The effectiveness of Iraqi sanctions Vietnam's foreign policy has matured after the conflict in Vietnam, a seemingly bloodless, tool that is not controversial in the country has appeared. The United States has begun imposing economic sanctions on fraudulent states to replace or dispatch armed groups. This policy of sanctioning the country is strong to think people about their legality. It is the Iraq conflict that needs to be reviewed. Following the hostile takeover of Kuwait in Iraq in 1990, the United States and the United Nations imposed sanctions on Iraq.
The sanctions imposed on the Iraq by the United Nations during the invasion of Kuwait have not been lifted, hampering Iraq's oil exports. In the late 1990s, due to sufferings of regular Iraqis, the United Nations considered considering easing the imposed sanctions. This survey doubted the number of deaths in southern and central Iraq during the sanction period. On 9 December 1996, the Saddam government accepted the first food oil program proposed by the United Nations in 1992. After the Gulf War, the relationship between the US and Iraq remained tense. On June 26, 1993, the United States launched a missile attack against Iraq intelligence headquarters in Baghdad. This is because Iraq repeatedly infringed the invasion of "the no-fly area" and the Kuwait after the Gulf War. US authorities continue to blame Saddam for violating the cease-fire provisions of the Gulf War, developing weapons of mass destruction and other forbidden weapons, and breaking UN sanctions
Provide humanitarian relief and terminate sanctions. Even if the war is still going on, the US and the Allied forces have begun to provide humanitarian relief to Iraqi citizens. This relief activity is expanding. Since the Hussein regime was reluctant to abandon the weapons of mass destruction and the weapons of terrorism plan to support missing people in the Persian Gulf War of 1991 and to stop suppressing Iraqi civilians, The Security Council imposed sanctions on Iraq. With the success of military actions to abolish Saddam Hussein, the new Iraq interim government, the alliance support from the US and the private authorities, should act swiftly to meet the requirements of the UN Security Council Resolution. Based on this, UN sanctions against Iraq should end.