to achieve their goals – which are called "The National Interest……"

-  Noam Chomsky


"With numbing regularity good people were seen to knuckle under the demands of authority and perform actions that were callous and severe. Men who are in everyday life responsible and decent were seduced by the trappings of authority, by the control of their perceptions, and by the uncritical acceptance of the experimenter's definition of the situation, into performing harsh acts. A substantial proportion of people do what they are told to do, irrespective of the content of the act and without limitations of conscience, so long as they perceive that the command comes from a legitimate authority"

- Stanley Milgram, 1965

Milgram was a psychologist who performed a series of experiments that proved conclusively that obedience to authority was so ingrained in the average US citizen they were prepared to cause lethal harm to others when instructed by authority figures to do so. More than 90% 'electrocuted' participants in his experiments, only discovering their true nature after the fact. They were unable to see the other particpants but were able to hear their screams, which were in fact performed by actors.

All those who took part were first asked if they would be capable of killing or inflicting severe pain on their fellow human beings. 100% replied categorically 'no'.


"[He is] our kind of guy."

- Unidentified Clinton administration official describing General Suharto of Indonesia, who killed at least 10,000 Indonesians during the 1980's, and an estimated 1 million in  the 1960's following his militray coup against former leader General Sukarno. Suharto even personally testified that: "...the corpses were left lying around as a form of shock therapy." - as cited in 'Rogue States', article by Noam Chomsky, 1999


' "In his memoirs, [former] US Ambassador to the UN, Daniel Patrick Moynihan takes pride in rendering the UN [powerless]: "The United States wished things to turn out as they did and worked to bring this about. The Department of State desired that the United Nations prove utterly ineffective in whatever measures it undertook. This task was given to me, and I carried it forward with no inconsiderable success."

- as cited 'Rogue States', article by Noam Chomsky, 1999, describing the US complicity, support and deliberate muzzling of the UN during the Indonesian invasion of East Timor which killed 250,000, one third of the entire population.


"When ABC TV correspondent Charles Glass revealed the site of one of Saddam Hussein's biological warfare programmes ten months after {the gassing at] Halabja, the US State Department denied the facts, and the story died. The Department "...now issues briefings on the same site...." Glass observes.

- as cited in 'Rogue States', article by Noam Chomsky, 1999


' "The Senate Banking Committee reported in 1994 that the US Commerce Department had traced shipments of 'biological materials' identical to those later found and destroyed by UN [weapons] inspectors. These shipments continued at least until November 1989. A month later George Bush authorised new loans for his friend Saddam, to acheive the "...goal of increasing US exports and put us in a better position to deal with Iraq regarding its' human rights record...." the State Department announced with a straight face, facing no criticism in the mainstream, or even report.

In a February 28th review of Western sales of materials usable for germ warfare and other weapons of mass destruction, the Times [newspaper] mentions one example of US sales in the 1980's, including "...deadly pathogens..." with government approval, some from the Army's Center for Germ Research in Fort Detrick." '

- as cited in 'Rogue States', article by Noam Chomsky, 1999


"What does it matter to the dead, the orphans, and the homeless whether the mad destruction is wrought under the name of totalitarianism or the holy name of liberty or democracy_"

- Mahatma Gandhi


"Politics is the art of preventing people from taking part in affairs which properly concern them all."

- Paul Valery


"Big Brother isn’t watching you....so much as Big Brother is you, watching."

- Mark Crispin Miller


"One man's death is a tragedy; a million is a statistic."

- Josef Stalin


"The world is indeed comic, but the joke is on mankind."

- H.P. Lovecraft


"History would be an excellent thing if only it were true."

- Leo Tolstoy


"An editor is one who separates the wheat from the chaff and prints the chaff."

- Adlai Stevenson, US politcian (1900-65)


"If large numbers of people believe in freedom of speech, there will be freedom of speech even if the law forbids it. But if public opinion is sluggish, inconvenient minorities will be persecuted, even if laws exist to protect them."

- George Orwell


"Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army."

- Edward Everett


"We will have to repent in this generation not merely for the hateful words and actions of the bad people but for the appalling silence of the good people."

- Martin Luther King, Jr.


"The spirit of democracy cannot be established in the midst of terrorism, whether governmental or popular."

- Mohandas Gandhi


"If liberty and democracy are to be truly saved, they will only be by nonviolent resistance no less brave, no less glorious, than violent resistance. And it will be infinitely braver and more glorious because it will give life without taking any."

- Mohandas Gandhi


"Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection."

- Martin Luther King, Jr.


"If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor."

- Archbishop Desmond Tutu


"Power cedes nothing without a demand."

- Harriet Tubman and Frederic Douglas


The reform of consciousness consists entirely in making the world aware of its own consciousness, in arousing it from its dream of itself, in explaining its own actions to it.

- Karl Marx


"For those who stubbornly seek freedom, there can be no more urgent task than to come to understand the mechanisms and practices of indoctrination. These are easy to perceive in the totalitarian societies, much less so in the system of 'brainwashing under freedom' to which we are subjected and in which all too often we serve as unwilling instruments."

- Noam Chomsky


"The Great masses of the people will more easily fall victim to a great lie than to a small one"

- Adolph Hitler


"The propagandist's purpose is to make one set of people forget that certain other sets of people are human."

- Aldous Huxley


"Those who can convince us to believe absurdities can convince us to commit atrocities."

- Voltaire


"The greatest purveyor of violence in the world today - my own government."

- Martin Luther King Jr., April 4th 1967, exactly one year before he was assassinated


"It takes two to speak the truth - one to speak, and another to hear."

