What To Do With
Saddam Hussein Now
by Benjamin Ferencz*, December 16, 2003
The apprehension
and arrest of Sadism Hussein, the former President of Iraq, offers
new opportunities to advance the rule of law. Vengeance begets
vengeance. As was demonstrated at Nuremberg after World war Two,
even the vilest criminal deserves a fair trial. The world legal
order is gradually moving toward a tribunal competent to try all
international criminals but, unfortunately, we are not yet there.
What should be done now? Let us consider certain basic principles
that should be respected.
The offenses attributable to ex-President Hussein
since he came to power range from the supreme international crime
of aggression, to a wide variety of crimes against humanity, and
a long list of atrocities condemned by both international and
national laws. It may be anticipated that the accused, will maintain
his innocence and will try to justify all of his actions as being
lawful and necessary in the national interest. He will seek to
implicate the United States and its allies. References to the
Deity will be asserted to gain support of his follower at home
and abroad.
A fair trial would achieve many goals. The victims
would find some satisfaction in knowing that their victimizer
was called to account and could no longer be immune from punishment
for his evil deeds. Wounds can begin to heal. The historical facts
can be confirmed beyond doubt. Similar crimes by other dictators
might be discouraged or deterred in future. The process of justice
through law, on which the safety of humankind depends, would be
reinforced.
The existing temporary tribunals created by the
United Nations Security Council to cope with the genocide and
atrocities committed in Yugoslavia and Rwanda in the early 1990s
(to the everlasting shame of the world community) have very restricted
temporal and territorial jurisdictions. Iraq is beyond their legal
reach. A new interim Security Council court is conceivable but
unlikely to be able to overcome political obstacles quickly. The
new permanent International Criminal Court (ICC) in the Hague,
faced with misguided opposition by the United States, lacks jurisdiction
over crimes committed before July 2002. It cannot intervene in
Iraq.
Perhaps the most tempting, but probably the worst,
alternative would be for the United States to subject its captive
to summary judgment and prompt execution by a military court.
It would make a martyr of the criminal whose loyal supporters
would likely be enraged to increase assaults on Americans wherever
possible. The Nuremberg Principles, which honored the US and the
rule of law, would be undermined.
The best hope for a speedy trial seems to lie with
the Coalition Provisional Authority which on December 10, 2003,
a few days before Saddam Hussein's capture, issued a "Statute
of the Iraqi Special Tribunal." Here too, certain cautions
are in order. A fundamental principle of the ICC, already set
up in the Hague but not yet operational, makes clear that the
nation state of the accused shall always be given priority if
it is able and willing to provide a fair trial. The wording of
the Iraqi statute calls for war crimes trials run completely by
Iraqis but also allows the use of non-Iraqi judges if the Governing
Council deems it necessary. It should be possible for expert help
to be recruited not merely as judges but also to assist the prosecution,
defense and administration so that it is obvious to all that trials
and judgment will be fair in every way.
Following the Nuremberg precedent, the first trial
should include leading accomplices either in custody or in absentia.
Speed is important but the proceedings must be carefully prepared
and time limits set on both prosecution and defense to present
their case. Not every crime need be included in the indictment.
There will be enough evidence readily on hand to justify any sentence.
Trials of lesser offenders can follow.
Whether a remorseless mass killer should
be sentenced to death is a difficult question. There can never
be a balance between the lives of a few mass murderers and the
lives of their countless victims. Humanitarian law has moved away
from imposing death as a penalty. It should be left to Iraqi judges
to decide what is most appropriate to bring peace and reconciliation
to their war-ravaged country.
*Benjamin B. Ferencz was a U.S. prosecutor at Nuremberg.
He is a member of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation's Advisory
Council. His web site is
www.benferencz.org.
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