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So
it's finally happened Saddam
has been captured. If he was in fact funding the Iraqi guerrillas,
US soldiers should now have an easier time of it in the wilds of Iraq,
with the A Lucky Break? The arrest of Hussein appears to be fortuitous, coming just in time for the new year and the new season for political campaigning in America. The timing could not have been any better for a beleaguered president who had, until yesterday, run out of propaganda stunts in advance of next month's pivotal State of the Union address. In the short-term, Bush's future looks rosy. The Democrats, schizophrenic, confused and constantly attacking one another's ideas, are once again reduced to fulsome plaudits of the president's great leadership, as they were with the Thanksgiving turkey stunt. They have no choice now but to praise the leadership that led straight to Saddam's underground lair and, by implication, make themselves utterly irrelevant to today's political debate. If by some small miracle, Osama is captured too, the Democrats may as well just drop out of the race. Enemies of Bush who fear nothing more than the unrestrained indulgences of a second-term president do not want to contemplate a long dark night of foreign intervention and revoked civil liberties. However, will the arrest of Saddam still prove a boon for Bush, 11 long months from now? In the long-term, could having Hussein on his hands actually prove problematic for Bush? We should remember that even after the initial euphoria of the arrest has worn off, the situation on the ground in Iraq remains. The Bush Administration has been spinning the myth that Saddam Hussein was the hidden hand behind the Iraqi resistance. However, if the guerrillas do not give up but instead redouble their attacks, the capture of Saddam will be seen as ineffectual. If this is how it turns out, and military deaths continue, then candidate Bush may actually suffer from the capture of Saddam. The Trial to End All Trials We should also not forget the inherent problems to be encountered in trying Saddam. If the US really wants to show itself as a paragon of law and justice, he will be allowed to mount a defense. And, if this goes anything like the Milosevic trial at the Hague has, the result will likely be long, tiresome and politically embarrassing. Will Saddam be allowed to call witnesses to the stand from past and present American administrations? Will his testimony on the former Iraqi-American friendship prove damaging for leading American officials? In this landmark trial to be conducted before the eyes of the world, how much of the proceedings will be censored or otherwise withheld from public knowledge and what will the free press have to say about this? Just as much as Saddam, the US Government and the operative tribunal will also be put on trial here. A Reprieve for the Imperialists Undoubtedly, the coming weeks will see a revitalized neoconservative movement use the capture to justify everything it has long called for. No doubt the fact that Saddam was overthrown and finally arrested no matter how bloody and difficult it turned out to be will be forwarded as justification for why leaders of other "rogue states" can and should be hunted down. On to Iran, Libya, North Korea! Yesterday's reports showed ordinary Iraqis celebrating the final downfall of Saddam. They giddily fired their rifles in the air, "like a wedding" said one resident of Baghdad. Now, everyone especially the neocons is waiting to see the effect this momentous event will have on the Iraqi resistance. Should the guerrillas melt away, give up, or even gladly put down their weapons and pledge fealty to the US occupiers, the prevailing narrative to emerge from all this conflict and waste will be that Saddam, and only Saddam, was the reason for the resistance in the first place. Removing a dictator, by necessity, would therefore be to simultaneously remove all opposition to the American Way anytime, anywhere. No doubt, the international tyrant count is set to rise exponentially overnight. In many ways, though they had no actual relation, the arrest of Saddam and the attacks of September 11th mark two turning points in the war on terror. The latter set it off, whereas the former will be used by propagandists to retrospectively justify it. However, if the now-daily attacks do not stop but rather intensify, one of two arguments will emerge. If they are seen to be revenge for the capture of Saddam, the Iraqi leader will continue to be blamed or, that is, his symbolic image will be blamed. Or, if there is no perceived relationship between the violence and the vanished leader, the possibility would have to be considered that Iraqis are just opposed to being run by an outside occupying force and not fighting for the honor of Saddam. This is the possibility neocons fear most. The sentiment has, however, certainly been witnessed by innumerable reports from Iraq, which have quoted many Iraqis as stating that, while they are grateful to the US Army for removing Saddam from power, they would prefer that it leave their country as soon as possible. Saddam's Arrest Deflecting Attention from the War on Terror While President Bush and Co. will probably