- In 1987, Libyan leader Moammar Kh8-4-3adafy led me by
the hand through the ruins of his Tripoli residence, showing me the bedroom
where American 2,000-lb bombs, launched in an attempt to assassinate him,
had killed his 2-year-old daughter. The bombing of a Pan Am airliner filled
with Americans two years later may have been revenge for this attack. Murder
breeds murder.
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- Now, the latest irksome Arab leader is in Washington's
gun sights. Time seems to be running out for Iraq's fugitive former president,
Saddam Hussein.
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- Chances are Saddam, like his sons, will be killed in
a Bonnie and Clyde-style shootout. He is unlikely to be captured, unless
incapacitated.
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- The Bush administration will be delighted not to put
Saddam on public trial. Dead dictators tell no tales.
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- The White House would much prefer to display a bullet-riddled
Saddam as a trophy to divert mounting criticism over U.S. casualties in
Iraq and the litany of falsehoods it used to drive America to war.
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- If put on public trial, Saddam would have a field day
revealing the embarrassing alliance between his brutal regime and Washington:
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- The CIA's role in bringing the Ba'ath Party to power
in a 1958 coup, opening the way for Saddam to take control.
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- U.S., Israeli, and Iranian destabilization of Iraq during
the 1970s by fueling Kurdish rebellion.
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- Washington's egging on the aggressive shah of Iran in
the Shatt al-Arab waterway dispute, a primary cause of the Iran-Iraq War.
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- The U.S. secretly urging Iraq to invade Iran in 1980
to overthrow that nation's revolutionary Islamic government.
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- Covert supply of Saddam's war machine by the U.S. and
Britain during the eight-year Iran-Iraq conflict, plus biological warfare
programs and germ feeder stocks, poison gas manufacturing plants and raw
materials.
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- Billions in aid, routed through the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Italy's Banco del Lavoro and the shadowy BCCI. Heavy artillery,
munitions, spare parts, trucks, field hospitals and electronics.
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- Equally important, the U.S. Defence Intelligence Agency
and CIA operated offices in Baghdad that provided Iraq with satellite intelligence
data on Iranian troop deployments that proved decisive in the war's titanic
battles at Basra, Majnoon and Faw.
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- The murky role played by Washington just before Iraq's
1991 invasion of Kuwait. The U.S. ambassador told Saddam "The U.S.
takes no position in Arab border disputes." Was this a trap to lure
Saddam to invade Kuwait, then crush his army, or simple diplomatic bungling?
Saddam could supply the awkward answers.
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- Military and financial aid
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- In short, Saddam was one of America's closet Mideast
allies during the 1980s, a major recipient of U.S. military and financial
aid. Saddam's killing of large numbers of Kurds and Shia rebels occurred
while he was a key U.S. ally. Washington remained mute at the time. After
George Bush Sr. called on the Kurds and Shia Muslims to revolt in 1991,
the U.S. watched impassively as Saddam slaughtered the poorly armed rebels.
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- Better a bullet-riddled Saddam, or one executed by a
military kangaroo court in Guantanamo, or hanged by the new, American-installed
Iraqi regime in Baghdad.
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- Saddam should be handed over by the U.S. to the UN War
Crimes Tribunal in The Hague that is trying Serbia's Slobodan Milosevic
and other accused Balkan war criminals. After all, it was Washington that
engineered Milosevic's delivery to The Hague, an act for which the U.S.
deserves high praise. What applies to Milosevic applies equally to Saddam
Hussein.
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- In fact, it would be better for the Iraqi leader to stand
trial at the newly constituted International War Crimes Tribunal in The
Hague. But the Bush administration, in one of its most shameful acts, has
refused to join this tribunal or co-operate with it.
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- Should Saddam be gunned down, like his two sons, there
will be glee among many Americans and rejoicing in the White House. But
Saddam Hussein is not John Dillinger or a prize elk. However odious, he
was the leader of a sovereign nation and a government recognized by the
U.S.
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- Killing foreign heads of state violates international
law and the directives made by three American presidents. Dropping 2,000-lb
bombs on sites where Saddam was believed to be is called attacking "leadership
targets" in the new Orwellian Pentagonspeak, but it's still old-fashioned
murder from the air. Gunning down Saddam will also be murder, or, to use
a more polite term, assassination.
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- America, the world's greatest democracy, has no business
murdering foreign leaders. Such behaviour is criminal, immoral, undemocratic
and reeks of the law of the jungle. Past U.S. attempts to murder foreign
leaders have proved self-defeating.
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- Last week, Task Force 20, a trigger-happy U.S. military
hit squad hunting Saddam, killed as many as 11 innocent Iraqi civilians
in a botched Baghdad raid. This is an outrage worthy of Saddam's former
secret police.
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- George Bush may yearn to drape the body of Saddam over
his Jeep and show it off to the folks around Crawford, Texas, but he should
be forcefully reminded that the president represents the laws of the land.
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- Bad enough the White House waged a totally unnecessary,
unprovoked, undeclared war on Iraq based on spurious charges.
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- This egregious offence should not be compounded by cold-blooded
murder, no matter how odious the intended victim.
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- http://www.canoe.ca/Columnists/margolis_aug3.html
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