The Unmentionable Hypocrisy: Hussein Hanged, Bush and Blair Remain in Power

» The Unmentionable Hypocrisy: Hussein Hanged, Bush and Blair Remain in Power

Saddam Hussein was hanged a week ago, today, for executing 148 people. Yet, even by conservative estimates, George W. Bush and Tony Blair are responsible for hundreds, or thousands, of times more deaths due to their war of aggression - the supreme international crime - in Iraq.But, while Saddam Hussein is hanged, Bush and Blair remain in power with apparent impunity.

Why the double standard?

Read the full post here…

Saddam Hussein executed in Iraq

BBC NEWS | World | Middle East | Saddam Hussein executed in Iraq

Former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has been executed by hanging at a secure facility in northern Baghdad for crimes against humanity.The news was confirmed to the BBC by the Iraqi deputy foreign minister.

Iraqi TV said the execution took place just before 0600 local time (0300GMT). A representative of the prime minister and a Sunni Muslim cleric were present.

Two co-defendants, Saddam Hussein’s half-brother and a former chief judge, are to be executed at a later date.

All three were sentenced to death by an Iraqi court on 5 November after a year-long trial over the 1982 killings of 148 Shias in the town of Dujail.

Read the full article…

So, Saddam Hussein has finally gone. Yet, with all the horrendous crimes he was accused of committing it strikes me as rather strange that they’ve rushed through his execution for a crime that, in his scale of misdeeds, was relatively minor.

Why not put a stay on the execution till he could be tried for all the many other crimes he’d been accused of committing.
It couldn’t be anything to do with the probability that, were his trials to have continued for a protracted period then yet more facts might have emerged (other than Saddam’s own rhetoric) about the complicity of the West in his crimes - could it? No, surely not.
Or are all the other accusations that have been made against him to go untried and untested in a court of law (even such a mockery of a “court of law” as that which tried Hussein) - so that they will remain forever unchallenged? Mighty convenient for the West.

Of course, the verdict and the sentence were a foregone conclusion.

And another foregone conclusion: I’ve been watching BBC News 24 throughout the early hours of this morning, part of which was devoted to a potted history of Saddam’s rise to power, and some of the events that led to today’s execution.
Thoroughly disgusted by their cherry-picking of the facts, at least it gives us a foretaste of what shape the “official history” will take. No surprises there either.

The only question remaining - now that everyone’s crowing about Saddam having finally been made accountable for his crimes - is when Bush and Blair will likewise been made accountable for the devastation they have wrought upon the peoples of Iraq?

Here’s an interesting link…

The Misguided Execution of Saddam Hussein

And another one…

Demand Accountability for U.S./Israeli War Crimes in Lebanon and Palestine

International Action Center

Let’s now charge the accomplices

Saddam: Let’s now charge the accomplices

By John Pilger

11/09/06 “Information Clearing House” — – In a show trial whose theatrical climax was clearly timed to promote George W Bush in the American midterm elections, Saddam Hussein was convicted and sentenced to hang. Drivel about “end of an era” and “a new start for Iraq” was promoted by the usual false moral accountants, who uttered not a word about bringing the tyrant’s accomplices to justice. Why are these accomplices not being charged with aiding and abetting crimes against humanity?

Why isn’t George Bush Snr being charged? In 1992, a congressional inquiry found that Bush as president had ordered a cover-up to conceal his secret support for Saddam and the illegal arms shipments being sent to Iraq via third countries. Missile technology was shipped to South Africa and Chile, then “on sold” to Iraq, while US Commerce Department records were falsified. Congressman Henry Gonzalez, chairman of the House of Representatives Banking Com mittee, said: “[We found that] Bush and his advisers financed, equipped and succoured the monster . . .”

Why isn’t Douglas Hurd being charged? In 1981, as Foreign Office minister, Hurd travelled to Baghdad to sell Saddam a British Aerospace missile system and to “celebrate” the anniversary of Saddam’s blood-soaked ascent to power. Why isn’t his former cabinet colleague, Tony Newton, being charged? As Thatcher’s trade secretary, Newton, within a month of Saddam gassing 5,000 Kurds at Halabja (news of which the Foreign Office tried to suppress), offered the mass murderer £340m in export credits.

Why isn’t Donald Rumsfeld being charged? In December 1983, Rumsfeld was in Baghdad to signal America’s approval of Iraq’s aggression against Iran. Rumsfeld was back in Baghdad on 24 March 1984, the day that the United Nations reported that Iraq had used mustard gas laced with a nerve agent against Iranian soldiers. Rumsfeld said nothing. A subsequent Senate report documented the transfer of the ingredients of biological weapons from a company in Maryland, licensed by the Commerce Department and approved by the State Department.

Why isn’t Madeleine Albright being charged? As President Clinton’s secretary of state, Albright enforced an unrelenting embargo on Iraq which caused half a million “excess deaths” of children under the age of five. When asked on television if the children’s deaths were a price worth paying, she replied: “We think the price is worth it.”

Why isn’t Peter Hain being charged? In 2001, as Foreign Office minister, Hain described as “gratuitous” the suggestion that he, along with other British politicians outspoken in their support of the deadly siege of Iraq, might find themselves summoned before the International Criminal Court. A report for the UN secretary general by a world authority on international law describes the embargo on Iraq in the 1990s as “unequivocally illegal under existing human rights law”, a crime that “could raise questions under the Genocide Convention”. Indeed, two past heads of the UN humanitarian mission in Iraq, both of them assistant secretary generals, resigned because the embargo was indeed genocidal. As of July 2002, more than $5bn-worth of humanitarian supplies, approved by the UN Sanctions Committee and paid for by Iraq, were blocked by the Bush administration, backed by the Blair and Hain government. These included items related to food, health, water and sanitation.

Above all, why aren’t Blair and Bush Jnr being charged with “the paramount war crime”, to quote the judges at Nuremberg and, recently, the chief American prosecutor - that is, unprovoked aggression against a defenceless country?

And why aren’t those who spread and amplified propaganda that led to such epic suffering being charged? The New York Times reported as fact fabrications fed to its reporter by Iraqi exiles. These gave credibility to the White House’s lies, and doubtless helped soften up public opinion to support an invasion. Over here, the BBC all but celebrated the invasion with its man in Downing Street congratulating Blair on being “conclusively right” on his assertion that he and Bush “would be able to take Baghdad without a bloodbath”. The invasion, it is reliably estimated, has caused 655,000 “excess deaths”, overwhelmingly civilians.

If none of these important people are called to account, there is clearly only justice for the victims of accredited “monsters”.

Is that real or fake justice?

Fake.

This article first appeared in the New Statesman.

This was a guilty verdict on America as well

Independent Online Edition: Robert Fisk
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 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.

more…


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License.