emphasize the capture of Saddam as the greatest moment in modern history, we shouldn't forget the broader context and the rationale that has led the US thus far: the war on terror. New evidence shows that the prosecution of this terror 'war' has some serious shortcomings. Take, for example, a recent report from the US Government itself on anti-terrorist financing initiatives, which reveals that: "…U.S. law enforcement still has no clear idea of how terrorists move their money and that the FBI, which is the lead agency in tracking terrorist assets, still doesn't 'systematically collect or analyze' such information. It concluded that the Justice and Treasury departments have fallen more than a year behind in developing plans to attack terrorist financial mechanisms, such as the use of diamonds and gold to hide assets." This same article quotes a "…senior US official" as saying: "…we desperately need to revitalize our effort to choke off terrorist financing, because until we cut that off, we have not crippled Al-Qaida's ability to attack us… we started out well, picked all the low-hanging fruit, and then, as we have squeezed, they have simply moved on to different methods." The Impossible War The obvious, but seldom-cited truth is that terrorism will never be eliminated until the motivations behind it are. Governments can invest as much money, time and technology as they want into fighting terrorism, but human ingenuity will always prevail in the end. To be sure, they can increase their chances of success by such methods, but the terrorist threat can never be entirely eliminated by policing. Any individual who is determined and fanatic enough can wreak untold havoc in countless ways, with even the bare minimum of funds and technology. That is the nature of terrorism, and the nature of our age. Capturing Saddam Hussein, while a great morale and propaganda boost for the US Government, may not end an Islamic terrorist campaign that began before his downfall and which had no use for him anyway. The great danger for the American people is that, while caught up in the inevitable Super Bowl-style euphoria over Saddam's arrest, other, more pertinent issues are likely to be further ignored. Take, for example, Afghanistan. The 'Forgotten' Front: Afghanistan The war there has cost $50 billion so far, and is not over yet. The vanquished Taliban have been allowed to regroup, aided by Pakistani tribesmen, forcing the US to launch a 2,000-man assault by far the biggest since the war to reclaim territory wrested from government control. According to the Independent, "…the deputy governor of Zabul admits most of his province is now in Taliban hands, officials report that the situation is much the same in neighbouring Oruzgan, while about half the territory in Kandahar has slipped out of government control. In the dusty town of Spin Boldak close to the border with Pakistan in the east, where the Taliban was born, black and green flags celebrate its rebirth. American forces in Afghanistan and the multinational International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) have come under fire more times in the past three months than the previous 15. This year, 25 American and Isaf soldiers have been killed and 28 injured. The number of Afghans, allied and enemy, killed, according to the US military, is 'several thousand.' More than 400 Taliban fighters were said to have been killed in September." Besides the forces of the elusive Osama bin Laden and Mullah Omar, the anti-American guerrillas now include a third faction: "…(warlord) Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, created by the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence as a mujahedin leader against the Russians, and a past favoured recipient of CIA largesse, is an increasingly active player in the anti-Western alliance." The Independent report also notes that American troops in Afghanistan are beginning to see an influx of foreign fighters and tactics such as suicide bombing that had been relatively unknown before. In fact, they are specifically noting the resemblance between guerrilla methods used in Iraq this year with the new style of Afghan resistance. This is ironic in the extreme, considering that before the war in Iraq that country had no interest in teaching the Taliban about terrorist methods, and no involvement with the Taliban's leading personalities. By invading Iraq, the US made Saddam Hussein no friend of radical Islam into a religious hero worth dying for. In the coming weeks, we are about to see if America's number one enemy becomes even more powerful in captivity than he was in hiding. Of course, it's also possible that his influence in captivity may wane, and the neocons appear to be justified. However, it is unlikely that Hussein's arrest will silence those other terrorists whose cause never involved him in the first place. The American people were tricked into thinking that winning the war on terror somehow depended on capturing Saddam, even if he had never been involved with the events of September 11th, 2001. Unfortunately, considering the massive amount of celebratory propaganda we are soon going to be hit with, it's likely that the delusion will continue even as international terrorism does also.
