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Arming Iraq: How the U.S. and Britain Secretly Built Saddam's War Machine

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Although the United States and Britain maintained a public stance of neutrality in the Iran-Iraq war, Mark Phythian demonstrates that the governments encouraged and facilitated the illegal supply of weapons to Iraq, and to a lesser extent Iran, in order to tilt the war in Baghdad's favor. The objectives of the covert policy agenda to keep Iran and Iraq at war so neither country could dominate oil supply or threaten the lower Gulf states, to promote domestic industries and trade, and to secure intelligence information. While the United States and other countries believed they were exploiting Iraq for their own purposes, the strategy backfired and the policy instead fueled the very conflict it was intended to contain, fortified Saddam Hussein's power, and led to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait and the Gulf War.
This disquieting look at the duplicity of the American and British governments and their covert role in arming Iraq provides important lessons for reshaping both foreign policy and arms export policy to control the dangerous proliferation of weapons in regions throughout the world.

320 pages, Hardcover

First published November 28, 1997

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Mark Phythian

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Profile Image for Jwt Jan50.
851 reviews5 followers
July 30, 2020
Part of my background reading to our response to 9/11. Call it 'how we got to now.' I'm a Reagan fan, but Phythia makes a pretty compelling case here re 'the great game' gone way bad. A bit like Caro, hard to find a 'good guy' to root for.
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