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America, Do We Get Squeemish over War?
Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Have we become like many of the nations in western europe? We overwhelmingly support going into combat to fight terrorists and evil dictators like Saddam.. but just a few years later we are sick of it to the point we are willing to forget why we fight.

Many I find on news shows on the television poke fun at the struggle in Iraq and even go as far as to say that our men and women are dying for no reason. The planes struck the twin towers and the pentagon on that Tuesday morning and American flags went up everywhere, on every vehicle beside every home America came together. But day after day following the attacks on our homeland we became more tired of this global war to combat terror. Flags began disappearing off vehicles and houses, democrats began questioning the Bush administration and went as far to make over the wall accusations of conspiracy and deliberate distortion of facts pertaining to the reasons why we went into Iraq. (for more on why the Iraq war is justified refer to my other 2 recent blogs on Saddam).

The media began it's attack; day after day showing carnage in Iraq and deliberately touting any failure on a day to day basis to decry the security situation in the new democratic country of Iraq. More time went by, and Americans, hit by the media's strong propoganda engines such as abc news, cbs and cnn.. began to become demoralized by the idea of keeping our troops in harms way. Americans began to demand change, ignorant of the progress made, they removed the republican party from control in the United States Legislature. Like President Bush said "Democrats care about our security just as much as I do". And I happen to agree with Mr. Bush about the Democrats' patriotism, which I do not question. But I do believe many of them need a dose of reality, realizing that this is a new struggle, a new war and a new enemy. Ever changing tactics and ever changing war strategy. Just remember we needed change in our strategy in Iraq, but as in all wars... changing the party or creating gridlock does not guarantee better security or success on foreign policy.

I like many of the Americans who voted for the democrats believe there are alot of problems in Iraq. But we most always remember the problems do not lie with us. For our troops are the finest, best trained, and most honorable fighters in the history of this world. We face an enemy who cowards in the dark and constantly shifts and we must all know that it is going to take some time to win this war. Just remember if we do pull our troops out, it is not only an insult to our fallen troops and what they fought for, it is in insult upon the very basis of our own democracy. And it would show to the world that America can not stomach the thought of standing up for Freedom, democracy, and Security. If somehow we end up chickening out, we might consider changing our national symbol to something other than an eagle. Like George HW Bush had said when he visited my home state of New Hampshire; "We don't stand there with our head in the sand, Our national symbol is not the Ostrich it's the eagle."

I am so very proud of our country for the high turnout at the polls regardless of the outcome. It shows people are becoming interested again, and realize that they can have a voice in this great country.

God Bless Y'all,

SLUGGER
posted by DC @ 23:47  
4 Comments:
  • At 11:49 PM, Blogger DC said…

    YOU THINK WE WERE WRONG TO TAKE OUT SADDAM HUSSEIN'S REGIME?? Then you need to look at the facts......

    It is well documented that Saddam's regime has produced and used Chemical weapons against the Iraqi people and against neighbouring countries. The following are some examples of the occasions in which he used such weapons:

    It is world wide known that Saddam's regime dropped chemical bombs by air fighter on Halabja in Northern Iraq in 1988. The UN, other international organisations and Western Governments' reports confirmed that more than 5000 thousands civilians were killed in few hours. Eye witnesses accounts , photos and films show the horrifying facts of the most heinous crime in modern time.
    There are many cites in Northern Iraq in which Saddam used chemical weapons. These cites are known to the UN and other international organisations.
    Saddam's regime used chemical weapons against Iranian soldiers during Iraq Iran war. Many of them were sent to Europe to receive medical treatment and the whole world saw them on the TV.
    General Wafiq Al Samarae the former director of the Iraqi Intelligence Service admitted in his book (Eastern Gate Ruins) that Saddam's regime used light chemical weapons against Iraqi people in the holy cities of Najaf and Karbala to crush the popular uprising of March 1991 which followed the defeat of Saddam in invading Kuwait.
    After the crushing of the uprising, large number of people took sanctuary in the Marshes of Southern Iraq. In 1993 Saddam's regime used chemical weapons against the people of the Marshes in orders to crush the resistance forces which took the Marshes as bases to attack Saddam's regime.
    The following Press Release was issued by SCIRI office in London.


