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105th Congress, 1st Session - - - - - - - - - - - - House Document 105-138
STATUS ON IRAQ
__________
COMMUNICATION
from
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
transmitting
A REPORT ON THE STATUS OF EFFORTS TO OBTAIN IRAQ'S COMPLIANCE WITH THE
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE U.N. SECURITY COUNCIL, PURSUANT TO PUB. L.
102-1, SEC. 3 (105 STAT. 4)
<GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT>
October 2, 1997.--Referred to the Committee on International Relations
and ordered to be printed
----------
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
WASHINGTON : 1997
The White House,
Washington, September 23, 1997.
Hon. Newt Gingrich,
Speaker of the House of Representatives,
Washington, DC.
Dear Mr. Speaker: Consistent with the Authorization for Use
of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution (Public Law 102-1)
and as part of my effort to keep the Congress fully informed, I
am reporting on the status of efforts to obtain Iraq's
compliance with the resolutions adopted by the United Nations
Security Council (UNSC). This report covers the period from
July 9 to the present.
Saddam Hussein remains a threat to his people and the
region, and the United States remains determined to contain the
threat posed by his regime. Secretary of State Albright stated
on March 26 that the United States looks forward to the day
when Iraq rejoins the family of nations as a responsible and
law-abiding member but until then, containment must continue.
Secretary Albright made clear that Saddam's departure would
make a difference and that, should a change in Iraq's
government occur, the United States would stand ready to enter
rapidly into a dialogue with the successor regime.
In terms of military operations, the United States and its
coalition partners continue to enforce the no-fly zones over
northern Iraq under Operation Northern Watch and over southern
Iraq through Operation southern Watch. We have not detected any
confirmed, intentional Iraqi violations of either no-fly zone
during the period of this report. We have repeatedly made clear
to the Government of Iraq and to all other relevant parties
that the United States and its partners will continue to
enforce both no-fly zones, and that we reserve the right to
respond appropriately and decisively to any Iraqi provocations.
In addition to our air operations, we will continue to
maintain a strong U.S. presence in the region in order to deter
Iraq. United States force levels include land- and carrier-
based aircraft, surface warships, a Marine amphibious task
force, a Patriot missile battalion, and a mechanized battalion
task force deployed in support of USCINCCENT operations. To
enhance force protection throughout the region, additional
military security personnel have been deployed for continuous
rotation. USCINCCENT continues to monitor closely the security
situation in the region to ensure adequate force protection is
provided for all deployed forces.
United Nations Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 949,
adopted in October 1994, demands that Iraq not use its military
or any other forces to threaten its neighbors or U.N.
operations in Iraq and that it not redeploy troops or enhance
its military capacity in southern Iraq. In view of Saddam's
accumulating record of unreliability, it is prudent to retain a
significant U.S. force presence in the region in order to
maintain the capability to respond rapidly to possible Iraqi
aggression or threats against its neighbors.
Since my last report, the Government of Iraq has continued
to flout its obligations under UNSC resolutions. During the
last 60 days, the Government of Iraq has continued to fail to
fully disclose its programs for weapons of mass destruction
(WMD). Without such full disclosure--mandated by Security
Council Resolutions 687, 707, and 715--the U.N. Special
Commission (UNSCOM) and the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) cannot effectively conduct the ongoing monitoring and
verification mandated by relevant UNSC resolutions. UNSCOM and
the IAEA continue to provide Iraq every opportunity for full
disclosure. What Iraq will not disclose, UNSCOM and IAEA will
try to discover, in an effort to fill in the huge gaps in
Iraq's declarations.
Iraqi threats, lying, and hiding during the past 6 years
have not deterred UNSCOM and IAEA dedication to their mandates.
While some nations have begun to display sanctions-fatigue, the
United States remains committed to sanctions enforcement. We
shall continue to oppose any suggestion that the sanctions
regime should be modified or lifted before Iraq demonstrates
its peaceful intentions by complying with its obligations under
UNSC resolutions.
