12-25-2003, 04:45 AM | #1 (permalink) |
Banned
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Who Armed Saddam?
Lets end this lie that the Americans Armed Saddam
The main sources for the below are the Desert Shield Fact Book (Frank Chadwick, Loren Wiseman et al, GDW 1991) and the Gulf War Fact Book (Frank Chadwick, Matt Caffrey et al, GDW 1991). Equipment will be listed by category, along with the nation of origin. For those scoring at home, items of AMERICAN origin will be highlighted thusly, and of European (FRANCE) likewise. As of 90/91, Iraq had the following: Aircraft MiG-29s - 70 (Soviet) Mig-25s - 18 (Soviet) MiG-23s - 20 (Soviet) MiG-21s - 105 (Soviet) F-7s - 20 (Red China) MiG-17s - 30 (Soviet) Su-25s - 20 (Soviet) Su-20s - 30 (Soviet) Su-7s - 50 (Soviet) F-6s - 20 (Red China) Su-24s - 10 (Soviet) Mirage F1s - 100 (FRANCE) MiG-23/27s - 70 (Soviet) Il-20s - 10 (Soviet) Tu-22s - 7 (Soviet) Tu-16s -12 (Soviet) Armored Vehicles T-54/55 - 1400 (Soviet) Type 59 - 500 (Red China) Type 69 - 1000 (Red China) T-62 - 1600 (Soviet) T-72 - 1000 (Soviet) IFVs, armored recon vehicles, and APCs - 9000 total, aprox (biggest component BTR - 60s); no precise breakdown but consist of: EE-3 (Brazil) EE-9 (Brazil) EE-11 (Brazil) ERC-90 (FRANCE) AML-60 (FRANCE) AML-90 (FRANCE) Panhard M-3 (FRANCE) FUG-70 (Hungary) BRDM-2 (Soviet) BTR-40 (Soviet) BTR-50 (Soviet) BTR-60 (Soviet) BMP-1 (Soviet) Type 63 (China) OT-62 (Czechoslovakia) OT-63 (Czechoslovakia) BVP-1 (Czechoslovakia) Walid (Egypt) Navy Interesting to note, at the time Iraq had 13 modern ships on order from ITALY Artillery G-5 155mm (South Africa) GHN-45 155mm (AUSTRIA) Astros-II SS-30 MRL (Brazil) Astros-II SS-40 MRL (Brazil) M56 105mm (BRITAIN) D-74 122mm (Soviet) D-30 122mm (Soviet) 2S1 122mm (Soviet) 2S3 152mm (Soviet) M1937 152mm (Soviet) M1938 122mm (Soviet) M1939 37mm (Soviet) M1943 152mm (Soviet) M-1975 122mm MRL (Soviet) BM-21 122mm MRL (Soviet) BM-13 132mm MRL (Soviet) S-23 180mm (Soviet) ZSU-23-4 23mm (Soviet) ZSU-57-2 (Soviet) ZU-23 23mm (Soviet) "Majnoon" 155mm (Iraq/Gerald Bull of CANADA) "Al Fao" 210mm (Iraq/Gerald Bull of CANADA) 82 mm Mortar (Soviet) SA-2 SAM (Soviet) SA-3 SAM (Soviet) SA-6 SAM (Soviet) SA-7 SAM (Soviet) SA-13 SAM (Soviet) Small Arms AK-47 (Soviet) RPK (Soviet) RPG-7 (Soviet) Clearly, the vast majority of Iraq's weapons came from the Soviet Union and other Communist nations. Behind them, however, it's largely European countries that armed Iraq. The best I can tell, the U.S. provided Iraq with some spare parts for systems Iraq acquired elsewhere, relatively trivial support compared with even what France provided (much less the Soviets). Even on the level of parts and logistical support, America's contribution was small compared with that supplied by those nations. Hysterical reports to the contrary of how America armed Saddam are belied by the facts of Iraq's TO&E on the eve of the Gulf War. Therefore, it is deceptive to the point of dishonesty for anyone - especially anyone from Europe - to say America armed Iraq. People are only able to get away with this like they do with inflated civilian casualty figures for the Afghanistan campaign - feeding off of people's ignorance. The ignorant then take the accusation at face value and pass it on. In the key period between 1973-91 the US exported a mere $5 million of weapons to Iraq; more reprehensibly the UK sold $330 million-worth of arms. Of much greater interest are the arms export totals to Iraq of the four countries most against military action: Germany with $995 million, China $5,500 million, France $9,240 million, and the Russians a massive $31,800 million. So the claim that we armed Saddam has to be treated with a degree of care, particularly by those who would award the moral high ground in this debate to the leaders of nations such as Germany, France and Russia. You dont believe me here is a link to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. I cant cut and paste it for some reason. http://projects.sipri.se/armstrade/T...Imps_73-02.pdf Dont you think it odd that the four major nations opposing the war had the most invested in Saddam's army? |
12-25-2003, 05:09 AM | #2 (permalink) |
42, baby!
