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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-31-06 02:33 PM
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Hussein the Rabbit
Link to original: http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/123106A.shtml

Hussein the Rabbit
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Columnist

Sunday 31 December 2006

It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.

- William Shakespeare


My cell phone has been buzzing with regularity all day, alerting me to the arrival of text messages from my conservative friends. "Saddam is dead woohoo" reads the latest one, and that pretty much describes all the others. Somehow, a lot of people are finding meaning or gratification in the fact that Hussein met his fate at the end of a rope Saturday morning.

I just can't get there. A portion of my ambivalence derives from my basic objections to the death penalty itself. My opposition to state-sponsored executions is not grounded in softhearted ideals, sympathy for the condemned, or the tenets of Catholic morality I learned as a child, but in the simple fact that death is an easy out. Justice is better delivered to the fiends of the world not by taking their lives, but by extending and prolonging their lives in absolute confinement.

The more brutal the crime, I believe, the greater is the imperative to ensure long life. Let them stew in their wretched state; let them stare at gray walls for decades in contemplation of what they did; let them face the awful truth that tomorrow will be as grim as yesterday, and that the sun no longer shines for them. I wish Timothy McVeigh were alive today, wreathed in steel bars and drowning in an ocean of time. So it is with Hussein, damned murderer of thousands, who yesterday morning was gifted freedom he did not deserve.

Beyond that is the rank absurdity of this whole farce. The so-called trial of Hussein was an affront to the fundamental principles of jurisprudence - more of a reality show than an exercise in the law. Much of the testimony offered against him would have been thrown out of the meanest municipal court in this country as hearsay. Three of Hussein's attorneys were assassinated, and the appointed replacements had no experience at all in international law. Hovering over it all was the fact that the entire process took place while the country was in the grips of a foreign occupation, presided over by a government held together by spit, baling wire and sectarian motivations.

Saddam Hussein has been used by three consecutive American presidential administrations the same way that plastic rabbit is used at the dog track. Like those speeding dogs, we have raced after him for years, never quite noticing that we are running in circles and doomed to arrive back where we began.

Some important and uncomfortable truths died with Hussein Saturday morning. The refrain of "Saddam gassed the Kurds in Halabja" has been with us for years, standing unchallenged in any mainstream political conversation. Yet Stephen C. Pelletiere, in a January 2003 New York Times article titled "A War Crime or an Act of War," revealed some information that cuts against this grain.

Pelletiere was the CIA's senior political analyst on Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war, and served as a professor at the Army War College from 1988 to 2000. He also headed a 1991 Army investigation into how the United States would fare in a war against Iraq, and the classified report created from this investigation contained voluminous details of the Halabja attack.

"Immediately after the battle," wrote Pelletiere, "the United States Defense Intelligence Agency investigated and produced a classified report, which it circulated within the intelligence community on a need-to-know basis. That study asserted that it was Iranian gas that killed the Kurds, not Iraqi gas. The agency did find that each side used gas against the other in the battle around Halabja. The condition of the dead Kurds' bodies, however, indicated they had been killed with a blood agent - that is, a cyanide-based gas - which Iran was known to use. The Iraqis, who are thought to have used mustard gas in the battle, are not known to have possessed blood agents at the time."

No one can deny that Saddam Hussein had many murders to his name, and yet the facts revealed in this classified report give pause. We have here an example of political expediency in the American style, where facts are ignored because they ruffle the story line and derail the rationalizations that sustain us. When the slogan on the battle standard is a lie, those who rally to it become victims of a fraud.

And then, of course, there is the guiding hand of the United States behind the curtain of this passion play. Like God with Adam, our government molded Hussein out of clay and blew the breath of life into his lungs. But for us, he would never have been.

A New York Times report from August of 2002, titled "Reagan Aided Iraq in War Despite Use of Gas," read, "A covert American program during the Reagan administration provided Iraq with critical battle-planning assistance at a time when American intelligence agencies knew that Iraqi commanders would employ chemical weapons in waging the decisive battles of the Iran-Iraq war, according to senior military officers with direct knowledge of the program.

