Environmentalists fret about Baghdad's scorched-earth record
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The Kuwaiti oil fields continued to burn for months
after the Persian Gulf War
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February 22, 1998
Web posted at: 1:52 p.m. EST (1852 GMT)
(CNN) -- Environmentalists are calling on President Clinton
to re-think his position about bombing Iraq should Baghdad
continue to refuse unrestricted access to U.N. weapons
inspectors.
War is historically unkind to the environment, and Saddam
Hussein's record of a scorched-earth policy has
environmentalists especially concerned.
During the 1991 Gulf War, and in other conflicts, Baghdad
took its anger out on the region's economic mainstay: oil.
For months, Iraqi forces dumped an estimated 3,000 barrels of
oil per day into the Persian Gulf. Environmental experts
told the U.S. Senate that it amounted to one Exxon Valdez oil
spill every 12 weeks. The Valdez disaster, off the Alaskan
coast in March 1989, is among the world's largest oil spills.
Hussein's forces in 1991 also dumped oil into the desert,
creating the largest landlocked oil spill in history. The
spills resulted in oil lakes scattered throughout the fragile
desert ecosystem. Some migratory birds died by mistaking the
oil lakes for water sources.
Iraqi troops also set fire to hundreds of oil wells, which
burned in the desert for months. The Kuwaiti government
capped the last of the fires by November 1991.
The Gulf's Chernobyl
Environmentalists say the Gulf War's legacy is the greatest
environmental disaster in history.
"What we have in the Gulf region is a legacy of a petroleum
Chernobyl," said Brent Blackwelder of Friends of the Earth,
referencing the Soviet Union's nuclear disaster.
"It destroyed the Persian Gulf region along the Saudi
(Arabian) shores, the mangrove swamps, the fisheries. It
ruined the deserts. It spread its poison smoke plumes
throughout a massive region," Blackwelder said.
While there has been some environmental recovery, the
disaster's effects are still felt throughout the region.
Fishermen say their catches can be off as much as 80 percent
during some seasons.
Some migratory bird populations have not recovered,
environmentalists say.
And scientists are still studying the impact on human health,
particularly the effect of breathing oily smoke over the long
term.
Would he do it again?
Saddam Hussein's oil dumping track record gives
environmentalists little reason to believe he won't trash the
region's oil resources again.
Hussein's forces also dumped oil in 1983, during the
Iran-Iraq war.
From February into September of that year, the Iraqi military
dumped an estimated 2,000 to 10,000 barrels of crude a day
into the environment. Each barrel holds 42 gallons, or 159
liters.
The Iranian government finally stopped the spillage on
September 21, 1983.
Many world officials have accused Hussein of being more
concerned about maintaining his power than he is about his
people.
Environmentalists say his respect for the Earth is about the
same.
"He is prepared to sacrifice the land of his people, the land
of his ancestors, in an attempt to maintain power,"
Blackwelder told CNN.
CNN's Natalie Pawelski contributed to this report.

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