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Sure, the Bible makes some incredible claims as to the size of a couple of major wars that are supposed to happen near the End-Times... but, c'mon, not any time soon!
As we all know, Russia is our Friend! Saddam got his butt kicked! There is so much world peace right now, that we have virtually asked our military to take a vacation! What in the world is there to worry about, anyway? Russia is weak, We are strong... who could make war with the West and win? So, let's all put down our weapons and kiss...
Wait a second... That all sounds crazy! Wasn't the Gulf War a little too easy? Didn't Russia help us defeat their greatest ally in Saddam's Iraq?
Hmmmm.... Hey! What's going on here?
Actually, I'm not talking about Armageddon,
but rather what the Bible calls the Battle of Gog and Magog...
Armageddon sounded more dramatic, but it's still at least 7 years away.
So should you be afraid after reading this article?
Only if you aren't prepared for the End Times!
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A. Introduction
B. Inconsistencies and Contradictions
C. The Deception
D. Confirmation
E. The Strategy
F. Conclusion
(Adolph Hitler)
"We have no right ever to forget that psychological warfare
is a struggle for winning people's minds."
(Mikhail Gorbachev)
"I have a great feeling of a great victory.
Anyone who dares even imply that we did not achieve a great victory
obviously doesn't know what the hell he's talking about."(1)
{Retired General Norman Schwarzkopf}
(Gulf War Commander in Chief, U.S. Central Command)
Since Gorbachev came to power in the Soviet Union there have been
persistent and exceptional historical contradictions in Soviet behavior.
The consequence of this contradictory behavior has been the breakup of the
Soviet Union and the seeming demise of the 'communist' threat.
Although on the surface the apparent, dramatic turn around in Kremlin
thinking and the consequent collapse of Soviet communism may seem like
positive developments for the West, there is reason to believe they may
actually not be. Secular trends indicate there is a possibility that the
Soviets have undermined their own political and economic power as part of a
grand deception. There is reason to believe that Russia is currently
misleading the world for the purpose of global military domination. An
unprecedented campaign of large-scale deceptions may be underway which has
totally misled the West such that the East can now successfully launch a
surprise third world war. (2)
For America and the West, the Gulf Crisis had a sensational outcome.
First off, through the Gulf War the threat of Saddam Hussein was seemingly
checked and Western interests in the Middle East were secured. Secondly,
the U.S.-led Coalition victory in the Gulf War helped the United States
overcome its disgrace in Vietnam and reinstated its position as the
dominant world hegemon. Lastly, the positive resolution of the Gulf Crisis
marked the beginning of a 'New World Order' in which the threat of
militaristic totalitarianism appears to be dead and the superpowers are
cooperating toward international peace and security.
The problem with the Gulf Crisis and its positive outcome is that it
all may have been literally too good to be true. Something which the West
seemed to conveniently overlook throughout the Crisis was that Iraq had
been a close ally of the Soviet Union for decades prior to the Invasion of
Kuwait. Consequently, the humiliating defeat of Saddam Hussein's Iraq in
the Gulf War, like the modern defeat of Soviet communism, may have been a
deception- an inherently contradictory lie. There is reason to believe
that Saddam intentionally provoked the Gulf War with the sole intention of
handing the West a 'great victory'. He would have done this in cooperation
with Moscow as an important part of an overall strategy to mislead America,
its Western allies, and the world as a whole, so that the East can
successfully launch a surprise attack against the West. In other words,
when it comes right down to it, the Gulf Crisis and subsequent Allied
victory over Iraq may have in actuality been nothing but a seductive lie.
In the following pages I will thoroughly examine how the Persian Gulf
Crisis may have been a deception. There will be four major parts. In part
I, numerous inconsistencies and contradictions associated with the behavior
of Iraq and the Soviets throughout the Gulf Crisis will be brought to
light. In the second part, a circumstantial case will be built for a
Persian Gulf deception based upon the implications of the given
inconsistencies and contradictions. This case will be confirmed by
directly incriminating evidence in part III. In the final part, possible
strategic aims of a Persian Gulf deception will be discussed.
Iraq's Invasion of Kuwait was inconsistent- it was a blatant
provocation for war with the West that went against Iraq's best interest.
Going into the Gulf Crisis Iraq had become a major military threat, and
potential target, for the West. During the 1980's, Saddam Hussein built-up
one of the largest militaries in the world. By 1990, he commanded a
million-man army equipped with a vast arsenal of modern weaponry including
over 4500 tanks, almost 5000 artillery pieces, and upwards of 800 combat
aircraft (3). Saddam also controlled hundreds of anti-ship missiles and
surface-to-surface ballistic missiles, as well as a stockpile of chemical
and possibly biolological munitions. During the 1980's Iraq developed an
extensive military infrastructure involving a comprehensive command,
control, communications, and intelligence (C^3I) network. By the summer of
1990, throughout Iraq were radar stations, anti-aircraft artillery,
surface-to-air missile batteries, and weapons production plants which
included facilities for the research and development of chemical,
biological, and nuclear weapons. (4)
As Iraqi military power grew, the West became increasingly concerned
about its expanding regional influence. In early May of 1990- just prior
to the Gulf Crisis- 'The New Republic' warned:
"The prospect of Saddam Hussein as top man in the Arab world and dominant power in the Persian Gulf is not one that civilized people should welcome. This man is a ruthless killer with a deep paranoia about the West and grandiose ambitions to be a new Nasser and to re-create the glories that were Babylon and Mesopotamia." (5)
All in all, going into the Invasion of Kuwait, the West saw Iraq as a
dangerous military threat and destabilizing force in the richest oil region
of the world. Saddam's growing military power, coupled with his staunch
anti-Israeli and anti-Western mindset, was becoming a major concern for the
West. Iraq could someday unify the Arab world such that the West would be
held hostage by its oil dependency. Even worse, Iraq could eventually
unleash a major regional war involving weapons of mass destruction which
could result in the destruction of Israel. By 1990, Saddam Hussein had
come to embody many of "the serious security problems of the post-cold war
era: aggression, terrorism, virulant tribalism, and missile, nuclear, and
chemical weapons proliferation" (6).
