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My first reaction to the
capture of Saddam Hussein was both anger and disgust. Anger with the old
dictator who could not even die honourably. He preferred to be captured
by his old friends than to go down fighting, the one decent thing he
could have done for his country.
I felt no pity for Saddam. He had killed some dear comrades of mine and
imprisoned too many others, but the US had no right to do this. It was
the responsibility of the Iraqi people.
I also felt disgust with the way in which the TV networks were covering
this event. CNN and BBC World had become total propaganda networks, to
such an extent that it must have made Berlusconi smile. Parading a
captured prisoner in this fashion is the new model of imperialism. The
latter-day equivalent of how barbarian chieftains were paraded in
ancient Rome, prior to their execution.
For years the US had built up Saddam as the big bogeyman in the
Middle-East. Now that he has gone what possible excuse is there for the
Western soldiers to remain in Iraq? Why not an immediate general
election to elect a Constituent Assembly? Is it because an elected
Assembly would demand an immediate end to the Occupation, Iraqi control
of Iraqi oil and Iraqi firms to reconstruct their country? These demands
will unite the bulk of Iraqis regardless of their religious or ethnic
origin.
What effect will Saddam's arrest have on the resistance? Several weeks
ago I wrote that even if Saddam was captured and killed, the resistance
would continue. There is no reason to change that view. In fact those
who were, till now, reluctant to back the resistance will now come out
openly against the Occupation. Those in the US and elsewhere who argued
that the resistance was led by Saddam and the remnants of the old
regime, will now get a big shock. This week a peaceful mass uprising in
Hilla removed a US-appointed Governor. The slogan chanted by the people
was: "Free elections now!' Actions of this type are bound to
increase.
If it is true, as the warmongers argued once they couldn't find any
'weapons of mass destruction', that they were ridding Iraq of a tyrant,
the logic should now be an immediate end to the Occupation. I don't
think this will happen. That is why a political resistance could spread
throughout the country. Banning trades-unions as the Occupation has done
won't make too much difference. The Iraqi underground is vibrant and
hopeful.
And what will they do with Saddam? The Occupation of Iraq is illegal and
so the US will not tempt international law by trying him in the Hague.
There is a further problem. In order to help Kissinger and other US war
criminals it was agreed that leaders cannot be charged retrospectively.
If there is a tribunal in Iraq, it will, like every other institution
today, be US-dominated. Will it be public? And what if old rogue decides
to tell the whole story of his collaboration with the US throughout the
Eighties of the last century? What if he reveals his conversations with
Donald Rumsfeld during the Iran-Iraq war? Its a problem for them. So
they will do what suits their interests.
After all, the Emperor Hirohito in Japan sanctioned and supported a war
that led to the deaths of tens of millions during the Second World war.
He was needed against Communism and so they transformed him into a
friendly marine biologist.
I don't think they need Saddam any more, so he can't be transformed into
a friendly neighbourhood archaelogist, but they will try and get what
they want out of him, though even a broken and defeated Saddam is
unlikely to help them find the weapons that never existed.
Tariq Ali's latest book, Bush
in Babylon: The Re-colonisation of Iraq, is published by Verso
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“No power - no matter how special, or how developed, or how strong, or
how urgent its claims of past victimisation - is exempt from accusation
and judgement…” - Edward W. Said
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