Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Iraq - The War and the Execution

THE WAR AND THE EXECUTION - IRAQ



The classsical idea of a just war demands that aim is moral;
Classical scholars defined war as an ethically appropriate use of mass political violence. Many credit Augustine with the founding of just war theory but this is incomplete. As Johnson notes, in its origins just war theory is a synthesis of classical thought .Many would accredit to Aristotle, Cicero and Augustine this refined and redefined validation of war – The Just War Tradition- Many of the rules developed by the just war tradition have since been codified into contemporary international laws governing armed conflict, such as The United Nations Charter and The Hague and Geneva Conventions. The tradition has thus been doubly influential, dominating both moral and legal discourse surrounding war. It sets the tone, and the parameters, for the great debate.
Just war theory can be meaningfully divided into three parts, which in the literature are referred to, for the sake of convenience, in Latin. These parts are: 1) jus ad bellum, which concerns the justice of resorting to war in the first place; 2) jus in bello, which concerns the justice of conduct within war, after it has begun; and 3) jus post bellum, which concerns the justice of peace agreements and the termination phase of war.
That the likelyhood of success is positive, that the means are proportionate towards that end.

The invasion of Iraq fails on each of these tenets. An outraged US President desperately seeking a perpetrator for the attacks on the Twin Towers declared it. When an obvious target in the form of an obvious aggressor could not be found, the State of Terror was invented, and later Iraq was dressed up to be the manifestation of that State. The US invaded without the mandate of the UN.
The Shock and awe strategy to bomb a city into submission prior to the land invasion was brutal, barbarous and yes murderous. It was indiscriminate and slaughtered thousands of civilians. It was on a scale of carnage and in equal ignominy to the bombing of Dresden in WW2 .
The leadership was topppled and the regeimen changed .The Americans used a con man (Chabli) to usurp / install a favourable leader. They succeed in installing a leadership as crass and fundamentalist as the one they deposed. The despot was tried in a courtroom where his protestations could be switched off and his remonstrations be screened off at the touch of a button by an unconcealed vengeful judge. He could have pleaded that the Anthrax which he used against the Kurds was supplied by the US, he might have referred to his former relations with Rumsfield, and the US support in his was against Iran but the charges against him were selective in that they had no material basis for US or UK collusion. These were Saddams own killings in revenge for the attempt on his life.
And so after a hearing which appeared at times like some slapstick judicial romp; a farce of truly theatrical proportions he was not surprisingly sentenced to die. He pleaded to be shot as a soldier (which he was not); this was denied
And so he was hanged by a taunting jeering mob as he prayed for the deliverance of Iraq from the Persians and their allies. And this was filmed on cell phone to give us the grisly reminder of the macabre horrorof an18 centaury execution. I have watched this with some sense of, loathing revulsion and disgust.
These last recorded moments of Saddams life as recorded on this cell phone are chilling and one feels a voyeur for looking at it.

If in his last moments Saddam showed contrition, or remorse or asked forgiveness we can never know ;only a knowing God can know and adjudicate. But what can one say of his executioners – if they believed in a hell need they have taunted and goaded him – he was in their urgings going there anyway but and if they believed in deliverance through a Devine mercy by any deity ; Allah ; God – any supreme being – how could they torment him even as the trapdoor opened.


Now consider the paradox that would surely have been if the British had captured Saddam and he immediately sought asylum in the UK because of his perceived fears of a trial culminating in the death sentence - a system which is not countenanced in the UK, I believe in these circumstances Saddam would have argued for such protection and have succeeded as did Pinochet.
The problem is that now are exposed the fault lines between the allies in the ethics of warfare and its sequellae. There is already an evidential wish for the British to distance themselves from what was a dark, brutal, gruesome and unseeingly hasty execution.
A new hatred between Arab cultures has been fomented by the invasion of Iraq – that between Sunni and Sheite ; it has been exacerbated by this trial and execution to an untold degree.
As the Bush administration seek to justify a new surge of troops in a country already in a state of civil war, where the Houses on record at least should oppose such a venture Bush seems destined to sink to depths of unpopularity not even known to Nixon.

4 comments:

Ed said...

