Nice revisionist history there. The CIA backed the coup that brought Saddam Hussein's Baathist faction to power in 1963, viewing them as inevitable successors to the failing Iraqi Republic government (which in turn had overthrown the pro-West monarchy) and as a bulwark against communism. The US and UK were happy to have the "stability" brought by the new Baathist leadership which, despite its hostility toward Israel, maintained cordial relations with the West. Following an internal Baathist putsch in 1968, Hussein became second-in command and dedicated himself to eradicating internal divisions in both the party and Iraqi society at large, using the secret police and a campaign of oppression to stamp out dissent and accrete personal power through the 1970s. However, he also used Iraq's oil wealth to improve conditions for the people (notably in health and education) and to modernize the economy. In the war with Iran, the US, Europe and the Arabs all supported Saddam from the outset; the only holdout was the Soviet Union, which claimed neutrality. The Reagan Administration supplied chemical weapons and intelligence data showing where to use them. The underlying causes of the war were numerous, but there was virtually unanimous international support for Iraq mostly because Iran was seen as a threat to export Islamic (and specifically Shiite) revolution.Lord Jim wrote:We didn't provide aid to Saddam in order to help him "win" if by win you mean some sort of strategic advantage over the Iranians.
At the time we started providing aid to Iraq, the Iranians had started to pull their act together as a military force, and the tide of battle was turning against Hussein. (Saddam will certainly not go down in the annals of history for as a great militarily strategist or tactician...)
We wanted them to punch each other out to a stalemate that would essentially restore the staus quo ante prior to Hussein's invasion...
Lord Jim wrote:Re Afghanistan:
You are aware I presume that the policy of aiding the Mujahedin began under Carter...and in fact it began even before the Soviets invaded. For the purpose of trying to provoke a Soviet invasion.
No, I wasn't aware of that. But regardless of which administration first supported the Afghan mujaheddin, it was a predictably bad policy to empower religious zealots even if their jihad was aimed at a Soviet-allied government -- unless, of course, they were never supposed to win, but only to keep fighting and dying, in which case the policy would be both bad and morally indefensible.




