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Iraqi Trial
Will Not Address All the Crimes
Hossein Askari
Saddam Hussein’s trial must address not only his
internal crimes, but also those committed against his
neighbors. There is no doubt that Saddam Hussein killed
and gassed many more Iranians than he did Iraqis during
his tenure as a Middle Eastern despot. Failure to charge
Saddam with international war crimes and to expose the
support of foreign powers for his regime would deny
closure to millions in Kuwait and Iran. After all, Iran
will be on Iraq’s eastern border long after the United
States has gone home. Iraq must come to terms with
Saddam’s aggression toward its largest neighbor if it is
to emerge from the past thirty-five years of darkness.
The Bush Administration will be making an irreversible
mistake to leave Saddam’s trial in Iraqi hands
Saddam Hussein, seeing an opportunity to take advantage
of the disarray in Iran in order to abrogate a 1975
treaty confirming the middle of the waterway between
Iran and Iraq as the border and to possibly grab some
Iranian territory to boot, invaded Iran in 1980. The
U.S., outraged by Iran’s egregious taking of U.S.
hostages, initially looked the other way, thereby
encouraging Saddam Hussein in his brutal adventure. The
major powers, suspicious of the revolutionary government
in Teheran, subsequently supported Saddam in every way
imaginable. Although Saddam claimed that Iran had
initially attacked Iraq, no serious human being could
question the fact that Iraq was the aggressor. In
December 1991, the Secretary-General’s finding, based on
the report of the UN committee established in 1987 to
look into the origins of the war, was clear:
“Accordingly the outstanding event under the violations
referred to in paragraph 5 above is the attack of 22
September 1980 against Iran, which cannot be justified
under the Charter of the United Nations, any recognized
rules and principles of international law or any
principles of international morality and entails the
responsibility for the conflict.” It is now time for
Iraq, the Europeans and the United States to face up to
Iraq’s aggression against Iran. While the West is
encouraging Iraq to come to terms with its past, it is
denying Iran’s and Kuwait’s right to justice, and it is
covering up its own misdeeds.
It is estimated that well over 500,000 Iranians died and
more than 1 million were wounded during Iraq’s invasion
of Iran. Saddam began his use of chemical and biological
weapons on the citizens of Iran in 1983, five years
before using them on his own Kurdish population. Iran’s
death toll from chemical weapons alone is estimated at
over 100,000; thousands are permanently scarred; today,
over 3,000 Iranians alone must be hooked up to oxygen
tanks to survive. Every Iranian family suffered a loss.
Yet Western politicians and press downplay this tragedy
and only mention the gassing of 5,000 Iraqi Kurds. And
if the human loss was not bad enough, the manner in
which Saddam Hussein brutalized the Iranian people was
truly outrageous. In 1984, the Iraqis laid a network of
thick electrical cables in the Majnoon Marshes; they
would fire enough artillery rounds to get Iranians to
leave their boats, and when they did, the Iraqis would
switch on the electricity, killing hundreds of Iranians
at a time.
But the
atrocities did not end there. The Iraqis would then
gather the bodies, placing corpses five across and five
high; they would sprinkle them with lime, cover this
mixture with about 12 inches of sand and, voilà,
an Iraqi road was built!
The international community must not let its distaste
for the regime in Teheran get in the way of justice.
There is now a rare opportunity to account for Saddam
Hussein’s mistreatment of Iranians and Kuwaitis and to
create a more conducive environment for regional peace
and prosperity. Iraqi steps toward reconciliation with
Iran will be facilitated if the West, especially the
United States, openly acknowledges and comes to terms
with its past support of the dictator, Saddam Hussein.
Saddam did not invent chemical and biological weapons.
Germany, France, the UK and, yes, the U.S. knowingly
supplied him with the illegal chemical and biological
weapons to defeat Iran, the U.S. supplied him with
decisive battlefield intelligence and supported him in a
multitude of other ways. Saudi Arabia and Kuwait
knowingly financed Saddam’s acts of genocide and his
crimes against humanity. The world can only learn from
the past if it faces up to its mistakes.
An Iraqi War Crimes Tribunal will be too concerned with
revenge against Saddam Hussein to deal adequately with
Iraq’s
war crimes against
Kuwait and Iran.
Saddam Hussein’s trial should be put in the hands of an
international tribunal, even if it means sparing Saddam
Hussein the death penalty. President Bush has stated
that “the former dictator of Iraq will face the justice
he denied to million.” But there must also be justice
for more than the one-and-a-half million Iranians Saddam
Hussein killed or wounded. The world must avoid the
danger of allowing its disagreements with the regime in
Teheran to thwart its quest for justice.
Hossein Askari is the
Iran Professor of International Business and Professor
of International Affairs at the George Washington
University.
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