id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt pst.000020340032 United States. Congress. Joint Economic Committee. Subcommittee on Education and Health. Economic sanctions against Iraq : hearing before the Subcommittee on Education and Health of the Joint Economic Committee, Congress of the United States, One Hundred First Congress, second session, December 19, 1992 4.EC 7:IR 1/2 1992 .txt text/plain 25020 1765 71 He is saying, apart from the rollback of Iraqi forces and the replacement of the Saba family, removal of their war-making capability, the major source of regional instability, is a major goal of U.S. policy. But, thinking that sanctions will decimate the Iraqi military machine and cause Iraq to remove its chemical and nuclear capabilities seems to me to be going too far. secretaries of state and defense declared that the United Nation's far stronger sanctions against Iraq cannot be relied on to force a withdrawal from Kuwait. force capable of defending Saudi Arabia, and to rely on the economic sanctions to get Saddam out of Kuwait. recommitment to the administration's original and still espoused objectives of relying upon economic sanctions to force Saddam from Kuwait while deploying adequate military force to defend Saudi Arabia. ./cache/pst.000020340032.pdf ./txt/pst.000020340032.txt