| Opinion, May 2003 Al-Jazeerah.info | ||||
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Iraqi War Fails to Unlock the
Mystery of Missing Kuwaitis, Richard
H Curtiss, Special to Arab News It appears that there will be no happy ending in the saga of the 625
Kuwaitis and third-country nationals who have been missing since the Iraqi
Army invaded Kuwait one August 1990 night. As the attack began, Kuwait’s
ruler, Sheikh Jaber and Crown Prince Saad drove through the night across
the border into Saudi Arabia, where they were received by surprised
members of the Saudi royal family, who escorted them to the capital city
of Riyadh. Thus began a period that lasted more than six months, during which the
Kuwaitis sought to build up an army in exile. An increasing number of
Kuwaitis made the long overland trip from Kuwait to Riyadh in order to
enlist in the Kuwaiti government forces. They were joined by Kuwaitis from
the United States, England and many other parts of the world who wanted to
help defend their country. The defense of Kuwait began as Saudi Arabia,
Qatar and the United Arab Emirates joined a coalition force comprising
some 30 countries, including the US, Britain and Egypt. The aerial war to liberate Kuwait began on Jan. 16, 1991, and the
coalition’s ground forces attacked occupied Kuwait on Feb. 23. The war
formally ended within four days, when Saddam Hussein officially accepted
the terms of a cease-fire declared by then-US President George H. W. Bush.
Many of the Iraqi troops were killed while attempting to flee from Kuwait. The coalition forces, taking the long route out of the desert, doubled
back north of a large portion of the Iraqi Army. In addition, the Iraqi
forces were halted by air attacks on both sides of the large retreating
Iraqi column, effectively trapping the bulk of the retreating troops on a
“highway of death.” Most surrendered or were forced to walk in groups
of hundreds, wandering across the desert until they reached Iraq’s
original lines. In the weeks after the coalition forces stopped shooting in 1991, as
most foreign troops were returning to their home countries, it was not
clear what had happened to the Kuwaiti citizens who had been arrested by
the Iraqis but had not yet found their way back home. Within four or five
months it became obvious that 625 of those Kuwaitis had not returned at
all, and they were officially declared missing persons. Unfortunately,
that remained their status until the end of this year’s war, in the
aftermath of which the absent Kuwaitis were expected to appear at any
time, perhaps within days of the collapse of Saddam Hussein’s forces.
This week, however, it finally has become clear that some or all of the
617 men and 8 women who went missing 12 years ago will not be coming home. On May 16, it was reported that Abdul Aziz Al-Qubaisi Abu Musab, a
member of Ahmad Chalabi’s Iraqi National Congress, had in his possession
a map indicating that the missing Kuwaitis are dead. The map purportedly
was drawn up by a man who had helped execute the victims and then driven
the bodies to a burial site. Upon receiving a copy of the map, Abu Musab
set out to excavate the area where the missing people had apparently
vanished. Their bodies were found in three adjacent areas, buried under 10
feet of sand and gravel. Only three months after they were moved to Iraq,
according to the Iraqi driver, the Kuwaitis were taken from prison in four
truckloads to an intelligence training school in Baghdad for execution.
The frightened prisoners, blindfolded and with their hands bound by green
plastic ties, were ordered to stand in horseshoe formations. They were
then machine-gunned until each was dead. Another group was then ordered
into the same formation and the process repeated until all the prisoners
had been executed. The bodies then were taken to be secretly buried,
according to the Iraqi driver. There were four such drivers and 15 laborers present at the execution.
The latter were forced to bury the Kuwaitis in 10-foot pits. The drivers
and the rest of the burial party were required to remain in the area for
about three months. When it finally was clear that the graves would remain
intact, they were allowed to leave. Thankfully, the Iraqi driver had the
presence of mind to draw up a detailed map of the area, near the Lake
Habbaniya dam, around which there are no villages or towns. He took
special care of the map to ensure that the site could be easily located.
If forensic evidence confirms the driver’s account, says Patrick E.
Tyler of The New York Times, “the mass grave here would answer one of
the most painful and enduring mysteries for Kuwaitis.” Over the years Kuwaitis have worked unremittingly to keep alive the
case of their missing countrymen and women. Visitors to Kuwait heard the
life stories of all the disappeared in a special museum dedicated to
keeping their memory alive. Regular briefings were held, not only for the
benefit of international visitors, but also to Kuwaiti schoolchildren so
they could be aware of their compatriots’ plight. In the final days of
the second Gulf War, as Saddam Hussein’s overthrow became apparent,
people were expecting to find some trace of these disappeared persons. As
town after town came under the control of US and British troops, however,
no sign at all of the missing Kuwaitis emerged. This was inexplicable, and in stark contrast to the aftermath of
Iraq’s war with Iran in the 1980s, after which nearly all the prisoners
on both sides eventually were released. Abu Musab’s new evidence seems
to solve the mystery of the missing Kuwaitis, a tale that only darkened as
its outcome was revealed. This crime is, sadly, all too similar to the other inexplicable and
senseless crimes committed by Saddam Hussein during and after the 1991
Gulf War, such as the wanton destruction of Kuwait’s oil fields. It is
similar to the crimes of Stalin and Hitler — the only difference being a
matter of scale. For the Kuwaiti victims and their loved ones, the
massacre of 625 prisoners of war will remain an unforgivable offense for
all time. — Richard H. Curtiss is executive editor of the Washington Report on
Middle East Affairs.
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