Over
the last two years, I've discovered documents of the Defense Intelligence Agency
proving beyond a doubt that, contrary to the Geneva Convention, the U.S.
government intentionally used sanctions against Iraq to degrade the country's
water supply after the Gulf War. The United States knew the cost that civilian
Iraqis, mostly children, would pay, and it went ahead anyway.
Prior
Knowledge
The
primary document, "Iraq Water Treatment Vulnerabilities," is dated
January 22, 1991. It spells out how sanctions will prevent Iraq from supplying
clean water to its citizens.
"Iraq
depends on importing specialized equipment and some chemicals to purify its
water supply, most of which is heavily mineralized and frequently brackish to
saline," the document states. "With no domestic sources of both water
treatment replacement parts and some essential chemicals, Iraq will continue
attempts to circumvent United Nations Sanctions to import these vital
commodities. Failing to secure supplies will result in a shortage of pure
drinking water for much of the population. This could lead to increased
incidences, if not epidemics, of disease."
The
document goes into great technical detail about the sources and quality of
Iraq's water supply. The quality of untreated water "generally is
poor," and drinking such water "could result in diarrhea," the
document says. It notes that Iraq's rivers "contain biological materials,
pollutants, and are laden with bacteria. Unless the water is purified with
chlorine, epidemics of such diseases as cholera, hepatitis, and typhoid could
occur."
The
document notes that the importation of chlorine "has been embargoed"
by sanctions. "Recent reports indicate the chlorine supply is critically
low."
Food
and medicine will also be affected, the document states. "Food processing,
electronic, and, particularly, pharmaceutical plants require extremely pure
water that is free from biological contaminants," it says.
Possible
Iraqi Countermeasures to Obtain Potable Water
The
document addresses possible Iraqi countermeasures to obtain drinkable water
despite sanctions.
"Iraq
conceivably could truck water from the mountain reservoirs to urban areas. But
the capability to gain significant quantities is extremely limited," the
document states. "The amount of pipe on hand and the lack of pumping
stations would limit laying pipelines to these reservoirs. Moreover, without
chlorine purification, the water still would contain biological pollutants. Some
affluent Iraqis could obtain their own minimally adequate supply of good quality
water from Northern Iraqi sources. If boiled, the water could be safely
consumed. Poorer Iraqis and industries requiring large quantities of pure water
would not be able to meet their needs."
The
document also discounted the possibility of Iraqis using rainwater.
"Precipitation occurs in Iraq during the winter and spring, but it falls
primarily in the northern mountains," it says. "Sporadic rains,
sometimes heavy, fall over the lower plains. But Iraq could not rely on rain to
provide adequate pure water."
As
an alternative, "Iraq could try convincing the United Nations or individual
countries to exempt water treatment supplies from sanctions for humanitarian
reasons," the document says. "It probably also is attempting to
purchase supplies by using some sympathetic countries as fronts. If such
attempts fail, Iraqi alternatives are not adequate for their national
requirements."
Consequences:
The Cold Truth
In
cold language, the document spells out what is in store: "Iraq will suffer
increasing shortages of purified water because of the lack of required chemicals
and desalination membranes. Incidences of disease, including possible epidemics,
will become probable unless the population were careful to boil water."
The
document gives a timetable for the destruction of Iraq's water supplies.
"Iraq's overall water treatment capability will suffer a slow decline,
rather than a precipitous halt," it says. "Although Iraq is already
experiencing a loss of water treatment capability, it probably will take at
least six months (to June 1991) before the system is fully degraded."
This
document, which was partially declassified but unpublicized in 1995, can be
found on the Pentagon's web site at www.gulflink.osd.mil. (I disclosed this
document last fall. But the news media showed little interest in it. The only
reporters I know of who wrote lengthy stories on it were Felicity Arbuthnot in
the Sunday Herald of Scotland, who broke the story, and Charlie Reese of
the Orlando Sentinel, who did a follow-up.)
