With Saddam remaining firmly in power, the U.S. now had to create a long term policy to prevent Saddam from ever threatening Gulf stability again. The U.S. subsequently created a policy of containment against Iraq, which relied on three pillars; utilizing no-fly zones, sanctions, and forcing disarmament. In addition the U.S. continued to explore the possibility of ousting Saddam in a coup. By the end of the 1990s however, the containment strategy was put into question amidst rising challenges that Iraq increasingly posed. A Multinational Interception Force was organized and led by the U.S. to intercept, inspect and possibly impound vessels, cargoes and crews suspected of carrying freight to or from Iraq. Following the Gulf War,
Resolution 687 amended the embargo to include eliminating weapons of mass destruction and extended-range
ballistic missiles, prohibiting any support for
terrorism, and forcing Iraq to pay
war reparations to Kuwait and all foreign debt. The resolution established the
United Nations Special Commission to oversee and monitor Iraq's disarmament. Sanctions would only be lifted if Iraq disarmed. The powers given to UNSCOM inspectors in Iraq were: "unrestricted freedom of movement without advance notice in Iraq"; the "right to unimpeded access to any site or facility for the purpose of the on-site inspection...whether such site or facility be above or below ground"; "the right to request, receive, examine, and copy any record data, or information...relevant to" UNSCOM's activities; and the "right to take and analyze samples of any kind as well as to remove and export samples for off-site analysis". Iraq initially attempted to conceal their WMD programs, hoping to ride the inspections out after a period of time. But
UN inspections proved to be far more through and stringent than what Saddam had originally anticipated, and was forced to begrudgingly accept their presence and allow the inspectors to destroy Iraq's arms. Unbeknownst to the UN however, Saddam gave orders to his second in command
Hussein Kamel (who helped head Iraq's WMD and military industries) in July 1991, to covertly destroy much of Iraq's undeclared stocks of weapons of mass destruction and related capabilities. The decision to secretly destroy weapons and material without UN verification would come to greatly harm Iraq's credibility with the UN in the years ahead, for the lack of verification convinced many in the UN and other nations that Saddam continued to develop and retain significant stockpiles of WMD. Similarly, when interrogated by the FBI in 2004, Saddam asserted that the majority of Iraq's WMD stockpiles had been destroyed in the 1990s by UN inspectors, and the remainder were destroyed unilaterally by Iraq; the illusion of maintaining a WMD program and WMDs was maintained as a deterrent against possible Iranian invasion. An FBI agent who interrogated Saddam during this time also speculated that while Iraq may not have possessed WMDs after the 1990s, Saddam may have intended to restart his WMD programs if given the opportunity to do so in the future, as Iraq also attempted to keep intact their scientific research and infrastructure. During the 1990s and 2000s, many surveys and studies concluded that
excess deaths in Iraq—specifically among children under the age of 5—greatly increased during the sanctions at varying degrees. On the other hand, several later surveys conducted in cooperation with the post-Saddam government during the U.S.-led
occupation of Iraq "all put the U5MR in Iraq during 1995–2000 in the vicinity of 40 per 1000," suggesting that "there was no major rise in child mortality in Iraq after 1990 and during the period of the sanctions." Nevertheless, the effects of sanctions caused widespread outrage globally and with it, came great pressure to soften the sanctions altogether. Iraq further intensified the pressure by heavily publicizing the deprivation caused by sanctions, and threatened to cutoff cooperation with UNSCOM unless the sanctions would be lifted.
