There was a guilty verdict on
America as well -
Saddam Hussein
by Robert Fisk
The Independent
www.zmag.org, November 6, 2006
So America's one-time ally has been sentenced
to death for war crimes he committed when he was Washington's
best friend in the Arab world. America knew all about his atrocities
and even supplied the gas - along with the British, of course
- yet there we were yesterday declaring it to be, in the White
House's words, another "great day for Iraq". That's
what Tony Blair announced when Saddam Hussein al-Tikriti was pulled
from his hole in the ground on 13 December 2003. And now we're
going to string him up, and it's another great day.
Of course, it couldn't happen to a better
man. Nor a worse. It couldn't be a more just verdict - nor a more
hypocritical one. It's difficult to think of a more suitable monster
for the gallows, preferably dispatched by his executioner, the
equally monstrous hangman of Abu Ghraib prison, Abu Widad, who
would strike his victims on the head with an axe if they dared
to condemn the leader of the Iraqi Socialist Baath Party before
he hanged them. But Abu Widad was himself hanged at Abu Ghraib
in 1985 after accepting a bribe to put a reprieved prisoner to
death instead of the condemned man. But we can't mention Abu Ghraib
these days because we have followed Saddam's trail of shame into
the very same institution. And so by hanging this awful man, we
hope - don't we? - to look better than him, to remind Iraqis that
life is better now than it was under Saddam.
Only so ghastly is the hell-disaster that
we have inflicted upon Iraq that we cannot even say that. Life
is now worse. Or rather, death is now visited upon even more Iraqis
than Saddam was able to inflict on his Shias and Kurds and - yes,
in Fallujah of all places - his Sunnis, too. So we cannot even
claim moral superiority. For if Saddam's immorality and wickedness
are to be the yardstick against which all our iniquities are judged,
what does that say about us? We only sexually abused prisoners
and killed a few of them and murdered some suspects and carried
out a few rapes and illegally invaded a country which cost Iraq
a mere 600,000 lives ("more or less", as George Bush
Jnr said when he claimed the figure to be only 30,000). Saddam
was much worse. We can't be put on trial. We can't be hanged.
"Allahu Akbar," the awful man
shouted - God is greater. No surprise there. He it was who insisted
these words should be inscribed upon the Iraqi flag, the same
flag which now hangs over the palace of the government that has
condemned him after a trial at which the former Iraqi mass murderer
was formally forbidden from describing his relationship with Donald
Rumsfeld, now George Bush's Secretary of Defence. Remember that
handshake? Nor, of course, was he permitted to talk about the
support he received from George Bush Snr, the current US President's
father. Little wonder, then, that Iraqi officials claimed last
week the Americans had been urging them to sentence Saddam before
the mid- term US elections.
Anyone who said the verdict was designed
to help the Republicans, Tony Snow, the White House spokesman,
blurted out yesterday, must be "smoking rope". Well,
Tony, that rather depends on what kind of rope it might be. Snow,
after all, claimed yesterday that the Saddam verdict - not the
trial itself, please note - was "scrupulous and fair".
The judges will publish "everything they used to come to
their verdict."
No doubt. Because here are a few of the
things that Saddam was not allowed to comment upon: sales of chemicals
to his Nazi-style regime so blatant - so appalling - that he has
been sentenced to hang on a localised massacre of Shias rather
than the wholesale gassing of Kurds over which George W Bush and
Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara were so exercised when they decided
to depose Saddam in 2003 - or was it in 2002? Or 2001? Some of
Saddam's pesticides came from Germany (of course). But on 25 May
1994, the US Senate's Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban
Affairs produced a report entitled "United States Chemical
and Biological Warfare-related Dual-use exports to Iraq and their
possible impact on the Health Consequences (sic) of the Persian
Gulf War".
This was the 1991 war which prompted our
liberation of Kuwait, and the report informed Congress about US
government-approved shipments of biological agents sent by American
companies to Iraq from 1985 or earlier. These included Bacillus
anthracis, which produces anthrax; Clostridium botulinum; Histoplasma
capsulatum; Brucella melitensis; Clostridium perfringens and Escherichia
coli. The same report stated that the US provided Saddam with
"dual use" licensed materials which assisted in the
development of chemical, biological and missile-system programmes,
including chemical warfare agent production facility plant and
technical drawings (provided as pesticide production facility
plans).
Yes, well I can well see why Saddam wasn't
permitted to talk about this. John Reid, the British Home Secretary,
said that Saddam's hanging "was a sovereign decision by a
sovereign nation". Thank heavens he didn't mention the £200,000
worth of thiodiglycol, one of two components of mustard gas we
exported to Baghdad in 1988, and another £50,000 worth of
the same vile substances the following year.
We also sent thionyl chloride to Iraq
in 1988 at a price of only £26,000. Yes, I know these
could be used to make ballpoint ink and fabric dyes. But this
was the same country - Britain - that would, eight years later,
prohibit the sale of diphtheria vaccine to Iraqi children on the
grounds that it could be used for - you guessed it - "weapons
of mass destruction".
Now in theory, I know, the Kurds have
a chance for their own trial of Saddam, to hang him high for the
thousands of Kurds gassed at Halabja. This would certainly keep
him alive beyond the 30-day death sentence review period. But
would the Americans and British dare touch a trial in which we
would have not only to describe how Saddam got his filthy gas
but why the CIA - in the immediate aftermath of the Iraqi war
crimes against Halabja - told US diplomats in the Middle East
to claim that the gas used on the Kurds was dropped by the Iranians
rather than the Iraqis (Saddam still being at the time our favourite
ally rather than our favourite war criminal). Just as we in the
West were silent when Saddam massacred 180,000 Kurds during the
great ethnic cleansing of 1987 and 1988.
And - dare we go so deep into this betrayal
of the Iraqis we loved so much that we invaded their country?
- then we would have to convict Saddam of murdering countless
thousands of Shia Muslims as well as Kurds after they staged an
uprising against the Baathist regime at our specific request -
thousands whom webetrayed by leaving them to fight off Saddam's
brutal hordes on their own. "Rioting," is how Lord Blair's
meretricious "dodgy dossier" described these atrocities
in 2002 - because, of course, to call them an "uprising"
(which they were) would invite us to ask ourselves who contrived
to provoke this bloodbath._Answer: us.
I and my colleagues watched this tragedy.
I travelled on the hospital trains that brought the Iranians back
from the 1980-88 war front, their gas wounds bubbling in giant
blisters on their arms and faces, giving birth to smaller blisters
that wobbled on top of their wounds. The British and Americans
didn't want to know. I talked to the victims of Halabja. The Americans
didn't want to know. My Associated Press colleague Mohamed Salaam
saw the Iranian dead lying gassed in their thousands on the battlefields
east of Basra. The Americans and the British didn't care.
But now we are to give the Iraqi people
bread and circuses, the final hanging of Saddam, twisting, twisting
slowly in the wind. We have won. We have inflicted justice upon
the man whose country we invaded and eviscerated and caused to
break apart. No, there is no sympathy for this man. "President
Saddam Hussein has no fear of being executed," Bouchra Khalil,
a Lebanese lawyer on his team, said in Beirut a few days ago.
"He will not come out of prison to count his days and years
in exile in Qatar or any other place. He will come out of prison
to go to the presidency or to his grave." It looks like the
grave. Keitel went there. Ceausescu went there. Milosevic escaped
sentence.
The odd thing is that Iraq is now swamped
with mass murderers, guilty of rape and massacre and throat- slitting
and torture in the years since our "liberation" of Iraq.
Many of them work for the Iraqi government we are currently supporting,
democratically elected, of course. And these war criminals, in
some cases, are paid by us, through the ministries we set up under
this democratic government. And they will not be tried. Or hanged.
That is the extent of our cynicism. And our shame. Have ever justice
and hypocrisy been so obscenely joined?
Robert
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