"Though senior officials of the Reagan administration publicly condemned Iraq's employment of mustard gas, sarin, VX and other poisonous agents," continued the report, "the American military officers said President Reagan, Vice President George Bush and senior national security aides never withdrew their support for the highly classified program, in which more than 60 officers of the Defense Intelligence Agency were secretly providing detailed information on Iranian deployments, tactical planning for battles, plans for airstrikes, and bomb-damage assessments for Iraq.

"In early 1988," continued the report, "after the Iraqi Army, with American planning assistance, retook the Fao Peninsula in an attack that reopened Iraq's access to the Persian Gulf, a defense intelligence officer, Lieutenant Colonel Rick Francona, now retired, was sent to tour the battlefield with Iraqi officers, the American military officers said. He reported that Iraq had used chemical weapons to cinch its victory, one former DIA official said. Colonel Francona saw zones marked off for chemical contamination, and containers for the drug atropine scattered around, indicating that Iraqi soldiers had taken injections to protect themselves from the effects of gas that might blow back over their positions. CIA officials supported the program to assist Iraq, though they were not involved. Separately, the CIA provided Iraq with satellite photography of the war front."

Officially, Hussein's death sentence was handed down as punishment for the murders of 148 people, all Shiites in the town of Dujail, in 1982. Hussein, according to the ruling, ordered these killings as a reprisal after a Shiite assassination attempt against him failed.

In the final analysis, however, the noose was placed around his neck not only by his own deeds, but also by years of sustained verbal and military attacks by the United States and a majority of the Western world. He was a petty dictator whose fearsome reputation was artificially and purposefully inflated, because those who run this nation well know that an America focused on a shared and frightening enemy is an America easily distracted and manipulated.

Hussein's fangs had been pulled years ago, and the simple truth of his demise is that he was a former ally of great value until he ceased to serve our regional purposes. His death served one last hoped-for purpose, as well. A floundering president, desperate to squeeze one last trip around the track out of the rabbit, has earned from this a few weekend hours of news stories about the bad man.

Somewhere along the line, perhaps, people may come to pause and question whether putting that noose on Hussein was worth the three thousand American soldiers killed; the 47,000 American soldiers wounded; the untold thousands of Iraqi civilians killed; the fertile recruiting ground for terrorists born of the resulting rage from these deaths, and the trillions of tax dollars poured into the sand.

Saddam Hussein was hanged on Saturday for all the acts beyond those described in the trial's final ruling, most of which were committed with the full knowledge and willing assistance of the American government - a government that propped up and sustained Hussein because he served as a useful idiot in our efforts against Iran. These facts will be buried with his body in an undisclosed location, and once again, the sand itself will swallow for eternity another glaring example of the awesome distance between words and deeds.

The rabbit, at last, has been removed from the track. We invaded his country, and things got worse. We captured him and threw him in prison, and things got worse. Now we have killed him, and things will get worse. We are still running in circles, arriving time and again at the place we just left. One wonders if we will ever get around to seeing the noose around our own necks in time, before the platform falls away beneath us and the darkness swallows us with the sound of a sickening snap.
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Cleita Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-31-06 02:52 PM
Response to Original message
1. I feel the same because I feel no one has the right to
take the life of another person who is disarmed and at a disadvantage.

Yes, I believe we can take life in self defense. Self defense in war and self defense in protecting oneself and family from those who would do us harm means that your attacker is also armed. This is a fair fight.

Any other killing to me is murder even if it's state sanctioned murder, IMHO.
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Benhurst Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-31-06 02:52 PM
Response to Original message
2. Recommended #2
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kentuck Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-31-06 02:55 PM
Response to Original message
3. Thanks...
Keep plugging Will.
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mnhtnbb Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-31-06 02:57 PM
Response to Original message
4. K & R.
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ginnyinWI Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-31-06 03:02 PM
Response to Original message
5. yes, indeed, Will. Yes indeed. n/t
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Batgirl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-31-06 03:08 PM
Response to Original message
6. nothing to add really
I do think this is a very good paragraph amongst several good paragraphs:

"Saddam Hussein was hanged on Saturday for all the acts beyond those described in the trial's final ruling, most of which were committed with the full knowledge and willing assistance of the American government - a government that propped up and sustained Hussein because he served as a useful idiot in our efforts against Iran. These facts will be buried with his body in an undisclosed location, and once again, the sand itself will swallow for eternity another glaring example of the awesome distance between words and deeds."
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Martin Eden Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-31-06 04:42 PM
Response to Original message
7. Perspective
What your conservative friends lack in their self-congratulatory messages is perspective.

