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CIAO DATE: 07/02
Iraq's Military Capabilities: Fighting A Wounded, But Dangerous, Poisonous Snake
Anthony H. Cordesman, Arleigh A. Burke Chair for
Strategy Center for Strategic and International Studies
The Center for Strategic and International Studies
December 2001
If we go to war with Iraq, we will go to war with forces that are the military equivalent of a wounded poisonous snake. They are weakened, but still dangerous, and they may lash out in ways that are truly dangerous. In broad terms, Iraq's forces have been in steadily decline ever since the beginning of the fighting in the Gulf War. They have been weakened by military defeat, by the impact of UN inspections, by wars of underfunding and by a decade without significant arms imports. At the same time, they are still the most powerful conventional forces in the Gulf, and Iraq may have some very unconventional weapons.
Full Text (PDF, 10 pages, 32K)