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The Truth
about Sanctions in Iraq
by Matt Welch
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here for PDF version
Critics of sanctions against
Iraq undermine their case by exaggerating estimates of the
impact of sanctions in infant mortality, for the truth is
bad enough
Are Ôa million
innocent children dying at this time in IraqÕ because of US
sanctions, as Osama bin Laden claimed in his videotaped message
to the world last year on October 7? Has the United Nations
ChildrenÕs Emergency Fund (UNICEF) discovered that Ôat least
200 children are dying every day . . . as a direct result
of sanctionsÕ, as advocacy journalist John Pilger maintains
on his website? Is it official United Nations (UN) belief
that 5,000 Iraqi children under the age of five are dying
each month due to its own policy, as writers of letters to
virtually every US newspaper have stated repeatedly during
the past three years?
The short
answer to all of these questions is no. The sanctions, first
imposed in 1990 after IraqÕs invasion of Kuwait, are administered
by the UN, not the US. They were initially imposed on all
exports from Iraq and occupied Kuwait, and all non-humanitarian
imports, in an effort to persuade Saddam Hussein to retreat
within his own borders. After the Gulf War, they were broadened
to include a dismantling of IraqÕs biological, chemical, nuclear,
and missile-based weapons systems, out of fear that Hussein
would otherwise lash out again.
Estimates of
sanctions-era ÔexcessÕ child deathsÑthe number above the normal
mortality rateÑvary widely due to politics and inadequate
data, especially concerning children older than five. The
dictatorial Iraqi government, which has blamed nearly every
civilian funeral since 1991 on sanctions, claims there have
been more than 600,000 deaths of under-five year olds in the
past 11 years (4,500 per month) and 1.5 million deaths overall.
While firefighters
were still pulling out warm body parts from Ground Zero, foreign
policy critic Noam Chomsky and his followers on college campuses
and alternative-weekly staffs nationwide were insisting that
it was vital to understand the ÔcontextÕ of the September
11 massacre: that US-led sanctions were killing Ô5,000 children
a monthÕ in Iraq. Meanwhile, on the Iraqi governmentÕs own
website, the number of under-five deaths from all causes for
the month of September was listed as 2,932.
Arriving at
a reliable raw number of child deaths is hard enough; assigning
responsibility for the ongoing tragedy borders on the purely
speculative. Competing factors include sanctions, drought,
hospital policy, breast-feeding education, Saddam HusseinÕs
govern-ment, depressed oil prices, the Iraqi economyÕs almost
total dependence on oil exports and food imports, destruction
from the Iran-Iraq and Persian Gulf wars, differences in conditions
between the autonomous north and the regime-controlled south,
and a dozen other variables difficult to measure without direct
independent access to the country.
Confusing the
issue still further are basic questions about the sanctions
themselves. Should the UN impose multilateral economic sanctions
to keep a proven tyrant from developing weapons to launch
more wars against his neighbours? If sanctions are inherently
immoral, what other tools short of war can the international
community use? Is this particular sanctions regime more unreasonable
than others that havenÕt triggered humanitarian crises? How
much should we blame Saddam Hussein for rejecting the UNÕs
Ôoil-for-foodÕ humanitarian offer for six years, and expelling
weapons inspectors in 1998? Most important, has Iraq made
headway since then in pursuing nuclear and biological weapons?
This murkiness
has not deterred supporters of sanctions from claiming absolute
certainty on the issue. The New Republic, for example,
announced in October that the notion that Ôsanctions have
caused widespread sufferingÕ was simply ÔfalseÕ. Writing in
National Review in December, former army intelligence
analyst Robert Stewart asserted that Ôresources are available
in Iraq. Even under the sanctions, IraqÕs people need not
starve.Õ
The chasm
between claims made by sanction supporters and opponents is
enough to make inquisitive people throw their hands up in
the air. Such despair is not conducive to healthy debate,
which is especially important at a time when President Bush
has made it clear that Iraq must cooperate with weapons inspection
or become the next target of the War on Terror. A closer look
at the controversy over infant mortality in Iraq shows that
opponents of sanctions have a compelling case to make. Although
they often undermine their own position with outrageous exaggerations,
their critics show a similar disregard for the facts when
they blithely dismiss concerns about the impact of sanctions
on innocent people.
