Toby
Member
Registered: Jul 2000
Location:
Posts: 3034 |
quote: Originally posted by ToolkiT
[...] how about the washington post? that should be a reliable source right?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...-2002Dec29.html [...]
OK, just finished reading the complete article, and I think it shows that the official government support of Saddam was tenuous at best (turning a blind eye to US-based multinationals selling 'dual-use' items which even the article states were on a much smaller scale than French and German companies' similar business dealings), and ultimately against our better judgement. I think the last couple paragraphs sum it up nicely.
quote: The U.S. policy of cultivating Hussein as a moderate and reasonable Arab leader continued right up until he invaded Kuwait in August 1990, documents show. When the then-U.S. ambassador to Baghdad, April Glaspie, met with Hussein on July 25, 1990, a week before the Iraqi attack on Kuwait, she assured him that Bush "wanted better and deeper relations," according to an Iraqi transcript of the conversation. "President Bush is an intelligent man," the ambassador told Hussein, referring to the father of the current president. "He is not going to declare an economic war against Iraq."
"Everybody was wrong in their assessment of Saddam," said Joe Wilson, Glaspie's former deputy at the U.S. embassy in Baghdad, and the last U.S. official to meet with Hussein. "Everybody in the Arab world told us that the best way to deal with Saddam was to develop a set of economic and commercial relationships that would have the effect of moderating his behavior. History will demonstrate that this was a miscalculation."
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