Little War
Criminals
Get
Punished,
Big Ones
Don’t
By Paul
Craig
Roberts
16/07/08
"ICH" -- -
National
Public Radio
has been
spending
much news
time on
Darfur in
Western
Sudan where
a great deal
of human
suffering
and death
are
occurring.
The military
conflict has
been brought
on in part
by climate
change,
according to
UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon.
Drought is
forcing
nomads in
search of
water into
areas
occupied by
other
claimants.
No doubt the
conflict is
tribal and
racial as
well. The
entire
catastrophe
is overseen
by a
government
with few
resources
other than
bullets.
Now an
International
Criminal
Court
prosecutor
wants to
bring
charges
against
Sudan’s
president,
Omar al-Bashir,
for crimes
against
humanity and
war crimes.
I have no
sympathy for
people who
make others
suffer.
Nevertheless,
I wonder at
the
International
Criminal
Court’s pick
from the
assortment
of war
criminals?
Why al-Bashir?
Is it
because
Sudan is a
powerless
state, and
the
International
Criminal
Court hasn’t
the courage
to name
George W.
Bush and
Tony Blair
as war
criminals?
Bush and
Blair’s
crimes
against
humanity in
Iraq and
Afghanistan
dwarf, at
least in the
number of
deaths and
displaced
persons, the
terrible
situation in
Darfur. The
highest
estimate of
Darfur
casualties
is 400,000,
one-third
the number
of Iraqis
who have
died as a
result of
Bush’s
invasion.
Moreover,
the conflict
in the Sudan
is an
internal
one, whereas
Bush
illegally
invaded two
foreign
countries,
war crimes
under the
Nuremberg
Standard.
Bush’s war
crimes were
enabled by
the
political
leaders of
the UK,
Spain,
Canada, and
Australia.
The leaders
of every
member of
the
“coalition
of the
willing to
commit war
crimes” are
candidates
for the
dock.
But of
course the
Great Moral
West does
not commit
war crimes.
War crimes
are charges
fobbed off
on people
demonized by
the Western
media, such
as the
Serbian
Milosovic
and the
Sudanese al-Bashir.
Every week
the Israeli
government
evicts
Palestinians
from their
homes,
steals their
land, and
kills
Palestinian
women and
children.
These crimes
against
humanity
have been
going on for
decades.
Except for a
few Israeli
human rights
organizations,
no one
complains
about it.
Palestinians
are defined
as
“terrorists,”
and
“terrorists”
can be
treated
inhumanely
without
complaint.
Iraqis and
Afghans
suffer the
same fate.
Iraqis who
resist US
occupation
of their
country are
“terrorists.”
Taliban is a
demonized
name. Every
Afghan
killed--even
those
attending
wedding
parties--is
claimed to
be Taliban
by the US
military.
Iraqis and
Afghans can
be murdered
at will by
American and
NATO troops
without
anyone
raising
human rights
issues.
The
International
Criminal
Court is a
bureaucracy.
It has a
budget, and
it needs to
do something
to justify
its budget.
Lacking
teeth and
courage, it
goes after
the petty
war
criminals
and leaves
the big ones
alone.
Don’t get me
wrong. I’m
for holding
all
governments
accountable
for their
criminal
actions. It
is the
hypocrisy to
which I
object. The
West gives
itself and
Israel a
pass while
damning
everyone
else. Even
human rights
groups fall
into the
trap. Rights
activists
don’t see
the
buffoonery
in their
complaint
that
President
Bush, who
has violated
more human
rights than
any person
alive, is
letting
China off
the hook for
human rights
abuses by
attending
the Olympics
hosted by
China.
President
Bush claims
that the
enormous
destruction
and death he
has brought
to Iraq and
Afghanistan
are
necessary in
order for
Americans to
be safe. If
we are
accepting
excuses this
feeble,
Milosovic
passed
muster with
his excuse
that as the
head of
state he was
obliged to
try to
preserve the
state’s
territorial
integrity.
Is al-Bashir
supposed to
accept
secession in
the Sudan,
something
that Lincoln
would not
accept from
the
Confederacy?
How long
would al-Bashir
last if he
partitioned
Sudan?
Last October
the Atlanta
Journal-Constitution
had a photo
on its front
page above
the fold of
an elderly
man with
mikes shoved
in his face.
Paul Henss,
85 years
old, is
being
deported
from the US,
where he has
lived for 53
years,
because Eli
Rosenbaum,
director the
the US State
Department’s
Nazi-hunting
bureaucracy,
declared him
a war
criminal for
training
guard dogs
used at
German
concentration
camps. Henss
was 22 years
old when
World War II
ended.
A kid who
trained
guard dogs
is being
deported as
a war
criminal,
but the head
of state who
launched two
wars of
naked
aggression,
resulting in
the deaths
of more than
1.2 million
people, and
who has the
entire world
on edge
awaiting his
third war of
aggression,
this time
against
Iran, is
received
respectfully
by foreign
governments.
Corporations
and trade
associations
will pay him
$100,000 per
speech when
he leaves
office. He
will make
millions of
dollars more
from memoirs
written by a
ghostwriter.
Does no one
see the
paradox of
deporting
Henss while
leaving the
war criminal
in the White
House?
Dr. Paul Craig Roberts, an assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury during the Reagan Administration, is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal and coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.
