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bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful



=== News Update ===


The Myth of the "Anfal Genocide" Saddam Hussein Did Not "Kill the Kurds"

David Hungerford, Al-Moharer.net

November 14, 2006

Many crimes against Iraq have been justified by the demonization of Saddam 
Hussein.  Invasion was justified by claims that he possessed "weapons of 
mass destruction," had ties to al-Qaeda, and posed a threat to the 
territorial United States.

The claims turned out to be lies. There were no "weapons of mass 
destruction" or programs to develop them. There were no ties to al-Qaeda. 
He did not threaten U.S. territory.

Those who still support the occupation now say it was justified because 
Saddam Hussein was a "brutal dictator." One of the main complaints against 
him is that "he killed the Kurds." The usual reference is the Anfal 
campaign of the Iraqi army from February 23, 1988 to September 6, 1988. It 
is claimed that Anfal was a campaign of genocide. It can now be said that 
the "Anfal genocide" never happened. It is another lie.

Ironically it is the second of the illegal U.S.-run "trials" of Mr. Hussein 
in Baghdad that allows this conclusion. The facts and circumstances of the 
"trial" can be analyzed without any concession to the legitimacy of the 
"court." Nor, since it is illegal, is there any reason to wait for the 
"court's" findings before reaching one’s own conclusions. Applicable 
principles of international law are presented in Appendix A.

Certain facts are not in dispute. The campaign took place in the late 
stages of the Iran-Iraq war. The Iraqi army fought units of the Iranian 
army in Northern Iraq. Kurdish guerillas called peshmerga allied with Iran 
against the government of their own country. In order to suppress the 
guerillas the Iraqi government displaced large numbers of Kurdish civilians 
from border areas.

Press reports say the current charge is genocide during Anfal. By any 
definition the crime of genocide means the extermination of large numbers 
of people. At first no definite number of civilian fatalities was given in 
news reports, but in September the "prosecution" was several times reported 
to say there were 182,000 deaths.

The "trial" on the Anfal charges began on August 21, 2006. There were 13 
sessions of the "court" between that date and September 26, at which time 
it recessed. See Appendix B for the tabulation of articles.

In the press reports studied for this analysis no statement or presentation 
of methodology was reported. No systematic studies were reported. No sworn 
affidavits were reported. No expert testimony was reported. Evidence of 
this kind would have been front-page news. It can be concluded that no such 
evidence was introduced.

Instead all testimony was anecdotal. As an example, on August 22, the first 
day of testimony, a witness named Ali Mustapha Hama was heard. He testified 
to events in the village of Balisan on April 16, 1987. The BBC reported 
that he said "there was greenish smoke, and minutes later, a smell like 
rotten apples or garlic. He spoke of a newborn infant who was trying to 
'smell life', but breathed in the chemicals and died. Many others died too, 
he added. During cross-examination, defence lawyers asked Mr. Hama how he 
knew the aircraft were Iraqi, and prompted Hama to say he had helped 
shelter guerrillas in his village."

The death of an infant is a very bad thing. Still, the number of fatalities 
definitely averred by Mr. Hama is one. He also admitted that there was 
guerilla activity in his village. Genocide is a large-scale crime against 
civilians, meant to exterminate an ethnic group. Thus Mr. Hama’s testimony 
did nothing to establish genocide. Another witness heard the same day was 
not even reported to have made any definite statement of fatalities.

Between August 22 and September 26 the news reports speak of seventeen 
witnesses. Definite statements of fatalities came to a total of 43. Some of 
the fatalities could have overlapped. No attempt to differentiate between 
civilian and military casualties was reported.

Of the fifteen witnesses three admitted to having been peshmerga guerillas, 
whereas genocide is a crime against civilians. One of the three former 
guerillas, Moussa Abdullah Moussa, now lives in Tennessee. Another witness, 
Katrin Michael, now lives in Virginia.

One of the witnesses, Mahmoud Hama Aziz, testified on September 9 to 7 
fatalities at an unstated location in 1987, prior to Anfal. The New York 
Times reported the next day that evidence bearing on Mr. Aziz' testimony 
had been found in a mass grave discovered in 2004, whereas the 
"prosecution" claims investigations have been going on since 1991 (see 
Doebbler, below.) The timing of the "discovery" is so convenient as to 
raise still more doubts.

Twenty-one of the 43 fatalities including the Balisan incident occurred in 
1987, before Anfal. That leaves at most 22 during the Anfal period or at 
times not stated. The question arises as to what happened to the other 
181,978 of the 182,000 claimed victims. At this rate it will take about 689 
years to account for the alleged fatalities.

