White House Wants Saddam Tried as Soon as Possible
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By Adam Entous
PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - President Bush (news - web sites) is under pressure from Republican allies to have Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) put on trial swiftly, a move they hope might boost support for the Iraq (news - web sites) war before the November presidential election.
Putting a spotlight on Saddam's record of execution and torture could help shore up public support for the invasion damaged by a U.S. prison abuse scandal, Sen. Arlen Specter (news, bio, voting record), a Pennsylvania Republican, said on Wednesday.
Specter said he has been lobbying Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney (news - web sites) and White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card to expedite Saddam's trial to as early as August.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan said U.S. and Iraqi officials were discussing the timing of Saddam's trial.
"We would like to see him face justice as soon as possible by that tribunal," McClellan said, but added: "I'm not putting a time frame on it."
Specter, a senior member of the Senate Judiciary Committee (news - web sites), is seeking the administration's support for a Senate resolution that calls for Iraq's interim government to put Saddam on trial "as soon as possible" following the June 30 transfer of limited authority. Aides said Specter was gaining support for the non-binding resolution from fellow Republicans in Congress.
"To try Saddam would put a lot of other issues in perspective," said Specter, who accompanied Bush on a visit to Philadelphia. "What Saddam did sort of fades from memory... Our prestige is on the line."
McClellan was supportive of the effort but said several steps had to be taken first.
"First of all, you have to have the transfer of sovereignty before you can turn over detainees like Saddam Hussein. Then the tribunal, we expect, would be making a request at some point," McClellan said.
The United States plans to turn over legal, but not physical, custody of Saddam and some other prisoners to the Iraqi interim government soon after it takes over on June 30.
Bush has refused to hand over Saddam physically until the Iraqis can ensure he is being held in an adequately secured detention facility.
"Those are issues we're discussing with the interim government," McClellan said.
U.S. forces captured Saddam in December from a hole where he had been hiding near his hometown of Tikrit. Designated by Washington as a prisoner of war, the former dictator has been held at an undisclosed location in Iraq since then.
An official said Saddam and other detainees handed over legally to the new government would then become "subject to Iraqi due process, including the right to speedy trial, the right to counsel and the right to have judicially issued arrest warrants in place to authorize continued detention."
Bush spoke by telephone with Iraq's interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi about the transition after Islamist militants threatened to assassinate Allawi.
"He (Allawi) is a very strong and capable leader, and he understands the importance of confronting these security threats, and we will be there after the transfer of sovereignty to help," McClellan said.
McClellan declined to say whether any new security measures were being taken to protect Allawi against Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who the United States accuses of organizing attacks in Iraq and of having close ties to al Qaeda. |