In the weeks and months before Iraq's Invasion of Kuwait, Saddam was
putting out some not-so-subtle hints as to his belligerent intentions,
giving the West an opportunity to consider the possibility of a future
confrontation. In a speech made on April 3rd, 1990, Saddam threatened to
"make fire eat up half of Israel", a comment which drew widespread Western
consternation (7). In May, U.S. officials confirmed press rumors that
Saddam told Kuwait: "Iraqi security may require him to occupy Kuwaiti
territory in the future" (8). Such bellicose remarks likely led Western
leaders to consider possible responses should Iraq become aggressive in the
near-future.
As Iraq began to blatantly threaten Kuwait in late July of 1990, the
United States made it clear that it would respond forcefully if need be.
The prevailing sentiment of America's leaders at that time was reflected by
Republican Senator Alfonse D'Amato who denounced Saddam as: "...a butcher,
a killer, a bully. Some day we're going to have to stand up to him. Why
not now?" (9). The State Department announced that the United States would
"remain strongly committed to supporting the individual and collective
self-defence of our friends in the Gulf, with whom we have deep and long-
standing ties" (10). To underscore America's willingness to use military
force against Iraq should events warrant such action, a joint naval
exercise with the United Arab Emirates was hastily arranged and initiated
in the northern Gulf (11).
Apparently unintimidated by American posturing, on August 2nd, 1990,
Saddam proved good on his word and Iraq invaded Kuwait. The West received
the opportunity it needed to do something decisive about the growing Iraqi
threat. Almost immediately, the United States and its Western Allies began
preparing for a war against Iraq. Saddam's military empire could be
forcefully checked before Iraqi regional influence grew too far or before
Iraq's military might became too strong- eventually including nuclear
weapons.
Saddam's provocation was ideal for a decisive Western military
response. As the 1991-92 'American Defense Annual' later put it: "Saddam
Hussein... proved to be a near perfect villian, and the coalition aligned
against him had a compelling 'casus belli'" (12). A ruthless military
dictator, infamous for gassing his own people, blitzkrieged the small,
peaceful nation of Kuwait in blatant violation of international law.
What's more, Saddam's Invasion resulted in Iraq's control of over a third
of the world's available oil reserves and "put his forces within striking
distance of one of the world's most critical resources, Saudi Arabia's oil
fields, making it necessary for the United States and other nations to act
to counter him, instead of just issuing protest statements" (13). As a
whole, through the Kuwaiti Invasion, Saddam had come to threaten half the
world's oil, a situation wholly intolerable to the oil-dependent West.
Between the Invasion and the beginning of the Gulf War, Iraq continued
to behave in a seemingly irrational manner that was inconsistent with its
own interests but favorable to Western interests.
In the wake of Saddam's overrun of Kuwait, international pressure, led
by the West, began to build on Iraq to withdraw. Immediately, U.N.
Resolution 660 was ratified which called for the unconditional withdrawal
of Iraq from Kuwait (14). Within days, U.S. military forces began flooding
into Saudi Arabia. With Saddam remaining intransigent, the United Nations
decided to impose international economic sanctions against Iraq. As Iraq
failed to respond, military forces from across the globe began flowing into
the Gulf along side the growing American build-up. On November 29th, with
a sizable Coalition force already in place, the U.N. okayed a resolution
for the forceful removal of Iraq from Kuwait by a U.S.-led international
Coalition should Saddam's forces not unilaterally leave by January 15,
1991. (15)
Saddam's intransigence as international pressure began to build made
little sense. It was apparent, given the scale of the American-led
military build-up in Saudi Arabia, that, beyond freeing Kuwait, the West
was preparing to use the Invasion of Kuwait as an excuse to destroy Iraq's
military potential and, in turn, the threat Saddam posed to Western
interests in the Middle East. Any sort of compromise or moderation on
Saddam's part could have easily undone Western attempts to organize
international support for a war and, in turn, resulted in substantial Iraqi
gains. In John Bulloch's and Harvey Morris' 'Saddam's War', it is pointed
out that:
"Had he (Saddam) contented himself with occupying the disputed islands of Bubiyan and Warbah and that sector of the Rumeileh oilfield which he claimed as his own, it is unlikely the United Nations would have gone beyond the imposition of unenforceable sanctions, or that the United States would have dispatched a single soldier to the region... Had a puppet government been left in charge of a nominally independent Kuwait, it would eventually have received some recognition, at least from the Arab world." (16)
Instead of moderation, however, Saddam remained almost completely
intransigent and belligerent toward the West. He persistently made clear
his unwillingness to be persuaded by Western intimidation. He declared
Kuwait to have always been a part of Iraq and let the world know that all
of Iraqi sovereignty- including Kuwait- would be militarily defended
against any hostile actions. Furthermore, Saddam called on moslems around
the world to rise up and launch a holy war, or 'jihad', against Western
imperialism. (17)
Saddam sometimes, and usually at the wrong times, failed to behave
according to the belligerent image he painted of himself.
