 |
|
Innocent Iraqi people await a tragic fate of being "gazed" by U.S forces
|
WASHINGTON,
March 2 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – While the United
States kept hawkish calls to disarm Iraq of its allegedly banned
weapons, it prepared to use the toxic riot-control agents CS gas and
pepper spray against the Iraqi people in a looming and seemingly
inevitable military aggression against their country.
The
U.S. Defense Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, has asked President George W.
Bush to authorize their use and the latter, who has often spoken of
"smoking out" the enemy, is understood to have agreed, a
leading British paper reported on Sunday, March 2.
"Internal
Pentagon documents also show that the U.S. is developing a range of
calmative gases, also banned for battlefield use," said The
Independent.
"Calmative"
gases are similar to the one that killed 120 hostages in the Moscow
theatre siege last year, could also be employed.
Rear
Admiral Stephen Baker, a Navy commander in the last Gulf War who is
now senior adviser to the Center for Defense Information in
Washington, told the paper that U.S. special forces had knock-out
gases that can "neutralize" people. He added: "I would
think that if they get a chance to use them, they will."
The
Pentagon said last week that the decision to use riot control agents
"is made by the commander in the field".
Rumsfeld
became the first senior figure on either side of the impending
conflict to announce his wish to use chemical agents in a
little-noticed comment to the House of Representatives Armed Services
Committee on February 5, the same day as Colin Powell's presentation
of intelligence about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction to the UN,
added the paper.
The
Defense Secretary attacked the "straitjacket" imposed by
bans in international treaties on using the weapons in warfare.
He
specified that they could be used "where there are enemy troops
in a cave [and] you know there are women and children in there with
them". General Richard Myers, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs
of Staff, spoke of using them against human shields.
Double
Standards
The
revelations leave the Bush administration open to charges of double
standards at a time when it is making Iraq's suspected arsenal of
chemical and biological weapons the casus belli, said The Independent.
"This
all adds to the confusion over how the war will be conducted. If the
argument with Saddam Hussein is over disarming him of weapons of mass
destruction, it is perverse of the U.S. to push the boundaries of
international chemical warfare conventions in order to subdue
him," Charles Kennedy, leader of the Liberal Democrats, said.
But
Leading experts and Whitehall officials fear that using even pepper
spray and CS gas would destroy the credibility of the Chemical Weapons
Convention, provoke Iraqi chemical retaliation and set a disastrous
legal precedent, the paper said.
Professor
Julian Perry Robinson, one of the world's foremost authorities on the
convention, said: "Legally speaking, Iraq would be totally
justified in releasing chemical weapons over the UK if the alliance
uses them in Baghdad.
"When
the war is over and these things have been used they will have been
legitimized as a tool of war, and the principle of toxic weapons being
banned will have gone. The difference between these weapons and nerve
gas is simply one of structural chemistry."
Britain
Opposed
The
U.S. plans to use these gases was met by wide opposition, even by its
ever staunchest ally Britain.
Although,
according to The Independent, both CS gas and pepper spray are
available for use by UK police forces, it is British policy not to
allow troops to take part in operations where riot control agents are
employed, read the press report.
The
British Ministry of Defense has warned the U.S. that it will not allow
British troops to be involved in operations where riot control agents
are used, or to transport them to the battlefield, but Britain is even
more concerned about the calmatives, added the paper.
Britain
would be in a particularly sensitive position if the U.S. used the
weapons as it drafted the convention and is still seen internationally
as its most important guardian.
The
Foreign Office said: "All states parties to the Chemical Weapons
Convention have undertaken not to use any toxic chemical or its
precursor, including riot-control agents. This applies in any armed
conflict."
A
special working group of the Federation of American Scientists
concluded last month that using even the mildest of these weapons to
incapacitate people would kill 9 percent of them. It added:
"Chemical incapacitating weapons are as likely as bullets to
cause death."
The
use of chemical weapons by U.S. forces was explicitly banned by
President Gerald Ford in 1975 after CS gas had been repeatedly used in
Vietnam to smoke out enemy soldiers and then kill them as they ran
away.