Iraq (1991)
Texto en Español
After the Persian Gulf War, Iraqi rebels who opposed Saddam
Hussein fled to the mountains in southern Turkey. These Kurds,
however, were not welcome in Turkey, either. Fred Cuny decided
his next project would be to help out the Kurds. He had to
decide what his primary goal would be; two of the possibilities
were to help the Kurds where they were, or to first try to move
them somewhere else.
Aiding the Kurds in their present position would require
building permanent refugee camps. But Cuny felt it was much
more humane to get the Kurds back to their homes as soon as
possible. He would not be able to do it alone, though. He knew
that military support would be needed, and Cuny was unsure as
to whether the U.S. government would provide such support. So
he needed to weigh the various possibilities, and come up with
a plan.
Once again, Cuny decided to think first of those in
distress. He promised that he would get the Kurds back to their
homes in Iraq in two months, and went about attracting support
for his plan. Fortunately, the U.S. and its allies pledged full
military support for Cuny's plan.


During "Operation Provide Comfort," Cuny directed the
construction of a transitional tent city, which was used to
house the Kurds in their journey home. Supplies were airlifted,
as well, and hundreds of thousands of Kurdish refugees were
successfully repatriated. It was another feather in the cap of
the energetic Texan.
Pictures of Iraq
Cite this page:
"Iraq (1991)"
Online Ethics Center for Engineering
2/16/2006
National Academy of Engineering
Accessed: Tuesday, February 07, 2012
<www.onlineethics.org/Topics/ProfPractice/Exemplars/BehavingWell/cunyintro/CunyIraq.aspx>