|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Saddam Hussein in court: a show trial made in the USA
By Peter Symonds
5 July 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The brief court appearance of Saddam Hussein last Thursday
had all the trappings of a political show trial. It was staged
by the US administration, with the assistance of its local collaborators,
in an effort to shore up the embattled US occupation of Iraq and
Bushs political fortunes at home.
True to form, the US and international media played its assigned
role, helping to maintain the pretence that the affair represented
justice by and for Iraqis. It remained completely silent on the
complicity of the US and other major powers in Husseins
crimes.
The World Socialist Web Site holds no brief for Hussein,
a ruthless and brutal dictator who is undoubtedly guilty of terrible
crimes against the Iraqi people. But it has to be noted that the
aging strongman conducted himself with a good deal more dignity
and honesty than his accusers, defiantly refusing to accept the
legitimacy of the tribunal or the US invasion of Iraq. You
know that this is all theatre by Bush, the criminal, to help him
with his [election] campaign, he contemptuously told the
judge.
From start to finish, every aspect of the 30-minute proceedings
had Made in the USA stamped all over it. Hussein appeared
in a makeshift courtroom on a US military base in the outskirts
of Baghdad with the sound of American helicopters whirring in
the background. He and 11 other senior members of his regime were
brought to the base by US soldiers from unknown locations then,
for the sake of appearances, walked into the courthouse by Iraqi
police.
The immediate purpose of the court appearance was to establish
the fiction that the detainees were now in Iraqi custody. For
weeks prior to the formal handover of sovereignty on June 28,
the Bush administration had insisted that it, not the new interim
Iraqi government, would retain control of Hussein. But with the
occupation supposedly ended, there was no legal basis for continuing
to hold Hussein as a Prisoner of War (PoW). So Hussein was nominally
handed over to an Iraqi court, only to be returned
to an American military prison at the end of the day.
While an anonymous Iraqi judge nominally conducted the affair,
US officials were clearly in control. There was a small and carefully
vetted audience. No American military uniforms were present but,
as the New York Times explained: [O]fficials of the
new Iraqi government were seated with three American reporters
and three American officials: two lawyers advising the Iraqi judge,
and a United States Navy admiral acting as a spokesman who attended
in tan chinos and a yellow, short-sleeved sportshirt.
Media coverage was severely limited. No Iraqi reporters were
allowed into the courtroom. The initial video footage released
to the media came without sound. As veteran Middle East correspondent
Robert Fisk explained in the Independent, the audio only
came later, after a team of US officers had censored the tapes.
An American TV crewmember, who was present, later told Fisk: They
were running the show. The Americans decided what the world could
and could not see of this trialand it was meant to be an
Iraqi trial. There was a British official in the courtroom who
we were not allowed to show pictures of. The other men were US
troops who had been ordered to wear ordinary clothes so that they
were civilians in the court.
The sham was further exposed by the fact that Hussein had no
defence lawyer. While the presiding judge pompously asked Hussein
whether he could afford a legal defence, a team of lawyers hired
by Husseins wife and daughters has been unable to obtain
access to their client or to the documents on which the prosecution
case is being built. The lawyers allege they have received death
threats from Iraqs US-appointed leaders and have appealed
to the International Red Cross, the US, France, Britain and Belgium
to guarantee their safe passage to, and protection in, Iraq. The
team has filed a suit in the US against the refusal of American
authorities to grant access to Hussein.
Mohammed Rashdan, a Jordanian lawyer who heads Husseins
team, denounced last weeks proceedings: The mockery
of [the] trial shows there is no democracy. They shouldnt
have asked him any questions without a lawyer there... We are
facing clear legal violations. The allegations that this is going
to be a fair trial are baseless... They are afraid of bringing
out the truth because a fair trial would be an indictment of George
Bush. He has to first prove whether his entry into Iraq was legal
or not.
A kangaroo court
Husseins stage-managed appearance only highlights the
fraudulent character of the Iraqi Special Tribunal.
It was set up last year by the US Coalition Provisional Authority
(CPA) and its puppet Iraqi Governing Council (IRC), both of which
adamantly opposed the establishment of a UN-mandated court along
the lines of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia, which is hearing charges against former Serbian President
Slobodan Milosevic.
Fearful of any degree of outside scrutiny and control, the
Bush administration has established a body that lacks even the
semblance of independence. The body is completely funded by Washington
and is advised by a team of at least 50 US officials
on every aspect of its functioning. The FBI is leading the investigation,
along with the US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. Prosecutors
from the Justice Department are involved in framing the charges.