Iraqi forces never preempted the build-up of the American-led Coalition
in Saudi Arabia. Saddam conveniently stood back as nations from all over
the world, particularly in the West, mobilized and imported a massive
military force. Yet, attacking while the Coalition was incomplete and
disorganized may have undermined the Coalition's ability to successfully
wage a war. Unfortunately, as is pointed out in the 1991-92 'American
Defense Annual': "It seems unlikely that future enemies will graciously
grant U.S. forces five months to prepare for battle" (18).
Even more inconsistent than failing to preempt was Saddam's release of
Western hostages. There can be little doubt that: "One act of great good
fortune was Saddam Hussein's decision to release his hostages, those human
shields whose continued presence in Iraq would have vastly complicated the
air war" (19). Specifically, Saddam made hostages out of the thousands of
Western civilians (including over 3000 Americans) who had been living in
Kuwait or Iraq when the Gulf Crisis broke out. He threatened to use them
as 'human shields' by placing them in strategic targets in order to deter
any approaching Coalition attack. These hostages became one of Saddam's
only major trump cards against a U.S.-led attack. It was apparent a
Coalition bombing campaign that would cost thousands of innocent Western
lives would have exceptionally high political costs for our leaders. In an
act of goodwill totally uncharacteristic of the 'Butcher of Baghdad',
however, Saddam released the hostages. The only major concession he made
before the Gulf War was profoundly self-contradictory in that it directly
undermined his stated intention to inflict as much damage and pain as
possible on the West. In fact, Saddam spared the lives of Westerners at
the cost of Iraqi lives later lost in unhampered Coalition bombings.
The deadline of January 15th eventually passed and the U.S.-Coalition
attacked the very next day. The Gulf War was underway as well as continued
inconsistencies and contradictions.
As General Powell correctly pointed out the following day, the
Coalition somehow 'caught Iraq off guard' and achieved tactical surprise in
its post-deadline air-attack (20). This, of course, is absurd. Going into
the Gulf War, Iraq had one of the most experienced and hardened militaries
in the world. It had just completed an almost decade-long, modern war with
Iran. Furthermore, Iraq was equipped with a sophisticated Soviet C^3I
network. To top it all off, Iraq had several months going into January
15th to prepare its defenses and a military response should war come. Yet,
Saddam's war-machine was somehow surprised by a *deadline*-attack. Upon
the initial wave of the air campaign there was little or no immediate Iraqi
response: no defensive black-out of Baghdad (something they had been
rehearsing), no immediate retaliatory SCUD missile strikes, and no Iraqi
air- or ground-counteroffensive. Fortunately for the Coalition, all its
planes ran into was well-lit targets, inept Iraqi air defenses, and some
sporadic dog-fights. Tactical surprise allowed the Coalition to swiftly
disable Saddam's war-machine with minimum associated costs.
During the air-campaign, the only significant counterattack from Iraq
was random SCUD missile attacks against Israel and Saudi Arabia.
Fortunately, however, chemical weapons were never involved. Of course, why
weren't they? It was not that Saddam lacked such weapons for in the War's
aftermath U.N. inspectors have found dozens of Al-Hussein chemical SCUDs
which survived Coalition bombings (21). Saddam decided not to use chemical
SCUDs even though such restraint contradicted both the threats he was
making and the image he was conveying prior to and during the Gulf War. If
Saddam really wished to spread the conflict and set-off a holy war as he
persistently claimed he would, hitting Israel with chemical SCUDs would
have been an ideal provocation. It is doubtful that Saddam feared Israeli
retaliation given that Iraq was already stomaching over two thousand
Coalition sorties a day and Israeli involvement was the intended goal. All
in all, it makes little sense that Saddam failed to use chemical SCUDs
during the Gulf War against Israel or any of Iraq's enemies, whereas he
gassed his own people only a couple of years before. (22)
In late February, the Coalition ground-offensive got underway, but
again no chemical weapons were involved. Apparently, Saddam disallowed the
use of any of the tens-of-thousands of chemical artillery shells and
chemical mines in the Iraqi arsenal (23). This is surprising given how
these weapons were employed with great success during the Iran-Iraq War
(24). The fact that chemical munitions were not used by the Iraqis is but
another inconsistency on the part of Saddam which was to the benefit of the
U.S. and the Coalition forces.
By March, Kuwait was repatriated and Saddam had managed to suffer a
defeat that seemed beyond human reasoning. With all said and done, the
U.S.-Coalition had succeeded in a total military 'rout' of Iraq's war-
hardened, well-equipped, million-man army and hardly got scratched in the
process. After six-weeks of Allied aerial bombardment involving upwards of
100,000 sorties and 141,000 tons of bombs, Saddam's vast war-machine was
left decimated at the cost of only a few dozen Coalition planes (25). Any
of Saddam's forces in Kuwait that escaped destruction during the Coalition
air-campaign proceeded to be encircled and destroyed in a 100-hour Allied
ground offensive. When the War was over, more than 100,000 Iraqi soldiers
had been killed, 300,000 were injured, and around 150,000 had been taken
prisoner (26). In causing this immense massacre, the Allies suffered only
468 casualties: 149 dead, 81 missing-in-action, and 238 wounded (27).
Through the Gulf War Saddam lost some 4000 tanks, 2000 artillery pieces,
2000 armored personnel carriers (APCs), 100 aircraft, and 80 ships (28).
Furthermore, Iraq's infrastructure suffered what the U.N. later described
as 'near-apocalyptic' damage (29). The Allies, on the other hand, lost
only 4 tanks, 1 artillery piece, 9 APCs, 44 aircraft, and 2 ships (30).