We anticipate the UNSCOM and IAEA 6-month reports to the
Security Council, due October 11, which will record their
conclusions regarding whether the Government of Iraq has
provided the ``substantial compliance'' called for in UNSCR
1115 of June 21, 1997--especially regarding immediate,
unconditional, and unrestricted access to facilities for
inspection and to officials for interviews.
The United States is committed to providing first-class
professional support to UNSCOM and the IAEA in the conduct of
their highly technical work in Iraq, so that both organizations
are staffed and equipped to conduct objective and accurate
inspections in order to determine whether Iraq has, or has not,
complied with its obligations in the field of WMD.
Implementation of UNSCR 1051 continues. It provides for a
mechanism to monitor Iraq's effort to reacquire proscribed
weapons capabilities by requiring that Iraq notify a joint unit
of UNSCOM and the IAEA in advance of any imports of dual-use
items. Similarly, U.N. members must provide timely notification
of exports to Iraq of dual-use items.
Regarding northern Iraq, the United States continues to
lead efforts to increase security and stability in the north
and minimize opportunities for Baghdad or Tehran to threaten
Iraqi citizens there. An important part of this effort has been
to work toward resolving the differences between the two main
Iraqi Kurd groups, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), led by
Massoud Barzani, and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK),
led by Jalal Talabani. Talanai visited the United States in
late July to meet with National Security Advisor Sandy Berger,
Under Secretary of State Thomas Pickering, and U.N. Ambassador
Bill Richardson. At these sessions, he reaffirmed his interest
in the ``Ankara process'' of ongoing reconciliation talks
jointly sponsored by the United States, the United Kingdom, and
Turkey. Recently, the KDP's Barzani has also accepted our
invitation to Washington.
As part of the Ankara process, the United States provides
political, financial, and logistical support to the neutral,
indigenous Peace Monitoring Force (PMF), comprised of Iraqi
Turkomans and Assyrians. The PMF has demarcated and monitors
the cease-fire line established between the two Kurdish groups
in October 1996. United States support takes the form of
services and commodities provided in accordance with a drawdown
that I directed on December 11, 1996, and funds for other
nonlethal assistance provided in accordance with a separate
determination made by former Secretary of State Christopher on
November 10, 1996.
The PMF also helps the Iraqi Kurds move forward on other
confidence-building measures, including joint committee
meetings to address a range of civilian services and
humanitarian issues affecting all residents of the north. Local
representatives of the two Kurdish groups, the three co-
sponsors of the Ankara process and the PMF continue to meet at
least biweekly in Ankara to discuss, inter alia, other
confidence-building measures.
The PMF began full deployment in mid-April 1997 and its
size is expected to double later this year to more than 400.
The PMF continues to investigate and resolve reported cease-
fire violations. Its work has become more difficult as elements
of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) have moved from
theTurkish border toward the PUK-KDP cease-fire line. The KDP
alleges that PKK elements have been operating across the cease-fire
line to attack the KDP. The KDP also alleges that the PUK has joined in
some of these attacks, a charge that the PUK denies. The United States,
together with the United Kingdom and Turkey, continues to stress the
importance of strict observance of the cease-fire.
Another important aspect of our commitment to the people of
northern Iraq is in providing humanitarian relief for those in
need. As part of this commitment, AID's Office of Foreign
Disaster Assistance will direct an additional $4 million for
relief projects to the region. These supplemental programs,
announced July 31, will provide emergency health and
nutritional support to 80,000 displaced women and children and
improve water supplies and sanitation, particularly in the PUK-
controlled province of Suleymaniyah.
The oil-for-food arrangement under UNSCR 986 was
reauthorized by UNSCR 1111 on June 4, 1997, and went into
effect on June 8, 1997. Under UNSCR 1111, Iraq is authorized to
sell up to $1 billion worth of oil every 90 days, for a total
of $2 billion during a 180-day period (with the possibility of
UNSCR renewal for subsequent 180-day periods). Resolution 1111,
like its predecessor, requires that the proceeds of this
limited oil sale, all of which must be deposited in a U.N.
escrow account, will be used to purchase food, medicine, and
other material and supplies for essential civilian needs for
all Iraqi citizens and to fund vital U.N. activities regarding
Iraq. Critical to the success of UNSCR 1111 is Iraq's
willingness to follow through on its commitments under the
resolution to allow the U.N. to monitor the distribution of
humanitarian goods to the Iraqi people. Although UNSCR 1111
went into effect on June 8, Iraq unilaterally suspended oil
sales until a new distribution plan was submitted and approved.