In a lengthy memorandum to the IRC last December, the US-based
Human Rights Watch (HRW) organisation cautiously questioned the
tribunals legitimacy and suggested a large number of amendments
to its statute to bring it into line with international law. Neither
the IRC nor the US occupation authorities took any notice of the
letter. Summing up its objections in January, HRW concluded the
US had failed to articulate any basis in international humanitarian
law by which the tribunal could be established and criticised
its drafting as highly secretive without any opportunity
for broad consultation or public comment.
Among the breaches of basic legal procedure identified by HRW
was the failure to ensure that the tribunal judges and prosecutors
were independent, impartial and had the necessary legal experience.
Any serious application of these requirements would have automatically
ruled out the tribunals directorUS-trained lawyer
Salem Chalabi, nephew of Ahmad Chalabi, the convicted embezzler
and longstanding US stooge, who, until recently, was one of the
Pentagons favourites for the post of Iraqi prime minister.
Like his uncle, Salem Chalabi is a member of the Iraqi National
Congress, set up by the CIA in the early 1990s and directly financed
by Washington for more than a decade. Salem was an enthusiastic
supporter of the US invasion and has vested financial interests
in the US occupation of Iraq. Last year, Salem set out to cash
in on his connections by establishing the Iraqi International
Law Group (IILG). Its website described its mission as taking
the lead in bringing private sector investment to
Iraq and boasted that its clients numbered among the largest
corporations and institutions on the planet.
On the grounds of security, none of the judges
or prosecutors appointed to the tribunal has been officially named,
thus preventing any scrutiny of their background. Journalist Robert
Fisk did, however, identify the faceless judge who conducted Husseins
arraignment as Raid Juhia 33-year-old who worked for
10 years as a judge under the Baathist regime. He performed another
political service for the US occupation in April, when he indicted
opposition Shiite cleric Muqtada al Sadr for murdera decision
that provided the pretext for the US military to move against
al Sadrs militia.
The HRW memorandum also drew attention to the failure of the
tribunals statute to adequately safeguard the basic legal
rights of the accused. Contrary to the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights, the statute failed to ensure that
guilt had to be proven beyond reasonable doubt. Much of the tribunals
procedure will be based on the criminal code established in the
late 1960s and early 1970s, after the Baath Party seized power
and imposed its dictatorial rule. During questioning and investigation,
the tribunals statute does not provide the right for the
defendant to remain silent, to consult a lawyer or to be informed
of the nature of the charges. It offers no protection against
arbitrary detention or physical and mental torture, or to the
use of forced confessions in court.
Given the revelations of systematic torture and abuse by US
interrogators and guards at the Abu Ghraib prison, there is every
reason to believe that Hussein and other high value detainees
have already been subjected to various types of coercion. At the
very least, they have been held for months in solitary confinementtreatment
that constitutes a form of psychological duress and is thus prohibited
under the Geneva Conventions.
Nervousness in Washington
In the flood of media reports that appeared in the US last
week, there was a distinct undercurrent of nervousness that Husseins
trial would backfire. This was evident in the minute dissection
that was made of Husseins body language during
his brief appearance and the expression of concern about how the
affair was being received in the Iraqi street. It
was also manifest in the media comments about the possibility
of Hussein turning the tables on his accusers, as the former Serbian
president Milosevic has done in his trial, and its political implications.
If the initial polls and interviews are any guide, the trial
is not going be to the trump card that Washington had hoped for.
A straw poll conducted last week by a Baghdad radio station after
Husseins appearance found that 45 percent of callers wanted
Hussein dead, while an astonishing 41 percent wanted him released.
A more systematic recent poll by the Iraqi Centre for Research
and Strategic Studies, which works closely with the US occupation
authorities, reported that some 20 percent of Iraqis thought Hussein
deserved clemency.
That Hussein, who ruthlessly ruled Iraq for more than two decades,
should have any measure of support is an indictment of the Bush
administration. The former Iraqi president is able to garner sympathy
only because of the overwhelming hostility of ordinary Iraqis
to the illegal US invasion and occupation of the country. Many
continue to feel that the tyrant should be put to death, whatever
the means. Others, however, regard the trial as another humiliating
US imposition on their country, and express sneaking admiration
for Hussein, despite his long record of oppression and brutality.