All in all, Saddam's defeat at the hands of the West was so drastic and
humiliating as to be utterly nonsensical.
With the Gulf War over, the West had reason to breathe a sigh of relief
at home. Fortunately, there had been no major anti-Western terrorist
attacks associated with the Crisis. Of course, why weren't there? The CIA
"picked up all the tell-tale signs of Iraq's ability to wage chemical
warfare and launch terrorist attacks around the Middle East and Europe...
Intelligence analysts are still scratching their heads, wondering why these
capabilities were not used (31)". In other words, Saddam refrained from
launching terrorist attacks just as he failed to wage chemical attacks even
though he was fully capable of and supposedly intending to do both. Thus,
since there was no terrorism, Saddam acted in a contradictory manner which,
once again, was favorable to the West.
In the wake of the Gulf War, one of the greatest inconsistencies of all
concerning Saddam's behavior has come to light. U.N. inspections following
the Gulf War ceasefire have revealed that Iraq's program to develop nuclear
weapons, code-named 'Project Babylon' (32), was far larger and more
successful than had ever been suspected in the West. In fact, it is today
believed that Iraq may have been less than a year away from having at least
a few crude nuclear weapons when it invaded Kuwait (33). Of course, if
Saddam was interested in taking on the West and fighting the "Mother of All
Battles", why did he make his challenge when he did? Why didn't he wait a
year until he had the Bomb? Why did Saddam invade Kuwait and fight a war
with the West before developing the ultimate means by which to fulfill his
grandiose ambitions?
Throughout the Persian Gulf Crisis the Soviets behaved as
inconsistently as Saddam's Iraq.
For the Gulf Crisis, Soviet foreign policy did an about-face.
Throughout most of the United Nation's history, Moscow had tried to
undermine any Western efforts to bring about international cooperation,
particularly if such cooperation was to somehow serve Western interests.
Yet, for the Gulf Crisis, this was not so. For the first time since World
War II the Soviets cooperated with the West in organizing an international
effort.
The effort they finally chose to support was blatantly in the West's
interest and against their own.
The oil-shock stemming from the Gulf Crisis was devastating to Western
economic vitality. The West desperately needed a way to resecure its
supply of cheap oil from the Persian Gulf by freeing Kuwait and eliminating
the Iraqi threat. Without the okay of the Soviets and international
support this may never have been possible and the West's economy may very
well have been plunged into depression.
For the Soviets, on the other hand, higher oil-prices stemming from the
Gulf Crisis was a blessing. At the time, Soviet Russia was the world's
largest producer and second largest exporter of oil. Hence, the sharp rise
in oil prices meant windfall profits of hard foreign currency- something
the Soviets greatly needed. Given the price at which oil topped-out during
the Crisis, the Soviets could have hoped to increase their hard-currency
earnings by nearly $40 billion a year. (34)
Beyond oil interests, Saddam Hussein's Iraq was a valuable ally and
military client which the Soviets should have wanted to keep.
By 1990, the Soviets had a long-standing and deeply-vested relationship
with Iraq. In 1972, Moscow and Baghdad signed a 'Treaty of Friendship and
Cooperation' (35). Over the next two decades the Soviets poured thousands
of military 'advisers' and other specialists into Iraq who trained
Baghdad's general staff and planning officers as well as organized its
intelligence services (36). Soviet involvement in Iraq became particularly
deep after Saddam Hussein came to power in 1979. Guided by a Stalinist
philosophy, Saddam wanted to model Iraq after the Soviet military state
(37). He affirmed his commitment to Moscow when he came to power by
signing an agreement with Soviet Defense Minister Ustinov on military
cooperation and strategic consultation (38). After making the agreement,
the Soviets helped Saddam carry out a large-scale campaign to consolidate
power within Iraq and become a regional military superpower. Reflecting
Moscow's involvement, eight military facilities were constructed in Iraq
for Soviet use including both air bases and naval ports (39). All in all,
by the Kuwaiti Invasion, the Soviet Union had invested a great deal of
time, energy, and resources in the construction of Saddam's totalitarian
regime and modern war-machine- an investment they likely meant to make good
on.
In developing its massive war-machine, Iraq became an ideal Soviet
military clientele state. During the 1980's Iraq became the world's
largest importer of arms. It is estimated that between 1980 and 1990
Saddam spent some $100 billion dollars on military equipment (that compares
to just under $70 billion spent on arms by Britian or France during the
same period) (40). Since 90 percent of Iraq's military was bought from the
Soviets, it should be apparent just how valuable a customer Saddam was to
Moscow.
Since Iraq purchased most of its arms from the Soviets on credit, it
was in Moscow's interest to maintain Saddam's regime and Iraq's economic
vitality. Going into the Gulf Crisis, Baghdad owed Moscow some $80
billion. For 1990 alone, the Soviets were expecting to receive $2 billion
from Iraq (41). Given the seeming economic distress in Soviet Russia,
preserving Iraq's economic potential should have been important to them.
In a nutshell, the Soviets should not have wanted to turn their back on
Iraq during the Gulf Crisis. As 'Times' columnist A.M. Rosenthal pointed
out at the time, doing so meant that:
"Moscow will lose its only remaining ally in the area. Also: its best customer for weapons. Also: the military and political prestige it invested in Saddam Hussein for so long." (42)
The principal reason Moscow forged a close relationship with Baghdad
and made such a deep military commitment is because Iraq has tremendous
geopolitical strategic value. Iraq is at the heart of the Persian Gulf and
the richest oil-region in the world. Thus, it is a focal point not only of
the Arab world, but also of vital Western energy interests. A foothold in
Iraq enhanced Moscow's influence over other Arab nations and gave the
Soviets access to the aquilles heel of the oil-dependent West.
