National Review Online
May 07, 2004
Keeping the Promise
Let's keep our eyes on the prize.
By Mahdi al-Bassam

Over the past week, the world has seen images of atrocious prisoner abuse in
Iraq. There was outrage in Western Europe and the Arab world; France,
Russia, and secular Arabs were particularly vocal in their condemnation of
America. There were murmurs too from the United Nations.

Were it not for their hypocrisy, these condemnations would be quite
stirring. But just a decade or two ago, the same groups stood by while
hundreds of thousands of Iraqis were dumped into mass graves. They even
supplied Saddam with lethal chemicals subsequently used against the local
population. Where were those great humanitarian voices when Saddam was
carrying out his atrocities?

The same Arabs and Muslims who today decry the behavior of a few American
servicemen for years turned a blind eye to the mass murder, torture, and
gassing of their fellow Muslims. They watched - and condemned America for -
the suffering of the Iraqi people, all the while supporting the torturer
himself and literally stealing food and medicine from the mouths of starving
men, women, and children.

This hypocrisy speaks volumes about the people who rejected the liberation
of Iraq for there own greed. Saddam's orphans are guilty participants in his
most serious crimes.

If we are to ask for an apology on behalf of the Iraqi people, then we must
begin closer to the source of their agony. That means getting at the
underlying reasons for why the Coalition is in Iraq today and what can be
done to keep the American promise of a democratic Iraq. We must find out why
these governments, organizations, and individuals so vehemently opposed
helping the oppressed Iraqis.

Americans will certainly look deeper into what happened and why. America
must find a new level of honesty in its introspection. We must get the facts
straight before we can recommend a solution; Bush has promised as much. The
facts will lead us to those who committed and facilitated the torture. It is
wrong to prematurely blame Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld for what we
see on television, and it is absurd to reach a conclusion before all the
facts are out. The battle against terror demands that we correct our errors
and continue moving ahead.

As for the Iraqi people, this will be one more step toward obtaining a
sovereign democratic state. It would be just for them to be included in the
process of decision-making regarding this atrocity. The greatest justice
would be for the Iraqi people to come out of this ordeal with a truly
democratic secular state.

Bush, members of his cabinet, and the American people must hold true to the
promise they made to the Iraqi people of freedom, democracy, and the chance
for a better life. The president should make the bureaucracy implement his
vision, and this atrocity should be turned to further strengthen the growing
bond between the American and Iraqi people in their joint aspirations for
peace and democracy.

- Dr. Mahdi al-Bassam, a physician in Texas, is a founding member of the
Iraqi National Congress.

 http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/albassam200405070948.asp

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