Location: The Netherlands
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Might I add that the countries that had most to gain from not going to war, but from lifting of the UN sanctions instead were, in no particular order: France, Germany, Russia and China. (mostly thanks to lucrative oil deals)
(sorry, had to be said) But one might argue that Iraq was simply very good at playing political-economical games to drive her enemies against another. The constant in-fighting at the UN kept him in power for a loooooong time. |
12-25-2003, 07:49 AM | #3 (permalink) | |||
この印篭が目に入らぬか
Location: College
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I was under the understanding that US support for Iraq was not in the equipment department, but rather in chemical and biological weapons.
For instance: Quote:
and from the Washington Post (downloaded from http://www.jonathanpollard.org/2002/123002.htm): Quote:
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12-25-2003, 12:36 PM | #5 (permalink) |
42, baby!
Location: The Netherlands
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lordjeebus, looking at the big picture, it seems that, again, the US is hardly a big player in the Iraqi WMD area. German companies build the chemical plants that made Saddam's nerve gas; French companies build the nuclear power plant that might have led to the Iraqi's having nukes (if Israel hadn't blown up said plant). Apparently, Russia later build *another* nuclear power plant for them.
If I'm not mistaken, the US "merely" supplied Iraq with reverence strains of biological agents. Nasty of course, but not something those other countries were unable or unwilling to do, I'd imagine. In short, your claim that "the WMD programs ... were founded on technology sold by US corporations with US government approval" is clearly inaccurate (at the very least). Biological weapons programs, maybe; but chemical and nuclear weapons programs were not based on technology supplied by the US. Well, unless you count the Manhatten project as a direct source for Iraqi WMDs; and even that was initiated by an European (Einstein)... |
12-25-2003, 05:12 PM | #6 (permalink) |
Her Jay
Location: Ontario for now....
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German factories may have made the nerve gas for saddam but the US and the rest of the world turned a blind eye to its use. the list doesn't mean these countries supplied the weapons to Iraq the black market is so vast that people can get anything they do not need to go to the country where it was made. go to Mogadishu and find anything you want.
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12-25-2003, 05:16 PM | #7 (permalink) | |
Insane
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The Orweillian nature of thsi thread astounds me. The logic here astounds me. No one defends France, Russia et al. for selling weapons to Iraq. But to somehow infer that because they might have sold more than the US so what the US did was ok or not as bad is simply rediculous. Are you really assigning levels of guilt dependant on who sold more chemical weapons than the other?!
The selective nature of your little list is also very suspect. According to the Iraq Weapons Dossier Report (remember that 12,000 page document?), several (more than 20) US companies were identified for their involvement in arming Iraq. And that's not just chemical or nuclear programs (like that's somehow not as bad, ok guys). There's Honeywell, Spectra Physics, Semetex, TI Coating, Unisys, Sperry Corp, just to name a few who all helped supply rocket programs as well as conventional weapons and military logistics. According to the German Press Agency DPA, the dossier report was reduced from 12,000 pages to 3,000 pages and it was this truncated version that was given to Non-permanent members on the Security Council. Quote:
SLM3 |
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12-25-2003, 08:19 PM | #9 (permalink) | |
The sky calls to us ...