Because of Iraq's strategic value, it was widely believed the Soviets
would never let the West attack and defeat Saddam Hussein. Such a scenario
entailed a shift in the regional balance of power that compromised Soviet
interests and benefitted the West. Just prior to the Gulf War, 'Aviation
Week and Space Technology' reported:
"...the destruction of Iraq's military, if it came to that, would augment the strategic weight of Israel and Iran. This is not in Soviet interests." (43)
At the Hoover Institute, a national defense think-tank, experts believed
that the Soviets would "do everything in their power to keep that man
(Saddam) in there... They do not want that part of the world dominated by
us" (44).
All in all, Moscow had vested interests in its relationship with
Baghdad such that they should have stood behind, or at least sought to
protect, Saddam Hussein's Iraq during the Gulf Crisis. Yet, they did not.
In fact, they opened the way for the West to launch a war against their
valuable Iraqi ally:
"The importance of Soviet cooperation cannot be overstated. If the Soviets had pursued their traditional policy of blocking agreements at the United Nations and defending their protgs in the Middle East, not only would united action have been impossible but fear of provoking a superpower confrontation might well have deterred the United States from acting." (45)
Although at least some contemplation would have been expected, the
Soviets turned their back on Saddam and helped out the West immediately and
without reservation. On the day of the Invasion, American Secretary of
State James Baker was visiting his Soviet counterpart, Eduard Shevardnadze,
in Siberia. On news of the Invasion, the two got together, and within just
a couple of hours they had worked out the draft wording for U.N.
Resolution 660 which called for an immediate, unconditional Iraqi
withdrawal from Kuwait. (46)
As Western forces began piling into the Gulf, Moscow failed to use its
diplomatic leverage over Saddam to remove Iraq from Kuwait. This, of
course, makes little sense given what the Soviets had to gain from
preserving Iraq. Yet, while a diplomatic solution was still possible
before Iraq was destroyed by Western military force, the Soviets sat on
their hands. If they were interested in seeing a peaceful resolution to
the Crisis they should have been able to produce one since the Soviet Union
was Iraq's principal political- and military-supporter. It is apparent
that: "The Soviet Union is the one power that could have brought Iraq to
terms early on if Moscow had really clenched its fist" (47).
In fact, Saddam may have backed down if only the Soviets informed
Baghdad of their willingness to let the U.S.-led Coalition attack. In
'Saddam's War', the authors revealed:
"In Baghdad, officials told us that they had their links to Moscow, and they were quite certain that at the Helsinki summit in mid-September the influence of Soviet military thinking made Gorbachev hold back from any endorsement of military action against Iraq if sanctions proved ineffective. Whether or not this was true, the Iraqis firmly believed that it was and that Soviet generals would prevent any attack on them. This perception undoubtedly influenced the Baghdad government's policy of brinksmanship." (48)
As war approached the Soviets actually helped prepare the U.S.-led
effort to destroy Iraq. They fed the West important codes and intelligence
on the Iraqi military which simplified the Coalition's offensive (49).
Hence, the Soviets went extraordinarily out of their way to facilitate a
Western-led attack against their valuable ally.
What can be drawn from the above inconsistencies and contradictions in
Iraqi and Soviet behavior? Quite simply, it appears something seriously
afoul may have been underlying the Persian Gulf Crisis. 'Contra'-'diction'
entails that something is contrary to what it appears to mean. This is the
essence of a lie. The contradictions associated with the Gulf Crisis
indicate that it may have been some sort of lie- the opposite of what it
appeared to be.
There was a prevailing and consistent theme to the contradictory
behavior of Saddam Hussein's Iraq and the Soviet Union during the Gulf
Crisis. Both nations persistently acted in a way that facilitated a
sensational Western Gulf War victory over Iraq. If, as part of a large-
scale deception, Soviet Russia and Saddam's Iraq were working together to
bring about the Gulf War and have Iraq decisively lose to the West, then
the seemingly inconsistent and irrational behavior of Bagdhad and Moscow
makes sense.
Saddam's Invasion of Kuwait was an ideal provocation to lure the West
into launching a war against Iraq. By 1990, the increasing threat posed by
Saddam's radical anti-Western policies, growing military power, and nuclear
weapons development program, most likely had the West seeking an excuse to
stop Iraq short. As Saddam began to make belligerent threats, increasingly
directed at Kuwait, the West was given ample time to muse the possibility
of fighting a needed war against Iraq. When Saddam actually invaded
Kuwait, there was a blatant violation of international law and half of the
world's known oil reserves came under an Iraqi threat- the West received
both an ideal excuse and an unavoidable provocation to wage a mitigating
war against Saddam's military empire.
Following the Invasion, the Soviets made it easy for the West to launch
a war against Iraq. With the U.S. Secretary of State already in Russia,
Moscow was able to immediately cooperate and the initial U.N. call for
Iraq to withdraw from Kuwait resulted. The reason the Soviets didn't take
time to contemplate their response is because they had preplanned it. As
the U.S. worked with the international community to set the stage for a
full-scale war against Iraq, the Soviets continued to cooperate including
their okay for the use of military force against their Iraqi ally. As the
deadline for war approached, Moscow made sure not to use diplomatic
pressure to get Saddam to back down because the intent was to make way for
a Western attack.