Opponents
of sanctions often undermine their own position with outrageous
exaggerations
How the
figures got exaggerated
The
idea that sanctions in Iraq have killed half a million children
(or 1 million, or 1.5 million, depending on the hysteria of
the source) took root in 1995 and 1996, on the basis of two
transparently flawed studies, one inexplicable doubling of
the studiesÕ statistics, and a non-denial on 60 Minutes.
In August
1995, the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) gave
officials from the Iraqi Ministry of Health a questionnaire
on child mortality and asked them to conduct a survey in the
capital city of Baghdad. On the basis of this five-day, 693-household,
Iraq-controlled study, the FAO announced in November that
Ôchild mortality had increased nearly five-fold since the
pre-sanctions eraÕ. As embargo critic Richard Garfield, a
public health specialist at Columbia University, wrote in
his own comprehensive 1999 survey of under-five deaths in
Iraq, ÔThe 1995 studyÕs conclusions were subsequently withdrawn
by the authors . . . Notwithstanding the retraction of the
original data, their estimate of more than 500,000 excess
child deaths due to the embargo is still often repeated by
sanctions critics.Õ
In March 1996,
the World Health Organisation (WHO) published its own report
on the humanitarian crisis. It reprinted figuresÑprovided
solely by the Iraqi Ministry of HealthÑshowing that a total
of 186,000 children under the age of five died between 1990
and 1994 in the 15 Iraqi regime-governed provinces. According
to these government figures, the number of deaths jumped nearly
500%, from 8,903 in 1990 to 52,905 in 1994.
Somehow, based
largely on these two reportsÑa five-day study in Baghdad showing
a Ôfive-foldÕ increase in child deaths and a Ministry of Health
claim that a total of 186,000 children under five had died
from all causes between 1990 and 1994Ña New York-based advocacy
group called the Center for Economic and Social Rights (CESR)
concluded in a May 1996 survey that Ôthese mortality rates
translate into a figure of over half a million excess child
deaths as a result of sanctions.Õ
In addition
to doubling the Iraqi governmentÕs highest number and attributing
all deaths to the embargo, CESR suggested a comparison that
proved popular among the growing legions of sanctions critics:
ÔIn simple terms, more Iraqi children have died as a result
of sanctions than the combined toll of two atomic bombs on
Japan.Õ The word genocide started making its way into the
discussion.
Still, the
report might well have sunk without trace had a CESR fact-finding
tour of Iraq not been filmed by Lesley Stahl of 60 Minutes.
In a May 12, 1996, report that later won her an Emmy and an
Alfred I. DuPont-Columbia University Journalism Award, Stahl
used CESRÕs faulty numbers and atomic-bomb imagery to confront
Madeleine Albright, then the US ambassador to the United Nations.
ÔWe have heard that a half million children have diedÕ, Stahl
said. ÔI mean, thatÕs more children than died in Hiroshima.
AndÑand you know, is the price worth it?Õ Albright replied,
ÔI think this is a very hard choice, but the priceÑwe think
the price is worth it.Õ
It was the
non-denial heard around the world. In the hands of sanctions
opponents and foreign policy critics, it was portrayed as
a confession of fact, even though neither Albright nor the
US government has ever admitted to such a ghastly number (nor
had anybody aside from CESR and Lesley Stahl ever suggested
such a thing until May 1996). The 60 Minutes exchange is very
familiar to readers of Arab newspapers, college dailies, and
liberal journals of opinion. Ralph Nader and Pat Buchanan
mentioned it several times during their respective presidential
campaigns.
After September
11, the anecdote received new life, as in this typically imaginative
interpretation by HarperÕs Editor Lewis Lapham in the magazineÕs
November issue: ÔWhen Madeleine Albright, then the American
secretary of state [sic], was asked in an interview on 60
Minutes whether she had considered the resulting death
of 500,000 Iraqi children (of malnutrition and disease), she
said, ÒWe think the price is worth it.ÓÕ
Albright has
been dogged by protesters at nearly all her campus appearances
in the past several years, and rightly so: she should have
refuted the figures. Quietly, a month after the World Trade
Center attack, she finally apologised for her infamous performance.