- Henry David Thoreau


"Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misguided men."

- Martin Luther King Jr.


"Suppose you were an idiot, and suppose you were a member of Congress; but I repeat myself."

- Mark Twain


"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience. Our problem is that numbers of people all over the world have obeyed the dictates of the leaders of their government and have gone to war, and millions have been killed because of this obedience. Our problem is that people are obedient all over the world in the face of poverty and starvation and stupidity, and war, and cruelty. Our problem is that people are obedient while the jails are full of petty thieves, and all the while the grand thieves are running and robbing the country. That's our problem."

- Howard Zinn, from 'Failure to Quit'


"Even a once-for-all loss of an eighth per cent of GDP does matter. But it is still a small price to pay for the stopping of the sale of limb-destroying mines or long range guns to odious dictators. There are two htmlects to moving out of the unedifying parts of the arms trade. The first would be for the government to stop encouraging it, whether by export credit subsidies, bodies like the MOD's Defence Export Sales Organisation, or the soft soap of royal and minsterial visits. The second would be much tighter controls on such sales.

Is it so impossible to strengthen present understandings among 'western' nations to support such a tightening_ How about Russia and China_ Compliance should be made a condition of aid from the IMF and other multilateral bodies. But stricter embargoes, even excluding those countries, would still be worth having."

- Samuel Brittan, 'There is no need to sell arms to odious regimes,' article in Finacial Times, 9th December 1999


 "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."

- Benjamin Franklin, Historical Review of Pennsylvania, 1759


"Of all the enemies to public liberty, war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded, because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes; and armies, and debts, and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination of the few."

- James Madison


"Patriotism is a kind of religion; it is the egg from which wars are hatched."

- Guy de Maupassant


 "Important signs of drug use in children: ...excessive preoccupation with social causes, race relations, environmental issues, etc....."

- From "How Parents Can Help Children Live Drug Free", published by Gerald Smith, director of the criminology program at the University of Utah, and others (with a foreword by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah), as noted in the Washington Post, October 7th 1998


"All who are not lunatics are agreed about certain things. That it is better to be alive than dead, better to be adequately fed than starved, better to be free than a slave. Many people desire those things only for themselves and their friends; they are quite content that their enemies should suffer. These people can be refuted by science: Humankind has become so much one family that we cannot insure our own prosperity except by insuring that of everyone else. If you wish to be happy yourself, you must resign yourself to seeing others also happy."

- Bertrand Russell


"It is enough that the people know there was an election. The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who count the votes decide everything."

- Josef Stalin


"It is insane that under the rules governing worldwide trade today you can take action against a company for pirating a Madonna videotape, but you can take no action against a company for employing children, or using forced labor, or violating workers' fundamental rights, or poisoning the environment."

- AFL-CIO President John J. Sweeney


"The most superficial look at history shows that no social advance rolls in on the wheels of inevitability. It comes through the tireless efforts and persistent work of dedicated individuals."

- Martin Luther King Jr.


"The hottest fires in hell are reserved for those who remain neutral in times of moral crisis"

- Edmund Burke


"Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience, above all liberties."

- John Milton


"In times of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act."

- Gerorge Orwell


"To be hopeful in bad times is not just foolishly romantic. It is based on the fact that human history is a history not only of cruelty, but also of compassion, sacrifice, courage, kindness. What we choose to emphasize in this complex history will determine our lives. If we see only the worst, it destroys our capacity to do something.

If we remember those times and places - and there are so many - where people have behaved magnificently, this gives us the energy to act, and at least the possibility of sending this spinning top of a world in a different direction.

And if we do act, in however small a way, we don't have to wait for some grand utopian future. The future is an infinite succession of presents, and to live now as we think human beings should live, in defiance of all that is bad around us, is itself a marvellous victory."

- Howard Zinn, from his book 'You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train: A personal history of our times'


"Aboriginality is about being a human being. Does that sound trite_ I hope not. You see, I like the Aboriginal people. They have taught me that people are much more important than any product of people, that a motor car, no matter how much it cots, is something you should never cry about, but you should always go to your uncle's funeral; you should always look after your brother's children when they're crook; you should forsake your job to go and attend to an ailing relative.

There is another thing they have taught me. I've seen in traditional law and the Aborigines themselves a truly non-neurotic people. If an arms works, whether it causes you pain or not, it is of no consequence. Pain and apprehension about any part of your body only come in when it fails to function. Then there is their attitude toward other people. They don't consider other people according to their class, rank, dress, demeanour. Other people, to them, have an existence that's just warranted by their very existence.

Then there's their attitude toward children. They don't think of children as being special or little models; children are just children and there's none of that special hu-ha and absurd indulgence that tends to occur in the small white family.

That is what they've taught me; and what they have goes beyond this country. It is something that can be universally applied; it is the skill and confidence of living in peace."

- Professor Fred Hollows, anti-trachoma specialist, describing his respect for Australian Aborigines, as quoted by John Pilger in 'Heroes'


Note: Thomas Friedman, columnist for The New York Times whose contributions to the geopolitic are included above, must qualify as perhaps the most racist, ignorant and war mongering journalist in America. It should come, therefore, as no surprise to hear that he is a former winner of a Pulitzer Prize.

Similarly, Henry Kissinger, former US Secretary of State, who must be directly and indirectly responsible for the deaths and injuries of millions of people, won a Nobel Peace Prize. American satirist Tom Lehrer quit showbusiness when he heard the news, saying: "All satire is now dead."


 

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