Super Moderator
Location: CT
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We supplied them with the gas that was repeatedly used on the Kurds, we smoothed things over when people got pissed about Saddam's use of WMD. Then, like the parent who confiscates a kid's BB gun when he starts shooting the other kids with it, we got rid of what we had given him. |
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12-25-2003, 09:08 PM | #10 (permalink) |
Loser
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Let's put it this way.
Yes, the US unfortunately funded and/or helped the Iraqi war-machine. As did many OTHER nations, including many who also profited from Iraq and then protested the war against them. Iraq was found in the past to have had WMD, and it's willingness to use them. Considering it invaded another country, and then didn't comply on several terms with its first surrender by UN definition and intelligence was showed that Iraq was continuing to research and "perhaps" develop WMD on top of it arsenal then (whether valid or not) Then all things considered, both past & present violations, attitude, aggressions, actions (against outside & internal civilians) It was decided it was best to pop a potentially festering sore. That by past action showed that it was more than likely to NOT be benign. Same reason we went into Kosovo. The unstability in either area, had the ability to pull our nation into major conflicts & wars and the greater international community too. Both have done so in the past, and then with great potential in the future. The current administration decide to head it off aggressively, rather than being passive and letting it grow. (although I disagreed with their international relations diplomacy) And it acknowledged the past mistake of feeding that growth, and took action to correct its mistake. Simple. Other nations decide to let it just be, and continue to make profits from it. And even now, they are trying to get back into the deal. Let's remember the decisions of ALL nations made are first for strength, the rationalization after is that "value-based" rhetoric. And hell, if it "promotes" your way of living...even better. No one is innocent here. Last edited by rogue49; 12-25-2003 at 09:17 PM.. |
12-25-2003, 10:17 PM | #12 (permalink) | |
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By the way, you are the first person to call the SPRI a suspect source of information. |
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12-25-2003, 10:21 PM | #13 (permalink) |
Her Jay
Location: Ontario for now....
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the iraqi gureillas are fighting foreign invaders much like the viet cong. no matter what the US administration says there are always going to be people in iraq who see America as an occupier instead of a liberator.
i must give credit that was a nice post rogue.
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Absence makes the heart grow fonder |
12-26-2003, 05:25 PM | #17 (permalink) |
Conspiracy Realist
Location: The Event Horizon
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Among others listed here痴 some specifics:
1. Honeywell 2. Spectra Physics 3. Semetex 4. TI Coating 5. Unisys 6. Sperry Corp. 7. Tektronix 8. Rockwell 9. Leybold Vacuum Systems 10. Finnigan-MAT-US 11. Hewlett-Packard 12. Dupont 13. Eastman Kodak 14. American Type Culture Collection 15. Alcolac International 16. Consarc 17. Carl Zeiss 18. Cerberus 19. Electronic Associates 20. International Computer Systems 21. Bechtel 22. EZ Logic Data Systems, Inc. 23. Canberra Industries Inc. 24. Axel Electronics Inc. Here痴 a link that has a directory of some unclassified Congressional documents. I壇 hate to see the classified ones. http://www.chronicillnet.org/PGWS/tuite/default.htm
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To confine our attention to terrestrial matters would be to limit the human spirit.- Stephen Hawking |
12-26-2003, 06:51 PM | #18 (permalink) |
Banned
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We sold Iraq lots of things, just as we sell weapons to France, England and any nation not being sanctioned by the UN. When it became ILLEGAL to see to IRaq, France, China, Russia, and Germany flouted international law and CONTINUED to see to Iraq.
