Sadddam is Dead
Posted by Kevin

  1. Good riddance
  2. What Josh said:

    This whole endeavor, from the very start, has been about taking tawdry, cheap acts and dressing them up in a papier-mache grandeur — phony victory celebrations, ersatz democratization, reconstruction headed up by toadies, con artists and grifters. And this is no different. Hanging Saddam is easy. It’s a job, for once, that these folks can actually see through to completion. So this execution, ironically and pathetically, becomes a stand-in for the failures, incompetence and general betrayal of country on every other front that President Bush has brought us.

    Try to dress this up as an Iraqi trial and it doesn’t come close to cutting it — the Iraqis only take possession of him for the final act, sort of like the Church always left execution itself to the ’secular arm’. Try pretending it’s a war crimes trial but it’s just more of the pretend mumbojumbo that makes this out to be World War IX or whatever number it is they’re up to now.

    The Iraq War has been many things, but for its prime promoters and cheerleaders and now-dwindling body of defenders, the war and all its ideological and literary trappings have always been an exercise in moral-historical dress-up for a crew of folks whose times aren’t grand enough to live up to their own self-regard and whose imaginations are great enough to make up the difference. This is just more play-acting.

    These jokers are being dragged kicking and screaming to the realization that the whole thing’s a mess and that they’re going to be remembered for it — defined by it — for decades and centuries. But before we go, we can hang Saddam. Quite a bit of this was about the president’s issues with his dad and the hang-ups he had about finishing Saddam off — so before we go, we can hang the guy as some big cosmic ‘So There!’

    Marx might say that this was not tragedy but farce. But I think we need to get way beyond options one and two even to get close to this one — claptrap justice meted out to the former dictator in some puffed-up act of self-justification as the country itself collapses in the hands of the occupying army.

    Marty Peretz, with some sort of projection, calls any attempt to rain on this parade “prissy and finicky.” Myself, I just find it embarrassing. This is what we’re reduced to, what the president has reduced us to. This is the best we can do. Hang Saddam Hussein because there’s nothing else this president can get right.

  3. What Jim said:

    And it’s also true that the US and its Iraqi allies chose to try Saddam on one of his relatively minor crimes because if they did so they could get him safely hung before they had to try him for the major ones, the gas attacks and massacres that happened during The Years of Playing Footsie with the United States. The Dujail reprisals were a war crime, no doubt about it, a bigger sham of justice than Saddam’s own trial, by two orders of magnitude. They were also the sort of war crime that people like Ralph Peters and a hundred other pundits and parapundits think the United States should be committing. Every time you read a complaint about “politically correct rules of engagement” you are reading someone who would applaud a Dujail-level slaughter if only we were to perpetrate it. Those are the people who are happiest of all about tonight’s execution.

December 30th, 2006 General | 7 comments

7 Comments »

  1. Janusz writes:

    If the administration wanted to “get it right”, they would have sent Saddam to the Hague where he could have been tried with a minimum of political theatre, where a carefully conducted trial would have been instructive to Iraqis still trying to institute rule of law. The hurried execution smelled of political expediency as well.

    No one doubts Saddam was guilty of horrific crimes. But an inordinately swift execution will not unify the Iraqis, in fact, it may aggravate sectarian tensions and may make Saddam a martyr to some.

    Comment 12/30/2006


  2. Daniel DiRito writes:

    To view a cynical and satirical visual of George Bush playing a round of “Hangman”…link here:

    www.thoughttheater.com

    Comment 12/30/2006


  3. Steve Plonk writes:

    Good riddance to Saddam Hussein, a heap of bad smelling rubbish! Like one old Shiite guy said, “Too bad they didn’t put his head on a pike!” That was mighty middle ages of him to say. Some may treat him like a martyr. A martyr to what?! Saddam wasn’t a martyr to anything except his greed and thirst for power.

    Comment 12/31/2006


  4. Fred writes:

    “The hurried execution smelled of political expediency as well.”

    The hurried execution smelled of justice.

    Comment 1/1/2007


  5. Janusz writes:

    Fred wrote: “The hurried execution smelled of justice.”

    The hurried execution smelled of victors’ justice.

    Comment 1/1/2007


  6. Fred writes:

    “The hurried execution smelled of victors’ justice.”

    You’re right. It was a victory for justice.

    Comment 1/1/2007


  7. Janusz writes:

    Fred wrote: “You’re right.”

    Of course I’m right. Even American officials are questioning the political wisdom, and justice, in the rush to hang Hussein. There were still many crimes with which he was to be charged. Executing him before he was tried for these crimes has deprived survivors of any closure. The unruly atmosphere that prevailed in the death chamber undermined any sense of dignity or even-handedness. Witnesses were shouting in support of Moktada, a leader of Shiite militias responsible for killings and torture of Iraqi Sunni’s, as well engaging in battles with American troops, thereby undercutting a sense of impartiality. Already some Sunni’s are treating Hussein as a martyr rather than a dictator held accountable for his crimes, not the desired result in a country in the midst of a civil war.

    It would have been far better to bring Hussein to the Hague where he could be tried and sentenced in an impartial atmosphere, gone through appropriate appeals, thrown into a cell and ultimately, faded into obscurity.

    Comment 1/1/2007


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