Baker Backed Loans That Added to Iraq Debt
By KEN GUGGENHEIM, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Now assigned the task of reducing Iraq (news - web sites)'s debt, presidential envoy James A. Baker III once gave crucial support for continuing a billion-dollar loan program to Saddam Hussein's government that accounts for most of the money Iraq still owes the United States.
As secretary of state in 1989, Baker urged the Agriculture Department to offer $1 billion in loan guarantees for Iraq to buy
U.S. farm products after Iraq said it would reject a smaller deal.
"Documents indicate he intervened personally to make sure that Iraq continued to receive high levels of funding," said Joyce Battle, Middle East analyst for the National Security Archives, a foreign policy research center with a vast collection of declassified documents from the era.
Only half the guarantees were provided before the program was suspended amid allegations of improprieties and deterioration of relations with Iraq in the months before the August 1990 invasion of Kuwait.
The guarantees were an important part of the first President Bush's effort to improve relations with Iraq in hopes of boosting commercial ties and gaining leverage with a powerful and strategically important nation.
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http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040111/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_baker&cid=540&ncid=1480Ahem. These loans were not used "to buy U.S. farm products." They were used to buy weapons. At the direction of Bush/Baker, these loans were rammed through over the objections of many officials.
It is, however, encouraging to see this story breaking. Maybe it's 13 years too late, but at least it's breaking.
For detailed, impeccably documented research see:
Friedman, Alan,
Spider's Web: The Secret History of how the White House Illegally Armed Iraq,
New York, NY, U.S.A.: Bantam Books, 1993. Chapter Book. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. 455 pages with notes, index, b/w photos. ISBN:0553096508
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0553096508/ref=ase_cryptogoncom-20/103-0699862-8219055?v=glance&s=booksOut of print, but worth tracking down.
interview with Alan Friedman
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article5401.htm