|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
US-installed regime begins second Saddam Hussein show trial
By Patrick Martin
25 August 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The special tribunal established under US auspices in Baghdad
began its second trial of former Iraq President Saddam Hussein
and his Baath Party associates. The trial focuses on charges that
Hussein authorized bloody massacres and the use of poison gas
against the Kurdish population of northern Iraq during 1988, in
a campaign known as Anfal, from the Arabic word for
spoils of war.
Along with Hussein, those charged include his cousin Ali Hassan
al-Majeed, military leader of the Anfal campaign; Sultan Hashem
Ahmed, military commander of the campaign and later defense minister;
Saber Abdel Aziz, director of military intelligence; Hussein Rashid
al-Tikriti, deputy of operations for the Iraqi forces; Taher Mohammed
al-Ani, governor of the northern city of Mosul; and Farhan al-Jubari,
head of military intelligence in the north.
The charges do not include the single most notorious incident
of Husseins rule, the use of poison gas against the Kurdish
town of Halabja, in which 8,000 people died. This is to be tried
separately.
Like its predecessor, the latest proceeding against Hussein
is a gross violation of international law, which bars an occupying
power from establishing new legal institutions in a conquered
country.
From a political standpoint, the trial is an act of the utmost
cynicism, since the Bush administration is guilty of crimes at
least as heinous as those of Hussein. Moreover, in the events
of 1988, the US government was a behind-the-scenes accomplice
of Hussein in the Kurdish bloodbath.
The proceedings began August 21, and testimony by survivors
of the Anfal campaign continued through Wednesday, followed by
an adjournment until September 11. The testimony gave a glimpse
of the mass suffering inflicted on the Kurdish people, but the
political events surrounding the Anfal campaign, above all the
tacit US support for the massacres, were kept entirely out of
both the proceedings and the press coverage.
Sustaining such a cover-up throughout a lengthy trial, especially
during the period provided to the defense for rebuttal, may prove
more difficult. Hussein has already proven himself able to exploit
the vulnerabilities and contradictions of the posture adopted
by the Bush administration and its Baghdad stooges.
There is little argument about what took place in the Kurdish
regions of Iraq in 1987-88, during the last stages of the Iran-Iraq
War (a war encouraged by successive US administrations, which
saw Saddam Hussein as an ally who was bleeding their main antagonist
in the region, the Iranian theocracy headed by the Ayatollah Khomeini.)
Kurdish pesh merga fighters, working in conjunction
with Iran, staged an uprising in several provinces in the north
and seized control in many mountainous areas. The Baghdad regime
struck back with a bloody campaign of reprisals, including mass
shootings, the use of poison gas, the destruction of villages
and the uprooting of much of the Kurdish population, in order
to deprive the guerrillas of a sympathetic base of support. The
estimates for the death toll range from 75,000 to as many as 200,000.
Throughout this period, the Reagan administration in the United
States maintained close relations with Baghdadrelations
that had been cemented in 1983-84 in a series of visits by Reagans
special emissary to Saddam Hussein, the once and future US secretary
of defense, Donald Rumsfeld.
US intelligence agencies were supplying Iraqi military planners
with strategic and tactical information gathered by spy satellites.
This data was used in some cases to plan Iraqi chemical weapons
strikes against Iranian troop concentrations, which caused devastating
casualties in the final year of the war.
So close was the collaboration that when Iraq opened fire on
an American warship, the USS Stark, while it was on routine patrol
in the Persian Gulf, the Reagan administration downplayed the
incident.
If it was prepared to ignore the killing of 37 Navy sailors,
the US government was certainly not going to quibble about the
slaughter of Kurds. A few perfunctory statements of concern were
delivered to Baghdad, but Saddam Hussein got the real message:
he should do whatever it took to maintain his power against the
Iranian threat.
The full story of US support for the Iraqi regime remains locked
up in CIA and Pentagon archives. But there is ample evidence that
the Reagan administration, in addition to satellite data and other
military intelligence, provided Hussein with billions of dollars
in credits, as well as giving the green light for US allies in
Europe and the Middle East to provide military hardware and aid.
American and European firms supplied Iraq with the essential ingredients
for the development and manufacture of chemical and biological
weapons.
In a 2002 article entitled Who Armed Saddam? British
academic Glen Rangawala wrote: During the Anfal campaign,
the US escalated its support for Iraq. It joined in Iraqs
attacks on Iranian facilities, blowing up two Iranian oil rigs
and destroying an Iranian frigate a month after the Halabja attack.
Within two months, senior US officials were encouraging corporate
coordination through an Iraqi state-sponsored forum. The US administration
opposed, and eventually blocked, a US Senate bill that cut off
loans to Iraq. The US approved exports to Iraq of items with dual
civilian and military use at double the rate in the aftermath
of Halabja as it did before 1988. Iraqi written guarantees about
civilian use were accepted by the US commerce department, which
did not request licenses and reviews (as it did for many other
countries).
The ongoing trials of Saddam Hussein and his closest associates
have nothing to do with providing justice or accountability for
the crimes committed by the Baathist regime against the Iraqi
people. Their purpose is rather to politically justify the crimes
being committed today by the Bush administration against that
same oppressed and now occupied nation.
The American media has focused its coverage of Iraq this week
on the evidence of the victims of the Anfal campaign, while saying
nothing about the role of US officials like Reagan, Rumsfeld and
Bushs own father, then the vice-president, in supporting
and facilitating that bloody repression.
Who is the United States government to be bringing charges
against Saddam Hussein? If an accurate tally could be produced,
it would show that more innocent Iraqis have died as a result
of Washingtons actions than as the result of the actions
of the Baathist dictatorship. The death toll would include:
* One million Iraqis who died in the Iran-Iraq War (and an
even greater number of Iranians), instigated by the Carter administration
in 1980 and sustained by the Reagan administration for eight years
*An estimated 100,000 Iraqi soldiers and civilians killed by
bombing and other direct US military action in the 1991 Persian
Gulf War, waged by the first Bush administration
*One to 1.5 million Iraqis, the majority of them children,
who died as a result of US-imposed economic sanctions that denied
Iraq medicines and essential foodstuffs, as well as medical equipment,
a blockade imposed by the first Bush administration and maintained
by the Clinton administration and the second Bush administration
*The casualties of the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the occupation
which continues to this day, with estimates from 100,000 on upwards.
No one would deny that the regime of Saddam Hussein was a bloody,
repressive dictatorship, although that did not stop successive
US governments from maintaining close military and diplomatic
relations when it served the interests of American imperialism.
But any trial in which Hussein plays the main role, while the
leaders of American imperialism posture as the advocates of democracy,
justice and human rights, can only be called a farce and a fraud.
It is George W. Bush and his chief aides and accomplices, in government,
in Congress, and elsewhere in the American ruling elite, who are
the most deserving of facing a tribunal for crimes against humanity.
See Also:
Is the US planning a coup in Iraq?
[22 August 2006]
As violence spirals in
Iraq
Prosecutor demands death penalty in Hussein show trial
[22 June 2006]
New charges of genocide against
Hussein over Kurdish Anfal campaign
[10 April 2006]
US tries to use Saddam Hussein
trial to justify its own crimes
[3 March 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |