Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on What Lessons Should Be Learned For Enforced Disarmament From The Post-Desert Storm Experience In Iraq?. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. The extent to which current-day political situations hearken back to the memory of Desert Storm is both grand and far-reaching; to ignore the myriad lessons learned for enforced disarmament from the post-Desert Storm experience in Iraq is to be led blindly yet once again into a fatal web with a fearless, inhumane entity whose only objective is annihilation. The most important of many lessons to be learned for enforced disarmament from the post-Desert Storm experience in Iraq is that words are cheap. Stipulations of a peace agreement as a direct result of Desert Storm mandated Iraq to comply with specific requirements; when this did not happen as anticipated, it set a precedence with the manner by which Iraq has continued to dodge disarmament compliance. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCDsrtS.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
lessons learned for enforced disarmament from the post-Desert Storm experience in Iraq is to be led blindly yet once again into a fatal web with a fearless, inhumane entity whose
only objective is annihilation. The most important of many lessons to be learned for enforced disarmament from the post-Desert Storm experience in Iraq is that words are cheap.
Stipulations of a peace agreement as a direct result of Desert Storm mandated Iraq to comply with specific requirements; when this did not happen as anticipated, it set a precedence
with the manner by which Iraq has continued to dodge disarmament compliance. "The obligation is clearly on Iraq to account for what we know they had before and demonstrate
they are serious about disarmament. So far they have simply returned to the old game of hide and seek, while utterly failing to be candid even about the old
stuff" (Allard, 2003, p. PG). Critics contend that the lackadaisical - even wishy-washy - approach of the U.N. Special Commission (UNSCOM) is to blame for the repeat performance Iraq
is giving concerning disarmament. Post-Desert Storm presented an opportunity to see the Iraqi leader for what he is: a power crazed, myopic and highly dangerous authoritarian who would like
nothing better than to wipe the United States off the face of the map. To have ignored these blatant signals was bad enough but for the UNSCOM to now
vacillate upon its responsibility to enforce existing compliance enforcement is to clearly demonstrate the inherent weakness of such UN resolutions and how Iraq is easily gleefully preying upon this political
flaw. "One wonders what exactly would constitute clear evidence of Iraqi non-compliance - or if indeed the other UNSC members would ever do anything if such proof were found"
...