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This article can be found on the web at
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20040719&s=scheer0706
column left by Robert Scheer
Even a Tyrant Is Entitled to Due Process
[posted online on July 6, 2004]
Has anyone noticed that the charges leveled last week against Saddam Hussein
bore no relation to the reasons offered by President Bush for his pre-emptive
invasion of Iraq? Not a word about Hussein being linked to terrorist attacks on
the United States or having weapons of mass destruction that posed an imminent
threat to our nation's security.
That is because after seven months of interrogation, the United States
appears to have learned nothing from Hussein or any other source in the world
that supports the Pazresident's decision to go to war. Washington turned Hussein
over to the Iraqis without charging its infamous prisoner of war with any of
these crimes. And even the Iraqis did not charge him with being behind the
insurgency that almost daily claims American lives.
It's a travesty, if you think about it. The fact is that the United States,
which holds itself up as the exemplar of democracy for the entire Middle East,
held Hussein in captivity for seven months, virtually incommunicado, without
access to lawyers of his choosing and without charging him with a crime or
releasing him at the end of the occupation, as required by the Geneva
Convention. If the United States believes, as most of the world does, that
Hussein committed crimes against humanity, then he is entitled to the same
international standards of due process that the United States and its allies
applied to top Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg. It is well established in such
cases that justice will not be served by turning Hussein over to be tried by his
former political rivals or his victims.
No one will be fooled by the claim that we are merely acceding to the demands
of the new Iraqi government, since its leader, interim Prime Minister Iyad
Allawi, has long been on the CIA payroll and was essentially appointed to his
post by the United States.
Similarly, Salem Chalabi, nephew of Pentagon protégé and discredited Iraqi
National Congress leader Ahmad Chalabi, was put in charge of the trial by the
United States, creating what looks so far like nothing more than a show trial.
The younger Chalabi is also a member of the INC, the exile organization
bankrolled by US taxpayers that provided much of the now disproven
"intelligence" Bush used in speech after speech to convince Americans
of the urgency of the Iraqi weapons-of-mass-destruction and terrorism
"threat."
Salem Chalabi was picked by Bush's national security advisor, Condoleezza
Rice. In a secret directive issued in January and leaked to the public in March,
Rice authorized a delegation of fifty lawyers, prosecutors and investigators to
be sent to Iraq to prepare for Hussein's trial. Chalabi is not only the
prosecutor but chose the judge, whose identity is a secret.
It is thus a huge stretch to call the proceedings a fair trial or an
Iraqi-run affair. Men long on the US payroll are running the country and the
trial; US troops are still guarding Hussein. And the United States even chose
what images could be broadcast and told pool reporters they could not record
Hussein's voice. An unauthorized audiotape was, however, leaked to the media.
We have already grossly violated the standard of Nuremberg laid down by US
Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson: "That four great nations, flushed
with victory and stung with injury, stay the hand of vengeance and voluntarily
submit their captive enemies to the judgment of the law is one of the most
significant tributes that power has ever paid to reason." But the four
great nations Jackson was referring to, led by our own, were not guilty of
committing aggression but rather of stopping it. The first principle of the
Nuremberg trials was to hold nations accountable for crimes against peace.
It is therefore fitting that the preliminary indictment holds Hussein
responsible for his aggression against Kuwait, which precipitated the 1991 Gulf
War. How disturbing that in the current war it was the United States that
committed aggression by invading Iraq based on false premises, thereby violating
the Nuremberg principle.
Judge not, lest ye be judged is Scripture not to be taken lightly.
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