Why The Rush To Execute Saddam? 
By Tarek Fatah 

04 January, 2007
The Toronto Star

Four days after the ugly and degrading execution of Saddam Hussein, neither 
Prime Minister Stephen Harper nor any other Canadian politician has the courage 
to comment or say anything on the matter. 
The execution, which was more reminiscent of a public hanging in the 18th 
century than a considered act of 21st-century justice, has shocked even the 
harshest critics of Saddam, but has left our politicians in a state of 
paralyzed silence.

If the Canadian Prime Minister chose to maintain silence, the American 
president did not lose much sleep and managed to express his now familiar 
musing about freedom and liberty. George Bush may consider the hanging of 
Saddam Hussein "as a milestone on the road to Iraqi democracy," but the reality 
is that no one outside his administration, not even Saddam's executioners, take 
the U.S. president's prognosis seriously. 

The fact is that far from fostering democracy in Iraq, the execution of the 
Iraqi dictator has turned a murdering monster into a martyr of mythical 
proportions for the Arab people. 
Saddam's stature will grow across the Arab world as each day passes and his 
crimes against his own people will be largely forgotten as new generations of 
Arab youth will see in him a rare Arab who stared death in the face and did not 
blink.

The man responsible for the death, torture and imprisonment of tens of 
thousands, should have been remembered for those crimes. Instead, because of 
the great American folly in Iraq, future generations of people in the Middle 
East will embrace his memory as an epitome of courage and resistance. 
The fact that Saddam was sent to the gallows on the day a billion Muslims were 
commemorating the patriarch Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son to God – 
Eid al Azha – will add a religious texture to Saddam's legacy. 

Canada was not always a silent spectator on Iraq. In 1988 when Saddam was a 
U.S. client and had bombed the Kurds with chemical bombs, the United Nations 
Sub-Committee on Human Rights wanted to condemn Iraq for rights violations. 
However, so strong were the links between Saddam's Iraq and the U.S. that 
despite the massacre of the Kurds in Halabja, the vote was defeated 11 to 8. It 
was Canada and the Scandinavian countries that stood up to U.S. pressure and 
voted to censure Saddam's regime.

The question that remains unanswered and is a mystery to many is, why was there 
such haste in executing Saddam? Even though he was judged guilty by a 
questionable court, Saddam had yet to face a second trial where the charges 
were of a far more serious nature and which had international implications. His 
hurried execution appeared to be revenge, not justice. 

At the second trial, which began in August 2006, Saddam and six co-defendants 
were charged with genocide during the Anfal military campaign against the Kurds 
of northern Iraq. In March 1988, Iraqi air force jets allegedly dropped 
chemical bombs on the town of Halabja killing thousands. 

The trial could have shed much light on the massacre of the Kurds in Halabja. 
It could also have shed light on the links between Iraq and the U.S. during the 
Iran-Iraq War. At that time Saddam was a U.S. ally.

The trial would certainly have delved into the discussions former U.S. defence 
secretary Donald Rumsfeld had with Saddam during the three meetings the two had 
in Baghdad. 

In fact, the ties that bound the United States to Saddam go back to the 1960s 
when the CIA helped the Baath Party stage a coup against the pro-Communist 
government of Abdel-Karim Qassim. Hundreds of Iraqi leftists, identified by the 
CIA, were systematically murdered – killings in which Saddam himself is said to 
have participated.

Additionally, the Halabja trial would also have shed light on the claim by 
Stephen C. Pelletiere, the CIA's senior political analyst on Iraq during the 
Iran-Iraq War, that both Iran and Iraq "used gas against the other in the 
battle around Halabja." Pelletiere made the astonishing claim in The New York 
Times in January 2003 that the "condition of the dead Kurds' bodies, however, 
indicated they had been killed with a blood agent – that is, a cyanide-based 
gas – which Iran was known to use."

With the death of Saddam, the secrets that could have emerged at the Halabja 
trial will probably never come to light. 

His death will be a relief to those in America who feared being exposed for 
having aided Saddam as he murdered so many of his countrymen. 