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Previous articles by Christopher Deliso on Antiwar.com Saddam's
Capture: A Pyrrhic Victory in the Making? The
Empire Strikes Out: Scott Taylor Reports From Iraq Simulating
Victory in a Simulated War Is
Albania Sponsoring 'Freedom Fighters' Next Door? NATO's
Eastern Enchantment Exporting
Devalued Values: America's Policy of Foreign Interference Grumbling
in Pakistan Spells More Trouble for the US Sedatives
from the West: How NGO's Damage Macedonia's Free Market Economy Inside
America's 'Colossal Blunder': Scott Taylor Reports from Iraq A
Hard Look at Europe's 'Hard Cases' Murky
Intelligence, Murky Wars Respect
the Troops Not Their Spineless Leaders Globalization
and the Future of Western Intervention Occupational
Hazards of War Without End McNews
Comes Gunning for Greece The
Albanians and the State Washington's
Confused Macedonia Policy 'The
Yanks Have Really Screwed Up in Iraq' Wolfowitz
in Skopje What Next for Macedonia? America's
'Conservative' Christians and the Middle East's Occupation
by Bad Example Iraq's
Cultural Catastrophe and Ours Has
America Gone Commie? The
Ends of Alliance in Iraq Washington's
Hubris Invites a Fatal Iraqi Misjudgment Suing
in England, Vacationing in France: the Misplaced Patriotism of Richard
Perle Top
Ten Bogus Justifications for the Iraqi War Disaster
Par Extraordinaire? Almost
Spot On: The British Critique of American Newspapers So
Many Fronts, So Little Sense Poisonings
or Power Plays? Terrorist
Bombing in Kumanovo, 1 Dead The
Instability Myth, Free Markets and Macedonia's Future The
Interview That Never Happened The
Price of Paranoia The
Trouble with Turkey Greater
Albania: a Place, or Just a State of Mind? Explosion
Rocks Macedonian Parliament
Baghdad
Braces for War Envisioning
Peace in the Shadow of War Seducing
Intervention: Nobody's
Fault But Their Own? In
European
Intelligence: The US Betrayed Us In Macedonia A
Georgian Gaffe Heavy
Fighting Erupts in Aracinovo on First Anniversary of NLA's 'Free Zone' Kodra
Fura and Macedonia's Emerging War Kosovar
Terrorists Renew Attacks on Macedonia Macedonia
On War Footing Over Kosovo Border Provocations Macedonian
Tortured In Tetovo Village, As Gang War Rages Macedonia:
A Nation of Ingrates Mujahedin
In Macedonia, or, an Enormous Embarrassment For the West How
Not To Capture Osama bin Laden Whispers
of Folly and Ruin Blurring
the Boundaries in Macedonia When
The Terror Goes Down To Georgia: Some Thoughts On The Caucasus Imbroglio
In
Macedonia, Terrorism Remains the Law But
Would It Be an Evil Axis? Economics
and Politics in Macedonia: an Interview with Dr. Sam Vaknin Macedonians
and the Media Secrets
of the Blue Café On
the Front Lines in Tetovo Interview
with Ljube Boshkovski A
Connection Between NATO and the NLA? The
Legacy of War: Kidnapped Persons in Macedonia The
Day's Disturbances and Developments in Macedonia
Crisis in Macedonian Government
Albanian Hackers Deface Macedonian Website
Partition: Macedonia's Best Lost Hope? Important
Notice to Readers of the Macedonia Page Selective Democracy Comes
to Macedonia Macedonia Capitulates With a Friend Like Pakistan Afghan-Americans Oppose Interventionism,
Seek Unity The Afghan
Quagmire Beckons Suddenly, Terrorists
Are Everywhere Turkey's Eclipse: Chechnya Comes Home
To America A Quiet Battle in the Caucasus:
Georgia Between Russia & NATO Central Asia: The Cauldron
Boils Over Bin Laden, Iran, and the KLA The Macedonian Phrase-Book:
Writing NATO's Dictionary of Control Barbarism and the Erasure
of Culture Macedonian Endgame: The Sinister
Transformation of the Status Quo Christopher Deliso is a freelance writer and Balkan correspondent for Antiwar.com, UPI, and private European analysis firms. He has lived and traveled widely in the Balkans, southeastern Europe and Turkey, and holds a master's degree with distinction in Byzantine Studies from Oxford University. In the past year, he has reported from many countries, including Serbia, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Hungary, Greece, the Republic of Georgia and the Turkey-Iraq border. Mr Deliso currently runs the Balkan-interest web site, www.balkanalysis.com. |