ÔI shouldnÕt have said itÕ, she said during a speech at the
University of Southern California. ÔYou can believe this or
not, but my comments were taken out of context.Õ
Towards
more credible estimates
The
other, far more credible source of the 500,000 number is a
pair of 1999 UNICEF studies that estimated the under-five
mortality rates of both Iraqi regions based on interviews
with a total of 40,000 households. ÔIf the substantial reduction
in the under-five mortality rate during the 1980s had continued
through the 1990sÕ, the report concluded, Ôthere would have
been half a million fewer deaths of children under-five in
the country as a whole during the eight year period 1991 to
1998.Õ If the expected mortality rate had stayed level rather
than continuing its downward slope, the excess death number
would be more like 420,000.
Significantly,
UNICEF found child mortality actually decreased in the autonomous
north (from 80.2 per 1,000 in 1984-89 to 70.8 in 1994-98)
while more than doubling in the south (from 56 per 1,000 to
130.6). This is Exhibit A for those who, like The New Republic,
argue that Saddam Hussein alone is responsible for IraqÕs
humanitarian crisis. When the report was released, UNICEF
Executive Director Carol Bellamy attributed the difference
in mortality trends to Ôthe large amount of international
aid pumped into northern Iraq at the end of the [Persian Gulf]
war.Õ
The UNICEF
report took pains to spread the blame for increased mortality
in the south, mentioning factors such as a dramatic increase
in the bottle-only feeding of infants in place of more nutritious
(and less likely to be tainted) breast milk. ÔItÕs very important
not to just say that everything rests on sanctionsÕ, Bellamy
said in a subsequent interview. ÔIt is also the result of
wars and the reduction in investment in resources for primary
health care.Õ But in the hands of sanctions opponents and
some news organisations, these findings were translated into
a UN admission that sanctions were Ôdirectly responsibleÕ
for killing half a million children (or even ÔinfantsÕ).
By November,
UNICEF was annoyed enough with the frequent misinterpretations
to send out regular corrective press releases, saying things
like: ÔThe surveys were never intended to provide an absolute
figure of how many children have died in Iraq as a result
of sanctions.Õ Rather, they Ôshow that if the substantial
reductions in child mortality in Iraq during the 1980s had
continued through the 1990sÑin other words if there hadnÕt
been two wars, if sanctions had not been introduced and if
investment in social services had been maintainedÑthere would
have been 500,000 fewer deaths of children under five.Õ
Sanctions
critics almost always leave out one other salient fact: The
vast majority of the horror statistics they quote apply to
the period before March 1997, when the oil-for-food program
delivered its first boatload of supplies (nearly six years
after the UN first proposed the idea to a reluctant Iraqi
government). In the past four years of oil-for-food, Iraq
has exported around three billion barrels of oil, generating
$40 billion in revenue, which has resulted in the delivery
of $18 billion of humanitarian and oil-equipment supplies,
with another $16 billion in the pipeline. (The rest is used
to cover administrative costs and reparations to Kuwait.)
As the UN
Office for the Iraqi Program stated in a September 28, 2001
report, ÔWith the improved funding level for the program,
the Government of Iraq is indeed in a position to address
the nutritional and health concerns of the Iraqi people, particularly
the nutritional status of the children.Õ Even two years earlier,
Richard Garfield noted in his survey that Ôthe most severe
embargo-related damages [have] already ended.Õ Anyone who
claims that more children will perish in Iraq this month than
Americans died on September 11 is cutting and pasting inflated
mid-1990s statistics onto a country that has changed significantly
since then. Knowingly or not, these critics are mangling the
facts to prove a debatable point and in the process damaging
their own cause.
Anyone
who claims that more children will perish in Iraq this month
than Americans died on September 11 is cutting and pasting inflated
mid-1990s statistics
The truth
is bad enough
Two
weeks after the hijacked planes crashed into the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon, I began looking in earnest for trustworthy
sources of information about the effects of sanctions on Iraq.
