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The official US response to the capture of Saddam Hussein:
a degrading spectacle
By David Walsh
16 December 2003
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The official American response to the capture of former Iraqi
president Saddam Hussein must provoke feelings of deep disgust.
It requires a political and media establishment from whom all
traces of democratic or humane instinct have been eradicated to
react with a display of such ignorance, vindictiveness and sadism.
There is irony in the fact that only a regime as depraved as
the current one in Washington could create by its actions a degree
of sympathy for Hussein, a right-wing nationalist thug and former
ally of the US.
Banner headlines screaming Weve got him!,
the innumerable and tedious variations on the rat
caught in his hole, countless news items citing the
event as George W. Bushs ultimate Christmas presentwhat
does this all add up to? Victors justice, with an unspeakably
backward and repellent quality to it.
The capture of Hussein, an inevitable event given the current
disposition of military forces and the free hand that American
forces have to bribe, bully and torture, is only the latest and
most dramatic in a series of such episodes. Since the re-eruption
of naked American colonialism in the 1980s, the US has demonized
a long list of foreign leaders and brought to justice
figures like Manuel Noriega of Panama in 1989 and Slobodan Milosevic
of the former Yugoslavia in 2001. The process is thoroughly stereotyped
by now. A thread connecting between these individuals and others,
including Osama bin Laden, is their former association with the
US government, military or CIA.
The stupidity and hypocrisy of the American media knows few
bounds. After years of pontificating about Husseins palacesand
this coming from multimillionairesthe media pundits now
point to his inglorious end in a mud-caked hole in the ground,
as though the undignified condition were of his own choosing.
The New York Post of Rupert Murdoch, as is generally the
case, offered the foulest example of gutter journalism, commenting
that Hussein looked every bit like a subway panhandler while
a medic checked his scalp for lice.... Even after hed been
cleaned and shaved, it was obvious that hed lost the will
to fight: His eyes were blank, his face a mask of submission.
This is pretty rich. Hussein was hiding for months from the
most lethal military force on the planet. His sons have been murdered.
What sort of condition was Hussein likely to be found in? And
as for his comportment, can it be truly said that he behaved with
less fortitude than an American president would under similar
conditions? American politicians regularly burst into tears when
they lose a primary election. The scene of Richard Nixons
resignation, in the East Room of the White House in August 1974,
prompted this comment from one journalist: Sometimes one
wished that his agonized wife would take this wretched slobbering,
spluttering man away by the arm and propel him into some windowless
vehicle for transport to obscurity.
Kill or torture Hussein?
Journalists are now pressing Bush and his cohorts with questions
about the possibility of executing Hussein. At his Monday news
conference, he was asked by one reporter: Do you think that
execution should be an option?
Bush smirked, He will be detained. We will work with
the Iraqis to develop a way to try him that will stand international
scrutiny, I guess is the best way to put it.... Ive got
my own personal views of how he ought to be treated, but Im
not an Iraqi citizen. Its going to be up to the Iraqis to
make those decisions. And the assembled reporters pretended
to believe his last point.
There is no doubt that Saddam Hussein has many crimes to answer
for. But so, for that matter, does George W. Bush and those among
his associates whose launching of an aggressive war against Iraq
constitutes, if the precedent of the Nuremberg trials retains
any standing, a crime. What legal, let alone moral right have
American government officialswhose hand-picked man in Baghdad,
Ahmad Chalabi, is a convicted felonto put Hussein on trial?
They all have unclean hands. The tribunal proposal is another
example of Washingtons criminality and flouting of international
law. Bush administration officials simply make things up as they
go along, according to the military, political or electoral needs
of the moment.
And the media laps it up, as do the tops of the Democratic
Party. The inevitable Sen. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, candidate
for his partys presidential nomination, quickly joined the
chorus calling for blood. If an international or Iraqi tribunal
could not execute Hussein, Lieberman said, he should be
brought before an American military tribunal and face death.
Providing a glimpse into the depths of depravity to which the
US media has sunk, Leslie Stahl of CBS Newss prestigious
60 Minutes program queried Rumsfeld Sunday night on the
advisability of torturing or killing Hussein. She asked, Let
me raise the whole question, for lack of a better term, [of ]torture.