Recently,
I have come across other DIA documents that confirm the Pentagon's monitoring of
the degradation of Iraq's water supply. These documents have not been publicized
until now.
The
first one in this batch is called "Disease Information," and is also
dated January 22, 1991. At the top, it says, "Subject: Effects of Bombing
on Disease Occurrence in Baghdad." The analysis is blunt: "Increased
incidence of diseases will be attributable to degradation of normal preventive
medicine, waste disposal, water purification/distribution, electricity, and
decreased ability to control disease outbreaks. Any urban area in Iraq that has
received infrastructure damage will have similar problems."
The
document proceeds to itemize the likely outbreaks. It mentions "acute
diarrhea" brought on by bacteria such as E. coli, shigella, and salmonella,
or by protozoa such as giardia, which will affect "particularly
children," or by rotavirus, which will also affect "particularly
children," a phrase it puts in parentheses. And it cites the possibilities
of typhoid and cholera outbreaks.
The
document warns that the Iraqi government may "blame the United States for
public health problems created by the military conflict."
Disease
Outbreaks in Iraq
The
second DIA document, "Disease Outbreaks in Iraq," is dated February
21, 1990, but the year is clearly a typo and should be 1991. It states:
"Conditions are favorable for communicable disease outbreaks, particularly
in major urban areas affected by coalition bombing." It adds:
"Infectious disease prevalence in major Iraqi urban areas targeted by
coalition bombing (Baghdad, Basrah) undoubtedly has increased since the
beginning of Desert Storm. . . . Current public health problems are attributable
to the reduction of normal preventive medicine, waste disposal, water
purification and distribution, electricity, and the decreased ability to control
disease outbreaks."
This
document lists the "most likely diseases during next 60-90 days (descending
order): diarrheal diseases (particularly children); acute respiratory illnesses
(colds and influenza); typhoid; hepatitis A (particularly children); measles,
diphtheria, and pertussis (particularly children); meningitis, including
meningococcal (particularly children); cholera (possible, but less
likely)."
Like
the previous document, this one warns that the Iraqi government might
"propagandize increases of endemic diseases."
The
third document in this series, "Medical Problems in Iraq," is dated
March 15, 1991. It says: "Communicable diseases in Baghdad are more
widespread than usually observed during this time of the year and are linked to
the poor sanitary conditions (contaminated water supplies and improper sewage
disposal) resulting from the war. According to a United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF)/World Health Organization report, the quantity of potable water is less
than 5 percent of the original supply, there are no operational water and sewage
treatment plants, and the reported incidence of diarrhea is four times above
normal levels. Additionally, respiratory infections are on the rise. Children
particularly have been affected by these diseases."
Perhaps
to put a gloss on things, the document states, "There are indications that
the situation is improving and that the population is coping with the degraded
conditions." But it adds: "Conditions in Baghdad remain favorable for
communicable disease outbreaks."
Disease
Outbreaks in Refugee Camps
The
fourth document, "Status of Disease at Refugee Camps," is dated May
1991. The summary says, "Cholera and measles have emerged at refugee camps.
Further infectious diseases will spread due to inadequate water treatment and
poor sanitation."
The
reason for this outbreak is clearly stated again. "The main causes of
infectious diseases, particularly diarrhea, dysentery, and upper respiratory
problems, are poor sanitation and unclean water. These diseases primarily
afflict the old and young children."
The
fifth document, "Health Conditions in Iraq, June 1991," is still
heavily censored. All I can make out is that the DIA sent a source "to
assess health conditions and determine the most critical medical needs of Iraq.
Source observed that Iraqi medical system was in considerable disarray, medical
facilities had been extensively looted, and almost all medicines were in
critically short supply."
In
one refugee camp, the document says, "at least 80 percent of the
population" has diarrhea. At this same camp, named Cukurca, "cholera,
hepatitis type B, and measles have broken out."
The
protein deficiency disease kwashiorkor was observed in Iraq "for the first
time," the document adds. "Gastroenteritis was killing children . . .
