Indeed!  Just would have demanded feeding Saddam feet first into a
wood-shredder.

 

-Bruce

 

http://www.jewishworldreview.com/jeff/jacoby010407.php3?printer_friendly

 

An act of moral hygiene 

By Jeff Jacoby 


 

Jeff Jacoby


 


 

 


http://www.JewishWorldReview.com | "The execution of Saddam, a human-rights
monster, turned his unspeakable record upside down." So we are informed by
Richard Dicker of Human Rights Watch, which issued a statement calling the
monster's hanging "a significant step away from respect for human rights and
the rule of law in Iraq." 

You may not agree with that - you may be one of those squares who think the
death of a mass murderer makes the world a better place - but Tim Hames
does. A columnist for the Times of London, Hames declared himself over the
weekend with "those who find the notion of this execution offensive." He
recognizes that "the evidence of Saddam's atrocities is overwhelming," but,
like Dicker, he is sure that the government that hanged the dictator did
something as evil to Saddam Hussein as anything Saddam did to his
innumerable victims. "Mainstream middle-class sentiment in Europe," Hames
tells us, "now regards the death penalty as being as ethically tainted as
the crimes that produced that sentence." 

As ethically tainted. Got that? The quick and painless death meted out to
the Butcher of Baghdad after a reasonably transparent trial is morally
equivalent to the horrific brutalities that earned him his nickname. 


The chronicling of those brutalities will go on for years, but here is a
reminder - one minuscule fragment of Saddam's record, plucked almost at
random from Kanan Makiya's 1993 book about Iraq and the Arab world, *Cruelty
and Silence*: 


"Children who would not give their parents' names to soldiers" - this was in
1991, during Saddam's suppression of the Shi'ite uprising - "were doused
with gasoline and set on fire. Some were tied to moving tanks to discourage
sniper fire from the rebels. Security forces also burned entire families in
their houses when they would not give or did not know the location of the
head of the household. . . . Some rebels, it has been alleged, were forced
to drink gasoline before being shot. It appears that instead of crumpling
into an undramatic lifeless heap, the victim explodes and burns like a torch
for a short while. " 


If "mainstream middle-class sentiment in Europe" equates burning children
alive with hanging the man responsible for burning them, then mainstream
middle-class sentiment in Europe, to quote Mr. Bumble, "is a ass - a idiot."



And so you might conclude from the headlines and the official European
reactions to Saddam's death. "The EU condemns the crimes committed by Saddam
and also the death penalty," said the spokeswoman for Javier Solana, the
European Union's foreign-affairs chief. "Europe condemns death penalty,"
announced the German paper Deutsche Welle. The British foreign secretary,
Margaret Beckett, let it be known that "the British government does not
support the use of the death penalty, in Iraq or anywhere else . . .
regardless of the individual or the crime." Dutch and Belgian officials
called the execution "barbaric." The Vatican declared it "tragic." 


With opposition to capital punishment so firmly entrenched in Europe's
worldview, it came as no surprise to learn that US officials tried in vain
to convince the UN, the European Union, and a host of countries to assist
with the tribunal that judged Saddam. "They all refused," the Boston Globe
reported last week, "because they opposed the tribunal's use of the death
penalty." 


But what if Europeans don't oppose the use of the death penalty? When the
German magazine Stern commissioned a poll on whether Saddam should be
executed, it found 50 percent of Germans in favor and only 39 percent
opposed. A poll conducted last month for Le Monde found that most Americans
(82 percent) favored hanging Saddam - as did most Spaniards (51 percent),
most Germans (53 percent), most French (58 percent), and most Britons (69
percent). 


In fact, once you get past the leftist elites who run the media and staff
the foreign ministries, other industrialized nations may not be nearly as
implacable in opposing the death penalty as we're commonly told. "Polls show
that Europeans and Canadians crave executions almost as much as their
American counterparts do," wrote Joshua Micah Marshall in The New Republic
in 2000. "It's just that their politicians don't listen to them." 


In Canada, for example, support for reinstating the death penalty ran
between 60 percent and 70 percent. Two-thirds to three-quarters of Brits,
about half of Italians, and even 49 percent of Swedes (according to a 1997
poll) felt the same way. "There is barely a country in Europe," Marshall
concluded, "where the death penalty was abolished in response to public
opinion rather than in spite of it." 


"Mainstream middle-class sentiment" abroad, it turns out, may not be such an
ass after all. When normal men and women in Europe look at Saddam's hanging,
they, like us, see an act of moral hygiene. If their politicians and
journalists see something different - well, what else is new? 

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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