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Kuwait: Saddam’s Apology Unveiled Attempt To Divide People

Saddam to Kuwait: “Oil is only part of the wealth of your country, Iraq”

KUWAIT CITY, December 8 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Kuwait accused Iraqi President Saddam Hussein Saturday, December 7, of trying to divide the oil-rich emirate by apologizing to the Kuwaiti people for his 1990 invasion while lashing out at the nation’s leadership.

“The message is an unveiled attempt to create a rift in the united ranks of the Kuwaiti people and leadership,” Information Minister Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahd Al-Sabah told the state’s KUNA news agency, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

He was speaking after the Iraqi leader apologized for the August 1990 invasion in a “message to the people of Kuwait” but virtually accused the Gulf state’s rulers of plotting against Iraq with the United States.

“Instead of deliberately ignoring the strong bonds tying the Kuwaiti leadership and people, Saddam Hussein should confirm his peaceful intentions in words and deeds by implementing all U.N. Security Council resolutions pertaining to the invasion of Kuwait,” Sheikh Ahmad said.

The Iraqi leader also sought to “encourage acts of terrorism which the whole world deplores,” he said, referring to Saddam’s praise of Kuwaitis who recently attacked U.S. troops stationed in the emirate.

Sheikh Ahmad said Kuwait’s policy was one of non-interference in Iraq’s internal affairs.

Who rules Iraq “is a matter that concerns the Iraqi people alone,” the information minister said, responding to Saddam’s charge that Kuwaiti officials were “conspiring” against Iraq with both Iraqi dissidents and the United States.

Kuwait, concerned by the Iraqi people’s plight, was keen to see the prospects of war disappear from the region through Iraq's full compliance with U.N. disarmament Resolution 1441, the Kuwaiti official said, urging Baghdad to release some 600 prisoners the emirate says have been held since the 1991 Gulf War.

Sheikh Ahmad said Saddam’s message was reminiscent of the “political and media campaigns” waged by Iraq in the run-up to its August 1990 invasion of Kuwait, which was ended seven months later by a U.S.-led international coalition.

Kuwaiti lawmakers and observers had earlier ridiculed Saddam’s message, saying it was provocative and threatened the emirate’s leaders.

“He (Saddam) is lying about everything,” liberal lawmaker Mohammed Al-Saqer told AFP.

“He’s apologizing to us 12 years later, why did he have to be put in a corner to apologize? It’s not convincing to us,” said Saqer, who heads parliament’s foreign affairs committee.

“The timing of his speech proves he’s scared.” But he added: “This is a direct threat to Kuwaiti officials. It’s unacceptable."

Islamist MP Waleed Al-Tabtabai said he rejected attempts by Saddam to divide Kuwaitis as a government and a people. The speech “overflowed with lies,” Tabtabai said.

“Kuwaitis will unite to face these threats embedded in the speech. The subject of the existence of U.S. forces in Kuwait is not a matter of dispute between anybody in Kuwait.

“Saddam’s attempt to drive a wedge between the people and government won't succeed because the Kuwaiti regime is legitimate,” Tabtabai said.

He said he regretted the fact that a speech directed at the Kuwaiti people made no mention of the 600-odd missing people and POWs from the 1990 invasion.

“The speech proved the evil intentions of the Iraqi regime, which the Kuwaitis will face in cooperation with the government,” Tabtabai added.

Mohammed Al-Jassim, editor of the Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Watan, called the speech provocative and an attempt to encourage Kuwaiti attacks on U.S. forces stationed here.

“It’s not an apology,” Jassim said. “He (Saddam) wants to embarrass Kuwait in front of the Arab street.”

In a message to the people of Kuwait read out on his behalf on state television by Information Minister Mohammad Said Al Sahhaf, Saddam said: “We apologize to God for any deed which might have upset Him in the past and ... for which we were blamed, and we apologize to you as well on this basis.”