    VAN DER STOEL INFORMED OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS ATTACKS


    The Documental Centre for Human Rights in Iraq wrote to Mr. Van der Stoel, U.N. Special Rapporteur of Human Rights in Iraq detailing Saddam's recent use of chemical weapons against the people of Iraq. Following is a synopsis of that letter:

    "Dear Sir,

    We regret to inform you that troops of the Baghdad regime have re-launched chemical weapons in its latest attack on many civilian areas of southern Iraq marshes. Reliable sources have reported the following which we now forward to yourself for your immediate attention:
    Date of the chemical attack: 28th September, 1993.
    Troops participating in the attack: "Autbah Ben Gazwan" troops of Division 51 and Brigade 32.,
    Aim of the Attack: To clear the area of all inhabitants.
    Areas directly affected: Villages of AI-Hayadir, AI-Ewajy west AI-Medainah, Abu AI-Sanadiech south AI Medainah, AI-Moniesfia, AI-Mhayyat, Um Al-Hawaly, AI-Fatrah south AI-Dair.
    Number of Killed or injured: Approximately two thousand people are estimated
    killed or injured from both sides.
    Additional Information: On September 28th, 1993, troops deployed in the AIDeer and AI-Rumailah area gave all the residents orders to leave the area. On 29th September, 1993 the local tribes people fled the area after it had been contaminated with chemical materials.







    Saddam's regime crimes are countless and endless. However the following are few examples of these crimes:

    The killing of Sunni religious leaders such as Abdul Aziz Al Badri the Imam of Dragh district mosque in Baghdad in 1969, Al Shaikh Nadhum Al Asi from Ubaid tribe in Northern Iraq, Al Shiakh Al Shahrazori, Al Shaikh Umar Shaqlawa, Al Shiakh Rami Al Kirkukly, Al Shiakh Mohamad Shafeeq Al Badri, Abdul Ghani Shindala.
    The arrest of hundreds of Iraqi Islamic activists and the execution of five religious leaders in 1974.
    The arrest of thousand of religious people who rose up against the regime and the killing of hundreds of them in the popular uprising of 1977 in which Ayatollah Mohamad Baqir Al Hakim the leader of SCIRI was sentenced to life imprisonment.
    The arrest, torture and executions of tens of religious scholars and Islamic activists in such as Qasim Shubbar, Qasim Al Mubarqaa in 1979.
    The arrest, torture and execution of Ayatollah Mohamad baqir Al Sadr and his sistre Amina Al Sadr (Bint Al Huda) in 1980.
    The war against Iran in 1980 in which hundreds of thousands of Iraqis were killed, and many doubles of that number were handicapped or missed.
    The arrest of 90 members of Al Hakim family and the execution of 16 members of that family in 1983 to put pressure on Ayatollah Mohamad Baqir Al Hakim to stop his struggle against Saddam's regime.
    Using chemical weapons in the North and the South the details of which are below.
    The occupation of Kuwait which resulted in killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and injuring many doubles of that number in addition to the destruction of Iraq.
    The assassination of many opposition figures outside Iraq such Haj Sahal Al Salman in UAE in 1981, Sami Mahdi and Ni'ma Mohamad in Pakistan in 1987, Sayed Mahdi Al Hakim in Sudan in 1988, and Shaikh Talib Al Suhail in Lebanon in 1994.
    The execution of 21 Bath Party leaders in 1979 in Iraq , the assassination of Hardan Al Tikriti former defence Minister in Kuwait in 1973, and the former Prime- Minister Abdul Razzaq Al naef in London 1978.

     
  • At 11:49 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    FOLLOW UP on Saddam Article..


    please read the following document I found quite interesting detailing alot of the shit Saddam caused prior to our "OCCUPATION"



    The Case for Justice in Iraq
    By David J. Scheffer
    Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues

    Monday, September 18, 2000

    Middle East Institute and the Iraq Foundation
    National Press Club, Washington, D.C.

    Thank you, David Mack, for your kind introduction, and thanks to you
    and to the Middle East Institute and the Iraq Foundation for
    sponsoring this important conference on the crimes against humanity
    and war crimes of Saddam Hussein and his regime. It is good to be
    among so many groups and individuals who are dedicated to the pursuit
    of justice, democracy and the rule of law for the Iraqi people. I am
    here to tell you all that the United States looks forward to the day
    when justice, democracy and the rule of law will prevail in Iraq.

    I want to do three things this morning, by way of starting us all on a
    series of interesting presentations on different aspects of the case
    for justice in Iraq. First, I want to recall to everyone's attention
    the reason we are here -- the need to address the continuing
    criminality of Saddam Hussein's regime. Second, it has been almost a
    year since I saw many of you here in Washington last October, when I
    spoke at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace on the subject
    of Iraqi war crimes, or at the Iraqi National Assembly in New York
    shortly thereafter. I want to update you on what the U.S. Government
    has been doing to promote accountability for Saddam Hussein's 20 years
    of criminal conduct. Third, I think you will find of interest some of
    the reaction, in Baghdad and elsewhere, to what we -- and many of you
    -- have been doing to promote the cause of justice in Iraq.

    Let me be clear at the outset. Our primary objective is to see Saddam
    Hussein and the leadership of the Iraqi regime indicted and prosecuted
    by an international criminal tribunal. If an international criminal
    tribunal or even a commission of experts proves too difficult to
    achieve politically, there still may be opportunities in the national
    courts of certain jurisdictions to investigate and indict the
    leadership of the Iraqi regime. The United States is committed to
    pursuing justice and accountability in the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda,
    Cambodia, Sierra Leone and elsewhere around the world. We are also
    committed to the pursuit of justice and accountability for the victims
    of Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq.

    I. The Criminal Record of the Regime of Saddam Hussein

    Let me turn to my first main point, the need to address the criminal
    record of Saddam Hussein and his top associates for their crimes
    against the peoples of Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, and other countries. To the
    United States Government, it is beyond any possible doubt that Saddam
    Hussein and the top leadership around him have brutally and
    systematically committed war crimes and crimes against humanity for
    years, are committing them now, and will continue committing them
    until the international community finally says enough -- or until the
    forces of change in Iraq prevail against his regime as, ultimately,
    they must.

    This may seem self-evident to all of you here today. Interestingly, in
    my discussions of this issue I have found some people who will agree
    that Saddam Hussein is a criminal, but who are genuinely unaware of
    the magnitude of his criminal conduct. Those who want to gloss over
    Saddam's criminal record often want to gloss over the need for him to
    be brought to justice. This goes to the very heart of why his conduct
    deserves an international response, so I find it useful to review what
    we now know of the criminal record of Saddam Hussein and his top
    associates.

    1. The Iran-Iraq War. During the Iran-Iraq War, Saddam Hussein and his
    forces used chemical weapons against Iran. According to official
    Iranian sources, which we consider credible, approximately 5,000
    Iranians were killed by chemical weapons between 1983 and 1988. The
    use of chemical weapons has been a war crime since the 1925 Chemical
    Weapons treaty, to which Iraq is a party. Also during the Iran-Iraq
    War, there are credible reports that Iraqi forces killed several
    thousand Iranian prisoners of war, which is also a war crime as well
    as a grave breach of the Geneva Conventions of 1949, to which Iraq is
    a party. Other war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by
    Saddam Hussein and the top leaders around him against Iran and the
    Iranian people also deserve international investigation.

    2. Halabja. In mid-March of 1988, Saddam Hussein and his cousin Ali
    Hassan alMajid -- the infamous "Chemical Ali" -- ordered the dropping
    of chemical weapons on the town of Halabja in northeastern Iraq. This
    killed an estimated 5,000 civilians, and is a war crime and a crime
    against humanity. Photographic and videotape evidence of this attack
    and its aftermath exists. Some of this is available to scholars and
    God willing -- to prosecutors through the efforts of the International
    Monitor Institute in Los Angeles, California. More visual evidence is
    available from Iranian cameramen, who collected their images of the
    victims of this brutal attack -- most of whom were women and children
    -- in a book published in Tehran. The best evidence of all is from the
    survivors in Halabja itself.

    I am proud to say that the United States has been working with groups
    such as the Washington Kurdish Institute and scientists like Dr.
    Christine Gosden to document the suffering of the people of Halabja
    and -- just as importantly -- to find ways to help the people of
    Halabja treat the victims and bring hope to the living. Working with
    local authorities, we are looking for ways to help investigators,
    doctors and scientists document this crime and plan the help that the
    survivors need and deserve. We know they will not get that help from
    Saddam Hussein. As one example, to help war crimes investigators, the
    U.S. Government is today announcing the declassification of overhead
    imagery products of Halabia taken in March 1988, the best image we
    have that was taken a little more than a week after the attack. We
    hope this will serve as a photo-map to enable witnesses to describe to
    investigators, doctors and scientists what they were during those
    terrible days of the Iraqi chemical attack and its aftermath.

    3. The Anfal campaigns. Beginning in 1987 and accelerating in early
    1988, Saddam Hussein ordered the "Anfal" campaign against the Iraqi
    Kurdish people. By any measure, this constituted a crime against
    humanity and a war crime. Chemical Ali has admitted to witnesses that
    he carried out this campaign "under orders." In 1995, Human Rights
    Watch published a compilation of their reports in the book Iraq's
    Crime of Genocide, which is now out of print. Human Rights Watch needs
    to reprint this book. Human Rights Watch estimated that between 50,000
    and 100,000 Kurds were killed. Based on their review of captured Iraqi
    documents, interviews with hundreds of eyewitnesses, and on-site
    forensic investigations, they concluded that the Anfal campaign was
    genocide. I challenge anyone to read the evidence cited in Iraq's
    Crime of Genocide and come to any different conclusion.

    4. The invasion and occupation of Kuwait. On August 2, 1990, Saddam
    Hussein ordered his forces to invade and occupy Kuwait. It took
    military force by the international community and actions by the
    Kuwaiti themselves to liberate Kuwait in February 1991. During the
    occupation, Saddam Hussein's forces killed more than a thousand
    Kuwaiti nationals, as well as many others from other nations. Evidence
    of many of these killings is on file with authorities in Kuwait and at
    the United Nations Compensation Commission in Geneva. Saddam Hussein's
    forces committed many other crimes in Kuwait, including environmental
    crimes such as the destruction of oil wells in Kuwait's oil fields,
    massive looting of Kuwaiti property -- Saddam's son Uday appears to
    have treated Kuwait as his personal used car lot. As well, Saddam
    Hussein's government held hostages from many nations in an effort to
    coerce their governments into pro-Iraqi policies. During the war,
    Iraqi authorities also committed war crimes against Coalition forces.
    War crimes against American service members were detailed in a report
    to Congress and in an article by Lee Haworth and Jim Hergen in Society
    magazine back in January 1994.

    5. The suppression of the 1991 uprising. In March and April of 1991,
    Saddam Hussein's forces killed somewhere between 30,000 and 60,000
    Iraqis, most of them civilians. The story of the uprising of the Iraqi
    people is one of courage and hope for the people of Iraq and has been
    told by men such as former Iraqi General Najib al-Salihi in his book
    Al-Zilzal, "The Earthquake," The story of the uprising that started in
    the south, a part of the country traditionally neglected and deprived
    by Saddam Hussein's government in Baghdad, deserves to be better known
    outside of Iraq. Most of those killed were civilians, not resistance
    fighters -- a distinction that Saddam Hussein did not respect in 1991
    any more than he has before or since. This qualifies as a crime
    against humanity and possibly also a war crime.

    6. The draining of the southern marshes. Beginning in the early
    1990's, and continuing to this day, Saddam Hussein's government has
    drained the southern marshes of Iraq, depriving thousands of Iraqis of
    their livelihood and their ability to live on land that their
    ancestors have lived on for thousands of years. This is clearly not a
    land reclamation project, or a border security project, as some of
    Saddam's defenders have claimed. Instead, as groups such as the Amar
    Foundation have begun to document, Saddam's efforts have served to
    render the land less fertile, and less able to sustain the livelihood
    or security of the Iraqi people. This qualifies as a crime against
    humanity and may possibly constitute genocide.

    7. Ethnic cleansing of ethnic "Persians" from Iraq to Iran, and an
    ongoing campaign of ethnic cleansing of the non-Arabs of Kirkuk and
    other northern districts. This ongoing campaign of ethnic cleansing
    was documented by the former U.N. Special Human Rights Rapporteur for
    Iraq, Max van der Stoel in his reports in 1999.

    8. Continuing unlawful killings of political opponents. Many groups
    have documented Saddam Hussein's ongoing campaign against political
    opponents, including killings, tortures, and -- lately -- rape. As
    some of you may know, the regime has been using sexual assaults of
    women in an effort to intimidate leaders of the Iraqi opposition. We
    salute the courage of opposition leaders such as General Najib
    al-Salihi for speaking out about this crime. The regime is also
    carrying out a systematic campaign of murder and intimidation of
    clergy, especially Shi'a clergy. The number of those killed unlawfully
    is difficult to estimate but must be well in excess of 10,000 since
    Saddam Hussein officially seized power in 1980. The number of victims
    of torture no doubt well exceeds the number of those killed.

    Who is responsible for these crimes? Like Slobodan Milosevic, Saddam
    Hussein did not commit these crimes on his own. He has built up one of
    the world's most ruthless police states using a very small number of
    associates who share with him the responsibility for these criminal
    actions. The non-governmental group INDICT some time ago developed a
    list of 12 of those most deserving of international indictment. To
    refresh everyone's recollection, they are:

    1. Saddam Hussein, president of Iraq and chairman of the Revolutionary
    Command Council (RCC). I will have more to say about the RCC shortly.

    2. Ali Hassan al-Majid, "Chemical Ali," reviled for his enthusiasm in
    using poison gas against Iraqi Kurds and in the Iran-Iraq war. He also
    turned up in Kuwait during the occupation and, more recently, as
    governor in the south of Iraq during recent periods of repression
    against the people there. When someone shows up at crime scene after
    crime scene, the pattern of evidence becomes clear.

    3. Saddam's elder son Uday, a commander of a ruthless paramilitary
    organization that maintains Saddam's hold on power.

    4. Saddam's younger son Qusay Saddam Hussein, the Head of the Special
    Security
    Organization, reputed by many to be Saddam's likely successor.

    5. Muhammad Hamza al-Zubaydi, Deputy Prime Minister of Iraq.

    6. Taha Yasin Ramadan, Vice President of Iraq.

    7. Barzan al-Tikriti, former Head of Iraqi Intelligence.

    8. Watban al-Tikriti, former Minister of the Interior.

    9. Sabawi al-Tikriti, former Head of Intelligence and the General
    Security Organization.

    10. Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, vice chairman of the Revolutionary Command
    Council and former Head of the Revolutionary Court.

    11. Tariq Aziz, Deputy Prime Minister of Iraq.

    12. Aziz Salih Noman, Governor of Kuwait during the Iraqi occupation.

    II. Building the Case: What the United States Has Been Doing

    The charges are clear. The targets of prosecution are identified. Let
    me turn to a brief description of what the United States has been
    doing in the past year to gather the evidence of Iraqi crimes against
    humanity, war crimes and genocide.

    First, we have undertaken an analysis of the de jure case against
    Saddam Hussein. This is important because a more straightforward de
    jure case can greatly simplify the work of prosecutors. As some of you
    know, the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
    took advantage of Slobodan Milosevic's official role as President of
    the FRY in 1999 to indict him for crimes against humanity in Kosovo,
    whereas he has not yet been indicted for his responsibility for crimes
    committed during the 1991-95 wars in Bosnia and Croatia, when he was
    nominally only President of Serbia.

    The de jure case against Saddam Hussein and his top associates is
    rock-solid. To summarize briefly, Article 37 of the current Iraqi
    constitution names the Revolutionary Command Council (RCC) the supreme
    body in the state. Articles 42 and 43 state that the RCC has the power
    to promulgate laws and decrees that have the force of law Article 38
    states that the RCC chairman is also the President, who is responsible
    under Article 57-59 for the acts of the Iraqi military and security
    services. The RCC chairman and Iraqi president is, of course, Saddam
    Hussein.

    We have also been doing our part on the de facto case. Our second area
    of work has been in connection with one of the most important archives
    of evidence-millions of pages of captured Iraqi documents taken out of
    northern Iraq by Human Rights Watch and the U.S. Government. We
    scanned these onto 176 CD-ROM's. Last October, we announced we had
    given a set of the 176 CD-ROM's to the Iraq Foundation, along with a
    grant to make the full collection of these documents available on the
    Internet to scholars, journalists and, eventually, prosecutors
    worldwide. I know the Iraq Foundation and the Iraq Research and
    Documentation Project have been working hard on that project, which I
    will let them describe further.

    Third, the U.S. Government has another archive of millions of pages of
    documents captured by U.S. forces in Kuwait and southern Iraq during
    Operation Desert Storm. I announced on August 2 that we have been
    working to declassify these documents and that we were giving the
    first of these to the Iraq Foundation. Today, I am announcing that we
    have given several hundred more to the Iraq Foundation, as well. I
    will let the Iraq Foundation describe further what is in this
    collection.

    Fourth, the U.S. Government has an extensive archive of classified
    documents relating to Iraqi war crimes during the Gulf War. Since
    October, staff from my office have located and reviewed these
    materials. If you remember the final scene of "Raiders of the Lost
    Ark," where the Ark is being wheeled into a warehouse of crate upon
    crate, I should tell you that that warehouse does exist -- it's in
    Suitland, Maryland -- and that my staff found these materials on Iraqi
    war crimes ... located safely right next to the Ark of the Covenant.
    U.S. Army lawyers and investigators did a truly outstanding job of
    compiling this evidence and organizing it in ways that will prove
    valuable to the staff of a tribunal or commission. Some of the
    materials can eventually be declassified. While we do not intend to
    make all of these documents public, we have worked closely with past
    commissions of experts and tribunals to allow them access to
    classified material in accordance with U.S. laws that protect sources
    and methods. We would be willing to do the same for a commission or
    tribunal looking into the crimes of Saddam Hussein and his henchmen.

