[House Document 104-106]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
104th Congress, 1st Session - - - - - - - - - - - - House
Document 104-106
DEVELOPMENTS CONCERNING THE NATIONAL EMERGENCY WITH RESPECT TO IRAQ
__________
MESSAGE
from
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
transmitting
A REPORT ON DEVELOPMENTS SINCE HIS LAST REPORT OF FEBRUARY 8, 1995,
CONCERNING THE NATIONAL EMERGENCY WITH RESPECT TO IRAQ, PURSUANT TO 50
U.S.C. 1703(c)
August 1, 1995.--Message referred to the Committee on International
Relations and ordered to be printed
To the Congress of the United States:
I hereby report to the Congress on the developments since
my last report of February 8, 1995, concerning the national
emergency with respect to Iraq that was declared in Executive
Order No. 12722 of August 2, 1990. This report is submitted
pursuant to section 401(c) of the National Emergencies Act, 50
U.S.C. 1641(c), and section 204(c) of the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act, 50 U.S.C. 1703(c).
Executive Order No. 12722 ordered the immediate blocking of
all property and interests in property of the Government of
Iraq (including the Central Bank of Iraq) then or thereafter
located in the United States or within the possession or
control of a U.S. person. That order also prohibited the
importation into the United States of goods and services of
Iraqi origin as well as the exportation of goods, services, and
technology from the United States to Iraq. The order prohibited
travel-related transactions to or from Iraq and the performance
of any contract in support of any industrial, commercial, or
governmental project in Iraq. United States persons were also
prohibited from granting or extending credit or loans to the
Government of Iraq.
The foregoing prohibitions (as well as the blocking of
Government of Iraq property) were continued and augmented on
August 9, 1990, by Executive Order No. 12724, which was issued
in order to align the sanctions imposed by the United States
with United Nations Security Council Resolution 661 of August
6, 1990.
Executive Order No. 12817 was issued on October 21, 1992,
to implement in the United States measures adopted in United
Nations Security Council Resolution 778 of October 2, 1992.
Resolution 778 requires U.N. Member States to transfer to a
U.N. escrow account any funds (up to $200 million apiece)
representing Iraqi-oil sale proceeds paid by purchasers after
the imposition of U.N. sanctions on Iraq, to finance Iraq's
obligations for U.N. activities with respect to Iraq, such as
expenses to verify Iraqi weapons destruction, and to provide
humanitarian assistance in Iraq on a nonpartisan basis. A
portion of the escrowed funds also funds the activities of the
U.N. Compensation Commission in Geneva, which handles claims
from victims of the Iraqi invasion and occupation of Kuwait.
Member States also may make voluntary contributions to the
account. The funds placed in the escrow account are to be
returned, with interest, to the Member States that transferred
them to the United Nations, as funds are received from future
sales of Iraqi oil authorized by the U.N. Security Council. No
Member State is required to fund more than half of the total
transfers or contributions to the escrow account.
This report discusses only matters concerning the national
emergency with respect to Iraq that was declared in Executive
Order No. 12722 and matters relating to Executive Orders No.
12724 and 12817 (the ``Executive orders''). The report covers
events from February 2, 1995, through August 1, 1995.
1. During the reporting period, there were no amendments to
the Iraqi Sanctions Regulations.
2. The Department of the Treasury's office of Foreign
Assets Control (``FAC'') continues its involvement in lawsuits
seeking to prevent the unauthorized transfer of blocked Iraqi
assets. In Consarc Corporation v. Iraqi-ministry of Industry
and Minerals, a briefing schedule has been set for disposition
of FAC's December 16, 1994, appeal of the district court's
order of October 17, 1994, transferring blocked property.
Investigations of possible violations of the Iraqi
sanctions continue to be pursued and appropriate enforcement
actions taken. There are currently 43 enforcement actions
pending, including nine cases referred by FAC to the U.S.
Customs Service for joint investigation. Additional FAC civil
penalty notices were prepared during the reporting period for
violations of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act
and Iraqi sanction Regulations with respect to transactions
involving Iraq. Three penalties totaling $8,905 were collected
from two banks for funds transfers in violation of the
prohibitions against transactions involving Iraq.
3. Investigation also continues into the roles played by
various individuals and firms outside Iraq in the Iraqi
government procurement network. These investigations may lead
to additions to FAC's listing of individuals and organizations
determined to be Specially Designated Nationals (``SDNs'') of
the Government of Iraq.
4. Pursuant to Executive Order No. 12817 implementing
United Nations Security Council Resolution 778, on October 26,
1992, FAC directed the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to
establish a blocked account for receipt of certain post-August
6, 1990, Iraqi-oil sales proceeds, and to hold, invest, and
transfer these funds as required by the Order. On March 21,
1995, following payments by the Governments of Canada
($1,780,749.14), the European Community ($399,695.21), Kuwait
($2,500,000.00), Norway ($261,758.10), and Switzerland
($40,000.00), respectively, to the special United Nations-
controlled account, entitled ``United Nations Security Council
Resolution 778 Escrow Account,'' the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York was directed to transfer a corresponding amount of
$4,982,202.45 from the blocked account it holds to the United
Nations-controlled account. Similarly, on April 5, 1995,
following the payment of $5,846,238.99 by the European
Community, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York was directed to
transfer a corresponding amount of $5,846,238.99 to the United
Nations-controlled account. Again, on May 23, 1995, following
the payment of $3,337,941.75 by the European Community,
$571,428.00 by the Government of the Netherlands and
$1,200,519.05 by the Government of the United Kingdom, the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York was directed to transfer a
corresponding amount of $5,109,888.80 to the United Nations-
controlled account. Finally, on June 19, 1995, following the
payment of $915,584.96 by the European Community and
$736,923.12 by the Government of the United Kingdom, the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York was directed to transfer a
corresponding amount of $1,652,508.08 to the United Nations-
controlled account. Cumulative transfers from the blocked
Federal Reserve Bank of New York account since issuance of
Executive Order No. 12817 have amounted to $175,133,026.20 of
the up to $200 million that the United States is obligated to
match from blocked Iraqi oil payments, pursuant to United
Nations Security Council Resolution 778.