Going into the January 15th deadline, Saddam made sure the West could
go through with the War it desired by remaining intransigent and
belligerent. Even as it became apparent that the Coalition force was more
than large enough to overwhelm Iraq, Saddam failed to compromise on Kuwait.
Saddam took steps prior to the Gulf War to open the way for a
successful Coalition attack with minimum potential costs for the West. By
failing to preempt the build-up of forces in Saudi Arabia, Iraq made it
easy for the U.S.-led Coalition to achieve a military superiority and fully
organize itself, thus facilitating Western success. On top of this, by
releasing his Western 'human shield' hostages, Saddam removed a substantial
mitigating factor to a Coalition air-attack and greatly reduced the
potential costs the West would face in launching a war, both in terms of
Western lives and consequent political costs.
For the initial Coalition air-attack, Saddam left his forces off-guard
and unprepared, allowing the Allies the advantage of tactical surprise.
Targets were left vulnerable, no initial military response was prepared or
executed, and defensive responses were subdued, thus the door was left open
for the the Allies to swiftly disable the potential of Saddam's war-
machine. This gave the West an inflated sense of technical and strategic
superiority, something which would be further fed throughout the War.
As the War progressed and Saddam's empire was being decimated, Iraq
refrained from using chemical weapons so that the West's Gulf victory would
be clean-cut and total. Saddam made sure not to hit Israel with chemical
SCUDs in that such a provocation would have surely elicited a potent
Israeli military response. Israeli involvement in the Gulf War could have
easily led to a breakup of the Coalition and possibly spawned a larger
regional conflict. By keeping chemical weapons off the battlefield, Saddam
minimized Coalition casualties and kept the conflict from escalating in a
way which could have led to a breakdown in international support for the
War and/or threatened the Coalition's cohesion. All in all, by not using
chemical weapons, Saddam minimized Western losses- both in terms of lives
and associated political costs, thus insuring that the victory handed to
the West was total.
Throughout the whole affair there was no associated terrorism so that
the deception would go smoothly and Soviet involvement would remain
undiscovered. Extensive evidence has been uncovered which indicates that
Moscow has been behind much of international terrorism (50). Thus, there
is reason to believe that, prior to the Gulf Crisis, the Kremlin may have
put out some sort of restraining order on both Saddam and international
terrorist organizations in general. This would have been done for two
reasons. First off, it was important to constrain hostilities as much as
possible to the Persian Gulf region. Aggravating other tensions, such as
between the Arabs and Israel, would have threatened both international
support for the Gulf War and the exceptional nature of the West's victory.
Secondly, terrorism could have opened up linkages to Moscow that Western
intelligence might discover and trace, thus leading to an uncovering of the
deception.
When the Gulf War ended and Iraq had been forced from Kuwait, Saddam
had managed to achieve exactly what he intended from the start. He
suffered a drastic, humiliating defeat while inflicting minimal damage on
the U.S.-led Coalition. Thus, the West was handed a sensational, total
victory in the Gulf.
As for the surprising extent of Iraq's nuclear program, Saddam
challenged the West before he had the Bomb because 'Project Babylon' was
most valuable as bait for a Western attack. Should Saddam have invaded
Kuwait once Iraq had nuclear weapons, the odds are that there never would
have been a Gulf War, and, if there was, it wouldn't have been a 'great
victory' for the West.
If it seems difficult to believe that Saddam might have staged the Gulf
Crisis under Kremlin order, simply consider the alternative: How could have
Saddam invaded Kuwait without Moscow's knowledge and consent?
In a New Republic article, 'Virtual Ally: What's the Soviet Game in the
Gulf', which came out just after the Crisis erupted, Edward Jay Epstein, an
expert on Soviet intelligence, asked the provocative question:
"Did the USSR have advance knowledge of well-designed Iraqi plans to invade Kuwait? After all, unlike the United States, the Soviet Union had military advisers in Iraq attached to the helicopter, tank, logistic, and radar units used for the invasion, and the KGB presumably had developed sources from the three generations of Iraqi staff and planning officers trained by Moscow?" (51)
As for consent, according to Claudia Wright of 'Foreign Affairs', in
the 1980's the U.S. State Department thought of Saddam Hussein as "so
beholden to the Soviet Union as to be incapable of autonomous foreign
policy" (52). Given how dependent Iraq was on the Soviets- particularly in
building up and maintaining its military strength, and given Saddam's
Stalinist, pro-Soviet mind-set, it's unlikely Baghdad would have ever
pulled-off a stunt as reckless and potentially costly as invading Kuwait
without first seeking Moscow's approval. This is particularly true since
it would have been nearly impossible to develop and carry out such plans
without the Soviets noticing.
All in all, there is good reason to believe California Senator Bill
Richardson who remarked, "there is little doubt that the Soviets were
apprised of the invasion before it happened, helped plan it and approved
it. There is no way communist puppet Saddam Hussein would have given the
order to invade Kuwait if it were not sanctioned by Gorbachev (53)."
The idea that the Gulf Crisis was an intentional deception and that
Moscow was fundamentally behind the whole affair is confirmed by some
directly incriminating evidence.
