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Politics : Pres. George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (547)4/11/2003 11:37:53 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 601
 
Hitler, Elvis, Saddam

By Clifford D. May
Scripps Howard News Service
April 9, 2003

What if we never find out for certain whether Saddam Hussein is dead or alive?

What if - Hitler-like - Saddam has now vanished, with most of the world presuming he's buried under tons of rubble but with some "experts" speculating that he made a last-minute escape from Baghdad, moustache shaved, dressed in a soiled burqa like an old woman, hidden in plain sight among refugees of war, heading for Pakistan, Yemen or Somalia? What if even the most sophisticated forensic detectives turn out to be no match for the explosive power of a "bunker buster"? What if for years there are reports of Saddam-sightings from Buenos Aires to Ramallah?

From a military point of view, it makes no difference whether Saddam is alive or dead, in captivity or on the loose. Once we are certain he has been cut off from his weapons, his money and his thugs he won't pose much of a threat to Americans, Iraqis, Kuwaitis, Israelis or other civilized peoples.

Some will argue that if he is alive, Saddam will now become another Osama bin Laden, one of the "hundreds" that Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak has predicted this war will create. But the fact is that even bin Laden is not the terrorist he used to be - not since American military forces pried Afghanistan from al Qaeda's claws.

And bin Laden, at least, has had some experience operating within a subterranean environment. It is unlikely that Saddam - who is accustomed to palaces and personal trainers - would prove adept at organizing a terrorist campaign from a cave in the Hindu Kush or a shanty town in Mogadishu.

Even al Jazeera viewers must be slowing coming to comprehend that Saddam's reputation as a strategic thinker was exaggerated. He lavished billions of petro-dollars on his military machine - with ample assistance from France, Germany, Russia and others. In the end, that machine has held up about as well as a Ford Pinto at a monster truck rally.

Saddam evidently counted on winning this showdown by relying on the Appeasement Movement - the United Nations, France, Germany, Russia, the European and American Left and the neo-isolationist Right - to keep President Bush on a short leash. When that didn't work, he no doubt hoped to create a river of blood, enough casualties - U.S., British or Iraqi, it didn't matter to him - to cause a renewed outcry from that same motley crew. Such an outcry, he expected, would lead to demands for a negotiated settlement. Such a settlement would leave him and his regime standing yet again, thus demonstrating that he could successfully defy the Great Satan (or, Hyperpower, to use the term the French prefer) and that would have been celebrated as a great victory in parts of the Arab and Muslim worlds, and in parts of Europe and America as well.

Slowly, Iraqis are allowing themselves to believe that Saddam's reign of terror just might be over, that this time the monster will not rise from the grave. In northern Iraq, the Kurds were waving American flags from the moment the first airborne troops touched their soil. But now there are increasing reports and pictures of Iraqis in all regions of the country openly welcoming coalition forces, denouncing Saddam and cheering Bush.

It's possible that Saddam's portrait, along with bin Ladin's, will continue to be displayed in Arab capitals. But I'll be surprised if, over the next few years, many Arab parents name their children "Saddam." As bin Ladin has so insightfully remarked: "When people see a strong horse and a weak horse, by nature they will like the strong horse."

Bin Laden looks less and less like a strong horse. And Saddam, based on his final trot across the world stage, resembles only the retreating portion of the equine anatomy. Will young Muslims from Morocco to Malaysia really want to emulate these examples, as Mubarak believes? Or will one lesson of Saddam's last days be that, in the 21st century, slaughtering infidels is a high-risk occupation with little opportunity for advancement? And might another lesson taught by Saddam and bin Laden be that it's time for the Islamic world to think seriously about joining the Free World?

Clifford D. May, a former New York Times foreign correspondent, is president of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, a think tank on terrorism.