The same nations that told us it was immoral to fight Iraq were the same nations that bypassed the UN to trade oil for weapons. Pretty immoral of them, huh? |
12-26-2003, 10:58 PM | #19 (permalink) | |||
Insane
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So, are you saying the US did help arm Iraq? Which story are you going to decide on? I find you keep changing your stance to suit whatever argument you come up with next. Quote:
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Also, I'm confused with your concept of morality. Is your standard of morality based on the status of UN sanctions upon the receiving state? American chemicals used to gas Kurds is ok because Iraq wasn't being sanctioned then? Then of course there's the fact that the US with its veto could make sure no sanctions were inflicted upon a US-client state., much as it did in 80's concerning Iraq's weapons. Your arguments are narrow and therefore useless. Take a step back, look at the big picture, and then make your decisions. Moral vs. immoral, it means nothing in this world of competing truths. It's interests vs. the willingness to pay for those interests, that is all. Welcome to realpolitik. SLM3 |
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12-27-2003, 08:15 AM | #20 (permalink) | |
Her Jay
Location: Ontario for now....
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what's wrong with iraqi's fighting foriegn invaders? you do seem to jump all over the board. do you actually have a position on this, or like SLM3 said do you just change to suit your new point?
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Absence makes the heart grow fonder |
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12-27-2003, 02:12 PM | #21 (permalink) | |
Banned
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I think the Northern Alliance fighting Soviet Military expansion is a lot different than whats going on in Iraq? dont you? Do you have an opionion or do you just hate bush for no reason that makes sense and just want to slam him for all the good he is doing? |
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12-27-2003, 03:49 PM | #22 (permalink) | |
Insane
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Do you really, honestly, think Al Qaeda is killing for Allah? What is terrorism to you? What do you think is going on in Iraq? SLM3 Last edited by SLM3; 12-27-2003 at 03:53 PM.. |
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12-27-2003, 04:12 PM | #25 (permalink) | |||
Crazy
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I think some of you misinterpret Endymon32. I've taken the liberty of breaking up the discussion part of his post into smaller parts -- if one was speeding past the list, it would be easy to miss this section.
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However, the first sentence of the post, "Let's end this lie that America armed Iraq," is misleading. Actually I find it somewhat humorously ironic, as it is as partially true as "America armed Iraq." Quote:
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The narrow (and useless) argument is that America sold something, anything, to Iraq. Therefore, America armed Iraq. -- Alvin |
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12-27-2003, 05:04 PM | #29 (permalink) | |
Crazy
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He listed three sources -- the details may be different, but all three corroborate the same basic story, that Iraq's military was overwhelmingly non-American. In particular the monetary amounts appear to come from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. You two are firing over each other's heads -- SLM3, you believe that America was responsible for Iraq's WMD program, and Endymon32, you believe that America was not responsible for Iraq's military. Both of these you two believe fall under "weapons." -- Alvin |
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12-27-2003, 05:12 PM | #30 (permalink) |
Insane
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I understood he was referring to conventional weapons and such. This is why I mentioned Honeywell, Spectra Physics, Semetex, TI Coating, Unisys, Sperry Corp, just to name a few because they provided conventional weapons programs and military logisitcs as opposed to what we commonly refer to as WMD. There's many more who provided conventional weapons programs. I'm just confused as to why these facts as displayed in the 12,000 page dossier aren't reflected in the sources presented in this thread. To me, it seems suspect.
Also, I wonder if the SIPRI figures come from the truncated version of the dossier, which was released to non-permanent members on the security council. The German Press Agency DPA has revealed that this version, altered by the US, omits almost all of the US dealings with Iraq. SLM3 |
12-27-2003, 05:24 PM | #31 (permalink) | |
Banned
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12-27-2003, 06:12 PM | #33 (permalink) |
Banned
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Yes it showed that France, China and Russia provided IRaq with 84% of his weapons, and The US NOTHING after Iraq was declared a rogue nation.
