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September 01, 1995 - Image 62

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-09-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Quality You Can Build On,
A Name You Can Trust.

The Iraqi Who
Won't Quit

Countering the likes of Saddam Hussein is the real
Israeli goal in the Middle East peace process.

JAMES D. BESSER WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT

igh profile defections and
chilling nuclear admissions
have brought Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein back to
the world's headlines, but Wash-
ington policy makers can't seem
to sustain interest in the dicta-
tor. Even in Jerusalem, the com-
plex peace process, and the
growing reaction against it are
keeping leaders away from fo-
cusing on the despot to the east.
But the Iraqi conundrum
keeps coming back like a recur-
ring bad dream; an erratic, irre-
sponsible Saddam represents a
kind of paradigm for changes in
the world that will redefine the
whole concept of "security" for
both countries.
Recently, the dramatic defec-
tion of two of Saddam's sons-in-
law to Jordan snapped our
attention back to the Iraqi threat.
And last week, the United Na-
tions team responsible for inves-
tigating Iraq's nonconventional
weapons program reported that
the Baghdad government was
much closer to using such
weapons during the 1991 Persian
Gulf war than anybody had imag-
ined.
For this country, these devel-
opments should be stark re-
minders that we ignore Saddam
and his ilk at our own peril.
And for an Israeli population
that continues to agonize over
Palestinian terror, it suggests a
more encompassing and urgent
justification for the current peace

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Sanctionless

In this country, policy makers
try to ignore Saddam Hussein be-
cause of the absence of good, po-
litically palatable options for
dealing with this ticking time
bomb in the international arena.
Economic sanctions and the
military vise that surrounds Iraq
have failed to bring Saddam
down. The Iraqi leader has com-
plied only grudgingly with efforts
to his arsenal, which still threat-
ens neighbors and Israel in par-
ticular.
Americans would like to see
the Iraqi leadership toppled, but
there is little support to recom-
mit American forces to do the job,
or for covert action to encourage
Iraqi opposition.
As long as Saddam makes no
visible moves against American
regional interests, expensive and
risky foreign entanglements,
which could ratchet up the pres-
sure in the 1996 presidential
campaign, will be a political mi-
nus.
But that lack of support for a
strong American role heightens
the largest threat to national se-
curity at the dawn of the 21st cen-
tury dawns — renegade nations
with access to nuclear weapons,
nations not retreating from the
fanaticism and the military ag-
gressiveness that have marked
them regionally and globally.
So far, Washington policy mak-

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13

Saddam Hussein shakes hands with Iraqi soldiers.

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