Sanction against Iraq: Was it over? It started on August 2, 1990. Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has made the most serious mistake for his country and his people. After several differences in oil contracts, he ordered his regime army to invade his small south neighbor, Kuwait. Aggression will not take more than 24 hours, but it opens the door to long-term suffering for innocent Iraqi civilians. After Iraq invaded Kuwait, the United Nations immediately requested Saddam Hussein to leave Kuwait to his troops and order the United Nations to impose economic sanctions on Iraq.
It is only six years since Iraq invaded Kuwait, six years after the liberation of Kuwait and the end of the desert storm. At one level, the United States was very strong. Economic sanctions against Iraq still exist and most of them are in agreement. It can also point out the substantial progress of efforts to disclose and eliminate Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. Iraq has economic difficulties and there are political differences. As a result, Saddam Hussein's Iraq is much weaker than the beginning of the decade and is understood as a dangerous danger rather than a real strategic threat.
Should UN sanctions against Iraq continue? Many people support and oppose UN sanctions imposed by Iraq. Some people believe that sanctions are good and will consistently coalesce in Iraq. Others believe that sanctions are hurting Iraq. They believe that the treatment of Iraqi people is unfair. Former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright believes that sanctions are still going on, and Rick McDowell thinks the sanctions were lifted. At the end of the Gulf War in 1991, Hussein was thought not to last long. In fact, Hussein continued, the United States had to deal with the result. Sanctions and the UN Special Committee on Weapons Verification successfully restrained the destruction of Iraq's numerous missiles and weapons of mass destruction by Saddam Hussein. For some time, Saddam Hussein screams at his cage and hopes the United States will use defense funds around mobility.
United Nations sanctions against Iraq after the Persian Gulf War have hurt Iraqi citizens, not Saddam Hussein himself. Hussein used the funds he gained from illegal trade and a plan to help Iraqi people pursue personal interests. Sanctions were originally intended to stop Hussein's construction of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. But Hussein still holds these weapons and uses black market funds to develop them. Punctuality remains valid as there are no better plans