During World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt reportedly
said of Nicaraguan strongman Anastosio Somoza that
"He
may be a son of a bitch but he's our son of a bitch."
Over the history of
the United States, many presidents could have made a similar statement
about ruthless dictators of varying degrees, one of which being
former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. In the late seventies and
most of the eighties, Saddam enjoyed a very cordial relationship
with the US, trading oil exports for much needed armaments for
his war with Iran. Unfortunately, Saddam used those weapons of
mass destruction for devastating Kurd separatists in the eighties
as well. Imagine "Made in the USA" being the last thing
those people saw. This little chapter in American history has
proven to be an embarrassment, and whenever 'our sons of bitches'
become embarrassments, they either get dead or imprisoned very
quickly.
With the recent hanging
of what appears to be the disgraced Iraqi leader, another distasteful
part of unctuous American foreign policy comes to an end. Oligarch
George W. Bush made a vague statement after the hanging that it
was an example of the Iraqi justice system at work. Yeah. Anyone
believing this please leave your phone number. I have a bridge
in Ramadhi I'd like to sell you.
But Saddam the son
of a bitch may have some life in him yet. For its likely that
the extrajudicial execution may bite George W. Bush right on the
ass. Ordinarily, America lances these boils on the world landscape
with swift recrimination, killing thousands of civilians in another
triumph for democracy.
However, Bush is losing
the conquest in Iraq and losing badly. He knows this, because
while Bush lulled the American people to sleep with his talk of
a democratic Iraq, he's been blackmailing countries around the
globe into signing off on his administration and the American
military being exempt from the International Criminal Court. Several
independent reports indicate that Bush has twisted the arms of
100 countries with the threat of losing foreign aid, and has ended
aid for fifty other countries that refuse to go along with the
plan.
Enter Representative
Eliot Engel from New York. He is the author of H.R. 5995, a bill
which repeals the legislation allowing Bush to coerce countries
into signing these bilateral agreements. Currently, H.R. 5995
is languishing in the House Foreign Relations Committee. However,
a highly charged Democratic Congress may move this bill forward
as a way of opening Bush and his cohorts up to charges from the
ICC, and taking the dirty business of impeachment off the table.
And this could give extraordinary new life to the butcher of Iraq.
And why shouldn't it?
No doubt, Saddam killed thousands of Shiites and Kurds in his
time as dictator. But Bush is responsible for hundreds of thousands
of unnecessary civilian casualties as well-possibly upwards to
650,000. And that's just in nearly four years. Saddam took thirty
years to reach his mass killing capacity.
Neo-conservatives like
to say Saddam "killed his own people." That's true,
but President Bush has also killed 3,000 of his own people fighting
an illegal war based on a false premise. That alone should be
enough to put him in the docket at The Hague. Certainly an extra
¾ of a million should be enough to put a noose around Bush's
neck as well.
Not all of our sons
of bitches are foreign tyrants. At least one of them occupies
the highest office in our nation, and the American people can
no longer pass him off as being just another in a long line of
monsters willing to cow tow to the recklessness of their own greed.