Send Saddam to The Hague!

The spectacle was disgusting.

“Rejoice not when thine enemy falleth, and let not thine heart be glad when he stumbleth, lestthe Lord see it, and it displeaseth Him, and He turn away His wrath from him!” Thus commandeththe ancient Jewish moral code (Proverbs, 24, 16).

The writer of this warning knew, of course, that every person tends to gloat when his enemyfalls. But he wanted to point out that this is an ugly human trait and one should try to overcomeit.

And now a mighty world-power has sunk to this level. It is repeatedly displaying the spectacleof American soldiers looking for lice in the hair of a miserable Saddam and poking about amonghis teeth.

If it is possible at all to evoke pity for a man like Saddam, who is responsible for the death ofhundreds of thousands, the Americans have achieved this. By showing him off as a druggedtramp, they created the opposite effect from what they wanted. The Vatican has called formercy. The public humiliation of an Arab leader, whatever one may think about him, evokes thedeepest feelings of insult and fury among tens of millions of Arabs. These feelings willstrive to express themselves violently. This may cost blood, much blood.

(Not long ago, the United States cried to high heaven when the Iraqis showed off some Americanprisoners. But there are apparently no mirrors in Washington DC.)

The childish stories about the tremendous success of the American army and intelligenceagencies are ridiculous. It is fairly certain that this was simply a case of a paid informer.

A trained eye could easily detect how the “spontaneous” outbursts of joy were staged: Here asmall group waving the flag of the Communist Party, there a few dozen people jumping likemonkeys for the cameras – probably the same people who were jumping a year ago for the cameras ofSaddam. Two Arab “journalists” producing a raucous show at the carefully staged pressconference of the American general. When Winston Churchill won a terrible war, he did notbehave like George W. Bush. No Winston he.

I have not written about Iraq in this column since the end of “major hostilities”. I checkedmyself. I know that it is neither nice nor wise to say “I told you so”. But it is very hard to writeabout Iraq without using these four words, since almost all the predictions of this columnbefore and during the war are coming true, one after another. For example:

1 – The Americans invaded Iraq in order to remain there. They did not invade because of “international terror”. Nor because of “weapons of mass destruction”. It’s the oil that drew them there.

The aim of the United States was not to topple Saddam and go home, but to create a permanent American military base in the Arab world, in a country that has the second largest proven oil reserves in the world and is also located within easy reach of the oil riches of Saudi Arabia and the Caspian Sea.

Now that is already quite clear. Saddam had no connections at all with Osama Bin-Laden.The “Weapons of Mass Destruction” do not exist. The Americans have simply changed thereasons for the war after the event. (“First make war, than find a reason.”) Now it is allabout eliminating Saddam and bringing democracy to Iraq.

Good. But Saddam has been eliminated – and the Americans are not heading home.

Elections could be held at once. But the Americans refuse. They want to keep theirmarionettes in place, so they can invite the Americans to stay forever.

The American occupation will last a long, long time. It is not a means. It is the aim.

2 – The toppling of Saddam will not be the end of the war. It will only be the beginning.

This forecast is now being confirmed in the most extreme fashion.

No people resigns itself to foreign occupation. Occupation breeds resistance.

At the time I recounted our experience in South Lebanon: The advancing Israelis werewelcomed as liberators, because they drove the Palestinians out. A few months later theywere being shot at from all sides, because they did not go home. After 18 years and athousand soldiers killed, they escaped under the cover of darkness “with their tailbetween their legs”.

The Americans cannot absorb this simple lesson. They do not look upon themselves asoccupiers but as liberators who came to do good by the Iraqi people. They are convincedthat the Iraqis are grateful and love them. They consoled themselves with a legend theyinvented: it is not Iraqi and Arab freedom-fighters who are attacking the occupationarmy and its collaborators, but die-hard henchmen of the evil Saddam.

But now the evil Saddam has been caught, and it appears that he had no possibility at all ofdirecting operations from his spider-hole. The capture of Saddam must mark the end of thelegend about his die-hard followers.

Iraq finds itself now in a classical colonial situation: A foreign conqueror is robbingthe natives of their natural resources. Resistance groups are staging violent attacks,with a large part of the population supporting them.

