Path: bloom-picayune.mit.edu!snorkelwacker.mit.edu!americast.com!americast.com!americast-post Newsgroups: americast.latimes.misc From: americast-post@AmeriCast.Com Organization: American Cybercasting Approved: americast-post@AmeriCast.com Subject: NONFICTION Date: Mon, 23 Nov 92 07:26:22 EST Message-ID: HEADLINE: NONFICTION Publication Date: Sunday November 22, 1992 BYLINE: ALEX RAKSIN THE FIRE THIS TIME: U.S. War Crimes in the Gulf by Ramsey Clark (Thunder's Mouth: $21.95; 325 pp.). THE PERSIAN GULF TV WAR by Douglas Kellner (Westview: $19.95; 460 pp.) While Ramsey Clark would like to deprive us of the military victory we have hungered for since World War II, he is not easy to dismiss. Hardly a knee-jerk activist who decided early on that Establishment politicians were evil, he was U.S. attorney general from 1961-1968 and head of the presidential delegation to Watts after the riots. Not an academic writing from the security of the ivory tower (like Douglas Kellner, a philosophy professor at the University of Texas), he risked his life by traveling for three weeks through Iraqi cities in an old American sedan at a time when the U.S. was staging 3,000 bombing sorties a day. This is not to say that Ramsey Clark's book, and to a greater extent, Douglas Kellner's, are unimpeachable. Both suffer from the same weaknesses they denounce in the Establishment: Clark's photo captions (e.g., "Children--the real victims of U.S. intervention") often resemble American media propaganda, and Kellner can't resist departing from his richly factual history to get in mean-spirited digs like this one: "Because the Bush Administration has a record of both incompetence and Machiavellian machinations..." Nevertheless, at least two of Clark and Kellner's points, virtually ignored in the mainstream U.S. media, deserve a brief hearing here: Only a tiny percentage of the 88,000 tons of bombs that rained on Iraq (the equivalent of seven Hiroshimas) were "smart." After less than 24 hours in Basra, Clark reports, "we saw hundreds of buildings, whole blocks in 10 separate residential areas, hospitals, mosques, and churches damaged and destroyed." Saddam's invasion of Kuwait would never have occurred had there not been a long string of uninformed, insensitive Western diplomacy toward the region: from 1921, when Sir Percy Cox of the British Colonial Office separated Kuwait, originally part of the Basra province, from Iraq, prohibiting Iraq's access to the Persian Gulf; to the mid-1980s, when the U.S. restored full diplomatic relations with Saddam while at the same time conspiring with Iran to overthrow him. This article is copyright 1992 The Los Angeles Times Home Edition. Redistribution to other sites is not permitted except by arrangement with American Cybercasting Corporation. For more information, send-email to usa@AmeriCast.COM