When it was legal to sell Iraq weapons, we sold them. When it was illegal, we stopped. Unlike other nations that said it was immoral to go to war with Saddam. But it was moral to violate the law and sell him weapons. |
12-27-2003, 06:29 PM | #34 (permalink) | |
Insane
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I rarely get to quote myself:
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It is my contention that your source does not accurately portray the history of Iraqi arms dealings with the US. You're allowed to disagree. Is that enough? I did provide information on the dossier, as told by the German Press Agency DPA. SLM3 SLM3 |
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12-27-2003, 08:52 PM | #35 (permalink) | |
Crazy
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Why didn't they complain at the time that the US was censoring damaging material? Or Kofi Annan? The "official" reason is that they removed data on building nuclear weapons, data considered unwise to share with non-nuclear powers. Your source at Deutsche Presse-Agentur doesn't have much information on the reaction from China, France, and Russia. One would think that they would jump on the opportunity to reveal the US as the major supplier of Iraq's WMD. -- Alvin |
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12-27-2003, 09:28 PM | #36 (permalink) |
Insane
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Well, as many have pointed out, no one is innocent here. France, Russia, and China played their hand trying to keep the war from happening, and now that it's all out in the open they're probably just as eager to keep things under wraps as the US.
Actually, from what I gather it was the US that lead the way towards the censorship but all the permanent members supported it as well. SLM3 |
12-28-2003, 09:13 AM | #37 (permalink) |
Banned
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And you still failed to provide the dates. As I have said, the US stopped selling to Iraq after Iraq was put on the Rogue nations list. You are only saying over and over that we did sell, and again, no one will argue that. I have shown, and argued that once it was illegal to sell weapons to IRaq, three members of the UN security council continued to sell to Iraq. You have yet to prove that we violated this.
We did sell food and medicine to Iraq, for oil, as was allowed. The fact that Iraq choose to sell oil for weapons with three members of the security council of the UN, while his people starved can hardly be blamed on the sanctions. Saddam choose weapons over food, he ate, while his people starved. And France, China, Germany and Russia are his cohorts in this. So again SLM please provide the dates to your sales and you have a case. |
12-28-2003, 01:11 PM | #38 (permalink) |
Insane
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Ok, we're going in circles. You can't use US policies as a constant in the international system. Why do I care about a rogue nations list if the US is the only one that creates and uses it? According to that list, am I a horrible person if I go on my summer vacation to Cuba? What if Germany came up with an anti-occupation mean country list and put the US on it? I'm not going to be bound by your argument that other actors in the international system must abide by US policies and decisions.
Maybe I'm reading your link wrong, but after 1990, no state sold weapons to Iraq. Atleast not according to that SIPRI link. When it was legal you did, when it was illegal you didn't? Illegal according to who? the US? You only refer to this US created rogue states list. Again, why should such a list have any bearing at all in the international system? Stop trying to inject a sense of morality into this so you can somehow put the US up on a pedestal. The US, like any other state, is a fair-weathered friend to freedom and democracy. Being the hegemonic power it has taken on a greater role in that respect but has continued on with its realist policies. Where was this morality during the Iran-Contra affair? Why are you picking and choosing? SLM3 |
12-28-2003, 01:15 PM | #39 (permalink) | |
Crazy
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This proof contradicts Endymon32's fact book that merely listed numbers, makes, and models of Iraq's military forces, and a separate SIPRI report that tabulates the total amount of arms sales to Iraq from 1973-1991, which I was able to partially correlate with additional, publicly available data (see below). You know, I'm absolutely willing to believe either of you two. I try hard to be open-minded. But in order for me to do that, I need more information, more than a flimsy conspiracy theory about a censored WMD report that was then further censored by the majority anti-liberation world press. It just doesn't add up. -- Alvin P.S. The SIPRI report was apparently performed on data available long before the censored dossier -- a second $5 million of weapons claim was also published in 1998 by Anthony Cordesman, long before the WMD dossier |
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12-28-2003, 01:24 PM | #40 (permalink) | |
Crazy
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The list is important because there is apparently a belief that the United States, and the United States alone, armed Iraq and that makes us culpable in supporting Saddam. Thus we cannot remove him from power because we were once his friend. Or something like that, it is not particularly good logic to begin with, especially considering anyone could plainly see on the television that the Iraqi equipment was clearly not American. But with this list, we see that this is not the case. Therefore, with a few facts we can put the above notion to rest. However, I doubt it will convince one who wholly believes that logic. After all, it is impossible to reason a fool out of a notion that he did not reason himself into in the first place (Jonathan Swift). -- Alvin |
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armed, saddam |
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