Greetings Everyone,
Thanks Amadu Njie for sending in this article.
I don't see any reason why Saddam Hussein shouldn't face charges at an
International Criminal Court. The decision that saddam be tried under the
auspices of US occupation and therefore its jurisdiction. is another
violation under International human rights.
Saddam Hussein should be made an example to all leaders who rule a state
of tyranny.
Therefore an International Criminal Court should be set up in Iraq to
preside over the case, and the jury should consist of jurors which are
representative of the Iraq population.
I can't see any reason, if the US is, as it claims to be the leading
light of democracy, will not accommodate Sadam Hussein to be tried by
international judges in Iraq. Bearing in mind that Iraq hasn't a system in
place of experienced judges.
Whether or not the decision of Saddam Hussein's is a for gone conclusion.
It is important for the attonement of his victims that he is tried under
the auspices of an international criminal court.
For a kangaroo court is not to meter out justice but revenge. Which
brings those presiding on the moral high ground to the same level as the
perpetrator. The stance taken by the US is questionable. It raises more
questions than it answers. Saddam Hussein decided to be captured alive.
Therefore he should take responsibility for his crimes against humanity
whether it takes months or years to compile the evidence against him. A
quick execution might quench blood lust. But does it really give justice
to the victims of his brutal regime, If Saddam Hussein is quickly disposed
of without being made accountable for crimes against humanity. Even if this
causes a certain amount of embarrassment to his former allies.
Saddam Husseins trail needs to be transparent, so that it sends out a
clear message, that there is zero tolerance of tyrranical leaders, and that
they have no amensty of being tried under the rule of law, whether it be
national or international. In cases were the judical system has colapsed or
are corrupt then they automatically should be judged by international
criminal court judges, as in the case of Serria Leone.
After all Iraqi's need attonement for the crimes committed against their
famillies, and have the restoration of sovernignty. The best the US can do
in my opinion, is to facilitate the hand over of Saddam Hussein to an
International Criminal Court to be held in Iraq. And exit Iraq as soon as
strategically possible.
The Iraqi's are more than capable of reconstructing a new Iraq without
the US or Britain monopolizing their natural resources.
Peace
Sophia Ba.
- Original Message -----
From: "Amadu Kabir Njie" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, December 18, 2003 1:22 AM
Subject: Fw: Bush calls for Hussein's execution: a portrait of sadism and
ignorance
Bush calls for Hussein's execution: a portrait of sadism and ignorance
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/dec2003/bush-d18.shtml
By Bill Vann
18 December 2003
Media reports on the nationally televised interview with George W. Bush
broadcast by ABC News Tuesday night focused on the American president's
call for the execution of Saddam Hussein. "Zap rat Saddam, sez Prez," was
the way the New York Daily News summed up the contents of Bush's remarks.
The general portrayal was one of a tough-talking leader moved by feelings
of personal outrage to demand that the former Iraqi president pay
the "ultimate penalty" for his crimes.
Those who actually sat through the interview and who know Bush's record,
however, may not be so impressed. When he was governor of Texas,
the "ultimate penalty" was altogether routine. He presided over 152
executions, more than any other governor in US history, and once allowed
that he spent an average of just 15 minutes reviewing cases before giving
the order to put human beings-including the mentally ill-to death.
After becoming president, he has resumed the use of the federal death
penalty for the first time in the US since 1963, ordering the execution of
a Persian Gulf War veteran on the very eve of launching the invasion of
Iraq last March.
For Bush, imposing the death penalty is less a matter of moral outrage
than vicarious thrill. His personal sadism and the "kick" he gets from
exercising this ultimate power was revealed most noxiously in his public
mimicking of the plea for clemency by a condemned Texas woman, Karla Faye
Tucker, before ordering her state murder.
"This is a disgusting tyrant who deserves justice, the ultimate justice.
But that will be decided not by the president of the United States but by
the citizens of Iraq in one form or another," said Bush, who defensively
added, "You don't want a kangaroo court."
But that is precisely what Washington is preparing. The "citizens of Iraq"
will decide nothing. They are subjects of a US military occupation,
without an elected government and without even the prospect of a vote for
years to come. The US will create the instrument that will render
Hussein's verdict based on the time-honored American principle of "give
him a fair trial and hang him."