I was joined in my search by a half-dozen or so email acquaintances
who approached the question from a broadly similar viewpoint:
If sanctions are killing Iraqi infants, then Osama Bin Laden
has a legitimate propaganda tool, and the US has blood on
its hands that demanded immediate attention. So I set out
to find the facts, weigh them against Saddam HusseinÕs weapons
capabilities, and proceed from there.
It immediately
became obvious that sanctions opponents, especially in the
US, would be a hindrance, not a help. The man who launched
the American anti-sanctions movement as we know it is a University
of Texas journalism professor named Robert Jensen. His websiteÕs
ÔfactsheetÕ on Iraq contains two lies right off the bat. Citing
the WHO, he claims that Ôeach month 5,000 to 6,000 children
die as a result of the sanctionsÕ. And citing UNICEF, he asserts
that Ôapproximately 250 people die every day in Iraq due to
the sanctionsÕ.
Jensen, who
teaches Ôcritical thinkingÕ, drifted onto the national radar
screen days after the terrorist attacks, when he wrote a column
published in ZNet, CommonDreams.org, and The Houston Chronicle
titled ÔUS Just As Guilty of Committing Own Violent ActsÕ.
He has opposed the war against Afghanistan (not to mention
Serbia), teaches the journalism of Mumia Abu-Jamal, and once
wrote a column about how the ÔU.S. middle class, particularly
the white middle class, is probably the single biggest impediment
to justice the world has ever known.Õ JensenÕs cohorts in
kick-starting the anti-sanctions movement were intifada-supporting
professor Edward Said, ÔpeopleÕs historianÕ Howard Zinn, and
Noam Chomsky, a man who has rarely met a foreign policy he
couldnÕt describe as ÔgenocideÕ. The four issued a joint statement
in January 1999 condemning the situation in Iraq as Ôsanctioned
mass-murder that is nearing holocaust proportionsÕ.
These four
men have authored reams of hyperbolic nonsense since September
11. IsnÕt it reasonable to conclude that anything they and
Saddam Hussein agree upon must be false? No, actually, itÕs
not, and therein lies the problem. Any sustained inquiry into
the sanctions issue runs up against waves of propaganda and
reckless disregard for the truth, and it would be all too
easy to declare the issue settled after a quick dismissal
of the most glaring lies. But that would be an abdication
of responsibility. Many of those who support continued pressure
on Saddam Hussein tend to focus on a few key counterpoints
while ignoring piles of haunting in-country surveys and the
damning testimony of former UN officials who have quit to
campaign full-time against US policy in Iraq. Sanctions supporters,
if they are not careful, run the risk of aping the foolish
debate tactics of the critics they condemn.
Take, for example,
the lowered mortality rates in the northern provinces of Dahuk,
Sulaymaniyah, and ErbilÑthe smoking gun of the sanctions-donÕt-kill
side. The New Republic claims the autonomous Kurdish
area Ôis subject to exactly the same sanctions as the rest
of the country.Õ This is false: Under the oil-for-food regime,
the north, which contains 13% of the Iraqi population, receives
13% of all oil proceeds, a portion of that in cash. SaddamÕs
regions, with 87% of the population, receive 59% of the money
(recently increased by the UN Security Council from 53% none
of it in cash. (Of the rest, 25% goes to a Kuwaiti compensation
fund, and the remainder covers UN expenses).
It just isnÕt
true that the sanctions are Ôexactly the sameÕ in both parts
of Iraq. And there are other factors affecting the north-south
disparity: International aid agencies have been active in
the areas protected by no-fly zones since 1991, and the Turkish
border is said to be suitably porous for smuggling.
Sanctions
advocates also like to point out that sanctions havenÕt seemed
to inflict similar grief in countries such as Libya and Yugoslavia.
