
Prologue
Washington, D.C., AP,
June 1, 2000 –
The U.S. State Department has traditionally labeled the following
countries as state sponsors of international terrorism: Cuba,
Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Sudan and Syria.
As
of June 1, 2000, the State Department officially stopped referring
to these nations by the term rogue nations, and instead
identified them as states of concern.
According
to the State Department, some of these countries have embarked
on a more democratic internal life. State Department spokesmen
cited Iran’s election of reformist parliamentary candidates
and North Korea’s decision to halt missile testing over the
Japanese home islands.
Shatt el Arab
January 2000
The three-car caravan shimmered under the hot sun
and the desert heat. Even during the colder months, the land between
Iraq and Iran sat like a hot griddle sizzling everything that crossed
it. The sand was saturated with the blood of martyrs and infidels.
During the eighties, the Iranian Mullahs sent human wave attacks
over the broken and stony ground to meet the Russian-made, Iraqi-purchased
artillery and machine gun emplacements. The world roared with jackhammer
clarity and the thirsty sand sucked up the bloody carnage.
Ayatollah Kambiz Abbasi had a new
mandate in a land where blood and death were as common as sand and
wind. Tehran had suffered a nuclear event. A low yield weapon had
detonated a few short weeks ago. The explosive blast had killed
thousands and shocked the world to the tragedy of the terrorist
mentality. He feared the weapon was one of Russia’s suitcase-size
nuclear weapons. A weapon similar to the ten purchased by Iran’s
ruling Mullahs for use against the United States—the Great Satan.
Innuendo and rumor became part of
the general discourse as the Mullahs refused all Western aid and
snubbed the cash-strapped Russians. Persia—Iran’s true name—did
not need Western charity with its hangers-on of Christian missionaries
and CIA spies. Persia was a great power, striving for the day when
she would once again have the might to make the earth quake in her
shadow—a missile-borne, nuclear-tipped shadow.
Abbasi argued that they could not
know which great power was responsible for the atrocity; therefore,
both the Russian Bear and the American Eagle should be punished.
The Mullahs, who drove the populace back to a thirteenth century
mind set and sought to employ twenty-first century weapons, found
the logic compelling. Their discussions were secret and stark. They
did not play to an expectant media or seek to charm any special
interest beyond themselves. They were both lawgivers and deathbringers.
In the end, they agreed to Abbasi’s suggestions, and gave him charter
to carry out the deed. After all, they sat atop a petroleum ocean,
and the entire world would have to deal with them eventually. They
feared no man, and believed they served God.
*
Two white vans plunged over the dusty gravel. They
crossed the border between Iraq and Iran at Abadan and snaked over
the poorly maintained roads to the meeting place. Saddam Hussein—the
Great leader—and his eldest son, Uday, rode together. Saddam’s grievance
with the United States was legendary and his country continued to
reel from the vengeful American presence.
Kuwait and Saudi Arabia mouthed words
regarding Arab Unity while American carrier task forces trolled
the Persian Gulf, and launched strike aircraft to strafe and bomb
his country. Monetary sanctions remained in place, and the meddlesome
Americans continued to stir dissent with the Kurds to the north.
His enmity for former President George Bush was palpable, and he
had been tied to an unsuccessful assassination attempt when Bush
visited Kuwait. It prompted President Clinton to launch over one
hundred cruise missiles into Iraq.
Conservatively, Iraq and Iran lost over
a one million combatants on the ground where they met today. In
the peculiar alchemy unique to the Middle East where the enemy
of my enemy is my friend, the hated Americans proved to be the
prime target for inheritors of the Babylonian and Persian Empires.
Neither party broached the topic that once the Western interlopers
were dispatched, the two great powers would meet again on the field
of battle, and this time there would be no stalemate.
Uday Hussein was considered by most
analysts to be even more unstable and unpredictable than his father.
He was also the heir apparent. If ruthlessness is a genetic trait,
then Saddam Hussein was the procreator of the pure strain. Murder
and terror were twin demons ravaging Iraq, and, less than nine precious
years since the Gulf War, Saddam had managed to rebuild his army
to one thousand battle tanks.
The violent purveyors disembarked
from their vehicles and walked to an open tent, a simple table,
and hard benches. Saddam Hussein, Uday Hussein, and Kambiz Abbasi
gathered over the hard ground to plot vengeance—a meal best served
cold.
Abbasi considered the rumors that
Saddam suffered from cancer. Rumors also placed Iran as the perpetrator
behind the 1997 assassination attempt on Uday. Neither man broached
a subject that might jeopardize their tenuous alliance.
The street-thug–turned–dictator coughed
grievously and explained, "I’m not dead yet—if that’s what
you are wondering."
Uday did nothing to comfort his father.
It was curious enough that Uday still breathed, considering the
rash of fratricide amongst his siblings. Saddam might actually be
considering the needs of the future—although a future absent of
Uday would certainly be more peaceful.
They bantered and bargained like
pair of Bedouin chieftains over water rights at a well. Both men
knew they would reach a pact over this parlay. The prize was too
delicious to resist. Once the broad outlines of the plan were secured,
Saddam slammed his hand flat on the wooden table.
"There is one more thing,"
he rasped. His strength was fleeing his weakened body, and a nervous
gaggle of doctors looked on from the second van. Their lives were
forfeit should the Great Leader succumb on their watch.
"Yes," asked Abbasi cautiously.
"Buuuusssshhh is running for
the American Presidency—the son of my great enemy," he wheezed.
Running for Presidency and achieving
the prize were two vastly different spectacles, but Abbasi continued
to listen quietly.
"If the son becomes President,
then he too is part of this deal," declared Saddam.
Abbasi pursed his lips and nodded.

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ROGUE STATE
Douglas De Bono
ISBN 0-9579858-1-9
383 pages
$17.95
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