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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Karen Lawrence who wrote (57975)11/20/2002 5:42:09 PM
From: aladin  Respond to of 281500
 
Karen,

The jury finding against Exxon was $5,000,000,000.00.

The concept of punitive damages in excess of actual costs is very American :-)

John



To: Karen Lawrence who wrote (57975)11/20/2002 8:49:31 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
More excellent personnel choices from the White House:

War crimes arrest blow to Iraqi
opposition
By Richard Beeston, Diplomatic Editor

DANISH police arrested last night an exiled Iraqi
general tipped as a possible replacement for President
Saddam Hussein. He faces charges that he was
responsible for killing thousands of Kurds in a chemical
weapons attack 14 years ago.

The arrest of General Nizar Khazraji, the former Iraqi
Chief-of-Staff and the most senior officer to defect from
Baghdad, appeared to wreck any chances that he might
lead a mutiny in the Armed Forces and help to topple
Saddam’s regime.

He has been under investigation in the North Sea town
of Soroe for the past year, after he was reported to the
Danish authorities by a Kurdish immigrant. Reports
from Copenhagen last night said that the police had
charged him with war crimes, violating the Geneva
conventions and other human rights abuses.

General Khazraji, 64, commanded the Iraqi Armed
Forces during the Iran-Iraq War, when Baghdad used
banned poison gas against Iranian troops and Kurdish
civilians. In the most notorious incident 5,000 Kurds in
the town of Halabja were killed when Iraqi artillery and
warplanes bombed the area with nerve gas and
mustard gas.

He remained military commander during the invasion of
Kuwait in 1990, but fled to Jordan after falling out with
Saddam. He applied for political asylum with his wife
and son in Denmark three years ago.

Iraqi opposition sources said last night that his arrest
was a serious blow to their efforts to build a credible
alternative to Saddam’s regime. Next month they hope
to convene a conference in London for 350 Iraqi exiles
as a first step to establishing an alternative
government.General Khazraji could have played an
important role, particularly on security and military
matters.

“His arrest is a major setback for us,” one opposition
figure said. “He is a man with credibility back home. His
arrest will make it that much harder to encourage other
officers to defect if they fear that they will be charged,
too.”

The Bush Administration is compiling evidence against
several prominent members of the Saddam regime,
who could face war crimes trials if it is toppled.
Washington, however, would like any hearings to take
place inside Iraq and to concentrate on a “dirty dozen”
list of suspects, including Saddam and his ruling clan.

General Khazraji, from a prominent Sunni Muslim family
in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, was not believed to
under investigation. Nevertheless, he was regarded in
Washington and London as one of the few former army
officers with real clout inside the Armed Forces. His
arrest will probably be greeted with dismay in both
capitals. The Bush Administration is counting on the
Iraqi Army to revolt en masse against Saddam in the
event of a US-led operation.

General Khazraji has consistently denied that he was
responsible for ordering the use of chemical weapons
and claims that the accusations were orchestrated by
Iraqi intelligence officers to prevent him co-operating
with the opposition.

In a BBC interview earlier this year he predicted that the
military would rise against Saddam in the right
circumstances. “The most important thing is that the
Iraqis must be sure that a democratic regime will be
there after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein and Iraq
will be an independent country,” he said.

Although mentioned as a possible future leader, he
said that he was not interested in the job. “I am a
military man, I prefer to stay on this side,” he said.
timesonline.co.uk
CC