The Trial of Saddam Hussein and The Fallout of The War

The Trial of Saddam Hussein

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The fallout in the Middle East from the regime change in Iraq

Monday, October 26, 2009

A Shambles

The double suicide bombing in Baghdad on Sunday that claimed more than 130 lives, and wounded hundreds more, highlights that the situation in Iraq is still far from stable.

Other news from that troubled country indicates that even the construction of the world's largest and "most secure" embassy (the US embassy) has been spectacularly botched.

Despite the US spending $700M on construction, the yet to be completed complex is riddled with serious flaws eg; "safe areas" that were not constructed according to contract specifications, walls and walkways that have begun to crack and a power distribution system that used nonstandard wiring.

There are also plumbing problems in 200 locations in the embassy compound, eg the deputy ambassador has the pleasure of airconditioning that pumps noxious sewage fumes into his residence, and deficiencies in a water treatment plant.

The cost of repairs is estimated at being a "mere" $132M.

However, the cost of running the new complex is expected to be so exorbitant that the US may well be forced to rent out part of the space.

Why on earth was such an unwieldy building commissioned in the first place?

As some local wags point out, if the Americans cannot even build their own embassy without botching it, how can they possibly expect to build a nation?

Monday, October 19, 2009

Iraq War Inquiry

Sir John Chilcot, Chairman of the official inquiry into the Iraq war, has invited submissions from members of the public who believe they have information useful to the inquiry.

The inquiry will consider the UK's involvement in Iraq, how decisions were made and will identify lessons that can be learned.

There are many who want former prime minister (and possible president of Europe), Tony Blair, to be held accountable for taking the UK into the war.

Submissions can be made in writing or via the inquiry website:

- www.iraqinquiry.org.uk

The address for written submissions is:

Submissions,
The Iraq Inquiry,
35 Great Smith Street,
London
SW1P 3BQ.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Imperial Folly

The Telegraph reports that the soldier and former American football player Pat Tillman who was killed in Afghanistan thought George W. Bush was a "cowboy" and the Iraq an "imperial folly".

Slowly, but surely, the truth behind the hype over this invasion will come out. Bush, Cheney et al will be kept very busy trying to defend their reputations in the coming years.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Aziz Jailed

Tariq Aziz, Saddam Hussein's right hand man, was found guilty yesterday of crimes against humanity and jailed for 15 years.

Watban Ibrahim al-Hassan and Sabawi Ibrahim, director of public security (half-brothers of Saddam) were sentenced to death on the same charges.

Aziz will appeal against the sentence. However, he still faces charges for the killing and arrest of hundreds of Kurds in the early 1980s.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Mission Accomplished

President Bush has finally admitted that it had been a mistake to hang a banner saying "mission accomplished" on a US battleship, where he declared major combat operations in Iraq over in 2003.

"Clearly, putting a 'mission accomplished' on an aircraft carrier was a mistake."

Quite!

Friday, December 19, 2008

British Troops To Finally Come Home

Gordon Brown has stated that most of the 4,100 British troops would leave Iraq by the end of July 2009. However, he has ruled at an enquiry into this most misguided of wars.

Monday, September 08, 2008

Abu Ghraib To Reopen

Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq is to reopen as a prison in a year, and a facility will be constructed within the prison to act as a museum documenting Saddam Hussein's crimes.

Abu Ghraib has not held prisoners since 2006. A section of the site will be converted into a museum, featuring execution chamber exhibits and other displays of torture tools used by Saddam's regime.

However, there will be no documentation of the abuse carried out there by US military personnel that was revealed in 2004.

Iraq's deputy justice minister, Busho Ibrahim, is quoted by The Associated Press as saying that the American brutality was "nothing" compared with the violence and atrocities of Saddam and the Baath party.

"There is evidence of the crimes (Saddam committed) such as the hooks used to dangle prisoners, tools used to beat and torture prisoners and ... the execution chambers in which 50 or 100 people were killed at once."

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Sanctions Breached

Mabey & Johnson, a British bridge construction company, has admitted that it may have made corrupt payments to Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq to win an export order.

Mabey & Johnson have been under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office for more than a year.

In its recent annual results Mabey said that in April this year, it "disclosed to the SFO evidence that had come to light suggesting that in 2002 the company may have indirectly made two payments to the Iraqi regime in breach of UN sanctions".

Mabey added that it "has recently been notified of allegations that certain historical contracts may have been procured through corrupt acts".

The company has called in a firm of City lawyers, Herbert Smith, to carry out its own inquiry into all the corruption allegations. New managers have been installed at the firm.

The UN report in sanctions busting alleges that Mabey paid a $202K kickback between 2001 and 2003, and was given a $3.6M contract by the Iraqis.

Wednesday, August 06, 2008

The Way of The World

The veracity of the justification by the Whitehouse for going to war in Iraq has taken another knock.

The journalist Ron Suskind has published a book "The Way of The World" in which he claims that the White House ordered the CIA to forge and backdate a handwritten letter from the head of Iraqi intelligence to Saddam Hussein, to link the Iraq regime to Al Qaeda.

"The White House had concocted a fake letter from Habbush to Saddam, backdated to July 1, 2001. It said that 9/11 ringleader Mohammad Atta had actually trained for his mission in Iraq –- thus showing, finally, that there was an operational link between Saddam and al Qaeda, something the vice president's office had been pressing CIA to prove since 9/11 as a justification to invade Iraq.

There is no link
."

The Whitehouse has stated that the claim is nonsense.

Whatever the truth or otherwise of the allegations, no matter what evidence is presented, there will be those who believe them and those who don't.