|
Saddam - The Man Who Knew Too
Much Eric
Margolis Toronto Sun 12-21-3
- "Many Americans, misled by the administration and its
media allies into believing Saddam was somehow responsible for the 9/11
attacks, are lustily cheering Sheriff Bush and his posse. They are
unaware the demonized Iraqi leader used to be Washington's man in
Mesopotamia."
-
- Saddam Hussein's capture is being feted in Washington
as a political and personal triumph for President George W. Bush that
further increases his chances of winning re-election next year.
-
- Many Americans, misled by the administration and its
media allies into believing Saddam was somehow responsible for the 9/11
attacks, are lustily cheering Sheriff Bush and his posse. They are
unaware the demonized Iraqi leader used to be Washington's man in
Mesopotamia.
-
- Nor do they understand the astounding price of this
manhunt: a war costing over $160 billion US that violated international
law and America's democratic and moral traditions; surging hatred of the
U.S. abroad; over 3,000 American military casualties and many thousands
of Iraqis; and the ongoing burden of colonial occupation.
-
- But catching outlaw Saddam - which was inevitable -
and stringing him up may not make U.S. pacification of Iraq any easier,
as Washington hopes, nor the U.S. any safer. In fact, it may make
occupation more difficult.
-
- First, until Saddam's capture, Iraq's Shia majority
(60% of the population) remained quiescent, grudgingly accepting foreign
occupation for fear Saddam might otherwise return to power.
-
- But with Saddam locked up, Shias are free to
forcefully express their pent-up demands for real political power and an
Islamic republic. This will bring a head-on clash with U.S. authorities,
who are determined to thwart any Iranian-style government. Radical Shia
elements have been calling for months for guerrilla war against the
American occupation. This is a storm waiting to break, unless Washington
can find a way of satisfying Shias' long-repressed thirst for
power.
-
- Second, during the invasion of Iraq last spring, the
elite elements of Iraq's army scattered into small units in the face of
overwhelming U.S. firepower and mobility, adopting a long-standing plan
to resort to guerrilla war. Hence the surprisingly short Iraq invasion
campaign and light resistance in Baghdad.
-
- Iraqi forces were following the example of
Afghanistan's Taliban, which abandoned the capital and dissolved into
small units fighting from the mountains. In both cases, claims of
decisive victory by the U.S. military and pro-war pundits were
mistaken.
-
- Nine of the 12 Iraqi resistance groups are either
anti-Saddam secular nationalists or Islamists who were savagely
repressed by the former regime. They are fighting against foreign
occupation, not for Saddam. The coming month will determine if the
resistance is merely "Saddam Hussein diehards" or genuine national
insurgency. Many suicide bombers are newly arrived freelance foreign
jihadists inspired by al-Qaida.
-
- Third, U.S. proconsul Paul Bremer's decision to
disband Iraq's army was a colossal error. Unemployed soldiers are a
volatile, dangerous mass and a source of resistance fighters. The Iraqi
military and police forces the U.S. is trying to cobble together will
mostly prove unreliable, unwarlike and treacherous.
-
- Interestingly, many Sunni Iraqis believe Saddam did
not abjectly surrender but was captured unconscious after being gassed
by U.S. forces in the course of a major battle. However undeserving, he
may yet become a martyr.
-
- Still, the elimination of Saddam and his sons opens
the way for the emergence of a new generation of Iraqi nationalist
leaders who may prove far more clever and popular than the widely hated
old regime.
-
- Saddam is to face a kangaroo court in Baghdad.
-
- Such hang-'em-high injustice, propelled by Bush's
unwise call for the death penalty, is worthy of Saddam's regime, not the
United States.
-
- There are no fair courts in the Arab world.
-
- Saddam should be sent for trial before the UN's war
crimes tribunal at the Hague. The U.S. engineered Serb tyrant Slobodan
Milosevic's delivery there; why should Saddam be different?
-
- A UN trial could improve America's negative reputation
around the globe, and at least buttress Bush's lame, ex post facto claim
the invasion of Iraq was all about human rights.
-
- The greatest crime for which Saddam should be tried
was his aggression against Iran in 1980. Iran suffered 500,000
casualties, 10% from Iraqi chemical weapons. The U.S. and Britain
encouraged Saddam to invade Iran, helped bankroll Iraq's war effort, and
supplied him technicians and intelligence plus conventional, chemical,
and biological weapons.
-
- If allowed a fair, open trial, Saddam would surely
divulge how the CIA helped his Ba'ath party into power, his role as
obedient servant of the West during the era of his worst internal and
external crimes, and explosive revelations about his relations during
the 1980s with Donald Rumsfeld, and senior CIA and U.S. military
officials. Plus embarrassing dirt about other U.S.-backed Arab
autocrats.
-
- So it's unlikely the Bush administration will allow an
open trial for the rogue dictator. He knows far too much. Better to bury
Saddam in prison like another petty despot who dared mock the Bush
family - Panama's former general, and now U.S. prisoner, Manuel
Noriega.
-
- Israeli commentator Ze'ev Schiff suggests the White
House might offer Saddam a deal: a life prison sentence in exchange for
a false confession that he had indeed made and hidden weapons of mass
destruction, thus absolving Bush and VP Dick Cheney of the accusation of
having made extravagant lies to whip up war against Iraq.
-
- This would inflict mass political destruction on
Bush's leading presidential rival, the anti-war Democrat Howard
Dean.
-
- Eric can be reached by e-mail at
[EMAIL PROTECTED].
-
- Copyright � 2003, CANOE, a division of Netgraphe
Inc.
-
- http://www.canoe.ca/Columnists/margolis_dec21.html
|
The
Mulindwas Communication Group "With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in
anarchy"
Groupe de communication Mulindwas "avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans
l'anarchie"
|