Hence in the first month of proceedings the "prosecution" presented no case 
at all.

The original trial judge was removed for political reasons on September 20 
(see below.) Later sessions descended from farce into chaos. Defense 
lawyers boycotted the "trial" on orders of Mr. Hussein. Anonymous 
"witnesses" gave testimony behind a screen; documents were stolen from 
defense attorney Badia Arif Izzat in the courtroom building, and so forth.

The prosecution has had all the time and opportunity needed to formulate a 
case. The alleged events occurred eighteen years ago. Northern Iraq has 
been out of Baghdad’s control since 1996 when the Clinton administration 
unilaterally imposed the "no-fly" zones on Iraq.

Nor has there been any lack of investigative expertise and money. The New 
York Times reported on July 1, 2004 that "The Federal Bureau of 
Investigation is leading the investigation, along with the Bureau of 
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and agents from the Justice Department." The 
NYT also said on July 20, 2005 that the U.S. had spent more than $35 
million on the investigations.

In a case as intensely political as this it must be presumed that at the 
beginning the "prosecution" will present its case at its strongest. It 
presented a shambles. Moreover the scale of time and resources behind the 
"prosecution" removes any argument that a case could be made with more 
effort. There is only one way that is at all plausible, likely, or 
straightforward to explain the "prosecution’s" failure to even begin to 
make any case: there was no "Anfal genocide."

Other circumstances support the same conclusion.

The charges are not even clear. None of the cited news reports give more 
than the word "genocide." The specification of charges might answer some 
questions. A moderate effort found a document termed a "charging 
instrument" for the first "trial" of Mr. Hussein, the Dujail case. It is 
posted 
at: 
<http://www.law.case.edu/saddamtrial/documents/20060515_indictment_trans_saddam_hussein.pdf>http://www.law.case.edu/saddamtrial/documents/20060515_indictment_trans_saddam_hussein.pdf.
 
Charges for the Anfal "trial" were not posted at the same site, however. 
Repeated internet searches using "charging instrument" and/or other search 
terms failed to find the corresponding prosecution statement for the Anfal 
"trial." Hence the "prosecution" case is not easily available. It is 
apparent that the Bush administration and the "prosecution" do not want 
their case to be known to the public.

The most basic and routine of defendant’s rights are violated. Defense 
attorney Curtis Doebbler writes:

The violations of unfair trial are too numerous to mention here, but 
include almost every provision in article 14 of the International Covenant 
on Civil and Political Rights that could be violated at this juncture of 
the proceedings. . .

The prosecution alleges to have been collecting evidence since at least 
1991 ­ which, of course, could only be true if it were the United States 
government doing the collecting ­ and has at least been doing so since 
April 2003 when dozens of American lawyers and Iraqis who had not lived in 
Iraq for years were shuttled in to build a case. The defense lawyers, 
despite requesting visits with their client since December 2003 when he was 
detained, have to date not been allowed the confidential visits that are 
necessary to begin to prepare a defense. No visits were allowed with the 
most senior lawyers until after the trial had started and at each visit 
American officials exercise the authority to read any materials brought 
into the visiting room despite the fact that all meetings remain under 
close audio and visual surveillance. As if this were not enough, evidence 
has been withheld from the defense lawyers. They have been denied access to 
investigative hearings; they have been denied prior notice of witnesses, 
and they are prevented from even visiting the site of the alleged crime.

<http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/forumy/2006/04/farce-of-law-trial-of-saddam-hussein.php>http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/forumy/2006/04/farce-of-law-trial-of-saddam-hussein.php

If any sound "prosecution" case was possible these abuses would be 
unnecessary.

Mr. Hussein's defense team has been denied physical security despite 
repeated requests. During the first "trial" three of his attorneys were 
murdered. During the current "trial" legal assistant Abdel Monem Yassin 
Hussein was murdered. He was kidnapped on August 29. His body was found 
five days later. The murders of defense personnel argue further against the 
possibility of any "prosecution" case.

The blatantly political nature of the "trial" was exposed again on 
September 20, when puppet Iraqi "prime minister" Nuri al-Maliki removed 
judge Abdullah al-Amiri from the case. The reason for this outrageous abuse 
was reported by the New York Times on September 15 as follows:

One witness, a Kurdish farmer, testified that in 1988 he had pleaded with 
Mr. Hussein for the life of his wife and seven young children. He said a 
furious Mr. Hussein shouted, "Shut up and get out."

In court, Mr. Hussein jumped up to defend himself.

