Date: Friday, July 18, 2008, 11:59 AM












 http://english. aljazeera. net/focus/ 2008/07/20087166 397881715. html
 




 








Mark Levine says Bush is as responsible for the disaster in Iraq as Bashir is 
for the humanitarian catastrophe in Darfur [GALLO/GETTY] 

While there is little chance Omar al-Bashir, the Sudanese president, will ever 
be brought to trial following his indictment by the International Criminal 
Court (ICC), the charges brought against him nevertheless offer hope for anyone 
concerned about human rights around the world.
For Americans, however, the ICC indictment should offer a moment of sombre 
reflection not merely for our relative inaction with regard to years of mass 
murder in Sudan.
It is equally disturbing that much of the al-Bashir indictment could just as 
easily be applied to George Bush, the US president.
Here is part of what the indictment says:
"Bashir was directly responsible [for the activities of the militias]. He is 
the president. He is the commander-in- chief. Those are not just formal words. 
He used the whole state apparatus. He used the army; he enrolled the 
militia/Janjaweed. They all report to him. They all obey him. His control is 
absolute."
In such context, Bush is also directly responsible for the horrific disaster in 
Iraq.
Bush's imperial presidency, with its "Unitary Executive" and arrogation of the 
right to declare war from the constitutionally- appointed Congress, has 
similarly "used the whole state apparatus" to wage the Iraq war. He "enrolled" 
our soldiers and his military commanders who "all report to him".
For Bush, like al-Bashir, "they all obey him. His control is absolute".
Iraq's chaos
When I was in Iraq in the late winter and early spring of 2004 I saw this 
clearly, and saw the already huge scale of the war crimes being committed 
systematically by US forces across the country.
It was clear to most Iraqis that the chaos being reaped by the US in their 
country was in fact deliberately sown by the US in order to create a situation 
that would make any US withdrawal almost impossible to pull off.
While the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis - for which Bush, and along 
with him, the American people who twice elected him, are responsible - is 
tragic, it should not be understated that the invasion itself was a crime 
against humanity.
The war and invasion were in clear breach of the UN charter, which prohibits 
invading other countries except when an attack on one's sovereign territory is 
about to occur or has just occurred.
Add to that US torturing of prisoners, illegal secret renditions, and a host of 
other human rights abuses, and you have a long list of actions that are 
prohibited and outlawed by US federal law.
Ideal America
In an America that still lived up to its founding ideals Bush and his henchmen 
and women would not be worrying about an ICC indictment because they would be 
too busy already defending themselves against a US federal indictment for war 
crimes and other violations of US law.
At least in this imperfect world, Bush and the architects and executioners of 
the Iraq war can join al-Bashir in suffering the ignominy of being at-large 
international criminals.
Mark Levine is a professor of Middle East history at the University of 
California, Irvine and is the author of the newly released Heavy Metal Islam: 
Rock, Resistance, and the Struggle for the Soul of Islam.
Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger .yahoo.com  














      

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke