And please hasten to note quotes from Ms. Tutwieler and Mr. Kelly, also cited from the same page. Some time later Ms. Glaspie, called before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, backpedaled furiously, if not to say desperately.
"She said she was the victim of “deliberate deception on a major scale,” and denounced the Iraqi transcript as “a fabrication” that distorted her position, though it contained “a great deal” that was accurate.
The veteran diplomat awaited her next assignment, later taking a low-profile job at the United Nations."
Mmmm, yes. “Low profile” Lucky she didn’t get reassigned to the mail room at the Elbonain Embassy.
All in all, the above quotations and thier context present a plausible case as far as I am concerned. I have no doubt that there are many who fervently wish it were not so. Down the memory hole, so to speak. Your interpretation is very generous indeed. Very, very generours, stretching a pair of pantyhouse to cover an acre of ground.
And no, of course, no one interprets Ms. Glaspie as “sanctioning” the invasion, that bit of stretch is entirely your own. Merely that she communicated a lack of concern, as having no dog in that fight.
However, if the US was prepared to go to war over Kuwait, is it unreasonable to expect something so major to be expressed in no uncertain terms? And why then the other quotes as above?
I was weighing in on what some people say about Saddam and terrorism, since that seemed to be the going concern.
I agree that there is no proven link between Saddam and 9/11. I’m not sure if it is Bush propaganda, as some claim, or poor critical listening skills on the part of US citizens (a majority think there is a proven Saddam - al Qaeda link according to some polls).
Personally, I’m curious as to how it was determined that the consequences of not going to war were more harmful to U.S. interests than the possible (some would say inevitable) consequences of doing so (i.e. terrorist organizations getting hold of brand new WMDs, increased tension in Middle East, loss of ally trust, etc.).
Of course, these must be balanced against the good in both cases, but how do our government honchos make these determinations? What sort of depth of information is required? Do we think that they can actually HAVE this depth? Though I’m sure they at least believe they do…
(And I hope they, unlike december, aren’t just hoping that terrorists won’t retaliate on an Iraqi war with chemical/nuclear attacks…)
(Just kidding, december, I know what you meant. :))
Here
Some sceintists are being interviewed. The Security Council looks split. The fight over a second resolution has begun. But don’t take my word for it.
Let’s see… You provide a transcript from an Iraqi source. When asked for another cite, you provide an anonymous Geocities page that also provides an unsourced conversation. You call that a cite?
On the other hand, we have Ms. Glaspie herself claiming that the transcript is a forgery. And we have the Bush administration saying that the orders Ms. Glaspie talks about in the forged transcript were never given.
In short, this whole “April Glaspie Told Saddam To Go Ahead and Invade Kuwait” thing seems to be a myth that developed like this: 1) Iraq forges a transcript in order to try and stop an attack by the U.S. A pure propaganda ploy. 2) Ross Perot, that shining beacon of rationality and reasonableness, seizes the document as a way to make political hay during an election. 3) Indy media propagates the transcript as myth, and it flies around the internet.
Those anthrax attacks that occured a few months ago involved weaponised anthrax that apparently came from American laboratories. What does the US intend to do with weaponised anthrax?
No assertion is made that Ms. Glaspie blessed Saddam’s intentions, merely that she did not clearly state American opposition. Later attempts to shove the entire thing down the memory hole have apparently proved unavailing, though I doubt that they will stop. Further, I note you have no rebuttal to the other two quotes in support of this thesis, from Ms. Tutwieler and Mr. Kelly.
If you wish to make the case that Ms. Glaspie incompetently fulfilled her role as envoy, you’ll get little opposition from me, it is entirely plausible that she misrepresented the view of our government to Saddam, or failed to make them clear. Nonetheless, if war is to be a consequence of an action, nothing should be left to doubt. Hence, Saddams actions as regards Kuwait could hardly be said to be the actions of a madman, flying in the face of certain war. You will recall, that is my point, and all of my point.
As I’m sure you know, my use of the phrase Saddam bin Laden is to satirize our leaders groundless certainty of a connection between two entirely incompatible forces of evil, connected only by thier enmity toward the US. Insisting that a secular cynic is kissing cousin with a religious fanatic makes about as much sense as insisting that the Unitarians control the agenda of the snake handling Pentecostals. It is nonsense, and as such, deserves derision, which I am happy to provide. You may smile, you may not, you may go pound burdocks, its all rather the same to me. I throw my line where the fish are, to open minds. I have no illusions as to yours.
Except that the ONLY evidence of your claims about Glaspie is a transcript from the Iraq regime, which the U.S. ambassador flatly calls a forgery.
Why are you giving Iraq the benefit of the doubt over your own ambassador? It all boils down the their word against hers, and they have much to gain from making this claim, and she had absolutely nothing to gain by saying what they claim she said.
