Description |
xviii, 304 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm |
Summary |
Sanctions are considered in a historical, political and legal context with focus on the role of the United States as a hegemonic power. Attention is given also to how the economic blockade might be reasonably viewed as a genocidal crime in violation of UN resolutions and the UN Genocide Convention |
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The Scourging of Iraq describes the impact of the 1991 Gulf War on the Iraqi people and land, and shows how the wartime suffering and devastation has been exacerbated ever since by the imposition of an extreme sanctions regime. Evidence is presented to show that food and medicine are being denied to the Iraqi people; and that, as one of many consequences, the United States is using virtual biological warfare against a civilian population. It is argued that both the prosecution of the US-led war and the protracted economic embargo have involved the United States in cynical violations of international law. Particular attention is given to the 1977 Protocol 1 addition to the 1949 Geneva Convention, which includes the words: 'Starvation of civilians as a method of warfare is prohibited' |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (273-289) and index |
Subject |
United Nations -- Iraq.
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United Nations. Security Council -- Resolutions.
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Economic sanctions -- Moral and ethical aspects.
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Persian Gulf War, 1991 -- Iraq.
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Economic sanctions -- Iraq.
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Sanctions (International law)
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LC no. |
96033706 |
ISBN |
0312161824 (hardcover) |
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