THUS PERISH TYRANTS
All Huttonian's working life in the Diplomatic Service he lived in the shadow of the Iraqi tryant: the late and unregretted Saddam Hussein Al Takrit.
My first day in the FCO,27 January 1969, on the 'Iraqi desk' I was confronted with the news that a number of 'Israeli spies' had been publicly hanged in Baghdad on the orders of the Iraqi regime then as until 2003, dominated by the butcher of Takrit. They were members of the small Iraqi Jewish community put to death on a series of trumped up charges at a time that the Ba'athist regime was under domestic pressure and a small diversion of popular sentiment was thought necessary.
Thereafter Saddam loomed large in my life-delegations of Iraqi Kurds told me of the regime's brutality against these people-a policy which culminated in the killing of many thousand Kurds in the Anfal campaign of 1989 as a revenge for their alleged support for Iran in the Iraq/Iran war in the 1980s I had a close view of this war-four years in Dubai and three in Kuwait-then there was no doubt about Saddam's possession of WMD and his use of it-against Iran and the Kurds. I missed his invasion of Kuwait by the good fortune of being posted away from there 6 monthsz before I was due to leave.And after the liberation of the Emirate I was soon back in the area, in Jordan, 1993-97 when acounts of Saddams brutalties reached us on a daily basis as hundreds of his citizens fled to safety in neighbouring Jordan often leaving relatives to be rounded up and murdered for the 'disloyalty' of other family members. His two son in laws also fled Iraq in 1995 and confirmed that stories of his crurel practices were no western propaganda-as indeed King Hussein, for one, used to believe and who subseqently told me that nothing he had dismissed as western spin measured up to the realities of life in 'the Republic of Fear'
I rejoiced in the overthrow of this brute. I never believed that the man whose actions caused me to burn the midnight oil in the chilly rooms of Near Eastern Department in Downing Street West would ever be called to book and face a court of his former,citizen I used to long for this as I heard what his troops were doing in Kuwait including the torture and murder of an old friend whose battered body was dumped out side her house 'pour encourager les autres'Our day will come claim the IRA-Saddam's certainly has. Al Hamdillah(Praise be to God), I suppose I should say.
But I don't. I believe, despite his blood stained hands, his almost unchallenged record of callous calculating cruelty, that it was a mistake to execute him. Even he,feared tyrant that he was, will now be a martyr-another rallying point for disaffected Sunnis. Much better to have left him to rot in prison and to have stood further trials for those crimes against humanity which are yet to be held. Many people, especialy the Kurds, will have desperately wanted to have had their day in court to confront their oppressor face to face.But the urge for revenge amongst so many other Iraqis, espsecially Shia was so strong that it must have been hard to resist.
A little voice whispers : 'Revenge is mine. I will repay said the Lord'
Indeed. And then another even smaller whisper:
'Perhaps he has'