Furthermore, their transcript says that she claims to have been given instructions by her government to say that they were not interested in Kuwait. Not only does the Bush administration deny this, but they have declassified documents which show that they are telling the truth.
Against all this, we have the word of Saddam Hussein. So naturally, elucidator assumes Saddam is telling the truth.
And again, apparently without effect, I call your attention to the supporting quotes, which you are pleased to ignore. Your innuendo that I am somehow sympathetic to Saddam Hussein ought to be beneath you. It is not.
No, I don’t think you’re sympathetic to Saddam Hussein. I think you’re sympathetic to any possible evidence which upholds your particular worldview. This is not an uncommon failing. We all do it to some degree.
Some, however, stick to their ‘evidence’ a little too long after it’s been shown to be a pile of crap.
I take it you didn’t actually read my cite, huh? Your page is basically the stuff that Ross Perot was spewing, which my cite debunks rather thoroughly. For example, you think that your page accurately quotes John Kelly. MY cite says this:
Your cite is some unknown Geocities page. Mine is the U.S. Information Agency. Which one do you think carries more weight?
As for Tutweiler’s comment, I can’t find any other sources for it, other than the usual collection of Tripod and Geocities links, or secondary sources that reference same. I can’t find any original source documents. If you have them, I’d liike to see it. But even if it were, it’s such a lame point that it’s not even worth talking about. I mean, your big ‘smoking gun’ is that a spokesman for the State Department was asked in a press conference if she knew whether or not the U.S. had protested a build up of troops on the border with Kuwait, and she said, “I am unaware of that”. Wow. Alert the presses.
well, Sam it would appear to be a simple matter of all my cites are crap, while yours are gospel truth. I am content to leave it at that. You have, however, altered the quote from Ms. Tutwieler. You phrase it as to whether the US had protested a build up of troops and have her saying “I am unaware of that”. I am sure you will admit this is an extraordinarily stilted way of speaking. My original quote:
"At a Washington press conference called the next day, State Department spokesperson Margaret Tutweiler was asked by journalists:
“Has the United States sent any type of diplomatic message to the Iraqis about putting 30,000 troops on the border with Kuwait? Has there been any type of protest communicated from the United States government?”
to which she responded:
“I’m entirely unaware of any such protest.”
If you are going to imply falsity, at the very least quote correctly!
Would the State Department lie to me? You’ve got to be kidding! My own President has lied to me, looked me right in the eye, jutted out his chin in an expression of the utterest candor, and lied to me. And to you as well. The difference is you believe it, and I do not. By no stretch of the imagination am I alone in my skepticism.
Nonetheless, we have clearly belabored this point sufficiently for a major hijack. If you like, open a thread on the subject of Ms. Glaspie’s actions prior to the Kuwait invasion, and lets open the matter up for more views, and especially better researchers. On my word as a gentleman and a Doper, I believe what I have said to be true is true, and verifiable, if for no other reason than that I have read it over and over, many times, from many sources, and you and Shodan are the first to try to tell me it isnt so. If you seek to convince me, you’ll have to do better. If you merely seek to discredit me, the game isn’t worth the candle.
Oh, and Dogbreath…want to call me a liar, or dishonest, at least have the balls to pit me and speak your mind, such as it were. You’ll be hard pressed to find anyone who will say I’ve ever ducked out of an honest disagreement, but give it your best shot, if you think you can hack the course. Until that time, you can kiss my ass till I bark like a fox.
As time goes on, and war draws closer, I cannot help but experience these discussions as becoming more and more surreal. Having read the alleged text for the Glaspie-Hussein meeting, elucidator, I find that there is room for both your interpretation and the official State Department version presented by Sam, above. It’s merely a matter of how you tilt the prism. I could go through my reasoning step-by-step, but to summarize, I think it is entirely possible that Hussein and Glaspie talked past each other, and misunderstood each other’s intent. After all, it is in no sense an unreasonable policy on the part of the US to avoid, if possible, entanglement in a minor border skirmish between Iraq and Kuwait, especially if we view US actions in their context – that of trying to improve US-Iraqi relations. While I’m uncomfortable with the attempts made by the US back then to get into bed with Hitler – oops, sorry Jeff, I mean Hussein – I have no problem with the US government assuming a ”hands-off” approach to conflicts like the one above. In fact, I wish they would do it more often.
That said, a critical review of your cite, Sam, doesn’t do much to support your claim, IMHO. The first few paragraphs refute a number of accusations made by Ross Perot. These are not at issue here, so I’ll skip over them. Coming to the meat of the issue, Boucher states:
This is a bit of red-herring, even if true; Glaspie may not have had specific instructions for that particular meeting, but she did have general instructions regarding the US diplomatic position vis-a-vis the Iraq-Kuwait conflict. In fact, the assertion above might even weaken your position: if Saddam had called her to a meeting specifically for the purpose of getting an idea of how the US would respond to an invasion, and Glaspie, with no other specific instructions, simply repeated the official US position, then it is entirely conceivable that Hussein could have interpreted her response as a green light. Glaspie, on the other hand, not understanding that Saddam was feeling her out (not up, mind you) with regard to his plans for overrunning Kuwait, simply articulated the standard official US policy. Afterwards, one might criticize her for failing to fully appreaciate the import of Hussein’s statements, but at the same time, such a mistake is – to my eyes at least – understandable (though tragic). Anyway, continuing:*
Conceivably, Hussein called Glaspie in order to get a specific clarification of the meaning of that document, or the seriousness of its intent. Again, a miscommunication may have occurred. (Please don’t misinterpret this last as a defense of Hussein. It is not.)
Note that this second delivery occurred almost a month after the invasion, and thus isn’t particularly relevant to the issue at hand.
Note also that the State Department, in its response, does not deny the correctness of the transcript released by the Iraqi government. It does not claim, for example, that Glaspie did not say the things she allegedly said; this question is, in fact, carefully avoided. Rather, State is simply trying to make the case that US policy vis-a-vis an eventual Iraqi takeover of Kuwait was clear, prior to the invasion. We can only speculate about how the US would have reacted had Iraq merely moved in and taken over some disputed border territory, and an oil well or two.
But now, here comes the surreal part. After defending Glaspie from charges of “green-lighting” the invasion, Boucher (the State Department representative) goes on state:
Now then, seriously. Here we have a State Department document that categorically exonerates Glaspie; Sam insists, in fact, that we must accept its claims as true, because of the credibility of the source itself, the US government. It also states categorically that Saddam no longer has WMDs. Sam, who promotes an invasion of Iraq because of its possession of WMDs, presents us with a government document that states factually no such WMDs exist, and supports the continued work of the UN inspectors.
So I ask you: how are we to interpret this document? Do you wish us to believe, Sam, that the section on Glaspie is true and accurate, but disregard the section on WMDs? Are they telling the truth at one point, but lying at another? If so, which is the lie, and how can you tell? If both are true, why are we going to war? On the other hand, if the statement concerning WMDs is false/incorrect, then why should we believe its claims about Glaspie, or its defense of US actions prior to the invasion of Kuwait?
It seems to me that beneath the major substantial issues in this debate lies a more fundamental question, one related to the trustworthiness of the US government. This question is something of a watershed: if you believe that the US government is honest, you support war, and in debate find that you must do everything in your power to defend its integrity. If you don’t believe in the US government, then the opposite; you do what you can to assault its integrity. (For what its worth, I, personally, call for a healthy dose of skepticism in the face of pronouncements for Washington.) What strikes me as surreal is the fact that ”conservatives,” who generally view the government with grave suspicions, and whose ideology dictates curtailing the influence of big government as much as possible, seem immediately willing to take everything presented by that government as true, a priori. At the same time, liberals, who are supposedly the friend of a large, paternalistic welfare state, and who tend to view the government not as an adversary, but as a ally, take the exact opposite stance.
Well done, Mr. S I never read so far as to get to the part about the WMD’s, and that has me confused. There were UN inspectors in Iraq before the Kuwait invasion? Huh? Wha?
Still, this remains a subset of a hijack: my original point was about half a hijack in and of itself, to wit: rebutting claims that Saddam is an uncontainable madman as evidenced by his behavior with Kuwait. I suggest that Saddam could be said to be irrational in this regard only if there was unquestionable and explicit statements from Ms. Glaspie that war would result from his actions. As in stating with total Bugs Bunnian dignity: “Of course you realise, this means war!” Short of that, any doubt lends credence to my supposition.
I hesitate to make a noise like “Well, enough of that, I win, they lose, let’s move on.” Not quite the done thing.
That was a CYA analysis if I ever read one: “Really our program is working well, unless it is determined later that it is not.”
I think the State Department was trying to simultaneously praise the inspections regime - while acknowledging the shell game the Iraqis have been playing for years.
On Kuwait: Logically, we did not green light Saddam to conquer Kuwait. No way. That is not, nor has ever been, in our national interests. However, it makes sense to stay out of border disputes between nations, happens all the time. Could the Iraqis have misunderstood what we were saying and vice versa? Sure, that too happens all the time.
In that case, Glaspie’s off the hook, IMHO. And that’s even if I accepted the Iraqi account as completely factual to the letter, which I do not.
Glaspie shouldn’t have had to spell it out for Hussein thus: “IF you invade Kuwait, make no mistake – the U.S. WILL take military action to kick Iraq out.” Saddam had to have known better, IMHO. He’s fully responsible for his own actions.