Security Council Resolution 712 of 19 September 1991 confirmed that Iraq could sell up to US$1.6 billion in oil to fund an
Oil-For-Food Programme (OFFP). Saddam initially refused, believing that it would lift pressure on the UNSC to lift sanctions completely. As a result, Iraq was effectively barred from exporting oil to the world market for several years. By 1995, the deteriorating conditions forced Saddam to change his mind and accept OFFP. 25% of the proceeds (which were held in
escrow The UN recounts that "Over the life of the Programme, the Security Council expanded its initial emphasis on food and medicines to include infrastructure rehabilitation". escaped from strife-torn cities to the mountains along the northern borders, into the southern marshes, and to
Turkey and
Iran. Their exodus was sudden and chaotic with thousands of desperate refugees fleeing on foot, on donkeys, or crammed onto open-backed trucks and tractors. Many were gunned down by
Republican Guard helicopters, which deliberately strafed columns of fleeing civilians in a number of incidents in both the north and south. Fearful that Saddam would launch another wide-scale repression campaign like that of the
Al-Anfal campaign in the late 1980s, the U.S.-led coalition created a no-fly zone in Northern Iraq to prevent aerial attacks by the Iraqis on the Kurds. On 3 March, General
Norman Schwarzkopf warned the Iraqis that Coalition aircraft would shoot down Iraqi military aircraft flying over the country. On 20 March, a US
F-15C Eagle fighter aircraft shot down an Iraqi Air Force
Su-22 Fitter fighter-bomber over northern Iraq. On 22 March, another F-15 destroyed a second Su-22 and the pilot of an Iraqi
PC-9 trainer bailed out after being approached by US fighter planes. On 5 April, the
United Nations Security Council passed
Resolution 688, calling on Iraq to end repression of its civilian population. On 6 April,
Operation Provide Comfort began to bring humanitarian relief to the Kurds. Alongside aerial enforcement by the U.S., U.K., and France, was the delivery of humanitarian relief of over an estimated 1 million Kurdish refugees by a 6-nation airlift operation commanded from Incirlik Air Base in Turkey involving forces from the US, UK, France, Germany, Canada, and Italy. As a result of these efforts, Iraq withdrew from Iraqi Kurdistan in October 1991. Provide Comfort was later superseded by
Operation Northern Watch, without French participation. In southeastern Iraq, thousands of civilians, army deserters, and rebels began seeking precarious shelter in remote areas of the
Hawizeh Marshes straddling the Iranian border. After the uprising, the
Marsh Arabs were singled out for mass reprisals, accompanied by
ecologically catastrophic drainage of the
Iraqi marshlands and the large-scale and systematic
forcible transfer of the local population. A large scale government offensive attack against the refugees estimated 10,000 fighters and 200,000 displaced persons hiding in the marshes began in March–April 1992, using fixed-wing aircraft; a U.S. Department of State report claimed that Iraq dumped toxic chemicals in the waters in an effort to drive out the opposition. of
VF-102 (foreground) and an EA-6B Prowler of
VAQ-137 – over Iraq during January 1998 A
no-fly zone up to the
32nd Parallel was enacted by the U.S., U.K., and France on August 26, 1992, with
U.S. Navy F/A-18C Hornets of
Carrier Air Wing Five from the aircraft carrier
USS Independence being the first to fly into the zone. There were at least 70 fixed aircraft of the
Iraqi Air Force assumed to be based in the No-Fly Zone at the time. Iraq frequently challenged both no-fly zones, firing on coalition aircraft, and flying helicopters and aircraft into the zones. The coalition often retaliated by bombing Iraqi air defense sites and/or shooting down Iraqi aircraft. In late April 1993, the United States asserted that Saddam Hussein had attempted to have former President George H. W. Bush assassinated during a visit to Kuwait on April 14–16. On June 26, as per order of then-President
Clinton, U.S. warships stationed in the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea
launched a cruise missile attack at the
Iraqi Intelligence Service building in downtown
Baghdad in response to Iraq's plot to assassinate former President
George H. W. Bush. Actions in the no-fly zones decreased meanwhile, as Iraq halted firing onto aircraft. In October 1994, Iraq once again began mobilizing around 64,000 Iraqi troops near the Kuwaiti border. The U.S. responded by deploying by building up troop presence in the Persian Gulf to deter a second invasion of Kuwait. Iraq subsequently withdrew its troops from the border. When fighting broke out between the Kurdish
PUK and
KDP factions in 1996, the latter decided to ask for assistance from the Iraqi government who, seeing an opportunity to retake northern Iraq, accepted. On 31 August, 30,000 Iraqi troops, spearheaded by an armored division of the
Iraqi Republican Guard, attacked the PUK-held city of
Erbil, which was defended by 3,000 PUK Peshmerga led by Korsat Rasul Ali, in conjunction with KDP forces. Erbil was captured, and Iraqi troops executed 700 PUK and
Iraqi National Congress prisoners of war in a field outside the city. After installing the KDP in control of Erbil,
Iraqi Army troops withdrew from the Kurdish region back to their initial positions. The KDP drove the PUK from its other strongholds, and with additional Iraqi Army help, captured Sulaymaniyah on 9 September.
