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9780745321486

Iraq The Human Cost of History

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780745321486

  • ISBN10:

    0745321488

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2003-11-20
  • Publisher: Pluto Press

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Summary

The people of Iraq have suffered for more than a decade from the most severe sanctions ever imposed on any nation in history. United Nations' sanctions against Iraq began in August 1990, as an attempt to force Iraq out of Kuwait. The contributors to this volume reveal why the sanctions regime has failed in its most basic aims, and ask serious questions about the real motivations of the powers involved -- notably the US and the UK. The contributors explain how, if sanctions had been carefully applied, they could have worked. The massive bombing campaign of 1991 destroyed Iraq's social infrastructure. Sanctions should have been modified to meet the post-Gulf War environment. Also, the US and the UK refused to agree that sanctions would be lifted if Iraq complied -- left with little incentive to disarm, it is not surprising that Saddam Hussein did not cooperate. Why did the sanctions continue if they did not fulfill their avowed purpose? The contributors argue that the real motives of the US and the UK were much more complex: instead of revolving around violations of human rights, terrorism and nuclear weapons proliferation, sanctions may have had more to do with political powerbroking and the danger that Iraq and Iran presented to US hegemony in the oil-rich Middle East. Assessing these and other related questions, the contributors put forward the idea that the current sanctions against Iraq are illegal under international law.

Author Biography

Tareq Y. Ismael is a professor of Political Science at the University of Calgary, Canada and President of the International Centre for Contemporary Middle East Studies at eastern Mediterranean University, North Cyprus. He is the author and editor of over twenty books on the Middle East, Iraq and international studies. His most recent works include International relations of the Middle East in the 21st Century: patterns of continuity and change (2000), Middle East Politics Today: government and civil society (2001), Turkey's Foreign Policy in the 21st Century: a changing role in world politics (2003), and The Iraqi Predicament: People in the Quagmire of Power Politics (2004).
William W. Haddad is Professor and Chair of the Department of History, California State University, Fullerton.  For over a decade, he was closely associated with Arab Studies Quarterly, serving as Editor-in-Chief from 1995-1998.

Table of Contents

List of Tables
vi
Introduction: The Iraqi question in world politics 1(15)
Tareq Y. Ismael
William W. Haddad
Iraq, the United States, and international law: beyond the sanctions
16(18)
Richard Falk
Power, propaganda and indifference: an explanation of the maintenance of economic sanctions on Iraq despite their human cost
34(23)
Eric Herring
British policy towards economic sanctions on Iraq, 1990--2002
57(61)
Milan Rai
Oil, sanctions, debt and the future
118(16)
Abbas Alnasrawi
Safeguarding ``our'' American children by saving ``their'' Iraqi children: Gandhian transformation of the DIA's genocide planning, assessment, and cover-up documents
134(33)
Thomas J. Nagy
The US obsession with Iraq and the triumph of militarism
167(46)
Stephen Zunes
Not quite an Arab Prussia: revisiting some myths on Iraqi exceptionalism
213(45)
Isam al Khafaji
Select Bibliography 258(4)
Notes on contributors 262(2)
Index 264

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