To the teeming millions in the Muslim world who saw Saddam being led to his 
death by slogan-chanting masked men, his hanging was an act of revenge, not 
justice, a lynching, not the carrying out of a death sentence.

Tarek Fatah is the host of television's Muslim Chronicle on CTS and a founding 
member of the Muslim Canadian Congress. 
© Copyright Toronto Star 

===============================================================
Why The Rush To Execute Saddam? 
By Tarek Fatah 

http://countercurrents.org/iraq-fatah040107.htm

With the death of Saddam, the secrets that could have emerged at the Halabja 
trial will probably never come to light. His death will be a relief to those in 
America who feared being exposed for having aided Saddam as he murdered so many 
of his countrymen

The Consequences Of Killing Saddam 
By Robert Dreyfuss

http://countercurrents.org/iraq-dreyfuss040107.htm

In life, even in prison, Saddam inspired many loyalists to fight for his 
legacy; but his death is certain to spark even fiercer violence, not just from 
his remaining lieutenants and senior Baath party officials but throughout the 
broader Sunni Arab community in Iraq. It pushes any hope of Sunni-Shiite 
reconciliation farther away, inflames passions on both sides and solidifies the 
image of the United States in Iraq as a bloodthirsty occupier

Saddam Hussein Execution: A Sectarian Lynching 
By Patrick Martin

http://countercurrents.org/iraq-martin040107.htm

A video of the final minutes of Saddam Hussein, released to the Arab media late 
Saturday and widely broadcast around the world, demonstrates that the execution 
of the former Iraqi president was an act of sectarian vengeance by the Shiite 
Muslim groups placed in power by the US invasion of the country

A Lynching...
By Baghdad Burning

http://countercurrents.org/iraq-burning040107.htm

One of the most advanced countries in the world did not help to reconstruct 
Iraq, they didn't even help produce a decent constitution. They did, however, 
contribute nicely to a kangaroo court and a lynching. A lynching shall go down 
in history as America's biggest accomplishment in Iraq. So who's next? Who 
hangs for the hundreds of thousands who've died as a direct result of this war 
and occupation? Bush? Blair? Maliki? Jaffari? Allawi? Chalabi?




'Illegal' Execution Enrages Arabs 
By Dahr Jamail & Ali Al-Fadhily

http://countercurrents.org/iraq-jamail040706.htm

The execution of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein carried out at the start 
of the Muslim festival Eid al-Adha has angered Iraqis and others across the 
Middle East

Hussein And Ford = Dead Criminals 
By Mickey Z.

http://countercurrents.org/us-mickeyz040107.htm

All you need to know about America is summed up here: Saddam Hussein was "the 
next Hitler" while Gerald Ford was a "healer."

A Deathly December: Two Satraps And An Emperor 
By Niranjan Ramakrishnan

http://countercurrents.org/us-rama040107.htm

Fazed less and less by irony with each passing day, America lionized Pinochet, 
upon his death, as a visionary responsible for Chile's resurgence. In Saddam 
Hussein's case, it welcomed his execution as a vindication of the judicial 
process. All this, too, while simultaneously heaping praise upon the recently 
departed President Ford

Truth At Last, While Breaking A U.S. Taboo Of criticizing Israel 
By George Bisharat

http://countercurrents.org/pa-bisharat040107.htm

Americans owe a debt to former President Jimmy Carter for speaking long hidden 
but vital truths. His book Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid breaks the taboo 
barring criticism in the United States of Israel's discriminatory treatment of 
Palestinians. Our government's tacit acceptance of Israel's unfair policies 
causes global hostility against us

The Road From Minority Appeasement To Empowerment
By Warisha Farasat

http://countercurrents.org/ind-farasast040107.htm

The High Level Justice Sachar Committee was appointed to examine the social, 
economic and educational status of the Muslims in India. It confirms the 
uncomfortable fact that comparing indicators of socio economic development, 
it’s evident that Muslims fare worst than even the SC/STs

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