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AMY GOODMAN: Today we’re joined by a
former U.N. Official who lived in Iraq before the U.S.
invasion. Hans Von Sponeck has been a fierce critic of the
war. In the late 1990's he was the coordinator of the United
Nations humanitarian mission in Iraq. He resigned in protest
over the U.N. Sanctions Regime. He’s also Former Assistant
Secretary General of the U.N. and has written a new book, it
is called A Different Kind of War: The U.N. Sanctions
Regime in Iraq. Welcome to Democracy Now!
HANS VON SPONECK: Good morning Amy.
AMY GOODMAN: It’s good to have you
with us. First, the situation. You just saw--heard the
explosion as the new U.N. Secretary General was announcing
there seems to be increased stability, and maybe that a
larger U.N. mission may come into Iraq.
HANS VON SPONECK: It gave him a first
hand opportunity to understand how volatile the situation is
in Iraq, and I hope it leads him to the conviction that less
violence and more peace initiatives on the part of the
United Nations might be the answer, rather than a surge in
troop levels. I very strongly feel there should be a surge
in the willingness in the U.S. Congress to insist that the
United Nations, the role of the international community
should be strengthened and the troops should come home with
respect and honor, if that is still possible, as soon as
possible.
JUAN GONZALEZ: What is the role of
the U.N. right now in Iraq. Given, obviously it has to be
very limited, anything can do, but what are U.N. personnel
doing, if anything there?
HANS VON SPONECK: The United Nations
staff, 55 of them, that’s all, are confined to the Green
Zone and to Amman. From a distance they look at an Iraq that
is crumbling. They can do very little. They do human-rights
reporting. They have a small number of projects, but
essentially they are confined to that limited space for
reasons of security. In fact, most of the staff that Ban
Ki-moon has allowed to be in Iraq is security-related staff.
So it’s a holding operation. The U.N. Flag can fly, but it
flies very timidly.
AMY GOODMAN: Of course the U.N.
mission there was blown up. What was the effect of that?
HANS VON SPONECK: It was a massive
demoralization for the United Nations, and Mr. Kofi Annan
was right in taking the staff out, as painful as this is.
AMY GOODMAN: Sergio De Millo, the
head of the mission killed.
HANS VON SPONECK: He was killed in my
office. This is the office I occupied from the time I served
in Baghdad. So I know the environment very well. It didn’t
come as a surprise. It was the weak, the soft underbelly of
the United Nations building area in Baghdad. And it’s a
tragedy it happened, but out of that should be a United
Nations that is more and more determined to encourage
dialogue, rather than support an ill-fated attempt to solve
problems in Iraq with military muscle.
JUAN GONZALEZ: In your book, A
Different Kind of War, you actually get into the entire
period of the sanctions in Iraq, and you document quite a
bit of information, that I don’t think--certainly most
Americans are not aware of. But I was especially interested
-- we were talking before the show about the United Nations
Compensation Committee, a commission that was set up
to--after the Persian Gulf War. And you had quite a few
examples there of what appear at least on the surface to be
of questionable awards that were given out, plus it was a
huge amount of money that was involved. Can you talk about
that whole Compensation Commission?
HANS VON SPONECK: Well you know I
don’t want to come across here as a vindictive person. The
intention of this book was to shed light on a very dark
chapter of United Nations by honestly identifying facts. And
among these dramatic facts is one which is hardly known,
certainly very little known in the U.S., and that is at a
time when an increasing number of people were dying,
particularly children, the United Nations agreed to pay out
$18 billion U.S. dollars. That’s a lot of money. The total
value of what came into Iraq during the entire Oil For Food
Program, in terms of supplies, $28 billion. So, if you
withhold $18 billion, that is a lot, that could have saved a
lot of lives. That is bad enough.
What is worse is that many of these
compensation claims were fraudulent. The U.N. discovered
some, others were overlooked and paid out. There was a claim
from the government of Jordan for having helped transiting
guest workers to go home for $8.2 billion U.S. dollars, 8.2.
The U.N. in the end awarded $79 million, less than a percent
of what was asked for. The Iraqi money was like a cow that
one could milk eternally in order to please governments that
need the money while Iraqis back home were dying in large
numbers. There are others examples, but maybe this would go
to far on this occasion.