    I must also salute the work of Kuwaiti prosecutors, the Center for
    Research and Studies on Kuwait, and others there in documenting Saddam
    Hussein's crimes against the Kuwaiti people. After the liberation,
    Kuwaiti authorities undertook a systematic effort at collecting
    evidence and documenting Iraqi war crimes in Kuwait. As some of you
    know, Kuwaiti prosecutors recently completed a thorough trial of Alaa
    Hussein, installed in August 1990 by Saddam. Hussein as the quisling
    governor of Kuwait during the early weeks of the occupation. Kuwaiti
    prosecutors showed, through their professionalism in that trial, their
    ability to present evidence of Iraqi war crimes committed 10 years
    ago.

    Fifth, U.S. Government officials have been meeting with witnesses and
    former Iraqi officials to gather evidence of Iraqi war crimes. There
    is no substitute for eyewitness accounts in any criminal prosecution,
    before an international tribunal or in national courts. We have
    learned a lot in these interviews. As a rule, we treat information
    provided to us in confidence, so we leave it to those who talk to us
    whether to go public with what they have experienced. There have been
    a number of cases where valuable leads have come forward. We
    understand other groups are also active in interviewing witnesses, but
    I will leave it to them to describe their own work.

    Sixth, to support our other work, the U.S. Government has undertaken a
    review of imagery to declassify potential evidence of both historical
    and more recent Iraqi criminal conduct. We have made public imagery
    products showing the ongoing work to drain the southern marshes, and
    destroy Iraqi villages. Recently, the Iraq Foundation received a
    report of the destruction of the southern Iraqi village of Albu Ayish
    on March 28 and April 5, 1999. We were able to locate imagery products
    from September 1998 and December 1999 that confirms this account.
    Those of you familiar with Jamie Rubin's press briefings of the
    conflict in Kosovo will recognize this presentation. [Show] On the
    left is Albu Ayish as it existed before Iraqi forces moved in. You can
    see the school near the river, here. The buildings surrounding it have
    roofs on them. In the "after" picture, here, the school is intact.
    That is more than you can say for the buildings surrounding the
    school, which bear the signs of destruction from ground level. I will
    leave it to Rend Franke if she wants to say more about what happened
    to the families at Albu Ayish and surrounding towns in southern Iraq.
    Albu Ayish is but one example of what the U.S. Government is doing to
    review imagery of Iraqi war crimes.

    All in all, we have had a productive year in developing and preserving
    evidence of Iraqi crimes against humanity and war crimes. We are the
    first to say there is much more that needs to be done. To that end, we
    are hoping the Congress will give us the President's full requested
    appropriations so that this important work can continue for another
    year. We also anticipate further strong contributions to this work by
    the Iraqi opposition. The Iraqi National Congress, in particular, tell
    us they plan to devote substantial efforts to this cause as part of
    its upcoming $8 million work program.

    III. The Reaction from Baghdad and Elsewhere

    Let me turn to my third main point. One of the most interesting
    aspects of our work on documenting Iraqi war crimes, and engaging with
    other governments on this issue, has been the reactions we have
    received. Let me first talk about Baghdad's reaction, Saddam Hussein
    recognizes that he is vulnerable to calls for accountability for his
    crimes against humanity, genocide and war crimes. Articles in the
    international press have reported that the regime takes international
    efforts to establish a tribunal seriously. Threats of possible arrest
    have caused Iraqi officials to curtail or forgo travel to European
    countries whose laws allow arrest under the UN, Convention Against
    Torture, The regime has also harassed Iraqis and others who speak out
    against the regime's crimes. For example, the regime sent someone with
    an Iraqi diplomatic passport -- hesitate to call him an Iraqi diplomat
    to try to film participants at INDICT's conference on Iraqi war crimes
    in Paris this past April.

    There is another important aspect of the Iraqi reaction, as well,
    Saddam Hussein realizes that international discussion of his crimes
    against humanity, genocide and war crimes reveals the truth about his
    policies towards the Iraqi people for the last 20 years. This is a
    regime that maintains its power through crime-whether it be by crimes
    against humanity and war crimes, or by killings, torture or the threat
    of killings and torture, of Iraqi citizens, and by looting the
    property that rightly belongs to the people of Iraq or Iraq's
    neighbors. Make no mistake -- those crimes are continuing to this day.

    Saddam Hussein clearly fears the truth. Journalists who travel to Iraq
    all have "minders." It takes courageous journalists, and documentary
    film producers like Joel Soler, to tell any story other than the one
    that Saddam Hussein's regime wants you to tell. (I hope you all can
    see Mr. Soler's documentary, "Uncle Saddam" at 1:00 this afternoon.)
    One recent visitor to Iraq traveled to Baghdad earlier this year and
    was shown hospital beds with two patients to a bed. It was only when
    he slipped away from his minder that he found out that around the
    corner, out of sight, was a room full of empty hospital beds. Last
    week, as you read in Barbara Crossette's story in September 12th's
    "New York Times", Saddam Hussein kept U.N. humanitarian experts from
    traveling to Iraq to assess the true living conditions in Iraq. She
    wrote, "President Saddam Hussein, whose government is now probably the
    world's most repressive, wants to control all contact between Iraqis
    and outsiders, and can in effect veto the assignment to Iraq of even
    United Nations officials." Large aid organizations based in Europe
    have been barred from areas in Iraq under the regime's controls.
    Instead, only small, anti-sanctions protesters, "who bring in
    relatively small amounts of aid, are welcomed for their propaganda
    value."

    Any statistics from Iraq, or taken by Iraqi officials for the U.N. are
    seriously suspect. A recent Fellow at the US Institute of Peace,
    Amatzia Baram, documented in this Spring's issue of "Middle East
    Journal" how the Government of Iraq denies U.N. relief agencies
    accurate and reliable statistics on the true conditions inside Iraq.
    No reporter should uncritically accept as true any Iraqi statistics,
    based on the research and data shown in this article. Iraqi human
    rights and opposition groups frequently must work hard and take risks
    to get the truth out of Iraq, and I am honored to be here with some of
    their representatives today.

    Saddam Hussein refused every year to allow the former U.N. Special
    Human Rights Rapporteur for Iraq, Max van der Stoel, to visit Iraq to
    find out the truth about Iraqi human rights abuses. The new
    rapporteur, Andreas Mavrommatis of Cyprus, has not been allowed into
    Iraq, either. Efforts to keep U.N. arms inspectors from the truth
    about Saddam's nuclear, chemical and biological weapons are so
    well-known I will not repeat them, except to say there were many "full
    and final disclosures." Russian diplomat Yuli M. Voronstov was this
    year denied entry to find out the true fate of more than 600 missing
    Kuwaitis taken captive by Iraq during the occupation of Kuwait and,
    thus far, never returned to their families. Their fate is known up
    until the time they were taken to a prison in Basrah, southern Iraq,
    and they have never been heard from since. It is true that, a few
    years ago, Iraq admitted it had been holding hundreds of Iranian
    prisoners of war more than 10 years after the end of the Iran-Iraq
    War. When the truth came out, Iraq was forced to release its
    prisoners.

    All this effort to conceal the truth about what is going on inside
    Iraq today is hard to explain without understanding the context of
    Saddam Hussein's 20-year record of crimes against humanity by the
    Iraqi regime. We know from those who have been in Saddam's inner
    office that he admires Josef Stalin, and he has clearly tried to
    emulate Stalin's methods of brutality, terror, covering up the truth,
    and using propaganda to project a different image. An awareness of the
    criminal character of Saddam Hussein's regime puts in context his
    current propaganda campaign. No wonder Saddam Hussein is concerned
    about efforts to establish an international tribunal that would
    document the truth of his 20 years of crimes against humanity,
    genocide and war crimes. It would end international support for Saddam
    Hussein's campaign to gain personal control of billions of dollars ofthe U.N.'s oil-for-food program. Make no mistake -- the United States
    is committed to finding ways of improving conditions for the Iraqi
    people, but we cannot foresee the suspension of U.N. sanctions except
    through full compliance with the Security Council's resolutions that
    were adopted precisely as a result of Saddam Hussein's crimes against
    humanity, genocide, and war crimes against the peoples of Iraq and
    Iraq's neighbors.

    The United States has held discussions in the last year with a number
    of governments and non-governmental organizations who share the desire
    for an international tribunal to indict Saddam Hussein and his top
    aides for their crimes. We have also compiled a collection of
    arguments from those who don't want to support a tribunal. As you
    would expect, none of them withstands scrutiny. Let me share some of
    the answers we have given and let you be the judge.

