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  • Try and Try Again

    The New York Times
    September 26, 2005

    Try and Try Again
    By GARY J. BASS

    Princeton, N.J. - "For these crimes," wrote Hannah Arendt during the
    Nuremberg trials, "no punishment is severe enough. It may well be
    essential to hang Göring, but it is totally inadequate."

    Saddam Hussein's punishment will surely be inadequate too - all the
    more so if he is executed too soon.

    The Iraqi war crimes tribunal's first case against Mr. Hussein, which
    opens Oct. 19, charges him with the 1982 massacre of at least 143 men
    and boys from the village of Dujail. This was meant to be a test case
    of manageable scope and strong evidence. Unfortunately, Laith Kubba, a
    spokesman for Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, says that once the
    court has reached a guilty verdict in the Dujail case, the
    near-certain sentence of death "should be implemented without further
    delay."

    But if Mr. Hussein is executed for the Dujail killings, he will never
    be called to account for the larger atrocities on which he was
    arraigned in July 2004: killing political rivals, crushing the Shiite
    uprising in southern Iraq in 1991, invading Kuwait in 1990, and waging
    the genocidal Anfal campaign against the Kurds in 1988, including
    gassing Kurdish villagers at Halabja.

    It is easy to understand the temptation to get the high-profile trial
    over with quickly. The lives of the tribunal's officials - including
    the young chief investigative judge, Raid Juhi, who confronted
    Mr. Hussein in a televised courtroom showdown - are at constant risk
    from the raging insurgency. And the international tribunal for the
    former Yugoslavia, where Slobodan Milosevic has dragged his trial into
    its fourth year with his theatrics, furnishes a cautionary example. A
    shorter trial would afford less time for Mr. Hussein to make defiant
    final speeches to Arab nationalists.

    What's more, the tribunal is a political football. The Dujail trial is
    set to start just four days after Iraq's referendum on its draft
    constitution - a time when ethnic rivalries will probably run high -
    and not long before the Dec. 15 elections. Saleh al-Mutlak, a former
    Baathist who led the Sunni delegation's rejection of the draft
    constitution, has accused the Iraqi government of speeding Mr. Hussein
    to trial in order to win election-season political points, presumably
    with Shiites and Kurds. Mr. Mutlak menacingly warns that the trial
    could touch off more violence.

    Nonetheless, the Iraqi tribunal would do well not to rush Mr. Hussein
    to the gallows. A hasty execution would shortchange Mr. Hussein's
    victims and diminish the benefits of justice. Baathists would be all
    the more likely to complain about a show trial. Kurds would rightly
    feel that they were denied their day in court for the Anfal
    campaign. Shiites in the south would also be deprived of a reckoning.

    A thorough series of war crimes trials would not only give the victims
    more satisfaction but also yield a documentary and testimonial record
    of the regime's crimes. After Nuremberg, the American chief prosecutor
    estimated that he had assembled a paper trail of more than five
    million pages. A comparably intensive Iraqi process would help drive
    home to former Baathists and some Arab nationalists what was done in
    their names. The alternative is on display in Turkey, where the
    collapse of a war crimes tribunal after World War I paved the way for
    today's widespread Turkish nationalist denial of the Armenian
    genocide.

    In June, Mr. Kubba said that Mr. Hussein could face as many as 500
    charges, but that Iraqi prosecutors would pursue only about 12
    well-documented counts. Now it may be down to just one. Because Iraq
    and the United States have chosen the hard road of courtroom justice,
    the war crimes tribunal should see it through. The Dujail case is a
    good start but not a good finish.

    Gary J. Bass, an associate professor of politics and international
    affairs at Princeton, is the author of "Stay the Hand of Vengeance:
    The Politics of War Crimes Tribunals."

    Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
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