Abu Allah, interviewed in a Baghdad restaurant for the San
Francisco Chronicle, declared: You see how he argues
with the judges. For sure, I didnt like him when he was
in powerhe took my brothers land from him once and
stuck him in jail for six months. But you must remember that he
was still our leader, and an Iraqi, and it is good that he shows
that he is not a coward. Many more Iraqis are too preoccupied
with daily survival in the social disaster created by the US invasion
to care too much about Husseins trial or his fate.
While Arab leaders have been notable for their cowardly silence,
newspaper editorials throughout the Middle East have been critical
of the trial, reflecting a broader popular hostility. The Jordan
Times, for instance, warned that the trial may also bring
to light how Hussein came to power and which countries,
especially in the west, helped him consolidate his grip on power.
The trial, it continued, is also about the role some western
capitals had in providing the Iraqi regime with the means to wage
wars against Iran and Kuwait and use chemical weapons against
its own people.
The US administration cannot afford to have details of Washingtons
long and sordid association with Hussein and the Baath Party come
to light in the course of the trial. According to some accounts,
the CIAs connections with Hussein go back to his botched
assassination attempt on the life of Iraqs left-nationalist
leader General Abdel-Karim Kassem in 1959. Four years later, the
Baath Party ousted Kassem in a putsch that was backed by the CIA,
which supplied the names and addresses of leading Iraqi Communists
to be rounded up and executed.
The Bush administration has ensured that the Iraqi Special
Tribunal remains under its tight control in order to prevent the
trial turning into a political debacle. Washington is well aware
that former Serbian president Milosevic is preparing his defence
in the Hague, and is expected to call various past and present
political leaders, including British Prime Minister Tony Blair
and former US President Bill Clinton, as witnesses to testify
to their responsibility for the bloody events in the Balkans.
The last thing that the White House wants is for senior US officials
to be put on the witness stand in Baghdad over their role in Iraq
in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Tribunal director Salem Chalabi made clear last week such a
thing would not happen. He told the media that the actual trial
proceedings, which will not start for months, would not be televised,
so as to prevent Hussein from grandstanding. He explained
that the rules of evidence would be strictly drawn to prevent
the defendant from bringing in extraneous subjects.
Saddam is going to want to use the tribunal as a platform
for his political views, but we are not going to let him. Were
going to make him focus on the very specific charges against him,
he said.
The seven charges read out against Hussein last Thursday were
couched in the most general terms. They included: the murder of
political opponents over three decades; the killing of religious
leaders in 1974; the slaying of members of the Kurdish Barzani
clan in 1983; the forcible displacement of Kurds in 1986-88; the
gassing of Kurds in Halabja in 1988; the 1990 invasion of Kuwait
and the suppression of the 1991 uprising by Kurds and Shiites.
In none of these instances should Hussein be standing alone
in the dock. Throughout the 1980s, the Reagan and Bush administrations
backed the Baathist regime in its bloody war against Iran and
deliberately turned a blind eye to its use of chemical weapons
against Iranian soldiers. With the approval of their governments,
various US and European companies supplied Iraq with the technical
means to develop and build its weapons of mass destruction.
Only in the aftermath of the Iran-Iraq war did the Bush administration
turn on its local vassal and use the invasion of Kuwait in 1990
as the pretext for bolstering the strategic presence of the US
in the Persian Gulf. The US ambassador to Baghdad at the time,
April Glaspie, deliberately encouraged Hussein to believe that
he had Washingtons backing in his dispute with Kuwait over
its siphoning of oil from the al-Ramallah fields in southern Iraq.
Following the US-led invasion of Iraq in 1991, President Bush
senior first encouraged the Kurds and Shiites to revolt against
the Hussein regime, then deliberately abandoned them to their
fate when it became clear that the rebellions were more of a danger
to US interests in the Middle East than the military dictator
in Baghdad.
Hussein and other members of his regime should be put on trial
for their crimes by the Iraqi people. But the precondition for
any genuine justice is the immediate and unconditional withdrawal
of all US and foreign troops from the country. Moreover, all those
US officials responsible for the present illegal occupation of
Iraq, as well those who previously backed and assisted Husseins
crimes, should be held legally accountable for their actions.
See Also:
Insurgency forces speedup
of Iraqi "handover"
[29 June 2004]
Bush calls for Hussein's
execution: a portrait of sadism and ignorance
[18 December 2003]
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 |