I agree with most of what you have written, except:

"An outraged US President desperately seeking a perpetrator for the attacks on the Twin Towers declared it. When an obvious target in the form of an obvious aggressor could not be found, the State of Terror was invented, and later Iraq was dressed up to be the manifestation of that State. The US invaded without the mandate of the UN."

3 points:
1. My Dad was working accross the street when two planes slammed into 1 and 2 World Trade Center (he was in the Verizon Bldg). He saw the people -much like yourself -jumping to their deaths. Choosing this option over being burned to death: I hope NO ONE ever has to make a decision like this again, or have to witness it. Having been to "Ground Zero" and seen the "pit," I can't fathom that 9 years previous (I live about 70 miles from the city) I was in the observation deck looking over the city. Several of my fellow coaches (American Youth Football program) are/were Firefighters in NYC. I see the price they have paid with their lives, and lungs. A war on terror wasn't an excuse to hunt down a religion, it is an action to prevent further violence against my homeland. I would think that being closer to London (than I am) you could appreciate where I am coming from on this -seeing that mass-transportation plays a much bigger role in most of Europe than it does here.

2. UN mandates? How many does it take to resolve a problem? At last count there were at least 17 imposed against Iraq. Not to mention the additional UN Security Council Statements to the legally binding UNSCRs, the UN Security Council has also issued at least 30 statements from the President of the UN Security Council regarding Saddam Hussein's continued violations of UNSCRs. (http://www.state.gov/p/nea/rls/01fs/14906.htm)

Let's also keep in mind, Saddam did state he enjoyed seeing the event, said he couldn't have planned it better, and had links to the conspiritors.

3. You left out Afghanistan. While yes, they were more complicit in the attack, Iraq was no innocent waif.

Other than that -I think you're spot on.

donkylemore said...

9/11 was an act of utter depravity by a crazed zealot on the most emblamatic symbol of western democracy as it is expressed in one of its manifest freedoms - that of free trade ; It was as demonic an act as could be visited upon the western world and its singular purpose was to terrorise; In so far as it was logistically almost flawless is what stirkes terror in to the hardest of hearts; All of civilisation lost something that day ; not least the ancient and most learned of Arab cultures and civilisation .
It is difficult for you to see that just now and this is understandable . I have worked with Arabic people especially in Lebanon especially during their civil war ; The Lebonese too have endured much at the hands of a belicose neighbour - Israel-which has close associations with the Bush administration. And they sit and watch as that neighbour builds a separation wall around it's stolen territories - the west bank , gaza , Golan heights and Jerusalem - while the Un and the rest of the west just watch and pay idle diplomatic platitudes .
And once again they see their country plunged into civil war . The factions behind fomenting this unrest are Iranian and Syrian .
Their country has been bombed back a hundred years , and they can scarcely afford the resourses to rebuild it .
And again let me be clear . I have the untmost regret for US losses and I have great faith in US resolve . But your president is edging closer by the day to extending his conflict into Iran.
This is no longer the beheivour of a Neo Con , but a misled messianic fanatic which will bring further loss upon US soldiers . And in this an apalling vista is being borne .
I invite you to read my piece about 'pity the soldier'
War is the failure of all civilisation.
My late father fought with Montgomery in the Western Desert WW2 , saw the concentration camps , was one of the frist to have to go in to Belsen ; he was a dentist and was required to make an estimate of the deaths in the cells based on dental records.
Do not let your president who never saw war subject your servicemen into another atrocious conflagration.
I will pray that you as a people have the determination to thawart his apparent determination to invade Iran

Ed said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Ed said...

I deleted an earlier post. I thought about it, and deleted it because my response was overlooking the fact that as a world citizen, your views can be, and are different than those of mine and my fellow patriots. I disagree with your view (surprized?) and need to think about an apropriate response. On several points, you have hit the nail on the head, and with that I think you are coming around to seeing things my way (or I'm seeing things your way -I'd like to think it was the first, and not the later (wink-wink, nudge-nudge)).

I have read the "pity" posting you have made, and I think you lack the understanding and perspective of the volunteer force that I and my family and friends joined. I will post this reponse in my blog, and I welcome you to view it.
http://henstebeck.blogspot.com/

...and as a quick retort:
"Do not let your president who never saw war subject your servicemen into another atrocious conflagration."

Okay, and please try to keep Mr. Blair (no history of documented military service I could find) from doing the same.

In the meantime, my hat is off to your father.