The Iraqi leader chose the day on which Iraq’s key declaration of its arms programs was being handed over to the United Nations to deliver an apology which Kuwait has been demanding since a U.S.-led coalition ended Baghdad’s seven-month occupation of the Gulf state in February 1991.

The message, televised shortly before U.N. officials received the document that could precipitate or hold off a U.S. strike on Iraq, praised Kuwaitis who have attacked U.S. troops on their territory and invited all to join Iraqis in a holy war against the American military presence in the Gulf.

In his speech, Saddam apologized to the Kuwaiti people, while virtually blaming their leaders in addition to the United States for provoking Iraq’s 1990 invasion.

“We regret all that happened to you as a result of the position you took” in the run-up to the August 2, 1990 invasion, Saddam told the Kuwaiti people.

He faulted the Kuwaitis for pushing down the price of oil from 21 to seven dollars a barrel by “drowning the oil market”; for encroaching into Iraq’s border oil wells; and for demanding the repayment of “modest aid” extended to Baghdad when it fought Iran from 1980 to 1988.

“Oil is only part of the wealth of your country, Iraq,” he said to the Kuwaitis in an apparent goodwill gesture. “If your oil runs out ... Iraq has resources that can last forever.”

Saddam said Kuwaiti leaders had isolated the Kuwaiti people from the wider Arab nation and put the country “under a direct foreign military occupation,” a reference to thousands of U.S. troops deployed in the emirate.

Saddam urged the Kuwaitis to join Iraqis fighting “the infidel occupying armies” after their leaders openly hosted “agents carrying Iraqi citizenship” - an allusion to Iraqi opposition figures - to conspire against Baghdad.

“So long as the agents get together at the foreigner’s behest to harm Iraq and the (Arab) nation, why don’t the believers and strugglers in Kuwait get together with their counterparts in Iraq ... to discuss their affairs, chiefly the jihad against the infidel occupying armies?” he asked.

Such a jihad (holy struggle or war) would enable them to “cleanse the nation of shame” and relieve it of the “harm done to the people of Kuwait and Iraq,” Saddam said.

He charged that Kuwait’s rulers were “planning hand in hand with foreign armies to harm Iraq and facilitate its occupation” by the United States, which has threatened to oust his regime.

In order to “please their (American) masters,” Saddam said Kuwaiti leaders went as far as to host Iraqi agents, who in turn declared that Kuwait would send representatives to “the conspiracy and treason conference in London.”

Iraqi Kurdish chief Jalal Talabani announced during a visit to Kuwait on Tuesday that Kuwaiti officials had agreed to send a delegation of “observers” to a December 13-15 conference in London during which Iraqi opposition groups will try to close ranks in anticipation of a U.S. strike on Iraq.

Ayatollah Mohammad Baqer Al-Hakim, leader of the Tehran-based Supreme Assembly for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SAIRI), the main Iraqi Shiite Muslim opposition group, also visited Kuwait recently.

Meanwhile, a U.N. plane carrying the massive Iraqi weapons declaration from Baghdad landed Sunday in Cyprus, from where it was to be sent on to the United Nations in New York and Vienna.

The white United Nations C-130 Hercules transport touched down at Larnaca international airport at 9:55 a.m. (0755 GMT) after a flight of two hours and 40 minutes.

An AFP correspondent saw a large box, carried by two people, brought out from the back of the aircraft and placed in a bus to be taken to the airport terminal.

Hiro Ueki, a spokesman for the UN Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC), would not confirm that the Iraqi declaration, which comprises some 12,000 pages, was inside.

But he added that the declaration, which is expected to determine whether the U.N. disarmament process ends in peace or war, would arrive in New York and Vienna “this evening”.

The respective copies of the declaration, which will be scrutinized by UNMOVIC in New York and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna, are to travel by commercial flights.

Iraq, which was required by United Nations resolution 1441 to make the declaration detailing its nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs by December 8, says it does not reveal any prohibited activities.

Its contents however remain under wraps until the U.N decides to release them.  

 

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