"Why did he try to see Saddam Hussein?" he asked the judge, referring to 
himself in the third person, as is his habit in court. "Wasn't Saddam a 
dictator and an enemy to the Kurdish people, as they say?"

The judge replied: "I will answer you: you are not a dictator. Not a 
dictator," he repeated. "You were not a dictator."

Mr. Hussein, smiling, replied, "Thank you."



Five days later the judge was removed. If the alleged events of 1988 had 
really occurred it is extremely unlikely that the puppet "government" would 
again have discredited itself and the "trial" with this shameless interference.

Even more extraordinarily, an AP report on August 21 said that "the trial 
does not deal with the most notorious gassing ­ the March 1988 attack on 
Halabja that killed an estimated 5,000 Kurds. That incident will be part of 
a separate investigation by the Iraqi High Tribunal."  The report did not 
say why Halabja is to be treated separately.

The Halabja incident is the biggest thing in the "genocide" case. The 
"prosecution" has dismembered its own case. It is trying to carry water by 
knocking the bottom out of its own bucket. The omission strongly suggests 
that there is no more to the Halabja story than there is to the "Anfal 
genocide."

***

The most serious doubts arise repeatedly that any valid case against Mr. 
Hussein can be made. Just as in the notorious "Downing Street Memo" minutes 
of a July, 2002 meeting of the British cabinet, "the intelligence and facts 
were being fixed around the policy."

In the United States the burden of proof is on the prosecution to prove its 
case "beyond reasonable doubt." The defects of the "prosecution's" case are 
so great as to constitute overwhelming doubt. There is no reason at all to 
believe that genocide was committed in the Anfal campaign. Only one 
conclusion can be drawn: the "Anfal genocide" never happened.

***

In all of the years of its war with Iraq U.S. imperialism has had only one 
significant political success: the demonization of Saddam Hussein. The 
"brutal, corrupt dictator" line is heard across the political spectrum. 
Investigation would seem unnecessary.

One result is that to a great degree antiwar opinion sees the war in Iraq 
as no more than a war for oil. It is insufficient to stop without looking 
at Iraq, but that is what almost always happens.

Firstly, the oil already belongs to Iraq. From its side the war has always 
been a war for sovereignty, i.e., its rights of national 
self-determination. Since occupation it has also become a war for 
independence.

"War for oil" also raises further questions. There are many ways to get 
oil. War is the worst way to get it. The question is why U.S. imperialism 
has resorted to war.  There are many countries that have oil. The United 
Arab Emirates has almost as much oil as Iraq but nothing is ever heard 
about it. The question is why Iraq is different.

Again the answer is that modern pre-occupation Iraq always fully asserted 
its rights of sovereignty. The war is Iraq is an unjust war for oil versus 
a just war for sovereignty and independence.

The highest questions of any war are questions of historical content and 
direction, questions of just and unjust causes. Antiwar opinion is most of 
the time not even aware of these questions. More than anything else it is 
the demonization of Saddam Hussein that denies the masses a full 
understanding of the war.

The revolutionary significance of Iraq’s great struggle disappears. The 
linkage of the struggle in Iraq to that of Palestine disappears. Too often 
the need to support the just and heroic Iraqi resistance becomes lost; too 
often the necessity to immediately demand unconditional withdrawal of all 
foreign forces as objectively the only way to end the war becomes lost.

Very little about Iraq and nothing at all about Saddam Hussein should ever 
be accepted on the basis of authority. There are no such authorities in the 
U.S. government. There are no such authorities in the U.S. media. There are 
no such academic authorities. There are no such authorities in the antiwar 
movement. Throw away all "authoritative" ideas about Saddam Hussein!

There are only determinations: sound methods, sound concepts, facts and 
logic, history. On method one can, for instance, look at the Iraqi side 
directly. Daily accounts of resistance activities are posted in English 
at: 
<http://www.albasrah.net/pages/mod.php?header=res1&mod=gis&rep=rep>http://www.albasrah.net/pages/mod.php?header=res1&mod=gis&rep=rep.
 
Political statements of the Iraqi Baath Arab Socialist Party and 
pre-occupation speeches of President Saddam Hussein are posted at 
<http://www.al-moharer.net/qiwa_shabiya/qiwa.html>http://www.al-moharer.net/qiwa_shabiya/qiwa.html.
 


The war will end and can only end in the defeat of imperialism and its 
expulsion from the Persian Gulf. The people of Iraq are stronger than 
imperialism. Though the whole world shatter, and well it may, in the end 
the people of Iraq will win.

Victory to Iraq!

Down With Imperialism!

source:
http://www.uruknet.de/?p=m28255&hd=&size=1&l=e

===



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