It
is amazing how Henry Kissinger has been able to retain his aura of
invincible genius in international relations, continuing to counsel
presidents, foreign governments and major global businesses, while
occasionally writing lofty Op Ed pieces advising the U.S. on what it
should or should not be doing next. This mind you, despite Kissinger’s
own history of monumental cynicism and duplicity when he was guiding
foreign policy for President’s Nixon and Ford. Indeed, it’s a tribute
to the ability of mainstream American media to forgive and forget.
The latest example is an Op Ed piece Kissinger just wrote for the
New York Times warning American leaders that they are no longer giving
Iraq the attention it deserves.
The fact is, however, when Kissinger was in charge of U.S. policy
for Iraq, the results for its people, particularly the Kurds, were
disastrous.
Over the decades, the Kurds quixotic struggle for some form of
independence doomed them to a seemingly endless cycle of rebellion
followed by incredibly vicious repression. Those uprisings were usually
encouraged by enemies of Iraq’s rulers who made use of the Kurds to
destabilize the regime in Baghdad. It was a ruthless, deceitful
process, which resulted in hundreds of thousands of Kurds being
slaughtered and displaced over the years. And it was an ideal playing
field for Kissinger.
For years, the Shah of Iran had been secretly supporting the Iraqi
Kurds to put pressure on Baghdad. So were the Israelis, who hoped to
distract Iraq’s increasingly virulent leader from joining an Arab
attack on the Jewish state. In 1972, Henry Kissinger and Richard Nixon,
motivated by fear that Iraq was becoming too cozy with the Soviet
Union, agreed to a request from the Shah to help back the Kurds.
For the sake of deniability, the U.S. supplied the Kurds with Soviet
arms seized in Vietnam, while Israel provided Soviet weapons that it
had captured from the Arabs. According to the Washington Post’s Jon
Randal, the clandestine operation was kept secret even from the U.S.
State Department, which had argued against any such support. The Kurd’s
new friends, however, did not want their protégées to win their
struggle. An independent Kurdish state would be much too disruptive for
the region, they felt. Their support was carefully doled out—enough to
keep the revolt going, but not enough to take it to victory.
The Kurdish leader, Mustafa Barzani, was hard-headed enough to
understand his people were being used by Iran, but not worldly enough
to comprehend that his American backers could be equally duplicitous.
“We do not trust the Shah,” Barzani told reporter Randal in 1973. “I
trust America. America is too great a power to betray a small people
like the Kurds.”
It was to be a fatal error of judgment. In 1975 the Shah and the
leaders of Iraq abruptly agreed to settle their disputes and signed a
treaty of friendship. A key part of the agreement was that Iran would
immediately cease its support of the Iraqi Kurds. Overnight, Iranian
army units that had been supporting the Kurds—with artillery, missiles,
ammunition, and even food—retreated across the border into Iran. The
U.S. and the Israelis similarly called a sudden halt to their support.
At the same time, Iraqi troops began a massive offensive against the
hapless Kurds.
Thus, without any warning, the Kurds were abandoned; not just their fighting men, the pesh merga,
but their villages, wives, and children, were exposed to a ferocious
Iraqi onslaught. Barzani sent a desperate plea to Kissinger for aid.
“Our movement and people are being destroyed in an unbelievable way
with silence from everyone. We feel, Your Excellency, that the United
States has a moral and political responsibility towards our people, who
have committed themselves to your country’s policy. Mr. Secretary, we
are anxiously awaiting your quick response.”
Twelve days later, a U.S. diplomat in Tehran cabled CIA director
William Colby, noting that Kissinger had not replied and warning that
if Washington ”intends to take steps to avert a massacre it must
intercede with Iran promptly.”
Meanwhile, a quarter of a million Kurds fled for their lives to
Iran. Turkey closed its borders to thousands of others seeking refuge.
Many of the militants left behind—especially students and teachers—were
rounded up by the Iraqi, imprisoned, tortured, and executed. Some 1,500
villages were dynamited and bulldozed.
Over the following weeks and months, as the killing continued,
Barzani issued more desperate appeals to the CIA, to President Gerald
Ford, to Henry Kissinger. No one answered. Kissinger not only refused
to intervene but also turned down repeated Kurdish requests for
humanitarian aid for their thousands of refugees.
This duplicity of American officials might never have surfaced but
for an investigation in 1975 by the U.S. Congress’s Select Committee
on Intelligence headed by New York Democrat Otis Pike. The Pike report
concluded that for Tehran and Washington the Kurds were never more than
“a card to play.” A uniquely useful tool for weakening Iraq’s
“potential for international adventurism.” From the beginning said the
report, “The President, Dr. Kissinger, and the Shah hoped that our
clients [Barzani’s Kurds] would not prevail.” The Kurds were
encouraged to fight solely in order to undermine Iraq. “Even in the
context of covert operations, ours was a cynical enterprise.”
The report’s damning conclusions continued: Had the U.S. not
encouraged the Kurds to go along with the Shah and renew hostilities
with Iraq, “the Kurds might have reached an accommodation with [Iraq’s]
central government, thus gaining at least a measure of autonomy while
avoiding further bloodshed. Instead the Kurds fought on, sustaining
thousands of casualties and 200,000 refugees.”
One of the officials who testified before the committee in secret
session was Henry Kissinger. When questioned by an appalled congressman
about the U.S.’s decision to abandon the Kurds to their bloody fate,
Kissinger chided the committee, “One should not confuse undercover
action with social work.”
Source: http://blogs.alternet.org/barrylando/2010/02/04/henry-kissinger-and-iraq-master-of-treachery/
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Henry Kissinger and Iraq-Master of Treachery