5. The Office of Foreign Assets Control has issued a total
of 590 specific licenses regarding transactions pertaining to
Iraq or Iraqi assets since August 1990. Licenses have been
issued for transactions such as the filing of legal actions
against Iraqi governmental entities, legal representation of
Iraq, and the exportation to Iraq of donated medicine, medical
supplies, food intended for humanitarian relief purposes, the
execution of powers of attorney relating to the administration
of personal assets and decedents' estates in Iraq, the
protection of preexistent intellectual property rights in Iraq
and travel to Iraq for the purposes of visiting Americans
detained there. Since my last report, 57 specific licenses have
been issued.
6. The expenses incurred by the Federal Government in the 6
month period from February 2, 1995, through August 1, 1995,
which are directly attributable to the exercise of powers and
authorities conferred by the declaration of a national
emergency with respect to Iraq are reported to be about $4.9
million, most of which represents wage and salary costs for
Federal personnel. Personnel costs were largely centered in the
Department of the Treasury (particularly in the office of
Foreign Assets Control, the U.S. Customs Service, the Office of
the Under Secretary for Enforcement, and the Office of the
General Counsel), the Department of State (particularly the
Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs, the Bureau of Near
Eastern Affairs, the Bureau of International Organization
Affairs, the Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, the U.S.
Mission to the United Nations, and the Office of the Legal
Adviser) and the Department of Transportation (particularly the
U.S. Coast Guard).
7. The United States imposed economic sanctions on Iraq in
response to Iraq's illegal invasion and occupation of Kuwait, a
clear act of brutal aggression. The United States, together
with the international community, is maintaining economic
sanctions against Iraq because the Iraqi regime has failed to
comply fully with United Nations Security Council resolutions.
Security Council resolutions on Iraq call for the elimination
of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, Iraqi recognition of
Kuwait and the inviolability of the Iraq-Kuwait boundary, the
release of Kuwaiti and other third-country nationals,
compensation for victims of Iraqi aggression, long-term
monitoring of weapons of mass destruction capabilities, the
return of Kuwaiti assets stolen during Iraq's illegal
occupation of Kuwait, renunciation of terrorism, an end to
internal Iraqi repression of its own civilian population, and
the facilitation of access of international relief
organizations to all those in need in all parts of Iraq. More
than 5 years after the invasion, a pattern of defiance
persists: a refusal to account for missing Kuwaiti detainees;
failure to return Kuwaiti property worth millions of dollars,
including military equipment that was used by Iraq in its
movement of troops to the Kuwaiti border in October 1994;
sponsorship of assassinations in Lebanon and in northern Iraq;
incomplete declarations to weapons inspectors; and ongoing
widespread human rights violations. As a result, the U.N.
sanctions remain in place; the United States will continue to
enforce those sanctions under domestic authority.
The Baghdad government continues to violate basic human
rights of its own citizens through systematic repression of
minorities and denial of humanitarian assistance. The
Government of Iraq has repeatedly said it will not be bound by
United Nations Security Council Resolutions 688. For more than
4 years, Baghdad has maintained a blockade of foods, medicine,
and other humanitarian supplies against northern Iraq. The
Iraqi military routinely harasses residents of the north and
has attempted to ``Arabize'' the Kurdish, Turcomen, and
Assyrian areas in the north. Iraq has not relented in its
artillery attacks against civilian population centers in the
south or in its burning and draining operations in the southern
marshes, which have forced thousands to flee to neighboring
States. In April 1995, the U.N. Security Council adopted
resolutions 986 authorizing Iraq to export limited quantities
of oil (up to $1 billion per quarter) under U.N. supervision in
order to finance the purchase of food, medicine, and other
humanitarian supplies. The resolution includes arrangements to
ensure equitable distribution of such assistance to all the
people of Iraq. The resolution also provides for the payment of
compensation to victims of Iraqi aggression and for the funding
of other U.N. activities with respect to Iraq. Resolutions 986
was carefully crafted to address the issues raised by Iraq to
justify its refusal to implement similar humanitarian
resolutions adopted in 1991 (Resolutions 706 and 712), such as
oil export routes and questions of national sovereignty.
Nevertheless, Iraq refused to implement this humanitarian
measure. This only reinforces our view that Saddam Hussein is
unconcerned about the hardships suffered by the Iraqi people.
The policies and actions of the Saddam Hussein regime
continue to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the
national security and foreign policy of the United States as
well as to regional peace and security. The U.N. resolutions
require that the Security Council be assured of Iraq's peaceful
intentions in judging its compliance with sanctions. Because of
Iraq's failure to comply fully with these resolutions, the
United States will continue to apply economic sanctions to
deter it from threatening peace and stability in the region.
William J. Clinton.
The White House, August 1, 1995.