Originally posted by: BBond
Originally posted by: Genx87
Continuously for those 12 years. They fought any efforts to lift or relax the sanctions. That's why I think the countries that went around the sanctions regime were right. You can bash them all you want, but there was no reason for those sanctions to be in place except to keep Iraq weak for eventual unjustified US invasion.
Well, be careful what you wish for, because the US got it.
I need an instance of this, not a general blanket statement of "Through the 12 years".
That is a pointless thing to say and lends zero credibility to the argument.
If the UN wanted to lift the sanctions I am surprised there wouldnt have been a single resolution addressing it or a vote in the general assembly asking the security council to lift the sanctions.
Surely you will come back with something more concrete next time right?
P.S. Your justifying the stealing by certain countries from the Iraqis is quite sad.
Sanctions Against Iraq
The UN Security Council imposed comprehensive economic sanctions against Iraq on August 6, 1990, just after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. When the coalition war had ousted Iraq from Kuwait the following year, the Council did not lift the sanctions, keeping them in place as leverage to press for Iraqi disarmament and other goals. The sanctions remained in place thereafter, despite a harsh impact on innocent Iraqi civilians and an evident lack of pressure on Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. A UN "Oil-for-Food Programme," started in late 1997, offered some relief to Iraqis, but the humanitarian crisis continued.
The US and UK governments always made it clear that they would block any lifting or serious reforming of sanctions as long as Hussein remained in power. After more than twelve years of sanctions had passed, the US and the UK made war on Iraq again in March, 2003, sweeping away Hussein's government. Soon after, Washington called for and obtained the lifting of sanctions, a step that gave the US occupation authority full control over Iraq's oil sales and oil industry. This section covers a wide range of sanction issues, including the humanitarian impact, the Oil-for-Food Programme, criticisms of the sanctions and the debate that took place about their termination.