Saddam's Impending Excecution

Iraq will burn even more

The confirmation of the death sentence handed down to Saddam Hussein is not a surprise. In a few days time Saddam would be killed and the Iraqis will have a new symbol to rally around. In fact Saddam will play a far greater role after death than he ever did in his lifetime. The trial which was held in connection with the Dujail killings was not free and fair. Right from the start the decks were stacked against the former President. The judges were frequently changed anfd the prececution team was specilly trained for its job by the occupiers. The trbunal itself derives its so called legality from a statute promulgated by the occupation powers and the Dujail killings were retrospectively brought under the ambit of the statute. Such retroactive promulgation is ususally avaided in countries that pride themselves as upholders of the rule of law.

The Defence team was under constant pressure from the governmnent and Shiaa death squads associated with it. Four of Saddam's lawers were killed and the triasl was frequently disrupted. Under any notion of jurisprudence Saddam cannot be held responsible for the Dujail killings, extra legal they may well have been.

It is not claer why the use of chemical weapons in the Iran war and the gassing of 150,000 Kurds is not been taken up. The fact of the matter is that during the Iran -Iraq War of the 1980s Saddam Hussein was a steadfast and valuable ally of the USA and the occupying power does not want its complicity on Hussein's crimes to be made public. Therefore hang Saddam so that the truth of these other crimes can forever be hidden.

The impending excecution of the former President will be like the January 30 1649 excecution of the Stuart king, Charles I. He will pass from a corruptible to an incorruptible crown. And the vilolence in Iraq will be beyond even the present unsustainable level.
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Reply #1 Top
He could also have simply been sent over to Kuwait to stand trial for what he did there. I don't think it really matters, frankly. His guilt is obvious.

I'm not so sure it will happen in the next couple of days, though. It was my understanding that they needed to complete the current trial beforehand. Maybe they decided not to bother, I wouldn't.
Reply #2 Top
The confirmation of the death sentence handed down to Saddam Hussein is not a surprise. In a few days time Saddam would be killed and the Iraqis will have a new symbol to rally around. In fact Saddam will play a far greater role after death than he ever did in his lifetime


This is probably very true - he will become the martyr for the cause to be bandied about with myth building around him turning him into a hero that he never was.

This man deserves death as a punishment as do all his henchmen. The quicker they do it the better, however as with all death sentences there will probably the usual delays involved. He should just have been put up against a wall and shot at the time of capture. Not legal I know - but oh so just and cost free except for the one bullet.
Reply #3 Top

Therefore hang Saddam so that the truth of these other crimes can forever be hidden.

Another conspiracy theory......

 

 

 

Reply #4 Top
I'm not so sure it will happen in the next couple of days


It has already happened as I predicted in the blog. But more seriously, will the death of Saddam Hussein change anything on the ground. It will only make a martyr out of him.
Reply #5 Top
Dunno why they rushed it, frankly. Wasn't he in the middle of another trial? I remember reading that he would complete that one before he was excecuted.

I always had a dim hope that he'd be sent to Kuwait to face his crimes there, as well.
Reply #6 Top

I always had a dim hope that he'd be sent to Kuwait to face his crimes there, as well.


Let's face it - there's something a little farcical about the dictator of Kuwait sentencing Hussein to death for being a more aggressive dictator than he was. Better for everyone that people forget that Kuwait was returned to a dictatorship after Saddam was pushed out.
Reply #7 Top
When the leader of Kuwait invades another nations and commits the kind of wholesale atrocities that Hussein kids committed on Kuwait I might see the equation. His evils bled out in the form of supporting Palestinian terrorism, invading other nations, threatening Israel with missile attacks, etc. It's great that Iraqis have a better hope of living without sanctions and putting something better together, but in the end few gave a damn until he started annexing other nations as Iraqi property.
Reply #8 Top
Strangely enough, our customarily anti-war, anti-Bush rag this morning only mentioned the celebrations by Iraqis in response to his execution. None of the gloom/doom/He'll now be a martyr/Bahu silliness. He'll continue to be a martyr to the people who considered him a martyr or hero yesterday, but that's about it, and a pretty small crowd at that. No Che Guevarra style myth for him, I'm afraid.
Reply #9 Top


He'll continue to be a martyr to the people who considered him a martyr or hero yesterday, but that's about it, and a pretty small crowd at that. No Che Guevarra style myth for him, I'm afraid.


Did not the myth of Charles I live on. The death of Saddam was choreographed so carefully and his words so well chosen, It was I whi built Iraq, that it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that Saddam has joined the ranks of the other great hero of Iraq, who by the way was a Kurd, Saladin.
Reply #10 Top
I take it you have gotten up before dawn and have already prayed to your hero, Saddam, then?

Bahu...your true colors are ever showing clearly in these statements....
Reply #11 Top
Chuck who?

Saladin?

In Saddam's eternal wet dreams, maybe.
Reply #12 Top
In fact even President George Bush has come out openly against the undignified manner in which Saddam Hussein was put to death. But then can a lynch mob be dignified.
Reply #13 Top
Do you believe Hussein deserved a dignified death, Bahu? Do you think despots should be sheltered from their naysayers, even on the gallows?
Reply #14 Top
Do you believe Hussein deserved a dignified death, Bahu? Do you think despots should be sheltered from their naysayers, even on the gallows?


Every human being deserves dignity in death. And that includes the likes of Pol ,Pot, Stalin, Mao and Saddam. I baulk at putting him in this list, but I think Saddam Hussein has become a favorite hate figure.

