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Saddam on trial
Jerusalem Post ^ | Dec. 16, 2003 | Eichmann

Posted on 12/15/2003 7:37:48 PM PST by yonif

As the United States prepares to put Saddam Hussein on trial, it may find it useful to examine Israel's experience in bringing a notorious war criminal to court.

In May 1960, Israeli agents captured Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in Argentina and flew him to Israel to face trial for his senior role in the genocide of six million European Jews. Israel immediately faced a torrent of international criticism.

The United Nations Security Council voted unanimously – with US support – to condemn Israel for "endanger[ing] international peace and security." The Washington Post asserted that Israel's capture and planned prosecution of Eichmann were "tainted by lawlessness," and that Israel had no right to act in the name of Holocaust victims or the Jewish people as a whole, which the Post called an "imaginary Jewish ethnic entity." Time magazine accused Israel's leaders of "inverse racism" for their position that Israel could speak for the Jewish people.

The New York Times rejected the Israeli claims that Eichmann's role in the Nazi genocide justified Israel's intrusion into Argentina, on the grounds that "no immoral or illegal act justifies another." The Times also denounced the idea of trying Eichmann in Israel. It preferred that he be brought before an international tribunal since "it was not against Israel but against humanity that his crimes were committed."

This position echoed the Times' policy during the Holocaust of deliberately obscuring the Jewish identity of Hitler's victims. Times publisher Arthur Hays Sulzberger believed that American Jews should keep their Jewishness as hidden as possible, and made it clear to Times editors that their coverage of Nazi atrocities should likewise play down the Jewish angle. They faithfully complied.

SOME US church publications were particularly bitter in their attacks on Israel's prosecution of Eichmann. An article in The Unitarian Register compared "the Jew-pursuing Nazi and the Nazi-pursuing Jew." The Catholic newspaper The Tablet said the Eichmann trial was a reminder "that there are still some influential people around who – like Shylock of old – demand their pound of flesh."

Some leaders might have wavered under such withering attacks. President George W. Bush may start to have second thoughts if he faces strong criticism for his handling of Saddam. But Israeli prime minister David Ben-Gurion was unbending.

"American journalists, who have not suffered from the Nazi atrocities, may be 'objective' and deny Israel's right to try one of the greatest of the Nazi murderers," Ben-Gurion rebuffed his challengers. "But the calamity that the Nazis inflicted on the Jewish people is a specific and unparalleled act – an act designed for the utter extermination of the entire Jewish people... Historic justice and the honor of the Jewish people demand that this should be done only by an Israeli court in the sovereign Jewish State."

As the opening of the Eichmann trial approached, the critics took aim again. State Department officials "deplored" the prosecution of Eichmann because, they claimed, the trial was making some Western democracies "less responsive to the Berlin crisis than desired."

An editorial in the Times of London warned that while the trial might be fair, it was tainted because it "springs from an admittedly illegal act–the abduction of Eichmann from Argentina." The paper warned ominously that the trial would have "profound effects [on Israel's] relations with the rest of the world [and they] will not necessarily be good."

Yet another round of criticism erupted after Eichmann was convicted and sentenced to death.

The New York Times asserted that "Eichmann's crimes are so enormous" that "hanging becomes meaningless." Novelist Pearl Buck urged that Eichmann be kept alive so that he might be studied. The Reform movement's Central Conference of American Rabbis declared its opposition to all capital punishment as a matter of principle. Martin Buber and a group of fellow Hebrew University professors argued that some young Germans had recently shown humanistic tendencies, and executing Eichmann would "retard" the flowering of their humanism.

The New York Times' final editorial on the subject, published following Eichmann's execution, went so far as to argue that while Eichmann was guilty, others were also guilty of "murderous hatred" – citing the Soviet Union, Franco's Spain, and even "our own country, where the power of the Federal Government has had to be invoked to secure equal justice for a racial minority."

Not many pundits today will compare the United States to Saddam Hussein as the N.Y. Times compared the US to the Nazis in 1962. But President Bush will surely find himself challenged for having Saddam prosecuted and punished.

What remains to be seen is whether he will follow Ben-Gurion's example and stand fast, or bend to the pressure of his critics.

The writer is director of The David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies near Philadelphia.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Israel; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: eichmann; hussein; iraqijustice; saddam

1 posted on 12/15/2003 7:37:49 PM PST by yonif
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To: SJackson; Yehuda; Nachum; Paved Paradise; Thinkin' Gal; Bobby777; adam_az; Alouette; IFly4Him; ...
In May 1960, Israeli agents captured Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in Argentina and flew him to Israel to face trial for his senior role in the genocide of six million European Jews. Israel immediately faced a torrent of international criticism.

The United Nations Security Council voted unanimously – with US support – to condemn Israel for "endanger[ing] international peace and security." The Washington Post asserted that Israel's capture and planned prosecution of Eichmann were "tainted by lawlessness," and that Israel had no right to act in the name of Holocaust victims or the Jewish people as a whole, which the Post called an "imaginary Jewish ethnic entity." Time magazine accused Israel's leaders of "inverse racism" for their position that Israel could speak for the Jewish people.

2 posted on 12/15/2003 7:38:13 PM PST by yonif ("If I Forget Thee, O Jerusalem, Let My Right Hand Wither" - Psalms 137:5)
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To: yonif
Wow!
3 posted on 12/15/2003 7:42:17 PM PST by CharlotteVRWC
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To: yonif
no immoral or illegal act justifies another..

The old "two wrongs don't make a right" maxim.