Lets say hes not forthcoming. Would we deprive him
of sleep, make it very cold where he is, or very hot? Are there
any restrictions on the way we treat him to get him to cooperate
more than he has been? When Rumsfeld indicated that the
US would not torture this person, she pursued the
matter, Sleep deprivation, that kind of thing. Youre
ruling it completely out, is that what youre telling us?
Later this revealing exchange took place:
Stahl: Did it cross your mind at all once you heard it
was likely that they knew where he was and he might be capturedthat
it would be better if he were killed? Would it just be better
if he werent alive?
Rumsfeld: Well thats a fair question. You know,
I have a lot of things I worry about and try and think through,
and that was one thing I could do nothing about. We either were
going to kill him or capture him, and our policy is we try and
capture and not kill and if were not able to capture and
we can kill, we do it.
We might as well be listening in on a conversation between
two Mafia wise guys.
The desire to humiliate and terrorize is uppermost in the minds
of Rumsfeld, Cheney, Wolfowitz and the Bush brain-trust, as well
as their servants in the media. The demeaning handling of Hussein,
in contravention of the Geneva Conventions, including the medical
examination broadcast to a worldwide television audience, is intended
to intimidate not only the Iraqi resistance and general population,
the Arab world and all those who might consider opposing US imperialism
around the globe, but, in the final analysis, the American population
as well. The message is: all resistance is futile, we will trample
on you too.
To whom is such a display intended to appeal today? The most
backward and morally depraved section of the US population, the
semi-fascist base of the Republican Party, the social and psychological
type whose counterparts in the ancient world used to whoop at
the sight of a man or woman thrown to the lions. Celebrating this
barbaric episode speaks to their own lack of humanity.
The degrading of Hussein follows the obscene display of his
sons corpses earlier this year. No one in the US media will
recall the howls emitted by the Pentagon when the Arab satellite
channel Al Jazeera broadcast footage of dead and captured American
soldiers last March. At the time Rumsfeld piously told the press,
The Geneva Convention indicates that its not permitted
to photograph and embarrass or humiliate prisoners of war.
The spectacle of official America celebrating over Saddam Husseins
capture, with its air of a particularly primitive and bloodthirsty
ritual, will horrify and outrage masses of people. It becomes
more and more apparent, and this is a relatively recent feature
of modern social life, that the American ruling elite inhabits
a political and moral universe that is distant and alien from
the lives and feelings of the overwhelming majority of humanity,
including American humanity. In decent-minded people such goings-on
can only evoke feelings of shame, the sense of witnessing something
unclean.
Whatever Bush and company can claim to represent is foreign
and hostile to the most honorable traditions and ideals of the
American people. They exist in another world.
Iraqis have no cause to celebrate
There is no reason to doubt the list of Husseins crimes,
although no US commentator will point out that the worst of them
were committed when he was in a de facto alliance with Washington.
However, reporters were quick to note a subdued mood in the Iraqi
population. The experience of eight months of American military
rule, combined with a natural and inevitable instinctive hostility
to foreign, colonial occupation, have disabused all but the most
naïve or corrupt Iraqis of any illusions in US justice.
A recent poll indicated that 91 percent of the population had
little interest in the hunt for or prosecution of members of the
former regime.
Joshua Logan of Reuters, for example, writes: Joy at
the capture of Saddam Hussein has given way to resentment towards
Washington as Iraqis confront afresh the bloodshed, shortages
and soaring prices of life under US occupation. Many were ecstatic
to see Saddam in the dock and hoped he would answer for his deeds
but said they would not rush to thank Americain their eyes
the source of their problems since a US-led coalition toppled
Saddam in April. Resistance attacks on US forces and Iraqi
collaborators continued unabated following Husseins capture.
Arab public opinion throughout the Middle East was similarly
hostile, responding to the obvious attempt by the American military
to humiliate and degrade the former leader. Even those interviewed
by Western media outlets who were pleased with Husseins
capture deplored the fact that it was Bush and the US military
who brought him down.
