Powell Testifies on Iraqi Sanctions Today and Tomorrow
US NewswireMarch 7, 2001
A new study that examines options for restructuring U.N. sanctions in Iraq may preview coming Bush administration policy initiatives intended to minimize hardships for innocent civilians and strengthen controls over Iraqi weapons programs. An advance release of the study comes just as Secretary of State Colin Powell is due to testify today and tomorrow before the House International Relations Committee and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
The new report by the Fourth Freedom Forum and the Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame, and set for release Monday, proposes a narrowly defined and tightly implemented set of "smart sanctions" focusing on weapons and military-related goods, as an alternative to the current faltering comprehensive sanctions regime.
The study's authors, who have met extensively during the past four months with government officials and international experts from the UN, U.S. and allied nations, write that a modernized sanctions regime would need to be sustainable over the long term through the support of key United Nations Security Council members and frontline states. It would remain in effect until such time as Iraq complies fully with the relevant Security Council resolutions and fulfills its disarmament obligations, the study says.
High among the expectations for Powell's testimony is the new administration's position on weapons inspections in Iraq. Last week, during a trip to the Middle East, Powell suggested changes in U.S. sanctions policy toward Iraq. Meanwhile, Vice President Richard Cheney and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice said in separate interviews published in the past few days that the return of U.N. arms inspectors in Iraq was not a critical part of continued U.S. pressure on Iraq and that the U.S. has no choice but to push for a new sanctions policy.
Fourth Freedom Forum and the Joan Kroc Institute, two leading research centers that focus on economic sanctions and weapons control as a means of preventing international conflict, sponsored the study, written largely before Powell's trip. The full report is available at www.fourthfreedom.org. Among the conclusions the study reaches are:
Embargo Arms, Not Trade
- Revamp current embargo in favor of a sharpened sanctions system
aimed at two key targets-the control of financial resources generated by
the export of Iraqi oil, and the prohibition against imports of weapons and
dual-use goods;
- Maintain strict controls on Iraqi oil revenues and military-related
imports, but permit trade in civilian consumer goods to flow freely;
- Contract out to commercial companies the responsibility of
certifying and providing notification of civilian imports into Iraq;
- Permit the ordering and contracting of civilian goods on an
as-required basis rather than in 180-day phases. Maintain UN Financial
Controls
- Continue to channel all Iraqi oil revenues through the UN escrow
account;
- Contract with an independent multinational oil brokering firm,
through which all records and payments for permitted oil purchases would
pass, to manage the sales of Iraqi oil and monitor any illegal payments or
surcharges;
- Establish a new compensation mechanism to provide economic
assistance to neighboring states and begin paying Iraq's external debt;
- Freeze the personal financial assets of Saddam Hussein and his
family, of senior Iraqi political and military officials, and of those
associated with weapons production programs.
Strengthen Verification and Monitoring
- Tighten land-based monitoring by establishing at major border
crossings into Iraq fully-resourced Sanctions Assistance Missions, modeled
on the UN sanctions experience in Yugoslavia;
- Establish a system of electronic tagging of approved dual-use
imports;
- Create a special investigative commission to track down and expose
sanctions violators;
- Assist member states in establishing effective penalties for
companies and individuals that violate the ban on exporting weapons and
dual-use items to Iraq;
- Require Iraqi-bound cargo flights to submit to UN inspection.
"No single element of this smart sanctions package stands alone in wielding sufficient coercive clout," the study says. "But linked together such controls provide a tightened sanctions regime."
More Information on the Iraq Crisis
More Information on Sanctions Against Iraq