August
18, 2002
Officers Say U.S. Aided Iraq in War Despite
Use of Gas
By PATRICK E. TYLER
WASHINGTON, Aug. 17 A covert American
program during the Reagan administration provided
Iraq with critical battle planning assistance at
a time when American intelligence agencies knew
that Iraqi commanders would employ chemical
weapons in waging the decisive battles of the
Iran-Iraq war, according to senior military
officers with direct knowledge of the program.
Those officers, most of whom agreed to speak
on the condition that they not be identified,
spoke in response to a reporter's questions about
the nature of gas warfare on both sides of the
conflict between Iran and Iraq from 1981 to 1988.
Iraq's use of gas in that conflict is repeatedly
cited by President Bush and, this week, by his
national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, as
justification for "regime change" in
Iraq.
The covert program was carried out at a time
when President Reagan's top aides, including
Secretary of State George P. Shultz, Defense
Secretary Frank C. Carlucci and Gen. Colin L.
Powell, then the national security adviser, were
publicly condemning Iraq for its use of poison
gas, especially after Iraq attacked Kurds in
Halabja in March 1988.
During the Iran-Iraq war, the United States
decided it was imperative that Iran be thwarted,
so it could not overrun the important
oil-producing states in the Persian Gulf. It has
long been known that the United States provided
intelligence assistance to Iraq in the form of
satellite photography to help the Iraqis
understand how Iranian forces were deployed
against them. But the full nature of the program,
as described by former Defense Intelligence
Agency officers, was not previously disclosed.
Secretary of State Powell, through a
spokesman, said the officers' description of the
program was "dead wrong," but declined
to discuss it. His deputy, Richard L. Armitage, a
senior defense official at the time, used an
expletive relayed through a spokesman to indicate
his denial that the United States acquiesced in
the use of chemical weapons.
The Defense Intelligence Agency declined to
comment, as did Lt. Gen. Leonard Perroots,
retired, who supervised the program as the head
of the agency. Mr. Carlucci said, "My
understanding is that what was provided" to
Iraq "was general order of battle
information, not operational intelligence."
"I certainly have no knowledge of U.S.
participation in preparing battle and strike
packages," he said, "and doubt strongly
that that occurred."
Later, he added, "I did agree that Iraq
should not lose the war, but I certainly had no
foreknowledge of their use of chemical
weapons."
Though senior officials of the Reagan
administration publicly condemned Iraq's
employment of mustard gas, sarin, VX and other
poisonous agents, the American military officers
said President Reagan, Vice President George Bush
and senior national security aides never withdrew
their support for the highly classified program
in which more than 60 officers of the Defense
Intelligence Agency were secretly providing
detailed information on Iranian deployments,
tactical planning for battles, plans for
airstrikes and bomb-damage assessments for Iraq.
Iraq shared its battle plans with the
Americans, without admitting the use of chemical
weapons, the military officers said. But Iraq's
use of chemical weapons, already established at
that point, became more evident in the war's
final phase.
Saudi Arabia played a crucial role in pressing
the Reagan administration to offer aid to Iraq
out of concern that Iranian commanders were
sending waves of young volunteers to overrun
Iraqi forces. Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi
ambassador to the United States, then and now,
met with President Saddam Hussein of Iraq and
then told officials of the Central Intelligence
Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency that
Iraq's military command was ready to accept
American aid.
In early 1988, after the Iraqi Army, with
American planning assistance, retook the Fao
Peninsula in an attack that reopened Iraq's
access to the Persian Gulf, a defense
intelligence officer, Lt. Col. Rick Francona, now
retired, was sent to tour the battlefield with
Iraqi officers, the American military officers
said.
He reported that Iraq had used chemical
weapons to cinch its victory, one former D.I.A.
official said. Colonel Francona saw zones marked
off for chemical contamination, and containers
for the drug atropine scattered around,
indicating that Iraqi soldiers had taken
injections to protect themselves from the effects
of gas that might blow back over their positions.