. In the south, 80 percent of the deaths were children (with the exception of Al
Amarah, where 60 percent of deaths were children)."
Contradictions
The
final document is "Iraq: Assessment of Current Health Threats and
Capabilities," and it is dated November 15, 1991. This one has a distinct
damage-control feel to it. Here is how it begins: "Restoration of Iraq's
public health services and shortages of major medical material remain dominant
international concerns. Both issues apparently are being exploited by Saddam
Hussein in an effort to keep public opinion firmly against the U.S. and its
Coalition allies and to direct blame away from the Iraqi government."
It
minimizes the extent of the damage. "Although current countrywide
infectious disease incidence in Iraq is higher than it was before the Gulf War,
it is not at the catastrophic levels that some groups predicted. The Iraqi
regime will continue to exploit disease incidence data for its own political
purposes."
And
it places the blame squarely on Saddam Hussein. "Iraq's medical supply
shortages are the result of the central government's stockpiling, selective
distribution, and exploitation of domestic and international relief medical
resources." It adds: "Resumption of public health programs . . .
depends completely on the Iraqi government."
As
these documents illustrate, the United States knew sanctions had the capacity to
devastate the water treatment system of Iraq. It knew what the consequences
would be: increased outbreaks of disease and high rates of child mortality. And
it was more concerned about the public relations nightmare for Washington than
the actual nightmare that the sanctions created for innocent Iraqis.
Destroying
Water Installations: International Law
The
Geneva Convention is absolutely clear. In a 1979 protocol relating to the
"protection of victims of international armed conflicts," Article 54,
it states: "It is prohibited to attack, destroy, remove, or render useless
objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population, such as
foodstuffs, crops, livestock, drinking water installations and supplies, and
irrigation works, for the specific purpose of denying them for their sustenance
value to the civilian population or to the adverse Party, whatever the motive,
whether in order to starve out civilians, to cause them to move away, or for any
other motive."
But
that is precisely what the U.S. government did, with malice aforethought. It
"destroyed, removed, or rendered useless" Iraq's "drinking water
installations and supplies." The sanctions, imposed for a decade largely at
the insistence of the United States, constitute a violation of the Geneva
Convention. They amount to a systematic effort to, in the DIA's own words,
"fully degrade" Iraq's water sources.
At
a House hearing on June 7, Representative Cynthia McKinney, Democrat of Georgia,
referred to the document "Iraq Water Treatment Vulnerabilities" and
said: "Attacking the Iraqi public drinking water supply flagrantly targets
civilians and is a violation of the Geneva Convention and of the fundamental
laws of civilized nations."
Over
the last decade, Washington extended the toll by continuing to withhold approval
for Iraq to import the few chemicals and items of equipment it needed in order
to clean up its water supply.
Last
summer, Representative Tony Hall, Democrat of Ohio, wrote to then-Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright "about the profound effects of the increasing
deterioration of Iraq's water supply and sanitation systems on its children's
health." Hall wrote, "The prime killer of children under five years of
age--diarrheal diseases--has reached epidemic proportions, and they now strike
four times more often than they did in 1990. . . . Holds on contracts for the
water and sanitation sector are a prime reason for the increases in sickness and
death. Of the eighteen contracts, all but one hold was placed by the U.S.
government. The contracts are for purification chemicals, chlorinators, chemical
dosing pumps, water tankers, and other equipment. . . . I urge you to weigh your
decision against the disease and death that are the unavoidable result of not
having safe drinking water and minimum levels of sanitation."
For
more than ten years, the United States has deliberately pursued a policy of
destroying the water treatment system of Iraq, knowing full well the cost in
Iraqi lives. The United Nations has estimated that more than 500,000 Iraqi
children have died as a result of sanctions, and that 5,000 Iraqi children
continue to die every month for this reason.
No
one can say that the United States didn't know what it was doing.
See
for Yourself
All
the DIA documents mentioned in this article were found at the Department of
Defense's Gulflink site.
To
read or print documents: