|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Bush calls for Husseins execution: a portrait of sadism
and ignorance
By Bill Vann
18 December 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Media reports on the nationally televised interview with George
W. Bush broadcast by ABC News Tuesday night focused on the American
presidents call for the execution of Saddam Hussein. Zap
rat Saddam, sez Prez, was the way the New York Daily
News summed up the contents of Bushs remarks.
The general portrayal was one of a tough-talking leader moved
by feelings of personal outrage to demand that the former Iraqi
president pay the ultimate penalty for his crimes.
Those who actually sat through the interview and who know Bushs
record, however, may not be so impressed. When he was governor
of Texas, the ultimate penalty was altogether routine.
He presided over 152 executions, more than any other governor
in US history, and once allowed that he spent an average of just
15 minutes reviewing cases before giving the order to put human
beingsincluding the mentally illto death.
After becoming president, he has resumed the use of the federal
death penalty for the first time in the US since 1963, ordering
the execution of a Persian Gulf War veteran on the very eve of
launching the invasion of Iraq last March.
For Bush, imposing the death penalty is less a matter of moral
outrage than vicarious thrill. His personal sadism and the kick
he gets from exercising this ultimate power was revealed most
noxiously in his public mimicking of the plea for clemency by
a condemned Texas woman, Karla Faye Tucker, before ordering her
state murder.
This is a disgusting tyrant who deserves justice, the
ultimate justice. But that will be decided not by the president
of the United States but by the citizens of Iraq in one form or
another, said Bush, who defensively added, You dont
want a kangaroo court.
But that is precisely what Washington is preparing. The citizens
of Iraq will decide nothing. They are subjects of a US military
occupation, without an elected government and without even the
prospect of a vote for years to come. The US will create the instrument
that will render Husseins verdict based on the time-honored
American principle of give him a fair trial and hang him.
The Bush administration has no intention of allowing any court
that is not under its unrestricted control to bring Hussein to
trial. Having revoked a previous treaty committing US support
for the International Criminal Court, it is determined not to
legitimize any such body. It justifiably fears that Bush, Cheney,
Rumsfeld, Tommy Franks and others could some day be brought before
such a tribunal on war crimes charges stemming from the war of
aggression against Iraq and the deaths of tens of thousands of
Iraqi citizens.
While international courts have ruled out the death penalty
as a barbaric punishment, with an Iraqi puppet court, the US can
put Saddam Hussein speedily to death while claiming that it is
merely doing the will of the Iraqi people.
The other advantage of such a procedure is that dead men tell
no tales. Hussein can be denied the one defense he would inevitably
make before an international court: that the greatest crimes of
which he stands accusedthe Iran-Iraq war, the gassing of
the Kurds and suppression of the Shiiteswere carried out
with either the direct support or tacit approval of US administrations
in Washington.
Whether Bush himself even grasps these political issues behind
the US handling of Hussein is unclear. The image that came across
in what was an exceedingly rare extended interview was that of
a politically ignorant and vindictive individual.
His interviewer was Diane Sawyer, a virtual state institution,
whose journalistic credentials are rooted in her having
served as a flack in the Nixon White House and then having followed
the disgraced president to San Clemente to help him write his
memoirs. But even the gentle probing of such a trusted ally seemed
to be an ordeal for Bush.
His peculiar facial expressions and nervous body language suggested
an inner fear that each and every question would press against
the outer limits of his scant knowledge, driving him to seek refuge
in the few stock phrases that he has picked up from his speechwriters
and political handlers.
Thus, when Sawyer opened up a line of inquiry concerning the
failure of the US military to turn up any trace of weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq, the pretext for launching the administrations
predatory war, Bush became badly flustered.
Sawyer asked about his administrations claims that the
Iraqi regime was close to producing nuclear arms and had hundreds
of tons of chemical and biological weapons. Bush responded, Look,
there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein was a dangerous person,
and theres no doubt we had a body of evidence proving that,
and there is no doubt that the president must act, after 9/11,
to make America a more secure country.
When Sawyer tried to pursue the question, Bush replied childishly,
Well, you can keep asking the question and my answers
gonna be the same. Saddam was a danger and the world is better
off cause we got rid of him. The former White House aide
moved accommodatingly to a different subject.
In one extraordinary exchange, Sawyer asked Bush about his
statement that his sole source of news is briefings prepared by
his staff. I get my news from people who dont editorialize,
he said. They give me the actual news, and it makes it easier
to digest on a daily basis, the facts.
Asked by Sawyer whether he did this because he found it harder
to read constant criticism, Bush responded: Why even
put up with it when you can get the facts elsewhere? Im
a lucky man, Ive got ... all kinds of people in my administration
who are charged with different responsibilities, and they come
in and say this is whats happening, this isnt whats
happening.
Nothing could more clearly demonstrate the US presidents
political backwardness and personal indifference to the world
outside the White House. His disdain for reading newspapers reflects
a lack of any ability or even interest in developing a political
orientation based upon a study of competing interests and conflicting
policies as they are reflected through the press. Making such
analyses is a key task of any serious politician, but Bush is
not such a figure.
His subjectivism and limited intellectual capacity make him
easy to manipulate. His subordinates and advisers feed him the
facts that favor the policies they seek, and Bush,
with his unconcern about political debate in the wider world,
is not even in a position to grasp the aims of antagonistic forces
within his own administration and staff.
Given such an individual as the titular chief executive, it
is not hard to understand the colossal blunders the administration
has made in its war in Iraq, policies that continue to cost the
lives of both Iraqi civilians and young American soldiers on a
daily basis.
Within US ruling circles, the fact that Bush is grossly unqualified
for the position that he holds is well known. For the gang of
corporate criminals that dominate his cabinet and serve as his
principal political base, his lack of any knowledge or intelligence
make him a malleable instrument for the pursuit of their profit
interests.
See Also:
Day three of US media coverage of Hussein's
capture: no let-up in the hysteria
[17 December 2003]
The official US response to the capture
of Saddam Hussein: a degrading spectacle
[16 December 2003]
Saddam Husseins capture will not
resolve Iraqi quagmire
[15 December 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |