Update on Saddam’s Execution

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Jan 012007
 

This adds more to my thoughts that this was more of a hit than an execution.


The cacophony from those gathered before the gallows included a shout of “Go to hell!” as the former ruler stood with the noose around his neck in the final moments, and his riposte, barely audible above the bedlam, which included the words “gallows of shame.” It continued despite appeals from an official-sounding voice, possibly Munir Haddad, the judge who presided at the hanging, saying, “Please no! The man is about to die.”

The Shiites who predominated at the hanging began a refrain at one point of “Moktada! Moktada! Moktada!”— the name of a volatile cleric whose private militia has spawned death squads that have made an indiscriminate industry of killing Sunnis — appending it to a Muslim imprecation for blessings on the Prophet Muhammad. “Moktada,” Mr. Hussein replied, smiling contemptuously. “Is this how real men behave?”

American officials in Iraq have been reluctant to say much publicly about the pell-mell nature of the hanging, apparently fearful of provoking recriminations in Washington, where the Bush administration adopted a hands-off posture, saying the timing of the execution was Iraq’s to decide.

While privately incensed at the dead-of-night rush to the gallows, the Americans here have been caught in the double bind that has ensnared them over much else about the Maliki government — frustrated at what they call the government’s failure to recognize its destructive behavior, but reluctant to speak out, or sometimes to act, for fear of undermining Mr. Maliki and worsening the situation.


Thoughts on Saddam’s Execution

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Dec 312006
 

After watching this video of Saddam’s execution, there is one thing that sticks out to me and doesn’t make sense. There are about five men with black face masks who are visible around Saddam, acting as guards. Why wasn’t Saddam executed by the Iraqi military?

This seems a little strange to me. It resembles a hit more than it does an execution. Maybe I feel that way because of this and what was said to Saddam right before they executed him.


The room was quiet as everyone began to pray, including Mr. Hussein. “Peace be upon Mohammed and his holy family.”

Two guards added, “Supporting his son Moktada, Moktada, Moktada.”

Mr. Hussein seemed a bit stunned, swinging his head in their direction.
They were talking about Moktada al-Sadr, the firebrand cleric whose militia is now committing some of the worst violence in the sectarian fighting; he is the son of a revered Shiite cleric, Muhammad Sadiq al-Sadr, whom many believe Mr. Hussein ordered murdered.

“Moktada?” he spat out, mixing sarcasm and disbelief.


I don’t trust any of them!

Ann Coulter: Kwanzaa: Holiday from the FBI

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Dec 282006
 

Ann Coulter’s take on Kwanzaa.


More African-Americans spent this season reflecting on the birth of Christ than some phony non-Christian holiday invented a few decades ago by an FBI stooge. Kwanzaa is a holiday for white liberals, not blacks.


Iraq’s Economy is Booming!

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Dec 202006
 

Where is the media coverage of this?


In what might be called the mother of all surprises, Iraq’s economy is growing strong, even booming in places.


Moral Clarity

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Dec 202006
 


In the world today, there are only two leaders that have the moral clarity and wisdom to recognize the threat we all face in the war against Islamic extremists. Thank God for George Bush and Tony Blair and their unwavering commitment to this cause.

Yesterday, on the final day of his last Middle East tour, in a speech to world leaders, Tony Blair urged the world to take bold action against “extremism” in Iran.


“We must recognize the strategic challenge the government of Iran poses; not its people, possibly not all of its ruling elements, but those presently in charge of its policy,” he said.

Iran wants “to pin us back in Lebanon, in Iraq and in Palestine,” he added.

“Our response should be to expose what they are doing, build the alliances to prevent it and pin them back across the whole of the region,” Blair said.

To do this “we need the open and clear backing of the countries in this region.”


It’s too bad he is leaving next year.