Jalal Talabani and the PUK retreated to the Iranian border, and American forces evacuated 700 Iraqi National Congress personnel and 6,000 PUK members out of northern Iraq. On 13 October, Sulaymaniyah was recaptured by the PUK, allegedly with support of Iranian forces. The attacks stoked fears that Saddam intended to launch a genocidal campaign against the Kurds similar to the campaigns of
1988 and
1991. The Clinton administration, unwilling to allow the Iraqi government to regain control of Iraqi Kurdistan, began
Operation Desert Strike on 3 September, when American ships and
B-52 Stratofortress bombers launched 27 cruise missiles at air defense sites in southern Iraq. The next day, 17 more cruise missiles were launched from American ships against Iraqi air defense sites. The United States also deployed strike aircraft and an aircraft carrier to the
Persian Gulf region, and the extent of the southern no-fly zone was moved northwards to the
33rd parallel. briefs reporters at
The Pentagon following Operation Desert Fox, 21 December 1998. In December 1998, the U.S. and U.K. initiated
Operation Desert Fox, a four-day bombing campaign of Iraqi regime and military targets after Iraqi cooperation with UNSCOM collapsed. Prior to this, France ended their participation in the no-fly zones, arguing that they were maintained too long and were ineffective. Following the bombing, Iraq declared that they no longer recognized the no-fly zones, resuming their efforts to shoot down coalition aircraft. This marked an increased level of combat between Iraq and the coalition, as coalition warplanes retaliated attempted shoot downs by further bombing air defense sites.
Attempts at regime change In May 1991,
U.S. President George H. W. Bush signed a presidential finding directing the
Central Intelligence Agency to create conditions for Hussein's removal from power. Coordinating anti-Saddam groups was an important element of this strategy and the
Iraqi National Congress (INC), led by
Ahmed Chalabi, was the main group tasked with this purpose. The name INC was reportedly coined by
public relations expert
John Rendon (of the
Rendon Group agency) and the group received millions in covert funding in the 1990s, and then about $8 million a year in overt funding after the passage of the
Iraq Liberation Act in 1998. INC represented the first major attempt by opponents of Saddam to join forces, bringing together
Kurds of all religions,
Sunni and
Shi'ite Arabs (both
Islamic fundamentalist and
secular) as well as non-Muslim Arabs; additionally
monarchists,
nationalists and ex-
military officers. In June 1992, nearly 200 delegates from dozens of opposition groups met in
Vienna, along with Iraq's two main Kurdish militias, the rival
Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). In October 1992, major Shi'ite groups, including the
SCIRI and
al-Dawa, came into the coalition and INC held a pivotal meeting in Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq, choosing a Leadership Council and a 26-member executive council. At the
Vienna conference, the INC made
Ahmed Chalabi, a secular Shi'ite Iraqi-American and mathematician by training as its president. Chalabi was previously responsible for the 1989 collapse of Jordanian
Petra Bank, which caused a $350 million bail-out by the
Central Bank of Jordan and accused of embezzlement and false accounting. Chalabi fled the country in the trunk of a car owned by
Prince Hassan of Jordan. He was convicted and sentenced
in absentia for
bank fraud by a Jordanian
military tribunal to 22 years in prison. Chalabi maintained that his prosecution was a politically motivated effort to discredit him sponsored by
Saddam Hussein. In 1993 Chalabi had begun promoting a plan for regime change called "The End Game". It envisioned a revolt by INC-led Shi'ites in southern Iraq and Kurds in the north that would inspire a military uprising and lead to the installation of an INC-dominated regime friendly to the U.S. He also began to use some of his CIA funding to build an armed militia. A later variation also included the presence of ex-U.S. Special Forces to incite Iraqi military defections. The U.S. would then recognize the INC as Iraq's provisional government, give it Iraq's U.N. seat; create INC-controlled "liberated zones" freed of sanctions, give the INC frozen Iraqi assets under U.S. control, launch air attacks, and have equipment prepositioned in the region in case U.S. ground forces were activated. The plan was quietly championed by neoconservatives before and during the early months of the
Bush administration. Differences within INC eventually led to its virtual collapse. In May 1994, the two main Kurdish parties began
fighting with each other over territory and other issues. In January 1995,
CIA case officer
Robert Baer traveled to northern Iraq with a five-man team to set up a CIA station. He made contact with the Kurdish leadership and managed to negotiate a truce between Barzani and Talabani. Despite Baer's pleas for American support of the offensive, none was forthcoming, and the Kurdish troops were forced to withdraw. INC was subsequently plagued by factional infighting, a cutoff of funds from its international backers (including the United States), and continued pressure from Iraqi intelligence services especially after the failed 1995 coup attempt. In 1998, however, the
US Congress authorized $97 million in U.S. military aid for Iraqi opposition via the Iraq Liberation Act, intended primarily for INC. However, the INA had been infiltrated by agents loyal to Saddam, and in June 1996, 30 Iraqi military officers were executed and 100 others were arrested for alleged ties to the INA. In October 1998, removing the Iraqi government became official
U.S. foreign policy with enactment of the
Iraq Liberation Act. Enacted following the expulsion of
UN weapons inspectors the preceding August (after some had been accused of spying for the U.S.), the act provided $97 million for Iraqi "democratic opposition organizations" to "establish a program to support a transition to democracy in Iraq." == Neoconservatives and Iraq ==