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We caught the wrong guy
By William Rivers Pitt
Dec. 15 Saddam Hussein, former employee of the American
federal government, was captured near a farmhouse in Tikrit in a raid
performed by other employees of the American federal government. That
sounds pretty deranged, right? Perhaps, but it is also accurate. The unifying
thread binding together everyone assembled at that Tikrit farmhouse is
the simple fact that all of them the soldiers as well as Hussein
have received pay from the United States for services rendered.
It is no small irony that Hussein, the Butcher of Baghdad, the monster
under your bed these last twelve years, was paid probably ten thousand
times more during his time as an American employee than the soldiers who
caught him on Saturday night. The boys in the Reagan White House were
generous with your tax dollars, and Hussein was a recipient of their largesse
for the better part of a decade.
If this were a Tom Clancy movie, we would be watching the dramatic capture
of Hussein somewhere in the last ten minutes of the tale. The bedraggled
dictator would be put on public trial for his crimes, sentenced to several
thousand concurrent life sentences, and dragged off to prison in chains.
The anti-American insurgents in Iraq, seeing the sudden futility of their
fight to place Hussein back into power, would lay down their arms and
melt back into the countryside. For dramatic effect, more than a few would
be cornered by SEAL teams in black face paint and discreetly shot in the
back of the head. The President would speak with eloquence as the martial
score swelled around him. Fade to black, roll credits, get off my plane.
The real-world version is certainly not lacking in drama. The streets
of Baghdad were thronged on Sunday with mobs of Iraqi people celebrating
the final removal of a despot who had haunted their lives since 1979.
Their joy was utterly unfettered. Images on CNN of Hussein, looking for
all the world like a Muslim version of Charles Manson while getting checked
for head lice by an American medic, were as surreal as anything one might
ever see on a television.
Unfortunately, the real-world script has a lot of pages left to be turned.
Former UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter, reached at his home on Sunday,
said, Its great that they caught him. The man was a brutal
dictator who committed terrible crimes against his people. But now we
come to rest of story. We didnt go to war to capture Saddam Hussein.
We went to war to get rid of weapons of mass destruction. Those weapons
have not been found. Ray McGovern, senior analyst and 27-year veteran
of the CIA, echoed Ritters perspective on Sunday. Its
wonderful that he was captured, because now well find out where
the weapons of mass destruction are, said McGovern with tongue firmly
planted in cheek. We killed his sons before they could tell us.
Indeed, reality intrudes. The push for war before March was based upon
Husseins possession of 26,000 liters of anthrax, 38,000 liters of
botulinum toxin, 1,000,000 pounds of sarin gas, mustard gas, and VX nerve
gas, along with 30,000 munitions to deliver these agents, uranium from
Niger to be used in nuclear bombs, and let us not forget the al-Qaida
terrorists closely associated with Hussein who would take this stuff and
use it against us on the main streets and back roads of the United States.
When they found Hussein hiding in that dirt hole in the ground, none of
this stuff was down there with him. The full force of the American military
has been likewise unable to locate it anywhere else. There is no evidence
of al-Qaida agents working with Hussein, and Bush was forced some weeks
ago to publicly acknowledge that Hussein had nothing to do with September
11. The Niger uranium story was debunked last summer. Conventional wisdom
now holds that none of this stuff was there to begin with, and all the
clear statements from virtually everyone in the Bush administration squatting
on the public record describing the existence of this stuff looks now
like what it was then: A lot of overblown rhetoric and outright lies,
designed to terrify the American people into supporting an unnecessary
go-it-alone war. The war made a few Bush cronies rich beyond the dreams
of avarice while allowing some hawks in the Defense Department to play
at empire-building, something they have been craving for more than ten
years.
Of course, the rhetoric mutated as the weapons stubbornly refused to be
found. By the time Bush did his little Mission Accomplished
strut across the aircraft carrier, the occupation was about the removal
of Saddam Hussein and the liberation of the Iraqi people. No longer were
we informed on a daily basis of the sinister nexus between Hussein
and al- Qaida, as described by Colin Powell before the United Nations
in February. No longer were we fed the insinuations that Hussein was involved
in the attacks of September 11. Certainly, any and all mention of weapons
of mass destruction ceased completely. We were, instead, embarking on
some noble democratic experiment.
The capture of Saddam Hussein, and the Iraqis dancing in the streets of
Baghdad, feeds nicely into these newly-minted explanations. Bush and his
people will use this as the propaganda coup it is, and to great effect.
But a poet once said something about tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow.
We are not fighting for Saddam, said an Iraqi named Kashid
Ahmad Saleh in a New York Times report from a week ago. We are fighting
for freedom and because the Americans are Jews. The Governing Council
is a bunch of looters and criminals and mercenaries. We cannot expect
that stability in this country will ever come from them. The principle
is based on religion and tribal loyalties, continued Saleh. The
religious principle is that we cannot accept to live with infidels. The
Prophet Muhammad, peace be on him, said, `Hit the infidels wherever you
find them. We are also a tribal people. We cannot allow strangers
to rule over us. Welcome to the new Iraq. The theme that the 455
Americans killed there, and the thousands of others who have been wounded,
fell at the hands of pro-Hussein loyalists is now gone. The Bush administration
celebrations over this capture will appear quite silly and premature when
the dying continues. Whatever Hussein bitter-enders there are will be
joined by Iraqi nationalists who will now see no good reason for American
forces to remain. After all, the new rhetoric highlighted the removal
of Hussein as the reason for this invasion, and that task has been completed.
Yet American forces are not leaving, and will not leave. The killing of
our troops will continue because of people like Kashid Ahmad Saleh. All
Husseins capture did for Saleh was remove from the table the idea
that he was fighting for the dictator. He is free now, and the war will
begin in earnest. The dying will continue because Americas presence
in Iraq is a wonderful opportunity for a man named Osama bin Laden, who
was not captured on Saturday. Bin Laden, it has been reported, is thrilled
by what is happening in Iraq, and plans to throw as much violence as he
can muster at American forces there. The Bush administration spent hundreds
of billions of dollars on this Iraq invasion, not one dime of which went
towards the capture or death of the fellow who brought down the Towers
a couple of years ago. For bin Laden and his devotees, Iraq is better
than Disneyland. For all the pomp and circumstance that has surrounded
the extraction of the former Iraqi dictator from a hole in the ground,
the reality is that the United States is not one bit safer now that the
man is in chains. There will be no trial for Hussein, at least nothing
in public, because he might start shouting about the back pay he is owed
from his days as an employee of the American government. Because another
former employee of the American government named Osama is still alive
and free, our troops are still in mortal danger in Iraq.
Hussein was never a threat to the United States. His capture means nothing
to the safety and security of the American people. The money we spent
to put the bag on him might have gone towards capturing bin Laden, who
is a threat, but that did not happen. We can be happy for the people of
Iraq, because their Hussein problem is over. Here in America, our Hussein
problem is just beginning. The other problem, that Osama fellow we should
have been trying to capture this whole time, remains perched over our
door like the raven.
Source: TruthOut
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