
I give
you Rolf Ekeus, former Swedish ambassador to the United States and,
before that, the executive chairman of the United Nations Special Commission
(UNSCOM) on Iraq from 1991 to 1997. These days he's chairman of the
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, a noted dovecote of
the olive branch set.

" . . .In the wake of the first Iraq war it was UNSCOM chief Ekeus,
exuding disinterested integrity as only a Swede can, who insisted that
Saddam Hussein was surely pressing forward with the manufacture of weapons
of mass destruction."
It was Ekeus who played a pivotal role in justifying the continued imposition
of sanctions, on the grounds that these sanctions were essential as
a means of applying pressure to the tyrant in Baghdad.
In 1996 Ramsey Clark, former US Attorney General, and a leading critic
of the indiscriminate cruelty of these sanctions, wrote an open letter
to Ekeus beginning thus: "Dear Mr. Ekeus, How many children are
you willing to let die while you search for 'items' you 'are convinced
still exist in' Iraq? Every two months for the past half year, and on
earlier occasions, you or your office have made some statement several
weeks before the Security Council considers sanctions against Iraq which
you know will be used to cause their continuation This cruel and endless
hoax of new disclosures every two months must stop. The direct consequence
of your statements which are used to justify continuation of the sanctions
against Iraq is the deaths of hundreds of thousands of innocent and
helpless infants, children and elderly and chronically ill human beings."
Despite many such furious denunciations, till the day he handed over
his job as UNSCOM chief to the more obviously suspect and disheveled
Australian, Richard Butler, Ekeus continued in the manner stigmatized
by Clark and others. US ambassador to the UN Madeline Albright notoriously
said to Lesley Stahl of CBS, of the lethal sanctions which killed over
half a million Iraqi children, "we think the price is worth it",
but Ekeus was the one who furnished the UN's diplomatic cover for that
repulsive calculus.
It's fortunate for Ekeus's reputation among the genteel liberal crowd
that public awareness of what he really knew about Saddam's chemical,
biological and nuclear weapons is still slight. In fact Ekeus was perfectly
well aware from the mid-l990s on that Saddam Ussein had no such weapons
of mass destruction. They had all been destroyed years earlier, after
the first Gulf war.
Ekeus learned this on the night of August 22, l995, in Amman, from the
lips of General Hussein Kamel, who had just defected from Iraq, along
with some of his senior military aides. Kamel was Saddam's son-in-law
and had been in overall charge of all programs for chemical, biological
and nuclear weapons and delivery systems.
That night,
in three hours of detailed questioning from Ekeus and two technical experts,
Kamel was categorical. The UN inspection teams had done a good job. When
Saddam was finally persuaded that failure to dispose of the relevant weapons
systems would have very serious consequences, he issued the order and
Kamel carried it out. As he told Ekeus that night, "All weapons,
biological, chemical, missile, nuclear, were destroyed."
(The UNSCOM record of the session can be viewed at http://www.fair.org/press-releases/kamel.pdf).
In similar debriefings that August Kamel said the same thing to teams
from the CIA and MI6. His military aides provided a wealth of corroborative
details. Then, the following year, Kamel was lured back to Iraq and at
once executed.
Did Ekeus immediately proclaim victory, and suggest that sanctions could
be abated?
As we have seen, he did not. In fact he urged that they be intensified.
The years rolled by and Iraqi children by the thousand wasted and died.
The war party thumped the drum over Saddam's WMDs, and Kamel's debriefings
stayed under lock and key.
Finally, John Barry of Newsweek unearthed details of those sessions in
Amman and in February on this year Newsweek ran his story, though not
with the play it deserved. I gather that when Barry confronted Ekeus with
details of the suppressed briefing, Ekeus was stricken. Barry's sensational
disclosure was mostly ignored.
And Ekeus's rationale for suppressing the disclosures of Kamel and his
aides? He claims that the plan was to bluff Saddam and his scientists
into further disclosures. Try to figure that out.
For playing the game, the way the US desired it to be played, Ekeus got
his rewards: a pleasing welcome in Washington when he arrived there as
Swedish ambassador, respectful audiences along the world's diplomatic
circuits.
To this day he zealously burnishes his "credibility" with long,
tendentious articles arguing that Bush and Blair had it right. He betrays
no sign of being troubled by his horrible role. He will never be forced
to squirm in hearings by Democratic senators suddenly as brave as lions.
He won't have to wade through raw sewage to enter the main hospital in
Baghdad and watch children die or ride in a Humvee and wait for someone
to drop a hand grenade off a bridge and blow his head off.
Today he grazes peacefully in the tranquil pastures of the Stockholm Peace
Research Institute. But if we're going to heap recriminations on Bush
and Blair and the propagandists who fashioned their lies, don't forget
Ekeus. He played a worse role than most of them, under the blue flag of
the UN.
Alexander Cockburn is the coeditor of The Politics of Anti-Semitism.