Conveniently forgotten
Saddam committed most of his crimes when he was an ally
of those who now occupy his country
By Tariq Ali
01/01/07 "The
Guardian" --- It was symbolic that 2006
ended with a colonial hanging - most of it shown on
state television in occupied Iraq. It has been that sort
of year in the Arab world. The trial was so blatantly
rigged that even Human Rights Watch had to condemn it as
a travesty. Judges were changed on Washington's orders, defence lawyers were killed and the whole procedure
resembled a well orchestrated lynch mob. Where Nuremberg
was a relatively dignified application of victor's
justice, Saddam Hussein's trial was the crudest and most
grotesque to date.
The great thinker-president's reference to it "as a
milestone on the road to Iraqi democracy" is as clear an
indication as any that Washington pressed the trigger.
The leaders of the European Union, supposedly hostile to
capital punishment, were passive, as usual.
Although some Shia factions celebrated in Baghdad, the
figures published by a fairly independent establishment
outfit, the Iraq Centre for Research and Strategic
Studies, reveal that more than 80% of Iraqis feel the
situation in the country was better before it was
occupied. (The ICRSS research is based on detailed
house-to-house interviewing carried out during the third
week of November.) Only 5% of those questioned said Iraq
is better today than in 2003; 12% felt things had
improved and 9% said there was no change.
Unsurprisingly, 95% felt the security situation was
worse than before.
Add to this the figures supplied by the United Nations
high commissioner for refugees: 1.6 million Iraqis (7%
of the population) have fled the country since March
2003, and 100,000 leave every month - Christians,
doctors, engineers, women. There are 1 million Iraqis in
Syria, 750,000 in Jordan, 150,000 in Cairo. These are
refugees who do not excite the sympathy of western
public opinion, since the US - EU-backed - occupation is
the cause. Perhaps it was these statistics, and
estimates of a million Iraqi dead, that necessitated the
execution of Saddam.
That Saddam was a tyrant is beyond dispute, but what is
conveniently forgotten is that most of his crimes were
committed when he was a staunch ally of those who are
now occupying the country. It was, as he admitted in one
of his trial outbursts, the approval of Washington and
the poison gas supplied by what was then West Germany
that gave him the confidence to douse Halabja with
chemicals in the middle of the Iran-Iraq war. Saddam
deserved a proper trial and punishment in an independent
Iraq. Not this.
The double standards applied by the west never cease to
astonish. Indonesia's Suharto, who presided over a
mountain of corpses, was protected by Washington. He
never annoyed them as much as Saddam.
And what of those who have created the mess in Iraq
today? The torturers of Abu Ghraib; the pitiless
butchers of Falluja; the ethnic cleansers of Baghdad;
the Kurdish prison boss who boasts that his model is
Guantánamo. Will Bush and Blair ever be tried for war
crimes? Doubtful. And former Spanish prime minister José
María Aznar? He is currently employed as a lecturer at
Georgetown University, in Washington, where the language
of instruction is of course English - of which he hardly
speaks a word.
Saddam's lynching might send a shiver down the spines of
the Arab ruling elites. If Saddam can be hanged, so can
the Egyptian president, Hosni Mubarak, the Hashemite
joker in Amman and the Saudi royals - as long as those
who topple them are happy to play ball with the United
States.
Tariq Ali is the
author of Bush in Babylon: the recolonisation of Iraq -
tariq.ali3@btinternet.com
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