    -- Until recently, some people said there was no reason to bring
    Saddam to justice since most of his crimes took place long ago,
    starting right after he seized absolute power in 1979. That argument
    doesn't work any more, since other recent efforts for justice in
    Europe and Asia have reached back prior to 1979, when Saddam Hussein
    murdered his way to the presidency of Iraq. The worst abuses of the
    Pinochet era took place in 1973-1979, and the crimes against humanity
    of the Khmer Rouge era took place in 1975-1979. As Secretary Albright
    has long made clear, there is no statute of limitations for genocide
    or crimes against humanity.

    -- Some have said that the Security Council should not establish
    another ad hoc international tribunal and instead wait for the
    International Criminal Court (ICC) to come into force. The ICC Treaty
    will not come into force for at least two more years, and it will not
    have jurisdiction over crimes committed before the Treaty comes into
    force. Therefore, the ICC will be not able to hold Saddam Hussein and
    his associates accountable for between a hundred thousand and a
    quarter of a million civilian deaths, nor for the tortures, rapes,
    lootings and other crimes against humanity and war crimes of the past,
    nor for crimes against humanity that are still going on inside Iraq
    today, Nor, under Article 12 of the Treaty, is the ICC going to be
    able to indict Saddam for crimes he commits in the future inside Iraq
    unless the Security Council acts to establish the court's jurisdiction
    over his crimes, which we, and others, say should happen right now.

    -- Our pursuit of justice in Iraq is entirely consistent with the
    objectives of International Criminal Court, objectives we have long
    supported. Governments that support international justice need to work
    together in real time on the most demanding issues of accountability
    of this era -- in places like the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda, Sierra
    Leone, Cambodia -- and Iraq. It would be ironic indeed if the
    generation of leaders who drafted the ICC Treaty turned their backs on
    the some of the most egregious crimes of our time. The ICC will not
    succeed if its supporters are not willing to demand accountability for
    war criminals like Saddam Hussein.

    -- Finally, there used to be those who said that the threat of
    indictment of officials around Saddam Hussein would deter them from
    leading a coup against him. The nature of the Iraqi regime -- both in
    fact and in law -- is that Saddam Hussein and a very small group of
    men around him have wielded absolute power. They are not likely to be
    the ones to lead an uprising against Saddam. They deserve to be the
    ones held responsible for the regime's crimes against humanity,
    genocide and war crimes. When Saddam passes from the scene -- and this
    will happen sooner or later -- there will need to be a process of
    truth and reconciliation for the bulk of Iraqi society if it is to
    make peace with itself. We owe it to the victims of 20 years of the
    crimes of this regime to hold accountable those at the top who wielded
    absolute power and ruined the lives of millions of Iraqis.

    -- The last argument that never gets made, at least publicly, is money
    -- that there is profit in doing business with the Baghdad regime
    despite its criminal character. Countries that have ratified the ICC
    treaty have already expressed, explicitly or implicitly, their policy
    decision that economic grounds are insufficient to let a war criminal
    off the book. We believe there is much more to gain for international
    peace and security from pursuing international justice against Saddam
    Hussein than would ever be possible to gain for private profit from
    pursuing international commerce with Saddam Hussein. Moreover, in the
    end, Saddam Hussein's criminal regime will go. At that time, the Iraqi
    people will look up, around them, and see who stood up for justice for
    the victims of Saddam. Hussein's criminal regime, and who opposed
    efforts to bring the regime to justice, It is in everyone's long-term
    interests -- economic, political, and moral -- to side with justice
    for the peoples of Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, and elsewhere.

    IV. Conclusion

    In conclusion, let me say this, Iraq is a proud nation. Its heritage
    goes back to the days of Hammurabi the lawgiver and the four schools
    of Islamic law of the Abbasid Caliphate [Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi'i and
    Hanbali], and the great Shi'ite schools of Islamic theology that
    Saddam Hussein has sought to destroy. Saddam tries to liken himself to
    the great Nebuchadnezzar II, when it is more likely history will judge
    him as a latter-day Hulagu Khan, the Mongol conqueror who left Iraq a
    legacy of death, devastation and misrule. Mongol conquerors built a
    pyramid of the skulls of their victims, Saddam Hussein used helmets of
    Iranian soldiers killed during the Iran-Iraq War. The time has come
    for Saddam Hussein and his top associates to be held accountable for
    their 20 years of crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide. I
    hope you will join with me these next few months in advancing the
    cause of justice in Iraq

     
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