Had he been tried in accordance with International Law and not as lynch mob, he would have still recived a death sentence but then we can say that law took its course. That is not the case now when he was put to death in a hasty maNNER, TAUNTED AND RIDICULED EVEN AS HE climbed up the gallows.
Reply #15 Top
I suppose it is a matter of opinion, but death is death, and whether you are treated like a hero in your last moments or spit upon results in the same end. You're dead. Given the death in question was considered a punishment for deeds done, I see no reason why "dignity" should even be a factor.

It's convenient for you that you agree with international law. It's much like rabid federalists in the US who use federal law, courts, etc., to trump state matters that are really none of their business. Saddam wasn't being tried by the world, he was in an Iraqi court, and international law means zilch.
Reply #16 Top

Every human being deserves dignity in death. And that includes the likes of Pol ,Pot, Stalin, Mao and Saddam. I baulk at putting him in this list, but I think Saddam Hussein has become a favorite hate figure.

Where are those statements regarding the people Saddam killed?  It's really telling that the people who are complaining about Saddams execution never said a word while Saddam was putting people in mass graves.  Tells you something doesn't it?

Reply #17 Top
Where are those statements regarding the people Saddam killed? It's really telling that the people who are complaining about Saddams execution never said a word while Saddam was putting people in mass graves. Tells you something doesn't it?


I'm pretty sure Bahu has, actually. So have many other high- and low-profile opponents to the execution of Saddam, such as the Pope and the Prime Minister of New Zealand.

You come out with the strangest things some times, Island Dog.
Reply #18 Top
I suppose it is a matter of opinion, but death is death, and whether you are treated like a hero in your last moments or spit upon results in the same end. You're dead. Given the death in question was considered a punishment for deeds done, I see no reason why "dignity" should even be a factor.


To be utterly cynical for a moment it's more politically useful to give enemies of the state a dignified sending off, particularly in times of high rebel activity. It helps to sway moderates away from joining the rebels. After all, if the moderates think both sides are as immoral as the other why not join the side that offers them more? The last thing a government needs is a population who doesn't care about it.
Reply #19 Top
Given the death in question was considered a punishment for deeds done, I see no reason why "dignity" should even be a factor.


Because quite simply Baker - one would hope your education has made you a civilized and dignified person who would bestow dignity upon someone at your mercy and in that situation and that you would not fall into the ditch they have been living in - joining them in their muck.

By not affording him dignity - you are no better than he.
Reply #20 Top
Because quite simply Baker - one would hope your education has made you a civilized and dignified person who would bestow dignity upon someone at your mercy and in that situation and that you would not fall into the ditch they have been living in - joining them in their muck


Jennifer1, I think BakerStreet is indeed a highly educated and a well informed person and I dare say that the remark quoted is unfair to him because he comes from the prespective that since Saddam did those horrible things, he deserved what he got. I do not think he, Baker, justifies the vindictive manner in which the actual execution was carried out.
Reply #21 Top
"Because quite simply Baker - one would hope your education has made you a civilized and dignified person who would bestow dignity upon someone at your mercy and in that situation and that you would not fall into the ditch they have been living in - joining them in their muck.

By not affording him dignity - you are no better than he."


What you're describing has nothing to do with intelligence or education. It has nothing to do with rational thought. It's just as emotional, subjective, idealistic as what you are describing as a "ditch".

You've convinced yourself what "civilized" means. Based on... what? How has your education lead you to believe that taunting someone before you snap their neck is less civilized than snapping their neck sans insult? What particular philosopher, sociologist, theory, quantitative data, etc., from your educational background are you basing that on?

You are the uncivilized one. You just equated gassing Kurds, slaughtering Shia, etc., with sentencing someone guilty of such to a death you find "undignified". I find THAT to be both ignorant and uncivilized. Part of education and sophistication is being able to discern subtle differences, and the difference between what Saddam did, and what was done to him is HARDLY SUBTLE.

Pop ideals that don't work in the real world aren't "education" or "civilization". If you want to apply some sort of stupid PETA values on the killing evil men, feel free, but if you are going to call it "educated" you'd better give "educated" reasons. Just because 'they' say so, or because you heard it from Deepak Chopra isn't really impressive to me.

Reply #22 Top
"I do not think he, Baker, justifies the vindictive manner in which the actual execution was carried out."


Thanks, Bahu, and no if I were in charge it wouldn't have gone that way at all. In the end, though, Iraq is a people who were put through a 30 year horror. There is no family in Iraq that didn't live in fear of someone disappearing, someone being arrested, tortured, etc. Even his ALLIES were in danger of making a misstep and ending up with a "red card".

I don't think someone like Jennifer1 can sit in her comfy chair and imagine what it would have been like to live under that for the last 30 years. When she lauds her own education and civilization, she has to admit she's cultivated it in very, very different circumstances. Of course she doesn't have the same, gut-level hatred of Hussein as the people he abused; people who know and love people he killed.

I've seen how American and English people have acted after being threatened by terrorism over the last few years, and it is often quite uncivilized. If you tossed Osama onto the field at the superbowl and let the crowd have him, how many pieces do you think you'd have left at the end? Do you think, maybe, if we had Osama on the gallows there wouldn't be a few hecklers? Now multiply the harm exponentially and you'll realize how Iraqis felt about Saddam.

So, no, I don't think we can judge people who finally have the culprit for their 30 year horror show on the gallows.