[lbo-talk] Saddam Hussein's Arrest and the Peace Movement

jacdon at earthlink.net jacdon at earthlink.net
Mon Dec 15 11:18:40 PST 2003


The following article appears in the Dec. 15 issue of the Hudson Valley Activist Newsletter, published in New Paltz, N.Y., and distributed by jacdon at earthlink.net. ­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­

THE CAPTURE OF SADDAM HUSSEIN

The U.S. government and mass media are beating the war drums of joy and victory over the capture of former President Saddam Hussein of Iraq, but the U.S. peace movement certainly has no cause to celebrate. Politically, the apprehension only strengthens the White House and associated warmakers.

The Bush administration's preemptive war against Iraq is unjust by all credible standards of ethics and morality, and illegal by all definitions of international law. The capture of Saddam Hussein cannot change these facts.

President Bush declared war against Iraq on the pretext that the Baghdad government possessed weapons of mass destruction that constituted an immense threat to the United States. He also alleged that Iraq was implicated with Al-Qaeda and the 9/11 terror raids. Both charges were lies that Washington will now seek to conceal behind the carnival atmosphere of Hussein's imprisonment."

So far, the U.S. war and occupation have resulted in the deaths of many thousands of Iraqi civilians and millions more are experiencing deep poverty, joblessness, and the horrendous consequences of massive social dislocation. The war has also been costly for the American people. The multi-billions of dollars invested in the seizure of Iraq are coming out of the pockets of working people who will receive in return only a further reduction in social services and a debt burden for decades to come.

Hundreds of GIs have been killed and thousands wounded by the Iraqi resistance in the last few months. The objective of this guerrilla struggle is to liberate the country from foreign domination in the name of national independence and sovereignty, not the restoration of Saddam Hussein to power. The former president, constantly on the run from the invading army, obviously was in no position to direct this fight. His capture will have no decisive impact on the continuing resistance.

The Bush administration is now seeking to exploit Hussein's capture to justify its aggression against Iraq, but this cannot conceivably stand up in any court of informed opinion. The U.S. had no right to invade Iraq and install a puppet administration on the grounds of "regime change," regardless of the character of the toppled government. This is an imperialist rationale to promote the expansion of U.S. hegemony throughout the Middle East. The matter of who shall or shall not govern Iraq was and remains exclusively the responsibility of the Iraqi people, to carry out by any means they choose.

The White House will now orchestrate the circus of a show trial for the former Iraqi leader throughout the election year in hopes of diverting public opinion from the body bags and setbacks of the occupation. In our view, the arrest of Hussein necessitates an intensification of the antiwar struggle in the U.S. and underscores the importance of the demand to end the occupation and bring the troops home immediately.



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