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Hybrid Justice for Hussein
Nikolas K. Gvosdev
(History News Service)
From
Baghdad to Washington, from Teheran to Paris, the world
agrees:
Saddam
Hussein should be held accountable for his crimes. But
who should Saddam answer to -- a domestic Iraqi court or
an international tribunal?
Washington
wants to avoid creating something like the
Nuremberg tribunal, convened by the victorious Allies
after World War II to hold Nazi leaders accountable for
"crimes against humanity." Having declined to ratify the
1998 Rome Statute creating the International Criminal
Court, the United States does not want now to set yet
another precedent for a domestic leader to be tried by
an international institution. It fears that efforts to
establish an international judicial system will erode
national sovereignty, usurp domestic courts and end up
limiting America's freedom of action on the global
stage. In a world where many countries oppose U.S.
actions, an international court that today puts Saddam
Hussein on trial might some day seek to put George W.
Bush in the dock.
Instead, the Bush administration would prefer that
Hussein face a domestic court. There are plenty of
recent precedents -- from South Korea to Mexico -- where
former leaders have been brought to account for misdeeds
committed while in office. But there are obstacles to
trying Saddam before a domestic Iraqi court. During
Hussein's time, what pleased him had the force of law.
It's not clear what Iraqi statutes he would be charged
with violating.
Focusing on Hussein's domestic transgressions throws the
spotlight on the extent to which many Iraqis acquiesced
in the dictator's policies and may impede efforts to
create a new and stable regime. (The Iraqi Governing
Council wants to create a South Africa-style Truth and
Reconciliation Commission to address this concern.) It
also runs the risk of polarizing relations between
Sunnis, many of whom benefited from Hussein's actions,
and Iraq's Shiite and Kurdish populations, who suffered
severely under his rule. If the goal is to discredit
Hussein's tyrannical regime, a judicial process that
appears to be nothing more than institutionalized
vengeance on the part of the latter two communities will
fail.
Proponents of the Nuremberg approach point to the
successful precedents of creating international
tribunals to try persons suspected of war crimes in the
former Yugoslavia and in Africa. These courts were
created precisely because it was believed that local
courts would be unable to effectively hold perpetrators
to account.
Indeed,
in June 2001, the
United
States
demanded that a democratic Serbian government extradite
Slobodan Milosevic to the war crimes tribunal in The
Hague, even though local courts were preparing to try
the former Yugoslav leader. The West wanted to emphasize
Milosevic's violations of international norms -- ethnic
cleansing and war crimes in Bosnia and Kosovo during the
1990s -- rather than Milosevic's internal misdeeds --
corruption and dictatorial rule.
Because
Milosevic's reputation has been enhanced at home rather
than tarnished by having him tried by "foreigners"
instead of his own people, the United States now prefers
that Hussein be tried by Iraqis to prevent him from
acquiring the status of a martyr. Moreover, focusing on
Hussein's violations of international law -- for
example, using chemical weapons against
Iran
-- might lead to embarrassing revelations about how the
West supported Saddam as a bulwark against revolutionary
Iran
during the 1980-1988 war, even providing the
infrastructure and expertise necessary to manufacture
such weapons.
Yet
Saddam's international behavior cannot be ignored. After
all, the justification for the coalition invasion of
Iraq was that his regime posed an immediate threat to
other nations -- not that he was a domestic tyrant. So
the best solution is to create a hybrid court --
constituted as a domestic tribunal, but with non-Iraqi
participants and advisers -- a solution being advanced
by Richard Goldstone, a former South African
constitutional justice who served as the first
prosecutor for the Yugoslav and Rwanda war crimes
tribunals.
A
hybrid tribunal would allow Iraqis to take the lead in
judging the fallen dictator but provide the judicial
expertise Iraq lacks after three decades of Hussein's
tyranny. Unlike an international tribunal, it would
respect Iraqi sovereignty. Unlike a domestic court, it
would have jurisdiction to adjudicate his treaty
violations.
It is
critical that both Hussein's domestic and international
crimes be brought to light. A mixed court offers us the
best way to achieve this.
Nikolas
K. Gvosdev is editor of the online weekly, In The
National Interest. This article first appeared in
History News Service.
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