There was strong evidence that the Soviets were involved with Iraq's
Invasion of Kuwait. First off, two weeks prior to the Invasion, Colonel
General Albert Makashov, former commander of the Volga-Urals Command, went
to Baghdad as a Soviet 'military counseler' (54). Since Iraq's military
command would have had difficulty handling an operation as logistically
complex as the Kuwaiti Invasion, there is reason to believe Makashov,
and/or other Russian commanders, oversaw the Invasion. This is
substantiated by the fact that there were Soviet military advisers attached
to the Iraqi helicopter, tank, logistic, and radar units used for the
Invasion of Kuwait (55). Also, 1200 Iraqi military personnel were being
trained by Soviet specialists at Odessa, inside the Soviet Union, around
the time of the Invasion (56). Further evidence of Moscow's complicity in
the Invasion stems from the fact that the Soviets sold or transferred
military spare parts to Saddam for at least five days following the August
2nd Invasion (57). What's more, when the U.S. began surveillance over
Kuwait in the wake of the Invasion, there were indications that Soviet
technicians helped the Iraqi air force jam intelligence and eavesdropping
on flights by American aircraft (58).
There was also strong evidence of Soviet complicity with Iraq
throughout the Gulf War. On numerous occasions allied forces heard Russian
language communiques on Iraqi military radios. Following the War,
returning U.S. soldiers said they saw evidence in the field that Soviet
advisers were working along with Iraqi forces. According to F. Andy
Messing, executive director of the National Defense Council Foundation,
there were over two dozen documented cases that showed Soviet involvement
in Iraq during the Gulf War. "The Soviets were all over the place", Messing
reported, Soviet advisers "continued to tune radars, fix tanks and planes
and advise (Iraqi) combat units down to the battalion level". In a Senate
Foreign Relations briefing paper published February 21st, 1991, it was
reported that: "For two days in February, Russian language and voices were
communicating over Iraqi military networks". Furthermore, the Soviets
repositioned satellites over the Gulf region and were "supplying targeting
information to the Iraqis for mobile missile launchers". The report
outlined how Soviet advisers were "helping Iraqis fire SCUD missiles at
Israel and Saudi Arabia". On February 25th, two days after the ground war
began, former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said during a BBC
interview that the Soviet Union was still supplying arms to Iraq. Despite
the strong evidence of Soviet complicity, the Kremlin denied any
involvement with Iraq and assured the West that its advisers and personnel
were pulled out soon after Iraq invaded Kuwait. (59)
All in all, there appears to be sufficient indirect and direct evidence
to believe that the Persian Gulf Crisis was a Soviet-engineered deception.
The inconsistencies and contradictions in Iraqi and Soviet behavior
throughout the Gulf Crisis build a strong circumstantial case for a
deception in the Gulf. Based upon the direct evidence above, there seems
little doubt that the Soviets were both aware of and involved in the
Invasion of Kuwait. Furthermore, it is clear that the Soviets
underhandedly backed the Iraqis throughout the Gulf War. The logical
explanation for the directly incriminating evidence is that the
circumstantial case is correct. Moscow and Baghdad worked together to
create a large-scale deception in the Persian Gulf.
Undoubtedly, Western intelligence had some idea of Soviet involvement in the Gulf. However, their interpretation of the connection was most likely misled. Backed-up by reassuring Soviet excuses, Western analysts would downplay the importance and implications of any Soviet involvement. This is because the West would either have to accept that Saddam was a fool and they were winning or they were the fools and would end up losing in a most tragic way. Western arrogance and fear would take over from there, something the Soviets could count on. (60)
As a deception, the Gulf Crisis would have served important military
and political strategic aims of Moscow and its Eastern counterparts.
In that it is not popularly perceived or expected, Russia, in concert
with other military powers of the East, may be pursuing a grand strategy
for world domination which involves launching a surprise third world war
against the West (61). The central idea of any such strategy would be to
instill a false sense of security in the West. Such a false sense of
security will minimimize the West's military potential and maximize Western
vulnerability. This is true for two main reasons. First off, with no
sense of a threat, the West will reduce its military preparedness.
Secondly, upon attack, the East would have the advantage of surprise- a key
ingredient to success in a war involving rapid mass destruction.
The principal way in which Moscow may be trying to instill a false
sense of security in the West is deceit. By intentionally creating and
exaggerating the image of weakness and incapacitation, along with pursuing
cooperative, peace-oriented policies favorable to the West, the perceived
Soviet military threat has been virtually eliminated, America has come to
trust its long-time Russian foe, and Western arrogance has been inflated to
blinding proportions. Consequently, a tremendous, potentially false sense
of security has developed in the West entailing a high degree of
vulnerability.
If, indeed, the Gulf crisis was a deception, then it was tailor-made
for a strategy as outlined above. First off, by creating a serious
international crisis in which critical Western interests were at stake,
Moscow gave itself the opportunity to cooperate with the West in a manner
that seemed to reflect a progressive, peace-oriented change of heart. This
significantly fostered Western trust. Secondly, since the West was allowed
such a substantial victory over Iraq, and because Saddam's military state
was of Soviet-design, the West's sense of superiority to the East was
significantly inflated by the Gulf War, particularly with respect to
military capabilities (62). Third, since Moscow turned its back on a
valuable military ally during the Gulf Crisis, the image that Russia is
incapacitated and increasingly interested in peaceful coexistence was
reinforced and exagerrated. Lastly, on a broader level, the isolation and
utter military defeat of Saddam Hussein's Iraq served as a symbolic end to
the power of military totalitarian regimes.
A provocative example of how Western trust may have been directly
exploited by the Soviets for successfully waging a surprise third world war
can be seen in interrelated developments surrounding the Gulf Crisis and
the Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) treaty. In November of 1990,
during the middle of the Gulf Crisis, the United States signed the CFE
treaty with the Soviet Union. The treaty entails major reductions in both
sides' European theatre conventional forces into 1994.