Two hundred years ago such groups defeated the mighty Napoleon in Spain. At that time, theterm “guerilla” (little war) was coined.

What will happen now? It’s all so predictable: Reacting to the operations of theresistance, the occupation will become ever more brutal. That will increase the supportof the population for the guerillas, and so forth. The vicious circle so well known toIsraelis. That’s how it happened in Lebanon. That’s how it is happening now in theoccupied Palestinian territories.

The public humiliation of the defeated leader will only accelerate the process.

3 – A vanquished Saddam will be more dangerous than a victorious Saddam.

The question arises: what to do with the prisoner?

The Americans have already said what they intend to do: hand him over to their Iraqiservants, so that he can be tried and executed in Iraq.

That would be a first-class blunder.

Nobody will believe in the fairness of such a trial. There is no way it could be fair,because in a fair trial Saddam would use the public platform to make his own accusationsand reach out to hundreds of millions of Arabs and other Muslims.

The best would have been to let him escape to the Fiji islands, there to live out his lifequietly, like Idi Amin in Saudi Arabia. But George Bush needs the ongoing humiliation ofSaddam for his reelection campaign.

The only reasonable way out now is to transfer Saddam to The Hague. In the eyes of the world,he is entitled to the same treatment as another political mass-murderer, SlobodanMilosevic. If he is treated differently, every Muslim will rightly suspect that there isa double standard: one for a Christian European leader, one for a Muslim Arab one.

But Bush will not be satisfied until the body of Saddam is hanging in a public square inBaghdad – perhaps the same square where his statue stood before it was toppled in acarefully staged TV spectacle.

4 – The talk about bringing democracy to Iraq is hypocritical nonsense.

In order to safeguard their occupation, the Americans need a supportive local regime. Touse a World War II term: they need Quislings.

When the British created the Iraqi state as their protectorate, they crowned EmirFaisal, a scion of the Hashemite family from Mecca. In order to keep Iraq as their ownprotectorate, the Americans must crown their own local agents.

If truly democratic elections were held, the American agents would be kicked out in notime – if they were not lynched first. That is self-evident. Therefore, there will be noreally democratic elections.

Generally speaking, democracy can not be “brought” anywhere. It cannot be implanted in adifferent society with a different culture, as if it were a tree. And in any case a treeneeds fertile soil.

Western democracy has grown organically over the centuries, from the village communityto the national parliament. To implant it by force in Iraqi society, which is based on thetribe and the extended family (khamulah) and on different concepts and traditions, is ahopeless pursuit.

Whhappened to Western democracy when it was implanted in Japan? The outer forms are inplace, the reality is quite different. What is happening now to Western democracy inRussia? Ask any Russian, and he will burst out laughing.

5 – Iraq will disintegrate

When we said it a year ago, it looked like wild speculation. Today it is a safe bet.

Only a brutal dictator like Saddam was able to hold the package together. Before the 1958revolution, the British colonialists did it. In a democratic regime, there is no chance.

A simple fact: The Shiites have a majority. They will rule. There is no chance at all thatthat they would institute a benevolent regime, after their long oppression by theSunnis. There is no chance that the Sunnis in central Iraq, who despise the Shiites, wouldaccept their supremacy. There is no chance that the Kurds in the north, who have alwaysfought for their independence, would accept Arab rule – neither by Shiites nor by fellowSunnis. They hardly accept their fellow Kurds.

The Americans can prevent the disintegration of Iraq only by maintaining an occupationregime, open or disguised. They could also set up an artificial structure, a shamfederation, in which Iraq would consist of three autonomous parts. But that would besheer make-believe.

When Iraq will cease to exist for practical purposes, a new balance of power will comeabout. For centuries Iraq has served as the eastern wall of the Arab world, a barrieragainst Iran – which has never forgotten the days of Cyrus, when it was the regional power.The fall of this wall will change the geo-political situation in the entire region, whichincludes Israel.

The implosion of Iraq will be the signal for general anarchy: the Arab world will be inturmoil, Islamic fundamentalism will threaten all Arab regimes, the border betweenTurkey and the Kurdish-Iraqi state will heat up, between Israel and Iran a nuclearbalance of terror may or may not hold, “international terror” will turn from legend toreality.

Since it is neither nice nor wise to say “I told you so,” I will restrain myself.