The Department of State, Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs, January 21
released the following fact sheet.
Myth: Everything that's wrong with Iraq's economy is because of
sanctions.
Fact: Iraq enjoyed a strong economy until Saddam
Hussein took power and launched attacks against his neighbors--Iran in
1980 and Kuwait in 1990--with devastating results for Iraq. It took 5
years for Saddam to accept the oil-for-food program. Saddam also has
failed to implement policies that would boost economic growth and generate
job opportunities to improve the population's living standards.
Myth: The Iraqi people do not have an adequate supply of
medicine because of sanctions.
Fact: Sanctions have never
prohibited or limited the import of medicine. In fact, the UN has urged
the Iraqi regime to order more basic medicines, but Baghdad has refused.
Saddam has been criticized by the UN for intentionally hoarding medicines
in warehouses in government-controlled Iraq instead of distributing it to
civilians.
Myth: Sanctions prohibit humanitarian contributions to Iraq.
Fact: Sanctions do not prohibit humanitarian contributions,
Saddam does. Since June 1998, Saddam has publicly refused a number of
humanitarian contributions while claiming that his people are suffering.
Myth: Sanctions prohibit the import of pencils, books and
journals, and desks for schools.
Fact: Basic educational
supplies including pencils, books, and desks have never been prohibited by
UN sanctions. They have been sent to Iraq regularly since 1991 and nearly
$64 million of supplies for the education sector, including photocopiers,
and printing and lab equipment, have entered Iraq under the oil-for-food
program.
Myth: Sanctions prohibit Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs)
from working in Iraq and the UN can run whatever programs it wants in
country.
Fact: Saddam has refused to allow most NGOs into Iraq
and sometimes impedes UN workers trying to oversee oil-for-food programs.
In fact, Saddam launched a series of terrorist attacks against NGO and UN
workers in northern Iraq in the early 1990s.
Myth: Sanctions prevent Iraqis from going on the Hajj.
Fact: Sanctions have never prevented Iraqis from making the
Hajj. The Security Council exempted Hajj flights from flight restrictions
and has offered the use of oil-for-food revenue to fund private Iraqi Hajj
travel, but Baghdad rejected the plan.
Myth: Sanctions prevent travel to the Muslim holy sites in
southern Iraq.
Fact: Sanctions have never prohibited travel in
or out of Iraq. The UN Sanctions Committee approved a ferry service
allowing pilgrims in the region to travel to An Najaf and Karbala.
Myth: Sanctions have crippled Iraq's ability to export oil.
Fact: Iraq's oil exports are approaching pre-war levels. Prior
to the Gulf War, Iraq was exporting about 2.6 million barrels per day of
crude oil. Its current crude oil exports have averaged about 2.2 million
barrels per day in recent months, and the regime said it plans to increase
exports to about 2.7 million barrels per day by yearend, which is higher
than pre-war exports. In addition, Iraq is smuggling 2.8 million barrels
of oil per month through the Persian Gulf.
Myth: Sanctions on Iraq will never be lifted.
Fact:
Sanctions remain in place because Iraq refuses to comply with Security
Council resolutions. The requirements for lifting sanctions have not
changed since they were first imposed in 1991. UN Resolution 1284, which
Iraq rejects, lays a path for the eventual suspension and lifting of
sanctions.
Myth: The international community has not taken measures to care
for the Iraqi people.
Fact: The UN designed the oil-for-food
program in 1991 -- unprecedented in size and scope--to provide food and
medicine for the Iraqi people. Saddam rejected it outright for four years
and then slow-rolled it for another year and a half. The substantial
expansion over the years has increased provisions for Iraqis. The
international community continues to look for ways to improve the program,
despite Saddam's effort to undermine humanitarian efforts.
Myth: The oil-for-food program has failed to meet basic needs of
the Iraqi people and it never will.
Fact: Oil-for-food has made
significant improvements in the lives of the Iraqis and will continue to
do so. The increase in revenue under the oil-for-food program from $4
billion in the first year of the program to a projected $20.4 billion this
year means there is a tremendous amount of money available for
humanitarian goods. The government of Iraq must choose to make that
happen. In northern Iraq, where the UN controls the humanitarian relief
programs, child mortality rates are lower than they were before the Gulf
War. However, in southern and central Iraq, where the Iraqi Government
controls the oil-for-food program, mortality rates have doubled.
Myth: There is a limit on the amount of food Iraq can import.
Fact: There has never been a limit on the amount of food Iraq
can import.
Myth: Contract holds have kept a majority of goods from entering
Iraq.
Fact: Since the oil-for-food program was implemented in
March 1997, the UN Sanctions Committee has approved about 90% of Iraqi
contracts received.
Myth: The Iraqi Government is doing all it can to make the
oil-for-food program work.
Fact: The regime is slow to order
and distribute goods and Saddam's lack of cooperation on monitoring makes
it difficult to ensure goods are equitably distributed to the Iraqi
people. Baghdad has rejected UN recommendations to increase
protein-enriched goods for malnourished children and pregnant women. The
Iraqi Government has also rejected assistance by all but a few
Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) and other outside groups.
Myth: The UN provides substandard goods under the oil-for-food
program.
Fact: Under oil-for-food, Saddam, not the UN, chooses
what is purchased and from whom. Saddam's choice of suppliers is
politically motivated. Over one-third of all contracts have gone to Iraq's
three most vocal supporters on the Security Council. Iraq also continues
to oppose placing mobile testing laboratories for humanitarian goods under
oil-for-food at UN entry points that would insure the quality of goods
delivered.
Myth: Iraq does not have the resources to support the Iraqi
people.
Fact: Baghdad has significant resources available to
alleviate much of Iraq's humanitarian suffering, but Saddam does not spend
the money on the Iraqi people. The oil-for-food program allows Iraq to
sell as much oil as required to meet humanitarian needs. From December
1999 to June 2000, Iraq earned approximately $8.3 billion from oil sales.
Myth: There is little food available in Iraq.
Fact:
More than 13 million metric tons of foodstuffs have arrived in Iraq since
the first deliveries of the oil-for-food program began in 1997. In fact,
Baghdad has been caught exporting dates, corn, and grain outside of Iraq
while claiming the Iraqi people are starving.
Myth: Iraq is in compliance with UN Security Council
Resolutions.
Fact: Iraq has not complied with UN Security
Council Resolutions that call for dismantling weapons of mass destruction
programs, and returning Kuwaiti and other nations' missing persons and
POWs and Kuwaiti property seized during the Gulf War.
Myth: Iraq has accounted for all Kuwaiti POWs and missing
persons during the Gulf War.
Fact: Iraq has still not accounted
for some 600 missing Kuwaitis. For over a year, the regime has refused to
cooperate with the ICRC in this humanitarian endeavor. Baghdad also will
not allow the UN Kuwaiti Issues Coordinator entry into Iraq to discuss
POWs or the property Iraq stole from Kuwait.
Myth: UNSCOM inspectors behaved badly and deserved to be thrown
out of Iraq.
Fact: The inspectors were not thrown out of Iraq.
Iraq's obstructionism and refusal to cooperate with the weapons
inspectors, who were carrying out a UN Security Council mandate, prevented
the inspectors from fulfilling their mission and they had no choice but to
leave.
Myth: Saddam is not more brutal than other dictators.
Fact: Saddam's gassing of the Kurds in northern Iraq in 1988
was one of the largest chemical weapon attacks ever waged against a
civilian population. Even today, Saddam continues to practice systematic
torture, executions, forced displacement, and repression against the Iraqi
people. The U.S. is currently seeking an indictment of senior regime
officials for these atrocities.
Myth: Only ethnic minorities (not Sunnis) in Iraq are subject to
harsh treatment by the regime.
Fact: Any group opposed to
Saddam Hussein's regime is subject to brutal repression. The regime has
moved against its people -- be they Arab, Kurd, or Turkoman, Sunni, Shia,
or Christian --through expulsion from their homes, razing of villages,
arbitrary arrest, execution, and torture.
Myth: Iraq is no longer a threat to its neighbors.
Fact: As a result of its refusal to cooperate with the UN
disarmament regime, Iraq maintains the capacity to produce missiles and
chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons. The absence of UN inspectors
from Iraq has afforded Saddam the opportunity to reconstitute his arsenal
of weapons of mass destruction. Saddam has already launched two bloody
wars; one against Iran in 1980 and the other against Kuwait in 1990. In
the last couple of years, Saddam Hussein has repeatedly issued public
threats against his neighbors, including calls for the overthrow of a
number of regimes.
Myth: Coalition air strikes are aimed at the Iraqi people.
Fact: The air strikes are not targeted at the Iraqi people.
They are the direct response for self-defense of the forces that protect
the Kurds in the north and the Shia in the south from the regime's
civilian repression.
Myth: Saddam's palaces are used by the Iraqi people.
Fact: The nearly 80 palaces and VIP residences in Iraq are
purely for the enjoyment of Saddam, his family, and key supporters as a
reward for their loyalty. Saddam's inner circle is immune from harsh
living conditions facing the general population.
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov/)