(Colonel Francona could not be reached for
comment.)
C.I.A. officials supported the program to
assist Iraq, though they were not involved.
Separately, the C.I.A. provided Iraq with
satellite photography of the war front.
Col. Walter P. Lang, retired, the senior
defense intelligence officer at the time, said he
would not discuss classified information, but
added that both D.I.A. and C.I.A. officials
"were desperate to make sure that Iraq did
not lose" to Iran.
"The use of gas on the battlefield by the
Iraqis was not a matter of deep strategic
concern," he said. What Mr. Reagan's aides
were concerned about, he said, was that Iran not
break through to the Fao Peninsula and spread the
Islamic revolution to Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.
Colonel Lang asserted that the Defense
Intelligence Agency "would have never
accepted the use of chemical weapons against
civilians, but the use against military
objectives was seen as inevitable in the Iraqi
struggle for survival." Senior Reagan
administration officials did nothing to interfere
with the continuation of the program, a former
participant in the program said.
Iraq did turn its chemical weapons against the
Kurdish population of northern Iraq, but the
intelligence officers say they were not involved
in planning any of the military operations in
which those assaults occurred. They said the
reason was that there were no major Iranian troop
concentrations in the north and the major battles
where Iraq's military command wanted assistance
were on the southern war front.
The Pentagon's battle damage assessments
confirmed that Iraqi military commanders had
integrated chemical weapons throughout their
arsenal and were adding them to strike plans that
American advisers either prepared or suggested.
Iran claimed that it suffered thousands of deaths
from chemical weapons.
The American intelligence officers never
encouraged or condoned Iraq's use of chemical
weapons, but neither did they oppose it because
they considered Iraq to be struggling for its
survival, people involved at the time said in
interviews.
Another former senior D.I.A. official who was
an expert on the Iraqi military said the Reagan
administration's treatment of the issue
publicly condemning Iraq's use of gas while
privately acquiescing in its employment on the
battlefield was an example of the
"Realpolitik" of American interests in
the war.
The effort on behalf of Iraq "was heavily
compartmented," a former D.I.A. official
said, using the military jargon for restricting
secrets to those who need to know them.
"Having gone through the 440 days of the
hostage crisis in Iran," he said, "the
period when we were the Great Satan, if Iraq had
gone down it would have had a catastrophic effect
on Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and the whole region
might have gone down. That was the backdrop of
the policy."
One officer said, "They had gotten better
and better" and after a while chemical
weapons "were integrated into their fire
plan for any large operation, and it became more
and more obvious."
A number of D.I.A. officers who took part in
aiding Iraq more than a decade ago when its
military was actively using chemical weapons, now
say they believe that the United States should
overthrow Mr. Hussein at some point. But at the
time, they say, they all believed that their
covert assistance to Mr. Hussein's military in
the mid-1980's was a crucial factor in Iraq's
victory in the war and the containment of a far
more dangerous threat from Iran.
The Pentagon "wasn't so horrified by
Iraq's use of gas," said one veteran of the
program. "It was just another way of killing
people whether with a bullet or phosgene,
it didn't make any difference," he said.
Former Secretary of State Shultz and Vice
President Bush tried to stanch the flow of
chemical precursors to Iraq and spoke out against
Iraq's use of chemical arms, but Mr. Shultz, in
his memoir, also alluded to the struggle in the
administration.
"I was stunned to read an intelligence
analysis being circulated within the
administration that `we have demolished a budding
relationship (with Iraq) by taking a tough
position in opposition to chemical weapons,'
" he wrote.
Mr. Shultz also wrote that he quarreled with
William J. Casey, then the director of central
intelligence, over whether the United States
should press for a new chemical weapons ban at
the Geneva Disarmament Conference. Mr. Shultz
declined further comment.
Copyright 2002
The New York Times Company
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