To which Richard Garfield, who compared the various penalised
countries, has an effective rebuttal: ÔEmbargoes with the
greatest impact on the health of the general population are
usually those which are multilateral and comprehensive, occur
in countries with heavy import dependence, are implemented
rapidly, and are accompanied by other economic and social
blows to a country. Iraq shared each of these characteristics.Õ
Those who
get past the initial frustrations of researching the topic
usually end up on Richard GarfieldÕs doorstep. His 1999 reportÑwhich
included a logistic regression analysis that re-examined four
previously published child mortality surveys and added bits
from 75 or so other relevant studiesÑpicked apart the faulty
methodologies of his predecessors, criticised the bogus claims
of the anti-sanctions left, admitted when the data were shaky,
and generally used conservative numbers. Among his many interesting
findings was that every sanctions regime except the one imposed
on apartheid South Africa led to limitations of food and medicine
imports, even though such goods were almost always officially
exempt from the embargo. ÔIn many countriesÕ, he wrote, Ôthe
embargo-related lack of capital was more important than direct
restrictions on importing medicine or food.Õ
Garfield concluded
that between August 1991 and March 1998 in Iraq there were
at least 106,000 excess deaths of children under five, with
a Ômore likelyÕ worst-case sum of 227,000. (He recently updated
the latter figure to 350,000 through this year.) Of those
deaths, he estimated one-quarter were Ômainly associated with
the Gulf warÕ. The chief causes, in his view, were Ôcontaminated
water, lack of high quality foods, inadequate breast feeding,
poor weaning practices, and inadequate supplies in the curative
health care system. This was the product of both a lack of
some essential goods, and inadequate or inefficient use of
existing essential goods.Õ
Ultimately,
Garfield argued, sanctions played an undeniably important
role. ÔEven a small number of documentable excess deaths is
an expression of a humanitarian disaster, and this number
is not smallÕ, he concluded. Ô[And] excess deaths should .
. . be seen as the tip of the iceberg among damages to occur
among under five-year-olds in Iraq in the 1990s . . . The
humanitarian disaster which has occurred in Iraq far exceeds
what may be any reasonable level of acceptable damages according
to the principles of discrimination and proportionality used
in warfare . . . To the degree that economic sanctions complicate
access to and utilisation of essential goods, sanctions regulations
should be modified immediately.Õ
GarfieldÕs
conclusion echoes that of literally every international agency
that has performed extensive studies in Iraq. In 1999 a UN
Humanitarian Panel found that Ôthe gravity of the humanitarian
situation of the Iraqi people is indisputable and cannot be
overstatedÕ. UNICEFÕs Carol Bellamy, at the time her landmark
report was released, said, ÔEven if not all suffering in Iraq
can be imputed to external factors, especially sanctions,
the Iraqi people would not be undergoing such deprivations
in the absence of the prolonged measures imposed by the Security
Council and the effects of war.Õ The former UN humanitarian
coordinator for Iraq, Denis Halliday, travels around the world
calling the policy he once enforced ÔgenocideÕ. His replacement,
Hans von Sponeck, also resigned in protest of the UNÕs Ôcriminal
policyÕ.
Conclusion
There
have been no weapons inspectors in Iraq since 1998. As a result
it is exceptionally difficult to know with precision what
nuclear and biological weapons Saddam actually has on hand
or in development. From the beginning, economic sanctions
have been tied to what foreign policy analyst Mark Phythian
described in World Affairs as Ôthe first attempt to
disarm a country against its willÕ. After September 11, the
issue of an America-hating tyrant arming himself to the teeth
has seemed more pressing than easing an embargo that blocks
his access to money.
Yet the basic
argument against all economic sanctions remains: namely, that
they tend to punish civilians more than governments and to
provide dictators with a gift-wrapped propaganda tool. Any
visitor to Cuba can see within 24 hours the futility of slapping
an embargo on a sheltered population that is otherwise inclined
to detest its government and embrace its yanqui neighbours.
Sanctions give anti-American enclaves, whether in Cairo or
Berkeley or Peshawar, one of their few half-convincing arguments
about evil US policy since the end of the Cold War.
It seems awfully
hard not to conclude that the embargo on Iraq has been ineffective
(especially since 1998) and that it has, at the least, contributed
to more than 100,000 deaths since 1990. With President Bush
set to go to war over SaddamÕs noncompliance with the military
goals of the sanctions, there has never been a more urgent
time to confront the issue with clarity.
Author
Matt
Welch, a columnist for the Online Journalism Review,
is a writer in Los Angeles. Reprinted with permission from
the March 2002 issue of Reason Magazine. Copyright 2002 by
Reason Foundation, 3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd, Suite 400, Los
Angeles, CA 90034. www.reason.com
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