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Joe Conason: Saddam-Style Justice, in Our NamePosted on Jan 3, 2007By Joe Conason The trial and punishment of the late Saddam Hussein ought to have been accomplished with respect for law and human dignity—not necessarily because the former dictator deserved such consideration, but because all who have died in the name of democracy over the past three years certainly do. Instead, his hurried hanging at dawn by a gang in leather jackets was all too reminiscent of the carnage routinely carried out in the old Baathist regime’s prison cells. Indeed, the ugly event took place in the same building where Saddam’s secret police used to string up his political opponents. Intentionally or ineptly, the Bush administration permitted this embarrassment to be perpetrated in the name of the American people. The president contributed his own special combination of false and foolish commentary when he released a statement praising the execution as the result of “a fair trial.” What George W. Bush means when he utters those words is unclear. Spoken by him, such rhetorical phrases are devoid of their historical meaning in American and international law. It is very unlikely that the president actually knows whether Saddam received due process, and even less likely that he cares. He may well have received the customary reassurances from Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who always made certain that Bush’s brief deliberations on executions when he was Texas governor were free of confusing facts, wholly predetermined and, oh yes, “fair.” For those who do care about the reputation of American justice as well as the prospects for a civilized future in Iraq, the way that Saddam met his end was not uplifting. After decades of totalitarian rule, there were few qualified Iraqi jurists available to deal properly with the massive docket of crimes committed by the Baathist government. Human Rights Watch—which exposed Saddam’s abuses back when he was still being coddled by Republican politicians—urged the creation of a competent tribunal that included both Iraqi and international judges. But the Bush administration dismissed that wise proposal. Advertisement No security measures were taken to protect the defense lawyers before the Dujail trial, so several of them were promptly murdered as soon as it began. Those who survived were unable to effectively question prosecution witnesses. Casting further doubt on the tribunal’s independence and fairness were the constant prejudicial comments and announcements emanating from the Iraqi national security adviser. The kangaroo-court proceedings concluded in late December with a mockery of the right to appeal. With only 30 days to prepare their argument, the defense lawyers didn’t receive the 300-page guilty opinion until more than halfway through that period. They had less than two weeks to respond. When the appeal was denied on Dec. 26, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, described as “frantic” to see his enemy executed, signed a death warrant of dubious legitimacy in violation of Iraqi law. Secretly recorded on video, the hanging looks and sounds like an old-fashioned lynching. The noose is fitted and the trap door springs while a jeering mob screams “Muqtada! Muqtada!” in homage to Muqtada al-Sadr, the anti-American Shiite warlord. They don’t even do a fair trial that way in Texas anymore. Despite feeble protestations by American officials—who supposedly tried to postpone the execution because of concerns over its legality—suspicions abound that the Bush administration wanted this travesty to unfold exactly as it did. Saddam was still a dangerous man, who might someday have squealed on his longtime benefactors in the CIA and the Reagan administration. As for President Bush, always simple-minded and bloody-minded, he probably believes that executing Saddam will somehow adorn his discreditable legacy. It won’t, because the hanging of Saddam was not only a judicial miscarriage but a strategic blunder. While he was in American custody, the U.S. could have wielded a powerful incentive to urge the Shiite-dominated governing coalition toward serious negotiation with the Sunni rebels. Squandering that opportunity while dishonoring decent standards was worse than venal. It was stupid. Joe Conason writes for the New York Observer (www.observer.com). To find out more about Joe Conason, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com. Copyright 2007 Creators Syndicate Inc. Previous item: Ellen Goodman: From Stay-at-Home to Speaker Next item: Molly Ivins: Stop This War, Now! CommentsAre you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig. Add Your Comment |
By G.I. JOE, January 14, 2007 at 4:19 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Kellina:
Take a hike fool.
Report thisWe got rid of a mass murderer named Saadam Hussein.
He was sentenced by his own people and executed by them.
He was buried in his home town in a much more respectful manner then he buried his hundreds of thousands of victims that he butchered.
Long live the United States and justice.
By Proctor S. Burress, January 10, 2007 at 5:00 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Mr. Conason: Nonsense and DOUBLE Nonsense!
Sadam was not dragged through the streets like the four contractors nor the U.S. soldiers in
Somali.
He was not dismembered. His corpse was not paraded through the streets and spit upon.
Please add my comments to the rest of the fools who have commented here. The reader can decide!
Report thisBy Kellina, January 8, 2007 at 5:52 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Okay, Chaseme! I’ll be in the stylish orange jumpsuit - with hair dyed to match.
Report thisBy roxy, January 7, 2007 at 12:44 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Chaseme:
Report thisThe same way they killed Germans. Remember the Second World War? The First World War? Remember the Revolutionary War? The Civil War? Get a clue.
By Chaseme, January 7, 2007 at 2:23 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
I will never understand for the life of me why white men can wholeheartedly support the killings of people who do not look like them. If Saddam was a white man, blonde hair, blue eyes, maybe a little resemblance to bush, white men would be outraged.
What is the root for such violent and schizophrenic behavior in white men?
Kellina, look for me in the camps; I’ll be the one with the peace sign held steadfastly above my head.
Report thisBy old benjamin, January 5, 2007 at 6:33 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
I don’t care if he got a fair trial. He got a small measure of justice in return for world class murder and mayhem. It is truly amazing to hear the whining about a fair trail for a monster who murdered, raped and tortured men, women, and children indiscriminately, and by the thousands. There is often a great disparity between law and justice. O.J. got law, not justice. Ken Lay got law, not justice. When you hear sympathy for Sadam, you know the relative merits of law and justice are sadly out of balance. You also know that irrational hatred for George Bush has seriously clouded the minds of many on the left. The main thing is to get rid of him, regardless of the lies that have to be told. Unfortunately, Bush isn’t the problem. It’s you and me. The solution must come from the bottom, not the top. Pluck the speck out of your own eye first. Then you can better see the splinter in someone else’s.
Report thisBy A Khokar, January 4, 2007 at 5:06 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Too late; for the hero
The shake hand with Rumsfeld which sent Saddam over the moon; resulted adversely into mass killing of his opponents; but it did bring in some good results in the field of job assigned by the god father; He achieved a marked success in containing Iran and depleted her in a long war of attrition. He proved himself to be the best US ally and a staunch Proxy.
While he was walking on the air; he took this bliss to be an ever lasting and was blinded to think beyond.
The mission of god father was accomplished as per plan. It was time to say; good by to the valued friend and accordingly plugs were pulled. He had come to know this, in Kuwait attack drama. He was horrified to find that he may not see another full moon. But when he had realised it; it was too late for him. He found his regime lost and Iraq the dream land of his empire; reduced to the rubbles smouldering of some stone age.
In an obvious play let of his prosecution; it was irony of his fate that the whole World knew in advance; the out come of his show trail. Although; he kept the might of his self pride high till last and he did not bend his head till his neck snapped on the gallows.
He left a lessons for all the dictators and monarch of Arab world that while performing as proxies; (active or may be passively); beyond the life of their bliss; only one thing is certain; a colossal betrayal of their god father; bringing them only the humiliation; deprivation for their people and a gallows awaiting at the end.
Report this——————————————
Love for all, Hatred for none
By yours truly, January 4, 2007 at 11:45 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
The three thousand of our best and brightest who gave their lives in Iraq did so that there be no war no more, nowhere, never, not even one. And we honor them by seeing to it that Congress cuts off all spending for the Iraq war and that it impeaches President George Bush, after which he’s put on trial at the International Court of Criminal Justice on the charge of crimes against humanity - “Have the members of the jury arrived at a verdict?” “Yes we have, your honor. Guilty as charged.”.
Report thisBy Kellina, January 4, 2007 at 7:32 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
We now have a gov’t on a par with the Nazi. So what do you expect from Nazis?
See you in the detention camps.
Report this