From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Thu Aug 29 2002 - 11:09:30 MDT
Desert Storm II would be a walk in the park
by Kenneth Adelman
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POLICY abhors a vacuum. That is why there is 
now a raging debate on śregime changeť in 
Iraq, as reflected by this public airing of 
differences with my friend Wesley Clark, the 
former Supreme Allied Commander Europe. 
No such debate was conceivable six months 
ago. Then, President Bush and his gifted 
national security team laid out a clear 
direction: foreign states are either with us, or 
against us, in the war on terrorism. Saddam 
Hussein™s relentless drive for nuclear weapons, 
and ever more biological and chemical 
weapons poses a dire threat to civilised 
nations. Time is not on our side: the longer we 
wait, the more danger mounts. 
So we waited. The President™s urgency 
dissipated. The White House warnings ceased. 
The Administration muddled. 
Into this policy vacuum have recently paraded 
experts, including Wesley Clark, who disagree 
with forcing a śregime changeť in Iraq. They 
generally concede that Saddam Hussein is a 
vile monster. Yet, having gone that far, they go 
no further. Most critics prefer tough 
śdiplomaticť and śeconomicť actions against 
Iraq, stepping up śthe international pressureť, 
and the like. 
Been there. Done that. All non-military options 
have been tried, and failed. Nothing but force 
can separate Saddam from the levers of power. 
The case for śregime changeť boils down to 
the huge benefits and modest costs of 
liberating Iraq. Saddam Hussein constitutes the 
number one threat against American and 
European civilisation. He is expanding his 
chemical and biological weapons day by day, 
and marching closer towards nuclear weapons. 
Some critics doubt Saddam™s ties to terrorism. 
They somehow forget the 1994 Iraqi attempt to 
assassinate George Bush. Add on the first 
bombing of the World Trade Centre in 1993, 
which killed innocent Americans, then Iraqi 
involvement seems evident. The terrorist 
mastermind fled to, and probably today lives 
in, Baghdad. Saddam now bestows on 
Palestinian families of homicide bombers some 
Ł16,000 each. This litany leaves aside 
Saddam™s probable connection to September 
11, which I believe exists but which is, 
admittedly, tougher to prove conclusively. 
Some critics claim, as did Brent Scowcroft, the 
former US National Security Adviser, that 
there should be ścompelling evidence that 
Saddam had acquired nuclear weapons 
capabilityť, to justify attacking Iraq. But one 
need not have been a National Security 
Adviser to wonder if that would really be the 
best time to garner support from Turkey, 
Kuwait, Qatar and the Europeans. 
It seems a lot smarter, and safer, to free Iraq 
before the world™s most destructive ruler 
acquires the world™s most destructive weapon. 
I will be blunt: demolishing Saddam™s power 
and liberating Iraq militarily would be a 
cakewalk. 
In 1990 before Desert Storm, we heard 
warnings galore about Saddam™s mighty army. 
Yet when the sand settled, his military did not 
perform sufficiently to warrant being called a 
paper tiger. Remember that gaggle of Iraqi 
troops, thousands in fact, trying to surrender to 
an Italian film crew? Not one American tank 
was destroyed in the Gulf War, which kept US 
casualties to less than 2per cent of those of 
Iraqi troops. And most of our casualties came 
from śfriendly fireť and random Scud flings. 
The Iraqi forces are far weaker now. Saddam™s 
army is less than a third of its size, and relies 
mostly on obsolete Soviet tanks. The Iraqi Air 
Force is half its former size. Iraqi forces have 
received scant spare parts and no weapons 
upgrades for nearly 12 years. 
Meanwhile, American power is much fiercer. 
The advent of precision bombing and real-time 
battlefield Intelligence has dramatically 
improved US military prowess. The US 
military of Desert Storm used primarily (90-
plus per cent) dumb bombs. Against the 
Taleban in Afghanistan, more than 80 per cent 
were smart bombs. Unmanned Predators with 
Hellfire missiles and Global Hawk 
intelligence-gathering did not exist, or were not 
deployed, during the first Iraqi campaign. They 
surely would be now, to devastating effect. 
This time we would insist on the removal of 
Saddam and his henchmen as our sole goal. 
We could then work with the international 
community to rerun what the UN managed in 
Afghanistan: establishing a democratic, non-
militarised government that destroys all 
weapons of mass destruction. 
Once President Bush announces our objective 
to rid the world of Saddam Hussein, defections 
from Iraq™s army may come even faster than a 
decade ago. Dancing in the streets of Baghdad 
will be even more joyous than that in Kabul 
after its liberation. How would such liberation 
happen?
By US forces knocking out Saddam™s 
headquarters, communications, air defences 
and fixed military facilities through precision 
bombing. 
By establishing military śno-drive zonesť. 
By arming the Kurds in the North, Shias in the 
South, and his opponents everywhere. 
By using US special forces, and some ground 
forces with protective gear, against chemical 
and biological weapons. 
By stationing theatre missile defences against 
Iraqi Scuds. 
By the President announcing that any Iraqi, of 
any rank, who handles Saddam™s weapons of 
mass destruction, in any form. will end up in 
Guantanamo Bay, at best. 
A military operation to demolish Saddam and 
his mass destruction weaponry ” and to 
liberate his long-suffering people ” would 
constitute the greatest victory of all in the war 
on terrorism. Otherwise, there can be no 
security: just a huge policy vacuum and a lot of 
vapid talk. 
Kenneth Adelman was assistant to Donald 
Rumsfeld, the US Defence Secretary, from 
1975 to 1977, and UN Ambassador and arms-
control director under President Reagan.
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