The bigger the war crimes, the more unlikely the perpetrators will be punished
By Paul Craig Roberts
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jul 18, 2008, 00:20
National Public Radio has been spending much news
time on Darfur in Western Sudan where a great deal of human suffering and
death are occurring. The military conflict has been brought on in part by
climate change, according
to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. Drought is forcing nomads in search of
water into areas occupied by other claimants. No doubt the conflict is tribal and racial,
as well. The entire catastrophe is overseen by a government with few resources
other than bullets.
Now anInternational
Criminal Court prosecutor wants to bring charges against Sudan’s president,
Omar al-Bashir, for crimes against humanity and war crimes.
I have no sympathy for people who make others suffer.
Nevertheless, I wonder at the International
Criminal Court’s pick from the assortment of war criminals? Why al-Bashir?
Is it because Sudan is a powerless state, and the
International Criminal Court hasn’t the courage to name George W. Bush and Tony
Blair as war criminals?
Bush and Blair’s crimes against humanity in Iraq and
Afghanistan dwarf, at least in the number of deaths and displaced persons, the
terrible situation in Darfur. The highest estimate of Darfur casualties is
400,000, one-third the number of Iraqis who have died as a result of Bush’s
invasion. Moreover, the conflict in the Sudan is an internal one, whereas Bush
illegally invaded two foreign countries, war crimes under the Nuremberg
Standard. Bush’s war crimes were enabled by the political leaders of the UK,
Spain, Canada, and Australia. The leaders of every member of the “coalition of the willing to commit war
crimes” are candidates for the dock.
But, of course, the Great Moral West does not commit war
crimes. War crimes are charges fobbed off on people demonized by the Western
media, such as the Serbian Milosevic and the
Sudanese al-Bashir.
Every week the Israeli government evicts Palestinians from
their homes, steals their land, and kills Palestinian women and children. These
crimes against humanity have been going on for decades. Except for a few
Israeli human rights organizations, no one complains about it. Palestinians are
defined as “terrorists,” and “terrorists” can be treated inhumanely
without complaint.
Iraqis and Afghans suffer the same fate. Iraqis who resist
US occupation of their country are “terrorists.”
Taliban is a demonized name. Every Afghan killed -- even those
attending wedding parties -- is claimed to be Taliban by the US military.
Iraqis and Afghans can be murdered at will by American and NATO troops without
anyone raising human rights issues.
The International Criminal Court is a bureaucracy. It has a
budget, and it needs to do something to justify its budget. Lacking teeth and
courage, it goes after the petty war criminals and leaves the big ones alone.
Don’t get me wrong. I’m for holding all governments
accountable for their criminal actions. It is the hypocrisy to which I object.
The West gives itself and Israel a pass while damning everyone else. Even human
rights groups fall into the trap. Rights activists don’t see the buffoonery in
their complaint that President Bush, who has violated more human rights than
any person alive, is letting China off the hook for human rights abuses by
attending the Olympics hosted by China.
President Bush claims that the enormous destruction and
death he has brought to Iraq and Afghanistan are necessary in order for
Americans to be safe. If we are accepting excuses this feeble, Milosevic passed
muster with his excuse that as the head of state he was obliged to try to
preserve the state’s territorial integrity. Is al-Bashir supposed to accept
secession in the Sudan, something that Lincoln would not accept
from the Confederacy? How long would al-Bashir last if he partitioned
Sudan?
Last October the Atlanta Journal-Constitution had a
photo on its front page above the fold of an elderly man with mikes shoved in
his face. Paul Henss, 85 years old, is being deported from the US, where he has
lived for 53 years, because Eli Rosenbaum, director of the US State
Department’s
Nazi-hunting bureaucracy, declared him a war criminal for training guard
dogs used at German concentration camps. Henss was 22 years old when World
War II ended.[Accused
Nazi guard says he’s no war criminal, By Brian Feagans, The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution, October 1,
2007]
A kid who trained guard dogs is being deported as a war
criminal, but the head of state who launched two wars of naked aggression,
resulting in the deaths of more than 1.2 million people, and who has the entire world on edge awaiting
his third war of aggression, this time against Iran, is received respectfully
by foreign governments. Corporations
and trade associations will pay him $100,000 per speech when he leaves
office. He will make millions of dollars more from memoirs written by a
ghostwriter.
Does no one see the paradox of deporting Henss while leaving
the war criminal in the White House?
Paul
Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan’s
first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal. He has held
numerous academic appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair, Center
for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University, and
Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was awarded
the Legion of Honor by French President Francois Mitterrand. He is the author
of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider’s Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M.
Stratton of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for
Peter Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent
epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.
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