You just provided it.

In spades.
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uppityperson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-31-06 04:56 PM
Response to Original message
8. This was a good piece Will, esp like this paragraph, thanks.
The more brutal the crime, I believe, the greater is the imperative to ensure long life. Let them stew in their wretched state; let them stare at gray walls for decades in contemplation of what they did; let them face the awful truth that tomorrow will be as grim as yesterday, and that the sun no longer shines for them. I wish Timothy McVeigh were alive today, wreathed in steel bars and drowning in an ocean of time. So it is with Hussein, damned murderer of thousands, who yesterday morning was gifted freedom he did not deserve.
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DinahMoeHum Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-31-06 05:19 PM
Response to Original message
9. "Useful idiot". Saddam was that for Reagan and Bush I against Iran
now Bush II serves that same purpose for Osama bin Laden and Iran.

Here's to 2007 and hoping that instant karma snags Bush and Cheney big time. AFAIC, their asses are grass, and we the people are the lawnmower.

:evilfrown:
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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 06:04 AM
Response to Original message
10. .
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oxbow Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 11:14 AM
Response to Original message
11. there's a reason nobody talked about Iran during this trial
It's because Saddam killed 300,000 Iranians with the complicity of Germany, France, our government and many other bulwarks of the free world during that 8-year war. To even dance around the atrocities commited during those 8 years would invite questions better left unasked in the minds of Iraq's present-day handlers.

Thanks for a great and much necessary article here, Will.
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The Wizard Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 12:13 PM
Response to Original message
12. And things will get worse
Because the United States violated international law. Hussein's trial was as valid as all those WMD he was ready to launch against us. Eventually the truth will emerge, and we, as well as our grandchildren, will pay the price in cash out of our pockets and lower living standards.
Those injured for life because of some personal vendetta and other assorted sins against humanity will need our care and understanding.
Saddam & Sons are dead, and we are not one bit more secure in our homes and papers.
In Bush world where the 101st combat keyboardists crow about Saddam's execution all is right with the world. See what happens when the draft notices get sent.
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kentuck Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 12:16 PM
Response to Original message
13. A clear and rational argument against the death penalty..
It is the easy way out. Life confinement without chance of parole, solitary for the very evil, is the most just punishment.
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spanone Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 12:25 PM
Response to Original message
14. Bush* has destroyed America beyond the hopes & dreams of any dictator.
K & R
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Cass Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 12:30 PM
Response to Original message
15. An excellent commentary on this situation.
K & R
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redeemer Donating Member (4 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 03:33 PM
Response to Original message
16. If good people feel this way why do we have criminals running the country?
I'm saddened with the complacency of Americans. As long as the Starbuck's is hot, cable is working, and the gas pumps flowing...many Americans are unwilling to do anything except what the administration and a lame Congress offer us. Are we really to blame? Does the average citizen have any control of the massive conversion to militarism in this country? Did our Constitution provide for a government o isolate itself and protect itself from the very citizenship it is suppose to serve?

America needs a serious revolution or America is doomed as our founding fathers had intended.

Where is "Mars Attacks" when we need it?
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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 03:52 PM
Response to Reply #16
19. ...says the fellow tapping on a keyboard.
Lead by example.
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SmokingJacket Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 03:36 PM
Response to Original message
17. Tried to recommend this but I missed the cutoff.
Excellent post!
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cali Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 03:38 PM
Response to Original message
18. Excellent powerful piece, Will
and really cleanly written.
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Blackbird_Highway Donating Member (41 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 07:48 PM
Response to Original message
20. The Irony In Saddam's Death
I see tremendous irony in Saddam Hussein's death. Iraq is falling into a bloody civil war, democracy is clearly not going to work in that country, and really the only possible way to prevent a long and very bloody civil war would be to have a strong dictator take control of Iraq.

