Bush’s Carnival of Blood
By Mike Whitney
11/06/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- This is a dark day for Americans and Iraqis
alike.
Killing Saddam Hussein isn’t justice; its vengeance. Only Bush
believes the two are the same.
How are we supposed to feel now that we know that Saddam will be
hanged for his crimes?
Elated? Energized? Jubilant?
Will it wash away the oceans of blood that Bush generated with
his misguided and tragic war?
The administration clings to the foolish notion that killing
Saddam will somehow justify their unprovoked invasion and
slaughter of 650,000 Iraqis.
It won’t.
I expect that many people feel the same sense of disgust and
emptiness that I do. The joy of executing Saddam is limited to a
small cadre of men who revel in the suffering and subjugation of
others. They are human in name only.
Nothing Saddam did in his life will make him seem larger in the
eyes of his people than his death. Still, the administration
doesn’t care if they turn Saddam into a martyr as long as they
get a bump in the polls before Tuesday’s midterm elections. It’s
pathetic. Fortunately, the American people are not nearly as
bloodthirsty as their leaders. All they want is an end to war
and the safe return of the troops.
Sentencing a man to hang merely to improve one’s prospects at
the ballot-box is about as desperate as it gets. It may be the
most cynical political-ploy we've seen in the last 6 years. It's
a thoroughly vile act unworthy of anyone holding high-office.
The whole circus atmosphere of the Saddam trial has further
eroded confidence in American justice and evenhandedness. The
outcome was known from the very beginning. Everyone knew that he
would be condemned to death.
So, why all the hoopla? Why not just shoot him outright?
Did Bush want to give Saddam the opportunity to grab the moral
high-ground and look like a statesman? Now the deposed dictator
seems like the unwitting victim of “victor’s justice”. How smart
was that?
After the verdict was announced, Saddam issued brief a statement
to his people which made him appear reflective and patriotic. He
said:
“Pardon and do not take revenge on the invading nations and
their people…and unify in the face of sectarian strife.”
Saddam's message of forgiveness and reconciliation won't be
warmly received in Washington where they were hoping that he
would fall to his knees and beg for forgiveness. That was
another miscalculation. Saddam may be a brutal tyrant but he was
never a coward. His courtroom performance will only strengthen
the resolve of the resistance and make life that much more
difficult for occupation forces.
The whole charade has been costly blunder for the Bush team;
nothing was gained.
Saddam’s death will have the same effect as the appalling photos
of the hooded prisoner at Abu Ghraib which offended the
sensibilities of decent people everywhere. It will just generate
more hatred and violence.
This isn’t justice. It's another example of a nation’s dark
shame.
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