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As violence spirals in Iraq
Prosecutor demands death penalty in Hussein show trial
By David Walsh
22 June 2006
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The prosecution in the trial of Saddam Hussein has demanded
the execution of the former president, along with three other
top officials, for his part in the 1982 repression of Iraqisincluding
torture and killingswhose sole crime was opposing the Baghdad
regime. The denouement of the case is taking place while the US
is engaged in mass repression of Iraqisincluding torture
and killingswhose sole crime has been resisting the occupying
forces and their puppet government.
This elementary reality exposes the hypocrisy and fraudulent
nature of the legal proceeding.
The current trial involves the persecution of a Shiite village,
Dujail, in 1982, by the Iraqi regime in retaliation for an attempt
on Husseins life. Some 148 people were allegedly killed
following the botched assassination. The Dujail case is the first
in a series of trials scheduled for Hussein: he will also be charged
with gassing 5,000 Kurds in Halabja in 1988 and a brutal crackdown
against Shiites following the Persian Gulf war in 1991. However,
if his appeals against the likely Dujail verdict are exhausted,
Hussein could be executed, by hanging, before those cases are
ever heard.
Since the Halabja incident occurred as part of the bloody Anfal
campaign in the Kurdish north of Iraq, at a time when the Reagan
administration was backing Hussein in the war with Iran and doing
its best to conceal his crimes, there is some question as to whether
Washington would care to have those charges fully explored.
The judges and prosecutors in the Dujail case, behind whom
closely lurk the American military and intelligence apparatus,
pretend to be operating in a fair-minded and impartial manner,
establishing a precedent for the new Iraq as a nation of
laws. The US media, by and large, goes along with the charade.
It is taken for granted by most American print and television
editorialists that the death penalty is an appropriate
punishment.
In fact, this is victors justice, pure and simple. Washington,
Husseins former ally during the 1980s, has organized a judicial
procedure, whose outcome was entirely predetermined, for whatever
political mileage it can extract. How much of an impact the case
and its presumable grisly outcome will have on the current situation
in Iraq, however, is highly questionable.
Even portions of the American media allow that the Hussein
trial has been characterized by disarray and farce at times
(Christian Science Monitor)and worse.
One of the Iraqi presidents principal defense attorneys,
Khamis al-Obeidi, who represented both Hussein and his half brother,
was abducted by men wearing police uniforms and shot to death
on Wednesday. It was the third such killing since the trial began
in October 2005. Two other defense attorneys were murdered in
the first three weeks of the proceedings. In January, the chief
judge resigned, under pressure from the Iraqi regime and its American
handlers for permitting Hussein too much freedom in the courtroom.
His assistant was also removed, after claims that he was a former
Baath Party member.
Legal norms were largely disregarded, and the democratic rights
of the defendants were regularly trampled on. Earlier this month,
the final chief judge, Raouf Abdel Rahman, had four defense witnesses
imprisoned on suspicion of perjury in a move Husseins attorneys
argued was clearly intended to intimidate other witnesses. He
cut short the defense case June 13 by forbidding its lawyers to
call any more witnesses, announcing, Ive finished
hearing witnesses.
Abdel Rahman, in keeping with his obvious marching orders,
has been particularly sensitive to any mention of the current
situation, and especially the US presence. Attempts by the defendants
to reject the proceeding as illegitimate and politically motivated
have been shut down. On the final day of testimony, former Vice
President Taha Yassin Ramadan, one of the accused, denied his
guilt in rambling comments, but when he mentioned the illegal
US occupation, the chief judge instantly cut him off. Abdel
Rahman has rejected any political defense as mere speechmaking
and rhetoric.
The proceedings are entirely illegitimate. They constitute
a political show trial, intended by the Bush administration to
provide a justification for its invasion and occupation of Iraq,
a naked act of colonial-style aggression. The court is the product
of an illegal war and occupation, and its very existence is a
violation of international law, which forbids an occupying power
from inflicting its own judicial bodies on a conquered people.
Hussein is responsible for many crimes, but the US imperialism
and its proxies have no right to play judge and jury.
The tragi-comic nature of the current trial has not done Washingtons
reputation any good. And this disturbs some of the Iraq wars
liberal supporters. Richard Cohen of the Washington Post
recently took the Bush administration to task for making a mess
of a golden opportunity (Trials and Errors in Iraq,
May 23, 2006).
The trial has been a calamity, Cohen claims, because
it has obscured the only redeeming element of the
Iraq war, its moral componentthe desire of some people
to do good by ridding the world of a thug and his regime.
Instead, the trial has become a sputtering charade,
which has provided Hussein the chance to make the odd speech,
to challenge the jurisdiction of the court and, in short, to turn
the entire proceeding into a metaphor for the American occupation
of Iraq: chaotic, endless and, worse, meaningless.
This American liberal philistine argues: How this has
happened is almost beyond comprehension. The Bush administration
was out to make two points, one political, the other ideological.
It was important for the trial to be an all-Iraqi operation, and
it was equally important to impose the death penalty.
It never occurs to Cohen that the trials failure to
come off flows from the nature of the war and US goals themselves:
not the desire to rid the world of a thug, with whom Washington
happily carried on business during the time he was carrying out
his worst acts of repression, but the ruthless pursuit of American
geopolitical ambitions. The trial is not orderly, convincing or
democratic, in the final analysis, because it is the product of
a criminal enterprise.
The latter stages of the Dujail case coincide with Iraqs
descent, under American occupation, into unspeakable violence
and bloodshed. Sectarian conflict is rife, at any moment threatening
to erupt in full-scale civil war. Death squads operate with impunity
out of the interior ministry and the Iraqi security forces. Suicide
bombings and other atrocities are a fact of everyday life. Dozens
of corpses arrive in Baghdads morgue each day.
Early in June, an LA Times reporter described the situation
in fairly stark terms: Baghdad is now a city where residents
never know whether they may be killed by a roadside bomb explosion,
in a crossfire, by mistakenly running a security checkpoint or
by being dragged out of their vehicle at any time they leave their
homes to go to work, to school, to shop or to visit relatives.
Baghdad has just bled its way through the most murderous
month since U.S.-led forces invaded the country in 2003, new Iraqi
government documents indicate. More people were shot, stabbed
or killed in other violence in May than in any other month since
the invasion, according to statistics tallied by the Ministry
of Health.
That figure does not include slain soldiers or civilians
killed in bombings, in which victims are not usually given autopsies.
Last month alone, 1,398 bodies were brought to Baghdads
central morgue, the ministry said. All over the capital and out
into the provinces, corpses surface on a daily basis in garbage
dumps, in abandoned cars or sprawled along roadsides. They often
bear marks of bondage and torture.
American imperialism bears the full responsibility for this.
The US encounter with Iraq, like Vietnam before it, has been a
catastrophe for both countries. Over the past decade and a half,
in the Persian Gulf war, through economic sanctions, as a result
of bombing raids during the interwar peace and, finally,
in the present war and occupation, the death toll caused by American
imperialism runs into the millions. All in pursuit of Iraqs
oil reserves. Whatever action is taken against Hussein will not
wash this blood clean from its hands.
See Also:
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]
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