Donât leave Saddam trial to the âjet setâ
Mark Steyn's column in today's Chicago Sun Times...
Well, itâs January, Decemberâs come and gone, so letâs add up the final score:
Coalition of the Willing: Saddam captured, Gadhafi neutered.
The ââInternational Communityââ: Milosevic elected to Parliament in Belgrade.
Yes, indeed. On the last weekend of the year, Slobo won a seat in Serbiaâs legislature, as did his fellow "allegedââ (as Wes Clark would say) war criminal Vojislav Seselj, and Seseljâs extreme nationalist Serbian Radical Party won more seats than anybody else.
But hang on a minute. Arenât Milosevic and Seselj in jail at the Hague and facing the stern justice of an ââinternational tribunalââ? Why, yes. Sloboâs been on trial for two years already, and theyâre only just wrapping up the prosecution. Among the witnesses was, of course, Gen. Clark, who couldnât resist boasting that heâs the only Democratic presidential candidate ââwhoâs ever faced a dictator down. Iâm the only one whoâs ever testified in court against one.ââ Au contraire, right now it looks like Slobo is the only Serbian parliamentary candidate whoâs ever faced a U.S. general down.
Anyone who goes goo-goo at the mention of the words ââinternational tribunalââ -- i.e., Clark, John Kerry, Howard Dean and the rest of the multilatte multilateralist establishment -- should look at what it boils down to in practice. Even though the court forbade Milosevic and Seselj from actively campaigning in the Serbian election, they somehow managed to. In other words, ââinternational lawââ is unable to enforce its judgments even in its own jailhouse.
But itâs worse than that. One reason why Slobo is popular again in Serbia is precisely because of the ââinternationalââ trial. In 2000, when the strongman of the Balkans was swept from power, he was a discredited figure, a European pariah reviled as a murderous butcher. After two years of legal hair-splitting at the Hague, heâs all but fully rehabilitated. True, Slobo, conducting his own defense, has been a shameless showboater, but not half as shameless as the absurd prosecutor Carla del Ponte. Itâs received wisdom among battered Serb democrats that every clumsy indictment of Ponteâs drove Sloboâs poll numbers higher. Had Serbs prosecuted Milosevic, that would have been one thing. But once it became Euro-preeners prosecuting Serbs, an understandable resentment set in.
This is the justice Clark wants for Saddam Hussein. If he gets his way, Saddam seems a shoo-in for the Iraqi presidential election circa 2009. But that seems to be the way of Clark, the great hero of small inconclusive wars in which the United States has no vital interest and, even if it did, Clark would be pleased to ignore it just to demonstrate his multilateral bona fides.
Itâs not just him, of course. Up to the moment Saddam popped out of the spider-hole, the international jet setâs line was that deplorable as Saddamâs rule might be -- gassing Kurds, feeding folks feet-first into industrial shredders, etc. -- it was strictly an internal matter for the Iraqi people. The minute the old boy was in U.S. custody, the international jet setâs revised position was that gassing Kurds, feeding folks into industrial shredders and so forth were crimes against the whole world and certainly not a matter for the Iraqi people. Instead, we need a (drumroll, please) United Nations-mandated international tribunal.
This is what the Zionist neocons would call chutzpah.
President Bush understands that the transnational establishmentâs interest in this case is not to pass judgment on Saddam but, by reasserting its authority, to pass judgment on America -- on its illegitimate war, illegal occupation, barbaric justice system, etc. The argument of the trannies is that only a Hague tribunal can confer ââlegitimacyââ -- ââlegitimacyââ being one of those great sonorous banalities that are at the heart of whatâs wrong with the international order, which, in the main, confers the mantle of legitimacy on a lot of ââillegitimateââ thugs. Indeed, two years of a farcical trial of the Hague seem to have conferred ââlegitimacyââ mainly on the rehabilitated Slobo.
But Saddam has been toppled, and Gadhafi has surrendered up his own WMD program to the Brits and Yanks. So the fellows in need of ââlegitimacyââ right now are the international institutions presided over by Kofi Annan and Co., who look, to put it at its mildest, utterly irrelevant and, at its worst, the pathetic patsies of Slobo and his ilk.
So the only strategic significance of Saddamâs trial is whether the transnational establishment gets rehabilitated or sidelined. The argument in favor of an international tribunal is that a full accounting of Saddamâs crimes will be made before the whole world. Really? Anyone who doesnât know about the mass graves and torture in Baathist Iraq is someone whoâs chosen not to. A lot of people fall into that camp -- for example, weapons inspector turned Saddamite shill Scott Ritter. ââThe prison in question was inspected by my team in January 1998,ââ he told Time magazine, a propos one grisly institution. ââIt appeared to be a prison for children -- toddlers up to pre-adolescents -- whose only crime was to be the offspring of those who have spoken out politically against the regime of Saddam Hussein. It was a horrific scene. Actually, Iâm not going to describe what I saw there, because what I saw was so horrible that it can be used by those who would want to promote war with Iraq, and right now Iâm waging peace.ââ
Ritter is rare in the extent of his depravity: He saw the horror close up and opted to turn his back. But in the interests of ââpeace,ââ many others in the transnational elites did the same from a safe distance. Itâs too late for them to claim that the stuff they covered up now needs a full airing in an international court.
As for the legal niceties, unless a dictator is canny enough to negotiate a transition to democracy, his subsequent trial will inevitably be as much about politics as justice. But then, letting dictators swank around the courtroom in a 10-year dinner-theater run of ââPerry Masonââ has nothing to do with justice either.
To allow the transnational jet set to reclaim Saddam would be to reward them for their indifference to Iraqi suffering. Letâs get on with it in Baghdad. A trial next summer, conviction in the fall, and (to forestall accusations itâs all timed for the U.S. elections) execution deferred until a day or two after Bushâs inaugural address in January.
Of course, I hasten to add thatâs only if the mass murderer is found guilty.
Iâm sorry, my mistake. I mean, the alleged mass murderer.
Posted by: tipper 2004-01-04 |