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Insensitive bravado
Sir, - Your editorial ``Insensitive bravado'' (Feb. 19) correctly
highlights the shortcomings in the U.S. President, Mr. George
Bush, pursuing ``the unfinished anti-Hussein agenda of his
father''. With stoic patience, the Iraqi people suffer enormous
hardships under crippling sanctions. Despite the dictator's
humiliating defeat after his Kuwait annexation and the heavy
price he paid for armed intervention against the Kurds, Mr.
Saddam Hussein remains Iraq's hero. The growing Arab resentment
of the perceived exploitative and divisive American role in the
Gulf region can deny their support to Mr. Bush's plan to contain
or dislodge the regime in Iraq.
C. R. Narayanan,
Cuddalore
Sir, - What is the United Nations doing about the unilateral
decision of the United States to bomb Iraq to ``defend'' itself?
This invocation by the U.S. of ``defence'' is surreal and
Orwellian when you reckon that the U.S./ U.K. bombers intrude
into the territory of a sovereign nation and claim the fear of
attack from the legitimate rulers of the country and rain bombs
on it. Contrast this with the law in some of the States in the
U.S. If any intruder were to be found loitering on the lawn of
your house you can shoot him dead and no case will be registered
against you.
We had a Secretary-General who was autonomous, when Mr. Boutros-
Boutros Ghali (an Egyptian) adorned the post, for the first and
perhaps the last time in U.N. history. He was unceremoniously
booted out after his first term even when 14 member-nations in
the Security Council voted ``aye'' with one ``no''. In any
democratic institution this would have meant that Mr. Ghali won.
The U.S. flagrantly flouted democratic traditions and vetoed the
resolution proposing Mr. Ghali's name. And he quit. At his first
election although the U.S. did not exhibit the same
aggressiveness it had nevertheless abstained from voting,
underscoring its clear if understated opposition to the
candidature of Mr. Ghali.
What right does the U.S. have to preach on absence of democracy
in Pakistan, Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan and Cuba and impose
sanctions when it undermines it in the world body? As for the
U.K., it is not surprising it has become the Rottweiler doing the
bidding of its master, the U.S.
Ramachandran Rajaraman,
Texas, U.S.
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