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Hussein's Capture Is Yesterday's News

By Christopher Scheer, AlterNet. Posted December 14, 2003.


The capture and public humiliation of our super-creepy ex-ally answers none of the intractable questions facing Iraq and the United States about the occupation.

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It is terrific news that Saddam Hussein, that human monster, is now under arrest and will be brought before a court. There seems little doubt that he meets the criteria for an international war criminal, and while I'd think it much wiser to send him to The Hague, it's difficult to argue that he deserves more than whatever made-to-order court the U.S. decides is appropriate for its old super-creepy ally.

As President Bush said in his brief speech Sunday, "For the vast majority of Iraqi citizens who wish to live as free men and women, this event brings further assurance that the torture chambers and the secret police are gone forever." I heartily hope this is true.

That said, it's time to return to Earth and reality. The TV talking heads tell us that the 2004 elections and the future of Iraq were decided this morning when Hussein was found in a hole. In my humble opinion, that's perhaps the stupidest comment since Paris Hilton speculated that Wal-Mart is a store that sells walls. Catching Saddam was a mop-up operation, rather like the slaying of his sons a few months back. The guy was already done-for; once a dictator falls from his perch, the wolves -- his own or others -- ensure that he will never again be alpha male in that pack. All the issues surrounding the occupation of Iraq will be with us tomorrow morning, and the day after that, and the day after that.

As far as I can tell, catching Saddam is not going to fix Iraq's economy, build a functioning democracy, prevent a Sunni-Shiite civil war, or bring back the Americans and Iraqis who have died and will continue to die at the checkpoints, home invasions and while driving their Humvees down the nation's roads. Humiliating Hussein with public dental examinations will hopefully reassure some Iraqis that peace is on the way, but while it would be nice if his old cronies who may be involved in the insurgency would lay down their arms, I wouldn't hold my breath.

Kenneth Pollack, the scholar who wrote, "The Threatening Storm: The Case For Invading Iraq," said on CNN Sunday that after a stay in Iraq, his impression was that the number one fear of the populace is not guerrilla violence but street crime. The so-called Iraqi Governing Council is now a joke, with a BBC/Oxford poll showing the public has nearly zero faith in its effectiveness. Unemployment is over 50 percent. Nearly half of the first class of the new Iraqi army quit just days ahead of being deployed. Billions of dollars of American taxpayer money is being funneled almost directly to a tiny handful of military contractors and construction companies like Bechtel and Halliburton.

The American military is the only power broker in the country, something which has not changed since the first days of the occupation. In six months, the U.S. has pledged to hand over control of the country straight to Iraqis elected by caucuses, without bringing in the UN or other international bodies to help oversee the transition. The U.S. will then be in a position of either having to let the new Iraqi government make its own mistakes, or treating it like a puppet regime. Faced with a cleric-dominated and independent government that may demand the United States withdraw more quickly or tries to prevent privatization of Iraq's resources, which do you think the micromanagers at the White House will choose?


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