AMY GOODMAN: It’s very relevant to
look at the Sanctions Regime against Iraq, given what is
being proposed for Iran right now. Major powers have readied
a draft resolution, to slap new punitive sanctions on Iran
with the U.N. Security Council vote expected on Saturday, as
Tehran remains defiant over its nuclear program. According
to Agence France-Presse, a western diplomat speaking on
condition of anonymity said the draft was expected to
receive overwhelming support. Talk about the Regime of
Sanctions and what it meant. I mean, people see what is
happening in Iraq right now as horrific. You describe a very
bad situation before the bombing of George Bush of 2003.
HANS VON SPONECK: You know, the
sanction cheese in Iraq had many holes. The sanction cheese
for Iran has bigger holes. It may look interesting on paper,
but in terms of the reality for implementation, we are
living today in a totally different situation. The world is
more polarized than it ever was in the days of the sanctions
against Iraq, but let me just pause here and say -- the
comprehensive economic sanctions that Iraq endured isn’t
what is proposed for Iran. It’s more a political—a political
threat to the Iranians rather than a direct punishment of
the people, as it was the case in Iraq.
Moreover, we must remember, the world of
2007 is not the world of the Iraq sanction time. There are
new constellations, new organizations are springing up in
protest over what I would call, as a friend of the U.S., I
would call it the “Western One-way Street”, while in fact it
is mainly an American highway on which we have traveled that
the world is no longer to accept.
So the sanction package against Iran -- it
may be a small -- I don’t think it is -- political victory
for the U.S. to get a sanction resolution through the
Security Council, but in terms of the implications for Iran
as a whole, it will have limited, limited value.
AMY GOODMAN: You, in talking about
Iraq today, are clearly saying that the U.N. is involved in
supporting violent solutions. What exactly are you saying?
HANS VON SPONECK: The United Nations
is painful for me as a person who believes in the U.N., who
has served 32 years in that organization, was indeed an ally
of bilateral policies that initially meant containing the
country, and later in the last years of the Clinton
Administration and very much since then, was a policy of
punishment; punishing a people for enduring a dictator. A
very strange logic here, but we could have in Baghdad, done
whenever we wanted to do.
The government could have cooperated with
the Security Council. It would have made no difference
because the key word in this equation was regime change. So,
as long as Saddam Hussein and his government were in power,
no chance to do something else--Mr. Negroponte in a hearing
in the U.S. Congress some time ago said, our first concern
were weapons of mass destruction. We were interested with
the peoples’ of welfare, but that was clearly a second
priority.
That was the approach and the U.N. went
along with this. And why am I mentioning it? Because I think
it is very relevant in the debate about the kind of United
Nations that we want to have, that we need, that the U.S.
needs, as much as my country, Germany, or anyone else around
the world, in these 192 member countries.
We need to take into account what happened
in Iraq in debating the U.N. reform needs of today and
tomorrow. And if we do this, then we do justice to the
demand of political accountability. This is not looking to
the future. Yes, we must look to the future. That’s demand
from European politicians and American politicians is
important, but not without looking back to understand what
happened and to hold those on both sides of the fence. You
have, I don’t want to talk too long here, but I want to say
you have in Iraq a very strange reality. You have two
perpetrators. You have Saddam Hussein, who has committed
crimes against his people, but you also have, tragically
enough, you have a United Nations that has equally become
the perpetrator in harming, punishing, because of a faulty,
I am afraid to say, U.S.-led, British-led, Spanish,
Italian-led policy in the Security Council.
JUAN GONZALEZ: I am curious, in the
period before you stepped down from your post, what kind of
conversations you may have had with other leaders of the
United Nations, or Kofi Annan directly about the concerns
about the U.N.'s role and what their response was. Obviously
they were aware that--of the negative role that the United
States and Great Britain and some of the other great powers
are playing. What kind of conversations did you have?
HANS VON SPONECK: Mr. Kofi Annan at
all times has the heart in the right place, but he didn’t
have enough muscle to succeed in convincing the Security
Council that the rhetoric in the council that was always
pro-people, that always recognized the plight of the Iraqi
people, should translate and be provided equipped with the
political will to bring about changes that would be more
focused on the perpetrators, in this case the government of
Iraq, rather than on innocent civilians. He knew that. Mr.
Kofi Annan at no time forgot that. But, a multi-lateral
diplomat is impotent vis-à-vis the powers of the day, if
they have a different design. And the tragedy is that it is
a 15-country security council that was overwhelmingly
dominated by the United Kingdom and the United States, and
the international community allowed this to happen.
AMY GOODMAN: You are here in United
States. You return to Germany tomorrow. You have been here
at a genocide conference at Columbia University in New York.
As you watch the coverage of what happened—what is happening
today, there is going to be a vote in congress for
supplemental money, more than $100 billion, to--for the wars
in Afghanistan and Iraq. Your thoughts?
HANS VON SPONECK: I want to tell you
that we are very carefully watching in Europe what is being
debated in Washington. And we cannot fully comprehend why
this courageous woman, Nancy Pelosi, isn’t making more
progress among her colleagues on both sides of the fence.
Why there are still republicans who can argue that it is a
betrayal of the U.S. troops. I sympathize with these poor
male and female G.I.s that have to serve in Iraq, but it is
incomprehensible to me that there are still voices that
insist that the way to go forward is to increase the troop
levels, to maintain a policy that will leave in Afghanistan
and in Iraq, to total disaster. This is not winnable. You
cannot do what is intended to be done. Democracy and human
rights and progress and development cannot be parachuted
over Kabul or Iraq. And why is it? I don’t have an answer.
Why is it that so many members of the U.S. Congress still
maintain that the old policies can remain intact and should
be implemented?
AMY GOODMAN: If the U.S. troops
pulled out today?
HANS VON SPONECK: Can there be more
chaos in Iraq than there is already? I am—I have links to
people who have links to the resistance. The resistance says
the Americans should talk to us. But if Ambassador Khalilzad
in Baghdad talks to resistance people, the real resistance
leaders start laughing. Because they say you are not talking
to the right people. So, Condoleezza Rice should have her
way. Mr. Cheney should not have his way. She should succeed
in convincing her cabinet colleagues that the moment is to
talk to each other. The moment is to talk to the resistance.
The moment is -- you mentioned the PKK
sometime, a moment ago. And Hezbollah, Fatah, Hamas. They
all belong around the table. You can no longer discuss an
element of the Middle East crisis in isolation. It has to be
-- I call it a strategy of a whole. Everybody belongs around
the table and needs to be taken into account. We don’t
recognize this, we will continue to waste money -- your
money, our money, our good will, your people's lives, and I
think that is a tragedy. And I hope that Nancy Pelosi and
her colleagues will make headway in convincing republicans
also to finally give up an un-winnable approach in dealing
with the middle east.
JUAN GONZALEZ: You mentioned how in
Europe people are watching very carefully what is happening
here in the U.S. Congress. Obviously European governments --
several of them have gone through major changes since the
start of the Iraq war. To what degree are the European
nations doing what they should be doing in terms of standing
up sufficiently? Clearly in Italy and Spain the climate has
changed dramatically, but what can Europe do in terms of
having an impact on American policy?
HANS VON SPONECK: The first order of
priority in the European Union, of 27 countries, is to get
our own act together, because we are very fragmented. There
are many shades of opinion with regard to the Middle East
situation, and there is no integrated foreign policy. And
that plays into the very hands in the U.S. that should keep
the hands off the political debate. The neoconservatives are
trying hard to maintain this level of division in Europe,
and the sooner our leaders in Europe recognize that, that
they will play no role, that they will have a marginal
impact at best, is--until they get their act together.
My own country in Germany, Mrs. Merkel, our
chancellor is trying to repair the transatlantic damage. She
tries very hard. But the fear that some of us have is that
she tries at the expense of doing what needs to be done now
and tell the friend across the Atlantic, tell Washington, as
a friend, that the track, the road on which the U.S.
Administration is traveling is leading to further disaster.
AMY GOODMAN: Hans Von Sponeck, I want
to thank you very much for being with us. Former Assistant
Secretary General of the United Nations, was the Chief of
the U.N. Humanitarian Mission in Iraq, quit over the
Sanctions Regime. And has now written a book now translated
into English, A Different Kind of War: The U.S. Sanctions
Regime in Iraq.
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