The CFE treaty is highly favorable to the Soviets in the context of
their initiating a third world war with a preemptive, nuclear surprise
attack against the West. The reason this is so has to do with the fact
that the United States is an ocean away from the European continent,
whereas the Soviet Union is directly attached to it. Following a Soviet
nuclear attack, America would be unable to reinforce its European allies
because the necessary ports, airfields, men and equipment will have been
destroyed. Consequently, it would be relatively easy for Russia to
reorganize the Soviet army and march across Western Europe (63). Thus, the
U.S. force withdrawals under the CFE treaty may be benefitting Russia if,
indeed, a nuclear surprise attack is being planned.
The Gulf Crisis sped-up and augmented the U.S. pullout from Europe. A
substantial portion of the half-million soldiers and military equipment
that poured into Saudi Arabia for the Gulf War was pulled out of Western
Europe (64). For instance, half of America's mechanized divisions in
Europe were drawn into the Gulf. From Germany alone, more than 70,000
soldiers and 40,000 tanks, artillery pieces, and other equipment were moved
to Saudi Arabia (65). Following the Gulf War, with superpower trust
elevated, many of the forces pulled from Western Europe returned to the
U.S. rather than the European theatre because it was to be removed by 1994
under the terms of the CFE treaty anyways (66).
The Gulf Crisis, along with technicalities in the CFE treaty, was used
by the Soviets to stockpile military equipment behind the Ural mountains-
an important preparatory measure prior to waging a surprise attack- without
alarming the West. Just before signing the CFE agreement during the middle
of the Gulf Crisis, the Soviets scurried over 70,000 pieces of military
equipment east of the Ural mountains (according to Moscow's count) (67).
On top of a large number of planes, helicopters, and armoured combat
vehicles, 20,000 tanks and over 34,000 artillery pieces were moved. This
accounts for half the tanks and two-thirds of the artillery the Soviets had
prepositioned against Western Europe up to that time. Placing the
equipment behind the Urals protects it from being counted under the CFE
treaty limits. It also protects it from Western missile and/or air attacks
and puts the equipment in a strategic position for later use in a re-
conquest of Eastern Europe and offensive on Western Europe. In a Februaury
opposing-editorial to the Wall Street Journal, the Deputy Director of the
Arms Control Association, Jack Mendelsohn, commented that: "...placing
these weapons in storage behind the Urals says something important about
Soviet intentions regarding a surprise attack or general war in Europe"
(68). NATO's supreme commander (retired: 6/92), General John Galvin, had
this to say about the stockpile: "My concern is that this equipment is
there for future use. It's big, big numbers. But I know it's just sitting
there in the snow- tanks and airplanes side by side, sometimes for
kilometers at a time" (69). For the most part, however, the West
disregarded the provocative Soviet move. Western suspicions were minimized
due to growing superpower trust, the distracting events in the Gulf, and
the idea that the Soviets may have simply been seeking to circumvent the
CFE treaty.
As can be readily surmised, the general idea of the Gulf Crisis and
Moscow's strategy in general may involve seducing the West with lies in
order to successfully wage a surprise third world war. It may be that
Gorbachev and Saddam are seeking to achieve long-run victory by allowing
their own short-run defeats. The West seems to have been easily seduced by
what may prove to be the staged death of Eastern military totalitarianism
and an illusory global victory of Western society. Such a lie is simply
too tempting for indulgent, proud Westerners to refuse. As a consequence
of this, Western vulnerability is at a post-war extreme and its military
potential has been significantly compromised. Thus, the path may have been
opened for an all-out surprise attack from the East.
Summarily, there is substantial reason to believe the Gulf Crisis was
not what it appeared to be. In fact, it may have been the total opposite
of what it seemed- a total lie. Instead of being a 'great victory', as
General Schwarzkopf believes, the Gulf War may have been a deception which
is being used toward the utter defeat of the West and global victory of
Eastern totalitarianism.
A logical explanation for the pervasive inconsistencies and
contradictions in Iraqi and Soviet behavior throughout the Gulf Crisis and
Gulf War is that the whole affair may have been some sort of staged
deception. It is possible that Saddam invaded Kuwait under Kremlin order
with the sole intention of provoking a war with the West. By cooperating
with the West in an unprecedented manner, the Soviets opened the way for
the Gulf War. Once war came, Saddam did what it took to decisively lose.
The upshot is that Moscow and Baghdad underhandedly worked together to hand
the West an illusory Gulf victory.
The purpose behind such a deception would likely involve an overall
Eastern strategy to dominate the world by fighting and winning a third
world war. Saddam stomached a humiliating defeat in order to augment a
false sense of security in the West and help Soviet Russia completely win
over Western trust. This, in turn, has opened the way for Moscow to dupe
the West into lowering its guard, thus creating an opportunity for the East
to launch a successful surprise attack.
Due in large part to the Gulf Crisis, the world may today be on the
brink of what would undoubtedly be the the Mother of All Wars. It is
rather apparent that an attack from the East would today be a total
surprise. Furthermore, in the wake of its Gulf 'victory', America has
increasingly let down its military guard, particularly against a Russian
nuclear attack. {For instance, America's strategic command has been
disbanded, a sizable part of the U.S. ICBM arsenal has been deactivated,
many attack-warning satellites and radar installations have been shutdown,
and almost all U.S. tactical nuclear weapons abroad have been pulled home-
including those which were on naval vessels (70).} All in all, the proper
conditions have developed for the East to launch a successful surprise
attack against the West. The Persian Gulf Crisis may have been a seductive
lie which was created toward this ultimate End.
{comment by Saddam Hussein following the Gulf War}(71)
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