The mood in the American population was markedly subdued as
well, outside of the pockets of pro-war zealots and despite (or
perhaps because of) the media bombardment. The Washington Post
published the results of a poll indicating that only 15 to 23
percent thought the arrest would help a great deal.
Nine in ten Americans felt big challenges remain in
Iraq. Forty-two percent of the population continued to argue that
the war was not worth fighting. Twice as many Americans say the
war is going worse than expected than think it is going better
than expected.
A CNN-Gallup poll found the same general result, that the capture
of Hussein had relatively little impact on attitudes toward the
war or Bush.
The general response in the US is one of caution, skepticism,
apathy. Bush made a pompous and lying address to the nation,
as though many cared to listen to what he had to say. Why should
anyone in America rejoice over Husseins capture, an event
that will not bring the end of US military intervention one day
closer, save the life of one Iraqi or American soldier, improve
the state of international or regional stability or remedy the
increasingly desperate economic condition of broad layers of the
population at home?
Husseins crimes pale in comparison
If every crime attributed to Hussein since the Baathists took
power for good in 1968 were true, his hands would still not be
stained with a fraction of the blood spilled by a series of US
presidents over the same general period. Under Kennedy, Johnson
and Nixon, four million Vietnamese lost their lives as the result
of US intervention, along with an estimated one million Cambodians
and half a million Laotians. In Indonesia in 1965, a CIA-supported
coup resulted in the deaths of another half a million people.
Between 1954 and 2002, 300,000 Guatemalans are estimated to have
met their deaths as the result of US-backed government repression.
Another 100,000 are thought to have died in El Salvador.
In Argentina and Chile in the 1970s, with the capable assistance
of the Nixon-Kissinger and Carter-Brzezinski regimes, military
butchers tortured and murdered 50,000 people. Hundreds of thousands,
if not more, Iraqis, including half a million children, have encountered
a tragic fate as the result of the two wars conducted by US forces,
and a decade of devastating sanctions under Bush and Clinton.
The Afghan catastrophe since 1979 has resulted in another one
million deaths, and one should add the lives of 3,000 innocent
Americans lost in the terrorist attacks of September 2001, which
was one of the byproducts of the disastrous US encounter with
the Central Asian nation.
And for all the talk about the Kurds, the US has stood shoulder
to shoulder with the worst oppressor of that people, the Turkish
regime. Indeed, the arrest of Hussein resembled nothing so much
as the capture of Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan, carried out
with US assistance, in February 1999.
Treatment of captured enemies
In more civilized times even the most implacable enemies were
treated with dignity. Napoleon Bonaparte, whom a contemporary
British account termed that bloody miscreant, who has so
long tortured Europe and whose cruelty is written
in characters of blood in almost every country in Europe and in
the contiguous angles of Africa and Asia which he visited,
was treated with respect aboard the Bellerophon when he
surrendered in July 1815, and this was after a first escape and
subsequent military campaign.
And what of the treatment of Gen. Robert E. Lee, who had led
a rebellion against the United States in defense of slavery, resulting
in the deaths of 600,000 Americans? Consider the response of his
dedicated enemy, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, at Appomattox in April
1865: Whatever his [Lees] feelings, they were entirely
concealed from my observation; but my own feelings, which had
been quite jubilant on the receipt of his letter [proposing negotiations],
were sad and depressed. I felt like anything rather than rejoicing
at the downfall of a foe who had fought so long and valiantly,
and had suffered so much for a cause, though that cause was, I
believe, one of the worst for which a people ever fought, and
one for which there was not the least excuse. I do not question,
however, the sincerity of the great mass of those who were opposed
to us.
Some might argue that these are not appropriate analogies;
after all, Saddam Hussein is neither a Napoleon nor a Lee. No
doubt he is not. But then, Bush is neither a Wellington nor a
Grant. In any event, it is not so much a question of the character
and actions of the vanquished, but those of the victor.
Husseins brutal and illegal treatment is a further sign
of the political, moral and cultural degeneracy of the American
ruling elite.
See Also:
Saddam Husseins capture will not
resolve Iraqi quagmire
[15 December 2003]
The killing of Husseins
sons: the Nuremberg precedent and the criminalization of the US
ruling elite
[24 July 2003]
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