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Iraq is US test.Arafat "saddened" by Saddam Hussein
Jordan Times/Ha'aertz/IMRA ^ | 12-15-03

Posted on 12/15/2003 7:06:36 AM PST by SJackson

Monday, December 15, 2003

Excerpts:Iraq is US test.Arafat "saddened" by Saddam Hussein

JORDAN TIMES 15 Dec.'03:
"Editorial:What next?"
QUOTES FROM TEXT:

"This ... is a major development which marks the end of an era."

"need to see a plan that offers a clear roadmap to the final objective of leaving the running of Iraq to a democratically elected Iraqi government."

"Unless they have a promise to cling to, the Iraqi quagmire will continue to drag Iraq and the rest of the region into further dispair, instability and misery.

---------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------

EXCERPTS:

THE CAPTURE of ... Saddam Hussein offers closure to one long difficult chapter in modern Iraqi history. The myth is shattered. The once feared leader of Iraq is now a prisoner behind bars. His chances of return to power are impossible. This, by any serious standard, is a major development that marks the end of an era, with all the pain, suffering, and various expectations that it had carried.

[IMRA: But the editorialist does not welcome , much less celebrate, the change. But it is also the beginning of a new era that offers its own set of extremely complex and trying challenges. With the shadow of Saddam no longer hanging over the future of Iraq, the target now is to rebuild what dictatorship, war and lack of clearly articulated strategies have destroyed.

... how will the man who ruled Iraq with an iron fist for decades be treated. Many Iraqis who suffered the wrath Saddam inflicted upon them and their families would want an eye for an eye.

[IMRA: Misuse of phrase "eye for an eye" to mean vengence without justice.]

But many other Iraqis who want to build a new modern, democratic Iraq want the law to take its course. ... Saddam should receive a fair trial that will reflect the new Iraq. ... Revenge against Saddam is not the answer - his trial is. The law will ultimately prevail, and the former Iraqi leader will receive the punishment specified by the law.

[IMRA: There is not the slightest indication to the contrary.]

The US ...cannot afford to be intoxicated by the victory that the arrest of Saddam represents. The Americans erred greatly in entering Iraq without having a clear plan of action.

[IMRA: No plan could have contemplated the evil Iraqis inflicted on themselves."

They now have a chance to right some of their wrongs and move steadily towards helping build a safe and modern Iraq. The US has showed resolve in conducting its military operations. The Iraqis deserve the same resolve in Washington's plans to fix the power supply, end fuel shortages and provide basic commodities. They need to see a plan that offers a clear roadmap to the final objective of leaving the running of Iraq to a democratically elected Iraqi government.

[IMRA: How rapidly can this be done? Is the new Iraq to be more democratic than Jordan?]

The Americans can now focus on helping rebuild what the sanctions and war have destroyed. Their responsibilities towards the Iraqis are enormous.

...the excitement over the arrest of Saddam will soon fade as the continued absence of security and basic commodities remind the Iraqis of their grim reality. When the excitement ends, Iraqis will once again start wondering when their lives will return to normal and when the foreign occupation forces will leave their land. Unless they have a promise to cling to, the Iraqi quagmire will continue to drag Iraq and the rest of the region into further despair, instability and misery.

[IMRA: Jordan never comlpained about Saddam's rule. Instead, Jordan supported demonstrations, person-to-person operations and was the launching-pad for pro-Iraq operations. Interesting that the editorialist has no advice on how Iraq's neighbors should help.]

+++JORDAN TIMES 15 Dec.'03:

"Editorial:What next?"

SUBJECT:Iraq is US test.

QUOTES FROM TEXT:

"This ... is a major development which marks the end of an era."

"need to see a plan that offers a clear roadmap to the final objecxtive of leaving the running of Iraq to a democratically elected Iraqi government."

"Unless they have a promise to cling to, the Iraqi quagmire will continue to drag Iraq and the rest of the region into further dispair, instability and misery.

---------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------

EXCERPTS:

THE CAPTURE of ... Saddam Hussein offers closure to one long difficult chapter in modern Iraqi history. The myth is shattered. The once feared leader of Iraq is now a prisoner behind bars. His chances of return to power are impossible. This, by any serious standard, is a major development that marks the end of an era, with all the pain, suffering, and various expectations that it had carried.

[IMRA: But the editorialist does not welcome , much less celebrate, the change. But it is also the beginning of a new era that offers its own set of extremely complex and trying challenges. With the shadow of Saddam no longer hanging over the future of Iraq, the target now is to rebuild what dictatorship, war and lack of clearly articulated strategies have destroyed.

... how will the man who ruled Iraq with an iron fist for decades be treated. Many Iraqis who suffered the wrath Saddam inflicted upon them and their families would want an eye for an eye.

[IMRA: Misuse of phrase "eye for an eye" to mean vengence without justice.]

But many other Iraqis who want to build a new modern, democratic Iraq want the law to take its course. ... Saddam should receive a fair trial that will reflect the new Iraq. ... Revenge against Saddam is not the answer - his trial is. The law will ultimately prevail, and the former Iraqi leader will receive the punishment specified by the law.

[IMRA: There is not the slightest indication to the contrary.]

The US ...cannot afford to be intoxicated by the victory that the arrest of Saddam represents. The Americans erred greatly in entering Iraq without having a clear plan of action.

[IMRA: No plan could have contemplated the evil Iraqis inflicted on themselves."

They now have a chance to right some of their wrongs and move steadily towards helping build a safe and modern Iraq. The US has showed resolve in conducting its military operations. The Iraqis deserve the same resolve in Washington's plans to fix the power supply, end fuel shortages and provide basic commodities. They need to see a plan that offers a clear roadmap to the final objective of leaving the running of Iraq to a democratically elected Iraqi government.

[IMRA: How rapidly can this be done? Is the new Iraq to be more democratic than Jordan?]

The Americans can now focus on helping rebuild what the sanctions and war have destroyed. Their responsibilities towards the Iraqis are enormous.

...the excitement over the arrest of Saddam will soon fade as the continued absence of security and basic commodities remind the Iraqis of their grim reality. When the excitement ends, Iraqis will once again start wondering when their lives will return to normal and when the foreign occupation forces will leave their land. Unless they have a promise to cling to, the Iraqi quagmire will continue to drag Iraq and the rest of the region into further despair, instability and misery.

[IMRA: Jordan never comlpained about Saddam's rule. Instead, Jordan supported demonstrations, person-to-person operations and was the launching-pad for pro-Iraq operations. Interesting that the editorialist has no advice on how Iraq's neighbors should help.]



JORDAN TIMES 15 Dec.'03:

"Palestinians mark 'black day'"

SUBJECT: Palesstrinians lament Saddam's capture.

QUOTES FROM TEXT:

"Disbelief and gloom seized many Palestinians ... at news of Saddam Hussein's capture" "senior leader of Hamas group said the United States would 'pay a very high price for the mistake' of capturing Saddam."

---------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------

EXCERPTS:

RAMALLAH (Reuters) - Disbelief and gloom seized many Palestinians on Sunday at news of Saddam Hussein's capture ... .

The former Iraqi ruler was a hero to many Palestinians for his stand against Israel and its US ally, as well as for giving financial aid to the families of Palestinian suicide bombers and others who died in a three-year-old uprising.

"It's a black day in history," said Sadiq Husam, 33, a taxi driver in Ramallah, West Bank seat of the Palestinian Authority.

"I am saying so not because Saddam is an Arab, but because he is the only man who said 'no' to American injustice in the Middle East," he said.

Palestinian President Yasser Arafat and his government made no comment. But Abdul Aziz Al Rantissi, a senior leader of the Hamas group, said the United States would "pay a very high price for the mistake" of capturing Saddam.

"What the United States did is ugly and despicable. It is an insult to all Arabs and an insult to Muslims," he told Reuters.

Islamic factions sworn to Israel's destruction have taken strength from Iraqi resistance and cautioned on Sunday that Saddam's capture would not end attacks on US forces.



Saddam paid over $35 million to the kin of Palestinian suicide bombers, militants and bystanders who died in an uprising that began in 2000.



JERUSALEM POST 15 Dec.'03

"Palestinians lament capture"

QUOTE FROM TEXT:

" 'President Arafat was sad to see an Arab leader in an humiliating position' "

---------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------

EXCERPTS:

Palestinians in the West Bank reacted to the capture of Saddam Hussein with shocl and disbelief, with many expressing deep disappointment that the man who symbolized defiance against the US and Israel surrendered without resistance.

The Palestinian Authority declined to comment, but a senior official in Ramallah said PA Chairman Yasser Arafat was "saddened" by the news from Baghdad. "President Arafat was sad to see an Arab leader in an humiliating position" he said.



HAARETZ 15 Dec.'03Last update - 01:28 15/12/2003

"Saddam could reveal arms cache in deal"By Ze'ev Schiff

EXCERPTS

ATHENS - Deposed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein could be offered a deal in which he would give his captors information on if and how he hid weapons of mass destruction and if he smuggled some of them into Syria. In exchange, he would face life imprisonment and not be executed for war crimes, senior Iraqis attending a conference here on the future of the region have hinted.



The Iraqi figures also said that, even if the number of concealed weapons of mass destruction is not large, Saddam will certainly know who he appointed to take charge of the operation and in what area the weapons are being stored.

The possibility that Saddam transferred some of the weapons to Syria was raised on the eve of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, when satellite pictures showed convoys moving from Iraq to Syria. It is still unknown precisely what was transported..., but it is clear that this was a secret operation between Iraq and Syria.



Iraqi representatives are divided over Saddam's expected trial. Some claim that since most of his crimes, including the use of chemical weapons on the Iraqi Kurdish population, were commited on Iraqi soil, he should be tried in Iraq. Others claim this is not desirable and there should be an international aspect to his trial.An Iraqi trial would make the internal reconciliation more difficult and could be seen as an American Iraqi-purifying trial.

[IMRA: Of what does the US need to be "purified"?]

A special international war crimes trial, however, would have greater global resonance and would act as a deterrent against commiting war crimes in the future.

[IMRA: And would probably exclude teh death penalty.]

Dr. Josph Lerner, Co-Director IMRA


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: arafat; husseincaptured; iraq; saddam

1 posted on 12/15/2003 7:06:36 AM PST by SJackson
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Yehuda; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; ...
If you'd like to be on or off this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.
2 posted on 12/15/2003 7:07:19 AM PST by SJackson (If Iraq came across the Jordan River I'd grab a rifle and get in the trench and fight and die, x42)
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To: SJackson
YAIDS alert.
"Yassir Arafat is deeply saddened"
3 posted on 12/15/2003 7:16:04 AM PST by Semper Paratus
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To: SJackson
Come on, Urafart... show that cowardly..sniveling..crawling..lice infested..pile of #hit that a REAL TRUE BELIVER, would have given his pistol barrel a Monica( or x42 ),and splattered what minimal brain matter available, all over the wall. No hiding in a slit trench for you..no way...blaze of glory time... Don't wait...hurry-up before its too late...the grapes are sour where your goin'!!
4 posted on 12/15/2003 7:45:41 AM PST by sidegunner
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