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257 lines
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257 lines
8.8 KiB
Plaintext
Here are excerpts from editorials in U.S. newspapers about the beginning of
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the ground offensive in the Persian Gulf War.
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---
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The New York Times:
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Americans can hope that the war will be both swift and limited. But it will
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not be damage-free. It will exact a price on the battlefield and, however
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successful the outcome, it could well exact a price diplomatically, especially
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in America's relations with the Soviet Union. On this point Mr. Bush's advisers
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have displayed not euphoria but an admirable practicality.
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---
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The Dallas Morning News:
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``Although half-promises of peace were at times achingly close, President
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Bush was right to order the commencement of this final phase of the war. Iraqi
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dictator Saddam Hussein has proven himself a merciless, calculating despot
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whose word is nothing more than another weapon. He cannot be trusted to
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implement a peace agreement. There was little reason to see the last-minute
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maneuvering of his government as anything but an attempt to buy time, and that
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would have escalated the danger to allied troops if zero hour finally arrived
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during treacherous weather...Yet even if Saddam Hussein leaves the mass of his
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troops to collapse in Kuwait, the allies should not pursue him to his bunker in
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Baghdad. Although tempting, such a move would turn a just war into a war of
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conquest. That would risk a loss of global support and would risk fracturing
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the coalition which George Bush has so masterfully assembled and maintained.
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Whether President Hussein is chased to Baghdad or not - he is finished.''
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---
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Dallas Times Herald:
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``It's too soon to claim victory, of course. There is much still to be done.
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But the first 18 hours of ground battle leave every reason for optimism. It's
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especially gratifying to see how well the coalition has worked together. The
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British and French have delivered for the alliance, and so have the Saudis and
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Egyptians. President Bush can take justifiable pride in the cohesion of these
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forces.
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There is much anguish in any war. No doubt that will be true of the Persian
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Gulf as well. But so far allied forces have acquitted themselves with great
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distinction.''
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---
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The Courier-Tribune, Asheboro, N.C.:
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``Yes, Saddam must be left humiliated and powerless - the president and our
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allies know that.
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It would be very bad and dangerous for us if Saddam Hussein remained in
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power in Iraq with a substantial part of his huge army still intact, warned
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Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir.
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....
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If left in power and well armed, his vindictiveness - when it came - would
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be appalling.
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---
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The Leaf-Chronicle, Clarksville, Tenn.:
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The U.N. coalition had no choice but to launch an all-out ground offensive
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after Iraqi President Saddam Hussein ignored an ultimatum to begin withdrawing
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his forces...The time for talk was over, and the people of Kuwait were begging
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for liberation....
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Ultimately, Iraq has found itself without friends to call upon during this
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war. The Arab masses in other countries never did rise up and rally to Iraq's
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cause. In fact, the only Arab country that showed much sympathy to Iraq was
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Jordan; but if it has made any contribution to Iraq's war effort, the effect
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has been negligible...
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...The country prays for the U.N. combatants and for their families. We also
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pray for those innocent people who have suffered in Kuwait. And we pray that
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after this is all over, peace and stability will come to the Middle East.
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The Oakland Press, Pontiac, Mich.:
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While easy early successes can be misleading, it seems that the liberation
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of Kuwait could come in days rather than weeks or months...
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The urgent question is not whether a ground war is wise or necessary. That
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has been answered, for better or worse, by George Bush and Saddam Hussein.
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The question now is what happens after the last Iraqi soldier straggles back
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across the Kuwaiti border and into Iraq?
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Will the allied forces pursue him? And, if so, how far?
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Then, what mechanism, if any, will be put in place in an attempt to head off
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further military adventures in the region, by Saddam or anybody else?....
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...So it is clear that an international conference should be convened to
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deal with such questions as arms control for the region, recognition of the
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right of Israel to exist and a permanent, humane solution to the Palestinian
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problem in the occupied territories.
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Ouside nations cannot continue to attempt to achieve stability by playing
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off one Middle Eastern country against another.
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That is how and why Saddam rose to power and prominence. And it was as much
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the cynical doing of the United States as of anyone else.
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Los Angeles Times:
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Until it's evident that the Republican Guard has been neutralized as a
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battlefield threat, and until it's clear that bloody street-to-street fighting
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in Kuwait City can be avoided, the danger to allied forces will remain, and
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anticipation of a quick and low-cost victory must be held in check.
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Quite soon the world will get a firsthand look at Kuwait as it emerges from
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more than six months of Iraqi subjugation. The stories and pictures are
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expected to be grim. Even in the final hours of their occupation Iraqi forces
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were reported to be heaping atrocity upon atrocity, murdering Kuwaitis,
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stealing what had not earlier been looted, wantonly destroying the oil
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installations and buildings. These are war crimes by any definition. If Kuwait
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presses for the reparations that the U.N. resolutions and international law
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allow it to claim, Iraq faces years of enormous compensations payments.
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---
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The Orange County Register:
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...Beyond that, and this comes as one more corroboration of Saddam's
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unceasing diabolism, hundreds of men and women of Kuwait City were being
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rounded up by their occupiers, tortured, and executed.
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The moral impulse to stop the genocide which came on top of the torching of
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Kuwait oil fields became all the more urgent. Other factors such as the looming
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sand storm season no doubt factored in of course. And there was the weekend
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story (confirmed) that the White House had established this timetable weeks
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ago, authorizing Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf to launch the attack when ready.
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That scandalized a small corps of reflexive Bush bashers who concluded that
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the president was clearly not serious about the Saturday deadline and intended
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to pursue some sort of sinister private agenda.
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But those are uncomplicated minds at work, and, happily, they do not reflect
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the overwhelming number of Americans who share the president's moral
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sensibility. It is altogether reasonable to have planned a punitive timetable,
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at the same time preparing to abandon it if the object of your enterprise
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suddenly, and surprisingly, agrees to conduct himself in a civilized fashion.
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Saddam responded to the Bush ultimatum with (1) some stalling-for-time joint
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diplomacy with the Soviet Union and (2) more Scud attacks on Israel and Saudi
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Arabia along with more hideous bloodletting in Kuwait City.
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Astonishingly enough, the peacenik gallery complained that President Bush
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failed to blind himself to the second part of Saddam's response which calls
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into question their own morale posturing. That they invested an iota of
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reliability in the Saddam-Gorbachev maneuvering called into question their
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grasp of history.
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---
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Los Angeles Daily News:
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The fear that Saddam inspired was simply the fear of the what-if: What if he
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has chemical or biological weapons of mass destruction? What if he can get the
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Arab masses to overthrow America's allies? What if his ground troops are
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fanatics who will fight to the death?
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The power in these questions is the power of the unknown. Once the answers
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are known - once Saddam is forced to deliver and fails to measure up to the
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worst
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Another file downloaded from:
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