What appears to be beyond the grasp of many in the West is the
scale and scope of a modern totalitarianism regime such as Saddam's.
It is truly - to use Iraqi dissident Kanan Makiya's term - a "Republic
of Fear". It is a regime which conducts its ruthless totalitarian
control through an estimated 280,00 secret police, and treats its
populace with complete contempt, as the recent humiliation dealt
to the Iraqi people by Saddam's 'referendum' demonstrated yet again.
There is incontrovertible evidence to suggest that Saddam has acted in
continuous violation of the disarmament conditions of the post Kuwait
cease-fire. As recently as 2000 Saddam engaged with the criminal Milosevic
regime in joint activities to produce weapons of mass destruction.
That Saddam's December declaration to the United Nations is
conspicuously flawed should come as a surprise to no one. He is an old lag
with form. He has violated every agreement to which he has subscribed -
how can anyone credibly suggest that he will change now?
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Can the view of ordinary Iraqis be ascertained on these issues? One can
be excused for wishing to look past the recent grotesque 'referendum' that
delivered Saddam a 99.9 per cent vote of approval. Interestingly, the
Brussels-based International Crisis Group (headed by former Australian
Foreign Minister Gareth Evans) conducted an informal survey of Iraqi
opinion in September and October 2002 in major Iraqi cities. It observed
that a significant number of the Iraqis interviewed, "with surprising
candour, expressed their view that, if such a change required an
American-led attack, they would support it."
Something more substantial than the vacuous 'no blood for oil' chant
will be required to dissuade those of us on the left who dissent from the
empty 'no war on Iraq' rhetoric. Those who have followed closely the
grotesque history of the Saddam regime recognise the dire need, on human
rights grounds alone, for regime change in Iraq. So too, it seems more
will be necessary to dissuade the bulk of ordinary Iraqis - the real
victims of Saddam's blood for oil campaign - against the desirability of
regime change.
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