The Bush administration has no intention of allowing any court that is not
under its unrestricted control to bring Hussein to trial. Having revoked a
previous treaty committing US support for the International Criminal
Court, it is determined not to legitimize any such body. It justifiably
fears that Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Tommy Franks and others could some day
be brought before such a tribunal on war crimes charges stemming from the
war of aggression against Iraq and the deaths of tens of thousands of
Iraqi citizens.
While international courts have ruled out the death penalty as a barbaric
punishment, with an Iraqi puppet court, the US can put Saddam Hussein
speedily to death while claiming that it is merely doing the will of the
Iraqi people.
The other advantage of such a procedure is that dead men tell no tales.
Hussein can be denied the one defense he would inevitably make before an
international court: that the greatest crimes of which he stands accused-
the Iran-Iraq war, the gassing of the Kurds and suppression of the
Shiites-
were carried out with either the direct support or tacit approval of US
administrations in Washington.
Whether Bush himself even grasps these political issues behind the US
handling of Hussein is unclear. The image that came across in what was an
exceedingly rare extended interview was that of a politically ignorant and
vindictive individual.
His interviewer was Diane Sawyer, a virtual state institution,
whose "journalistic" credentials are rooted in her having served as a
flack in the Nixon White House and then having followed the disgraced
president to San Clemente to help him write his memoirs. But even the
gentle probing of such a trusted ally seemed to be an ordeal for Bush.
His peculiar facial expressions and nervous body language suggested an
inner fear that each and every question would press against the outer
limits of his scant knowledge, driving him to seek refuge in the few stock
phrases that he has picked up from his speechwriters and political
handlers.
Thus, when Sawyer opened up a line of inquiry concerning the failure of
the US military to turn up any trace of weapons of mass destruction in
Iraq, the pretext for launching the administration's predatory war, Bush
became badly flustered.
Sawyer asked about his administration's claims that the Iraqi regime was
close to producing nuclear arms and had hundreds of tons of chemical and
biological weapons. Bush responded, "Look, there is no doubt that Saddam
Hussein was a dangerous person, and there's no doubt we had a body of
evidence proving that, and there is no doubt that the president must act,
after 9/11, to make America a more secure country."
When Sawyer tried to pursue the question, Bush replied childishly, "Well,
you can keep asking the question and my answer's gonna be the same. Saddam
was a danger and the world is better off cause we got rid of him." The
former White House aide moved accommodatingly to a different subject.
In one extraordinary exchange, Sawyer asked Bush about his statement that
his sole source of news is briefings prepared by his staff. "I get my news
from people who don't editorialize," he said. "They give me the actual
news, and it makes it easier to digest on a daily basis, the facts."
Asked by Sawyer whether he did this because he found it "harder to read
constant criticism," Bush responded: "Why even put up with it when you can
get the facts elsewhere? I'm a lucky man, I've got ... all kinds of people
in my administration who are charged with different responsibilities, and
they come in and say this is what's happening, this isn't what's
happening."
Nothing could more clearly demonstrate the US president's political
backwardness and personal indifference to the world outside the White
House. His disdain for reading newspapers reflects a lack of any ability
or even interest in developing a political orientation based upon a study
of competing interests and conflicting policies as they are reflected
through the press. Making such analyses is a key task of any serious
politician, but Bush is not such a figure.
His subjectivism and limited intellectual capacity make him easy to
manipulate. His subordinates and advisers feed him the "facts" that favor
the policies they seek, and Bush, with his unconcern about political
debate in the wider world, is not even in a position to grasp the aims of
antagonistic forces within his own administration and staff.
Given such an individual as the titular chief executive, it is not hard to
understand the colossal blunders the administration has made in its war in
Iraq, policies that continue to cost the lives of both Iraqi civilians and
young American soldiers on a daily basis.
Within US ruling circles, the fact that Bush is grossly unqualified for
the position that he holds is well known. For the gang of corporate
criminals that dominate his cabinet and serve as his principal political
base, his lack of any knowledge or intelligence make him a malleable
instrument for the pursuit of their profit interests.
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