They are forever trying to equate the action of capturing Eichmann as some sort of a "wrong thing." That is so blatantly hypocritical. What a load of crap. Even reading this garbage incites me to a near rage.

I don't know Yoni, I really wish that we could just ignore them, and that they would all just go away. I am not even Jewish, but I am not stupid either. I do not know what to say at times. I just want to express my support for Israel, and Jews everywhere (save the reprobate Rats.) Still, even the rats of the Promise will all come around.

Hopefully, sooner rather than later. We all know that they will! They will have no other option, if they want to live. We don't need no more "Arbeit Macht Frei" cynical insults. I will never forget the day that I walked through the remnants of the Dachau enterprise. I will never forget, not ever. My sentiment is genuine, and I so much do not understand so many who are willing to forget the Holocaust so quickly.

We all know by now, that they will never stop killing Jews. They have a lot of weapons, but they are in darkenss, and it is important that vigilance is maintained always.

The fight must be also, brought to them. Never again, should a people sheepishly walk into ovens of human construction. The freaking Nazis, were merely Heralds, compared to these vile despiciaple representatives of Evil incarnate. I see the truth so clearly. The enemies of Israel, and the sons of Abraham and the Promise do not surprise me, but their supporters do indeed confound me.

Why can't they see? Why are they all so blind?

Rant over!

4 posted on 12/15/2003 8:09:02 PM PST by Radix (They say that in the Army, the coffees mighty fine, Looks like muddy water, tastes like turpentine)
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To: yonif
Israel learned its lesson. The response to the Black September terrorists in Munich, 1972 was a good deal less public. Golda Meir just had Committee X find them and kill them.
5 posted on 12/15/2003 8:09:57 PM PST by Snake65 (Osama Bin Decomposing)
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To: yonif
In the past year I heard of a TV talk show where it was pointed out that Saddam had killed thousands of Iraqis. Some female reporter type said "Well, they are his people.) So, Saddam belongs to te Iraqi people now, let them do as they wish with him. In the same vein, if the Gov. of N.Y. wants to kill the Mayor of NYC, or a U.S. Senator from N.Y.,,,then very well "they ARE his people. "If the shoe fits, or the foo sh-ts, wear it.
6 posted on 12/15/2003 8:11:41 PM PST by Waco
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To: Radix
Never again will Jews walk like sheep to the slaughter without putting up a fight. Jews have a state, Jews have an army, and Jews have friend like the US.
7 posted on 12/15/2003 8:11:45 PM PST by yonif ("If I Forget Thee, O Jerusalem, Let My Right Hand Wither" - Psalms 137:5)
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To: Snake65
If Germany would have allowed an Israeli counter-terror unit to fly to Germany and rescue the Israeli atheletes, maybe they would have been saved. But Germany did not, instead performing a number of stunts to try to rescue them with people that did not have any experience with such a thing.
8 posted on 12/15/2003 8:13:48 PM PST by yonif ("If I Forget Thee, O Jerusalem, Let My Right Hand Wither" - Psalms 137:5)
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To: yonif
Actually, the net result of the Eichman trial was positive for Israel, IMHO. The usual suspects all ranted away, but I think most people agreed that Eichman was a monster.

Still, it would obviously be better to try Saddam in the place where he committed his crimes, Iraq. Let them put on the show trial. And by all means, let's put Saddam in a glass box like Eichman's.
9 posted on 12/15/2003 8:14:55 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Snake65
Saddam must be kept away from a trial in Europe.

Muslims would not think a trial by Infidels was valid and the trial itself would be a bash fest on the USA.

10 posted on 12/15/2003 8:15:09 PM PST by Mike Darancette (Proud member - Neoconservative Power Vortex)
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To: yonif
If Germany would have allowed an Israeli counter-terror unit to fly to Germany and rescue the Israeli atheletes, maybe they would have been saved.

I'm inclined to agree. A military that could pull of an Entebbe (with the loss of what, one man? Yoni Netanyahu, by anyone's definition a great hero, bless him...) would most likely have done better.

11 posted on 12/15/2003 8:19:46 PM PST by Snake65 (Osama Bin Decomposing)
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To: Cicero
the net result of the Eichman trial was positive for Israel

It also produced Hannah Arendt's incredible book: Eichman in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil (1963). Chilling, uncomforatable to read, and thought-provoking.

12 posted on 12/15/2003 8:27:17 PM PST by Snake65 (Osama Bin Decomposing)
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: Snake65; CharlotteVRWC; Cicero; yonif
I agree with Charlotte, WOW, I didn't know any of this before. I only knew about Arendt's famous "Banality of Evil" observations. Boy oh boy did that phrase come to mind early Sunday morning. I had no idea that the Times has been so bad for so long. And the others, amazing!

No wonder folks like Hitler, Stalin & Saddam get away with as much as they do as long as they do. If you're not the one going into the shredder or the oven I guess it's pretty easy to blink at evil.

I never felt as stupid in my life as I did on 9/11. I knew I needed more INFORMATION, I knew I had overlooked information I already had, I felt I needed to learn Arabic. I didn't know I didn't know enough about the capture and trial of Adolph Eichmann. That was an "unkown unknown" to me. Now I know a little, and my mind is much expanded.

GREAT POST. That's like the third time I've said great post tonight. FR is really good today. Every day, but today is especially good.
14 posted on 12/15/2003 9:25:54 PM PST by jocon307 (The dems don't get it, the American people do!)
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To: jocon307
"I had no idea that the Times has been so bad for so long. And the others, amazing!"

Shocking! I guess Liberals will be Liberals...

15 posted on 12/16/2003 7:45:20 AM PST by CharlotteVRWC
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