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Spanish Judge calls for architects of Iraq invasion to be
tried for war crimes
By Vicky Short
27 March 2007
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Baltasar Garzón, the Spanish judge who sought to prosecute
Chilean dictator General Augusto Pinochet, has called for US President
George W. Bush and his allies to be tried for war crimes over
Iraq.
Writing in El Pais on the fourth anniversary of the
invasion, Garzón stated, Today, March 20, marks four
years since the formal start of the war on Iraq. Instigated by
the United States and Great Britain, and supported by Spain among
other countries, one of the most sordid and unjustifiable episodes
in recent human history began.
Breaking every international law, and under the pretext
of the war against terror, there has taken place since 2003 a
devastating attack on the rule of law and against the very essence
of the international community. In its path, institutions such
as the United Nations were left in tatters, from which it has
not yet recovered.
Instead of commemorating the war, Garzón
continues, we should be horrified, screaming and demonstrating
against the present massacre created as a consequence of that
war.
He then writes that George W. Bush and his allies should eventually
face war crimes charges for their actions in Iraq: We should
look more deeply into the possible criminal responsibility of
the people who are, or were, responsible for this war and see
whether there is sufficient evidence to make them answer for it.
For many it would be merely a question of political responsibility,
but judicial actions in the US are beginning to emerge, as is
the case of the verdict passed on one of vice-president Cheneys
collaborators, [I. Lewis Libby] which point in a different direction.
There is enough of an argument in 650,000 deaths for
this investigation and inquiry to start without more delay,
he added.
Garzón then turns his scathing criticisms towards the
former Spanish Prime Minister, José María Aznar,
who followed British Prime Minister Tony Blair in supporting Bushs
war of aggression against Iraq.
Those who joined the US president in the war against
Iraq have as much or more responsibility than him because, despite
having doubts and biased information, they put themselves in the
hands of the aggressor to carry out an ignoble act of death and
destruction that continues to this day.
Aznar still defends the invasion of Iraq. He reluctantly admitted
last month that he now knew Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass
destruction, but added that the problem was not having been
clever enough to know it earlier.
Garzón answers this in his article: If he didnt
know enough, he should be asked why he didnt act prudently,
giving United Nations inspectors more leeway instead of doing
the opposite in total submission and fidelity to President Bush.
Fearful of the extension of the insurgency in Iraq throughout
the Middle East and internationally, Garzón declares that
the North American bellicose action, and that of those who
supported it, has determined or at least has contributed to the
creation, development and consolidation of the biggest terrorist
training camp in the world.... In some way, with a terrible lack
of awareness, we have been and are helping this monster grow more
and more and strengthened by the minute, so that it is probably
invincible.
Garzón has investigated everything from Basque terrorism
to the March 11, 2004 Madrid train bombings, whose alleged perpetrators
are currently on trial. He led the investigation into the rightist
terror group Grupos Antiterroristas de Liberación (GAL),
whose creation was attributed to the Socialist Party (PSOE) government
of the day. He also banned Herri Batasuna, the political arm of
ETAthe first political party to be outlawed since the death
of Franco in 1975.
Back in 1996 the Progressive Union of Prosecutors filed criminal
complaints against the Argentine and Chilean military for the
disappearance of Spanish citizens under the dictatorships that
ruled them in the 1970s and 1980s. One year later, Garzón
issued an arrest order that included Argentine Navy Captain Adolfo
Scilingo, who made a televised confession in 1995 of death
flights in which hundreds of detainees were thrown from
airplanes to their deaths in the Atlantic Ocean. Scilingo was
detained after travelling to Spain voluntarily.
Former Chilean President Pinochet was arrested during a medical
check-up in London in 1998 based on a warrant issued by Garzón.
For months the judge attempted to have the dictator extradited
to Spain to be tried for heading the military coup in 1973 that
overthrew the elected president Salvador Allende and the subsequent
murder of thousands of students and workers. He has also signalled
his intention to question Richard Nixons national security
adviser Henry Kissinger about events in Chile, after declassified
documents released by the US State Department and the CIA suggested
that Kissinger was well aware of what was happening.
The fact that such a prominent international judicial figure
openly speaks of bringing war crimes judgement against the leaders
of the US, UK and Spain is an indication that the entire Iraq
campaign is heading towards a disaster and a response to the mounting
opposition around the world.
Yet his statement was given only the most cursory coverage
by the media in the United States and internationally. No publication
chose to make an editorial comment and most simply reproduced
or slightly amended a Reuters report.
Such is the level of hostility to the Iraq war and occupation
in Spain, however, that even sections of ex-Prime Minister Aznars
Popular Party (PP) are publicly declaring that his attendance
at the meeting in the Azores that supported Bush in his decision
to invade Iraq was an error.
Reporting on their criticism, the right-wing newspaper El
Mundo commented on March 20, The PP should not continue
avoiding an auto-criticism on Iraq.
It continues that, although the present critics were in the
main opposed to sending troops to Iraq at the time, today even
if only a few dare to say it aloud ... the vast majority in the
PP accept in private that Aznar made a mistake. In his zeal to
make Spain more of an Atlantic country, trusting Bush blindly,
he only succeeded in fertilising the rank anti-Americanism of
a sector of Spanish society, as well as neglecting the repercussions
this would have on domestic affairs, which, as the new (PSOE)
government is demonstrating, demanded more attention than our
projection abroad.
A few hours after the El Pais article by Garzón
had reached the shops, the secretary of organisation for the PSOE,
José Blanco, declared in an interview in Telecinco
that someone had to pay the consequences for the decision to invade
Iraq. And if Bush, Blair and Aznar were to be made legally accountable,
then he would support this.
See Also:
For an international mobilization
of workers and youth against the war in Iraq [22 January 2007]
Eric Hobsbawm on the Spanish Civil War:
an anti-historical tirade
[16 March 2007]
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