URL:http://www.defenddemocracy.org/in_the_media/in_the_media_show.htm?doc_id=162523



To: calgal who wrote (547)4/11/2003 11:40:05 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 601
 
Welcome to a Baghdad
Oliver North

April 11, 2003


BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Welcome to Baghdad. The pictures broadcast in the United States and around the world this week showing the Iraqi people, with the help of U.S. Marines, tearing down Firdos Square's 40-foot statue of the dictator who brutalized this country for 24 years were magnificent. But those pictures are only symbolic of the real appreciation that is being showered upon U.S. forces by the Iraqi people in this capital city and around the country.

While we are proud to be liberating another people from tyranny, it is still difficult for us, as Americans, to appreciate the relief and exhilaration of the Iraqi people who have suffered under this brutal regime for so long. Imagine living every day in fear of imprisonment, torture, rape, execution. These people were unable to speak, write or travel freely and lived with the constant fear that the secret police might -- for little or no reason -- snatch you up in the middle of the night.

Those who met such a fate were either executed, or thrown in squalid prison cells for months only to be tortured by having their feet beaten, or being hooked up to battery cables or deprived of food and water. And, if sleep was permitted, it was only in their own waste. Imagine having your children taken from you or your daughter summoned to one of Saddam's son's palaces only to have her innocence violently stolen. Under Saddam, too many Iraqis suffered the indignity of having their children imprisoned or being forced to watch their wives being raped. Imagine living under such fear and repression one day and the next day being liberated from it.

Maybe that explains why leaders of the Baath Party who carried out such brutality are now, in some cases, the targets of retribution. Some have had their homes looted or businesses taken over. Others are not as fortunate. In Baghdad, a Baath Party official was hanging from a light pole on a street corner. He had a placard around his neck indicating that could be the fate for others if they are caught.

But mostly, the Iraqi people are celebrating their liberation by welcoming the Marines and other U.S. forces with open arms. I was with the 5th and 7th Marines as they entered Baghdad and were greeted by little kids walking up to them and handing them flowers. It is one of the most moving things I've seen so far in this war -- children greeting their liberators with flowers and homemade American flags. We've seen it several times, and it's the kind of thing that gets you choked up because the people are so thrilled to get rid of this brutal regime.

So much so that the intelligence the Marines have received hasn't only been from the U.S. government, but also from Iraqi civilians who volunteer it. In Baghdad, and along the road to the capital, the Marines have been meeting civilians who give them information regarding the locations of weapons caches, Republican Guard forces, Baath Party leaders and other fighters. Special Operations personnel are working with the internal resistance, and locals have shown up to warn Marines about nearby Fedayeen and expose their positions.

At this writing, organized resistance from Iraqi units has almost ceased to exist. We've seen some of Saddam's regular forces drive their anti-aircraft guns, armored vehicles and artillery pieces to fields and other places where they park them, abandon them and walk home.

The U.S. military now controls the countryside. We were up in four armed helicopters this week -- two Hueys and two Cobras -- looking for targets of opportunity, which must be confirmed enemy positions, armor or other enemy resources. The Marines shot up a half dozen tanks and armored personnel carriers and a few anti-aircraft sites, and returned with most of their ammunition. There are fewer targets in the countryside outside of Baghdad and almost nothing left to shoot at except the so-called Fedayeen.

That's not to say it is safe -- it's not. It is largely the Fedayeen who are keeping this country from freedom, and in many cases the Fedayeen are not even Iraqi -- they've been identified as Syrian, Egyptian, Saudi, and even Sudanese and Somalis. They have gone through the so-called Salman Pak education center -- a terrorist training camp in southern Baghdad, and the Iraqi civilians are referring to them as "the foreigners."

The Marines still have a lot of work to do here before they can go home. But their morale is high and they are ready for the task. When I spoke to Maj. Craig Watson, the operations officer for the 3rd battalion, 5th Marines, he said that although they have been engaged regularly since crossing the border, "the Marines have done an outstanding job. I just can't say enough about their performance here." The people of Iraq are saying the same thing.

Oliver North is host of Common Sense Radio with Oliver North and founder and honorary chairman of Freedom Alliance. Both are TownHall.com member groups.

©2003 Creators Syndicate, Inc.

URL:http://www.townhall.com/columnists/ollienorth/on20030411.shtml