Not that a brutal dictator like Saddam is in any way preferable, but the state of Iraq is such that only a dictatorial type of government can work. By removing Saddam Hussein, and attempting to install a democratic government, we have guaranteed that a civil war is the only possible outcome in Iraq.
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aein Donating Member (262 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 11:17 PM
Response to Original message
21. you don't believe in the death penalty because you believe life imprisonment is a greaterpunishment?
how vindictive of you
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WillyT Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 11:21 PM
Response to Reply #21
22. you believe in the death penalty because it is a lesser punishment ?
how.... "nice" of you

Whaaa... :wtf:
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aein Donating Member (262 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-02-07 12:46 AM
Response to Reply #22
27. i don't believe in the death penalty, but my justifications are different
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frankly_fedup2 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 11:41 PM
Response to Original message
23. So that is how an execution in a Democracy is done. Awoke at
Edited on Mon Jan-01-07 11:45 PM by frankly_fedup2
dawn, taken out into what looks like a small, cold warehouse. Looking at the noose knowing what your punishment is coming now, no last words except yelling back at people taunting you, telling you to go to Hell, screaming revenge. No last meal, no clergy of your choice present, no last words except those of your taunters. Yeah, sounds like Bush's Democracy alright.

Merry Christmas Poppy. You got the gift that is priceless. The life of another human being. Almost forgot: And the World got to see it all!

I found it sickening.
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lonestarnot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 11:44 PM
Response to Original message
24. Damn this is good! Happy New Year Hairy Bastid!
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Stephanie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-01-07 11:54 PM
Response to Original message
25. thanks Will
I was wondering where you were.

What secrets died with SH? And what do you make of the timing?
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ConsAreLiars Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-02-07 12:26 AM
Response to Original message
26. Great work, as always. But for a future essay you might want to
attend more to the history wherein the CIA used/pushed the Baath offing of the commie-tolerant neutralist monarchy (See Sihanouk for another case in point) and then used/pushed the Saddam Hussein faction to finish the purge. You can find the data via http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qassim if you need a starting point.
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Jade Fox Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-02-07 09:44 AM
Response to Original message
28. We'll look pretty stupid running around that track chasing nothing....
Bushco's chief boogie man is gone now, in a brief orgy of blood lust. Having made Hussein a focal point for those who need a Bad Guy to project onto, Bushco is short one large motivational element their war in Iraq. Now the Iraq disaster will look like what it is: pointless death in the desert.
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ProudDad Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-02-07 05:55 PM
Response to Original message
29. I can't condone revenge!
Edited on Tue Jan-02-07 05:59 PM by ProudDad
Sorry Will, I can't go along with this statement:

"The more brutal the crime, I believe, the greater is the imperative to ensure long life. Let them stew in their wretched state; let them stare at gray walls for decades in contemplation of what they did; let them face the awful truth that tomorrow will be as grim as yesterday, and that the sun no longer shines for them. I wish Timothy McVeigh were alive today, wreathed in steel bars and drowning in an ocean of time. So it is with Hussein, damned murderer of thousands, who yesterday morning was gifted freedom he did not deserve."

One may get a rush talking like this but it does little to improve things.

My opposition to Capital Punishment is primarily based on my belief that it corrodes our society. It fosters and promotes revenge over any other positive responses to an unfortunate (yes, and even horrible) act. As Gandhi said, "An eye for an eye and soon the whole world is blind." That sums up my opposition to the death penalty.

It also sums up my opposition to the way "criminal behavior" is treated in most of the world. The criminal-injustice system of cops, lawyers and prisons corrodes our society as it fails to curb "criminal behavior" in any meaningful way. It serves as an example to those of our brothers and sisters who are missing a sense of empathy or conscience; that it's ok to exact revenge; it's ok to treat OTHERS as deserving of torture, pain and death. The system creates "us" and "them" to make it easier to treat "criminals" or anyone we determine is "criminal" as objects not people like us.

I believe that Saddam and Timothy and Charlie Manson and Dalmer were/are still human beings. They are some of the worst examples because of choices they've made but still human. I also know that many innocent folks have been tortured and killed by the system but that's not my primary objection. It should serve as a reminder to you though with a little bad luck, wrong place wrong time, there YOU be!

I object to the state declaring some humans "sub-human" by declaring them "Criminals" and determining that they are all irredeemable! Almost NO ONE is utterly irredeemable. I believe that folks who run afoul of society should be reclaimed. I believe that most of our brothers and sisters who are now incarcerated could be returned to society. If they can't be returned to society than they should still be treated humanely; not for their sakes but for OURS.

Revenge corrodes the avenged more than it does the victim of revenge. Forgiveness and compassion heals.
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