The U.N. Secretary General approved a distribution plan on
August 13 and oil sales have resumed.
Iraq continues to stall and obfuscate rather than work in
good faith toward accounting for the hundreds of Kuwaitis and
third-country nationals who disappeared at the hands of Iraqi
authorities during the occupation. It has also failed to return
all of the stolen Kuwaiti military equipment and the priceless
Kuwaiti cultural and historical artifacts that were looted
during the occupation.
The human rights situation throughout Iraq remains
unchanged. Iraq's repression of its Shi'a population continues,
with policies that are destroying the Marsh Arabs' way of life
in southern Iraq and the ecology of the southern marshes. The
U.N., in its most recent reports on implementation of UNSCR
986, recognized that the Government of Iraq continues forcibly
to deport Iraqi citizens from Kirkuk and other areas of
northern Iraq still under the Iraqi government's control. The
Government of Iraq shows no signs of complying with UNSCR 688,
which demands that Iraq cease the repression of its own people.
The effort by various Iraqi opposition groups and
nongovernmental organizations to document Iraqi war crimes and
other violations of international humanitarian law known as
INDICT, continues.
The Multinational Interception Force (MIF) continues its
important mission in the Arabian Gulf. The United States Navy
provides the bulk of the forces involved in the maritime
sanctions enforcement authorized under UNSCR 665, although we
receive much-needed help from a number of close allies. In
recent months, ships from The Netherlands, Canada, New Zealand,
and the United Kingdom have participated in MIF operations. We
continue active pursuit of broad-based international
participation in these operations.
Illegal smuggling of Iraqi gasoil from the Shatt Al Arab
waterway continues to increase at an alarming rate. We now
estimate that over 150,000 metric tons of gasoil each month is
exported from Iraq in violation of UNSCR 661. The smugglers use
the territorial waters of Iran with the complicity of the
Iranian government that profits from charging protection fees
for these vessels to avoid interception by the MIF in
international waters. Cash raised from these illegal operations
is used to purchase contraband goods that are then smuggled
back into Iraq by the same route. We continue to brief the U.N.
Sanctions Committee regarding these operations and have pressed
the Committee to compel Iran to give a full accounting of its
involvement. We have also worked closely with our MIF partners
and Gulf Cooperation Council states to take measures to curb
sanctions-breaking operations. A recent spill of illegal Iraqi
gasoil caused the desalinization plant in Sharjah, United Arab
Emirates (UAE), to suspend operation for 2 days, highlighting
the environmental threat these activities pose to Gulf states.
Recent announcements by the Government of the UAE that it
intends to crack down on smugglers who operate UAE-flagged
vessels has been backed up by strong actions against violators
detained by the MIF.
The United Nations Compensation Committee (UNCC),
established pursuant to UNSCR 687, continues to resolve claims
against Iraq arising from Iraq's unlawful invasion and
occupation of Kuwait. The UNCC has issued almost 1.1 million
awards worth approximately $5.9 billion. Thirty percent of the
proceeds from the oil sales permitted by UNSCR 986 have been
allocated to the Compensation Fund to pay awards and to finance
operations of the UNCC, and these proceeds will continue to be
allocated to the Fund under UNSCR 1111. To the extent that
money is available in the Compensation Fund, initial payments
to each claimant are authorized for awards in the order in
which the UNCC has approved them, in installments of $2,500.00.
Iraq remains a serious threat to regional peace and
stability. I remain determined to see Iraq comply fully with
all of its obligations under U.N. Security Council resolutions.
My Administration will continue to oppose any relaxation of
sanctions until Iraq demonstrates its peaceful intentions
through such compliance.
I appreciate the support of the Congress for our efforts
and shall continue to keep the Congress informed about this
important issue.
Sincerely,
William J. Clinton.
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