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- Organization: Penn State University
- Date: Sun, 24 Jan 1993 15:45:36 EST
- From: <TWZ101@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Message-ID: <93024.154536TWZ101@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Newsgroups: alt.desert-storm
- Subject: Iraqi Aircraft Violations
- Lines: 36
-
- Some people in this group seem to be saying that the U.S. is being too
- rigid in its enforcment of the U.N. resolutions against Iraq, especially the
- flight bans in the north and south, and the actions taken against the SAM
- batteries and air defense assets in both zones. In fact, the U.S. has been
- far too lenient.
-
- In U.N. Resolution 686, Iraq was forbidden from flying ANY combat air-
- craft anywhere in the country. This was passed right after Schwarzkopf's
- Safwan meeting with Iraqi armed forces leaders, and codified into interna-
- tional law the cease-fire accords. This document has NEVER been recinded or
- superceded by any other resolution or agreement.
-
- In April, 1992, after Iraq began flying combat air patrols in response to
- an Iranian air raid on a rebel base camp inside Iraq, the U.S. and its
- Coalition partners did ABSOLUTELY nothing to stop the blatant violation of
- accord. As long as fixed-wing flights were kept out of the zone north of the
- 36th Parallel (where U.S. and Coalition forces were protecting the Kurds,
- again under U.N. resolutions), they were left untouched. Iraqi SAM batteries
- had in fact been located in this zone after the cease-fire, but were also left
- alone if they remain inactive (and thus not a threat to Coalition air patrols)
- and if they were not moved into "threatening" positions, i.e., if there was
- no effort to "net" them together into a dangerous air defense network.
-
- In late August, after Iraq began using its fixed-wing planes against
- Shi'ite cities in the south, the U.S. took action under existing U.N. res-
- oltuions which prevented Hussein from brutalizing his own people. The south-
- ern no-fly zone was established, under similar conditions of the northern one.
- However, fixed-wing flights were allowed to continue in the central part of
- Iraq, again, in clear violation of Resolution 686.
-
- Hard on Saddam? If the U.N. resolutions were really being enforced, what
- was left of Iraq's Air Force would be being sold for scrap in the souks of
- Basra.
- T.Z.
- "Knowledge, was it worth such torment/
- To see the far side of shadow?"--G.T.
-