Dilip might find this interesting.

cm



Op-Ed Contributor

The Trials of the Century

By LAWRENCE WRIGHT

Published: September 22, 2006


Austin, Tex.

THE fifth anniversary of 9/11 has come and gone, 
but there was a conspicuous figure missing from 
the retrospectives and commentaries: Osama bin 
Laden.

Al Qaeda's founder has clearly been marginalized 
even in his own movement, as other jihadist 
spokesmen, Ayman al-Zawahri and an American, Adam 
Gadahn, issued threats and demanded that 
Americans convert to Islam. Meantime, Pakistan 
has negotiated a truce with tribal chiefs 
promising to keep troops out of the Waziristan 
districts, where the leadership of Al Qaeda may 
be hiding, and the C.I.A. has closed Alec 
Station, the unit devoted to finding Mr. bin 
Laden. He is the forgotten man.

Fortunately, there are still some members of the 
American intelligence community who are 
interested in the terrorist's whereabouts. Not 
long ago one of them approached me - not because 
of my reporting on Al Qaeda but because of my 
experience as a Hollywood screenwriter, a talent 
pool the C.I.A. occasionally draws on for 
futurist thinking. The official asked me to 
envision what we would do with Mr. bin Laden if 
we caught him. I said that I didn't feel 
comfortable, as a reporter, writing a script for 
the C.I.A.

I have given the idea some thought, however. 
Osama bin Laden is arguably the most famous man 
alive, and his name will resound through history. 
If we do have the good fortune of actually 
capturing him, the manner in which we bring him 
to justice will make a critical difference in the 
way in which his legacy will unfold. Here is my 
scenario for how this movie could end.

First, don't kill him. He'd become a martyr 
instantly, which is of course his goal. His death 
at the hands of Americans would be the ideal 
finale from a Qaeda perspective. Deny him that 
victory at all costs.

And, please, don't send him to Guantánamo or 
torture him in an undisclosed location. That 
route leads to his becoming a symbol of 
resistance to the erosion of the American legal 
system. The world will want to know what happens 
to him, and if he is hidden away, or subjected to 
a secret trial, then his reputation will soar as 
ours plummets. He has to be accorded the 
civilized treatment that he and his movement 
would never offer their enemies.

But don't bring him to the United States to 
answer for his crimes, at least not at the 
beginning. His followers would never accept the 
verdict of an American court. And, more to the 
point, neither would hundreds of thousands, 
perhaps millions, of Muslims who sympathize with 
him and his cause. It's that audience that we 
have to address in our attempt to roll back Mr. 
bin Laden's awful legacy.

Moreover, if he were tried in an American court, 
one can easily envision wide-scale attacks on 
American holdings and Americans being held for 
ransom in exchange for the terrorist leader. 
Placing him in the dock of the World Court would 
involve similar risks, and could lead to the sort 
of prolonged trial that sees him dying of natural 
causes, as in the case of Slobodan Milosevic.

We should, instead, offer him to the authorities 
in Kenya, where, on Aug. 7, 1998, a Qaeda suicide 
bomber murdered 213 people in the attack on the 
American Embassy. More than 150 people were 
blinded by flying glass in the attack - most of 
them Africans who were in or near the embassy or 
the secretarial school across the street, which 
was flattened by the blast. Let Mr. bin Laden sit 
in a courtroom in Nairobi and explain to those 
blind Africans that he was aiming only at an icon 
of American power.

Then take him to Tanzania, where on the same 
August morning Al Qaeda hit another American 
Embassy, killing 11 people, most of them Muslims. 
The terrorists excused the murder of their 
co-religionists by saying that the bombing took 
place on a Friday, when good Muslims should have 
been in a mosque. That would be an excellent 
venue to pose the question of what Islam really 
stands for.

Thus exposed as a mass murderer of Africans who 
had no part in his quarrel with America, Mr. bin 
Laden would be ready to stand trial for the 
bombing of the American destroyer Cole and, of 
course, 9/11. By treating him as a criminal 
defendant instead of a enemy combatant, we could 
underline the differences between a civil society 
and the Taliban-like rule he seeks to impose on 
Muslim countries and eventually the entire world.

Mr. bin Laden could go on to many other venues to 
answer for his crimes - Istanbul, Casablanca, 
Madrid, London, Islamabad - but in my opinion 
there is an obvious last stop on his tour of 
justice: his homeland, Saudi Arabia, where 
hundreds of his countrymen and expatriate workers 
have died at the hands of Al Qaeda. There he 
would be tried in a Shariah court, the only law 
he would ever recognize.

If he were found guilty, he would be taken to a 
park in the middle of downtown Riyadh known as 
"Chop Chop Square." There, the executioner would 
greet him with his long, heavy sword at his side. 
It is a Saudi tradition that the executioner 
personally beseeches the audience, composed of 
the victims of the condemned man's crimes, to 
forgive the condemned. If they cannot, the 
executioner will carry out his task. After that, 
Osama bin Laden's body would be taken to an 
unmarked tomb in a Wahhabi graveyard, as he would 
have wanted.

There are other ways this movie could end, and as 
a screenwriter I can't say that any of them are 
"happy" in the conventional Hollywood sense. But 
drama demands resolution, in real life as well as 
fiction. Since the Greeks, dramatists have known 
that a good ending is one that acknowledges the 
longing of the audience for justice and the sense 
that order has been restored.

I think the American intelligence community would 
be wise to pay attention to those ancient 
artistic dictates. The role that Osama bin Laden 
has cast himself in is that of the hero to 
Muslims who feel slighted by history and 
victimized by the West. It is a legend that could 
last for hundreds of years and inspire many 
generations of future terrorists. By turning his 
actions in other parts of the world against him, 
we can justly put that legend to rest.

_______________________________________________
assam mailing list
[email protected]
http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org

Reply via email to