Looking back on Saddam Hussein
Looking back on Saddam Hussein
What was it like to study the Arab world under the shadow of Saddam? The capture of the former dictator of Iraq leads a respected scholar-activist to tell some of his personal encounters, in the west and across the Middle East and Persia, with the tentacles of the republic of fear. The images of Saddam Hussein in custody brought back to me a mixture of memories. Throughout my life as a scholar, an activist and someone with close friends from across the Middle East, the issue of Iraq has been in the forefront of discussions, meetings and campaigns. Saddam’s influence has shaped, distorted, and poisoned thinking and passions across forty years, in a way that defies straightforward narrative. The 1958 revolution in Iraq unleashed a powerful, and often uncontrollable, set of political conflicts. These continued even after the first Ba’ath party (and anti-communist) coup of 1963, Around that time the Iraqi Communist Party, one of the largest in the Arab world split into two, a more cautious pro-Soviet and a more critical independent party: the latter group had representatives in the United Kingdom who worked with the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation, before despatching key members to start a guerrilla war in the southern marshes of Iraq, which ended in defeat in 1969. At that time, many Iraqi leftists regarded Saddam Hussein as obviously a "British agent" ("amil britani") and a "fascist". I and those who thought like me, could not persuade our Iraqi comrades that this was perhaps not the case. We did not like Saddam, and unlike some on the British left never took his "dinar" or his theatrical forms of solidarity; but we felt that, given his control of a state with vast oil revenues, he was, in the language of the time, "relatively autonomous" of Washington. Right from the start, the projection of Saddam as a stooge or agent disempowered those critics from dealing with their own realities. For those in thrall to it, "agent" talk was confirmed when the civil war broke out in Jordan in 1970 between King Hussein and the Palestinians. Iraq remained neutral, even though it had 12,000 troops in Jordan, posted there in the aftermath of the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. The Palestinians later claimed that Saddam had encouraged them to act against the King. The complicity of Saddam with western imperialism was equally evident when, in 1975, he signed an agreement with the Shah of Iran ending the two countries’ six-year border war and closing down the exile operations and radios of their respective clients. Then, when he invaded Iran in 1980 and was supported by western allies like Saudi Arabia and Jordan, as well as by financial and intelligence backing from the United States, everything was beyond doubt. For some, Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990 was the final proof of his subservience to the CIA, since it provided the US with the cast-iron excuse to deploy its forces in the region and impose even stricter control on the local satraps, emirs, and sultans. The travails of expertise A striking quality of the post-1958 period was the vitality and, in the Arab world, the highly influential role of the Iraqi left intelligentsia and of the artistic, theatrical, literary, musical, and architectural people associated with it. Indeed, even in a predominantly Anglophonic political and academic context in the west, it was Iraqis themselves, or other Arabs influenced by them, or people involved in the politics of the country, who wrote much of the literature of modern Iraq. Majid Khadduri, Abbas Kelidar, Sami Zubaida, Faleh Abd al-Jabar, Isam al-Khafaji, are just some of the best known. The most monumental social science book on any Arab country is that of the Lebanese academic, the late Hanna Batatu: "The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq" (Princeton, 1978; reprinted in 2004 by al-Saqi books). As lecturer at the American University of Beirut, Batatu influenced a generation of Arab political scientists and intellectuals. A vivid memory from an Exeter University conference in 1981 is of Hanna Batatu, faced by a squad of menacing Ba’athist "academics" from Iraq, refusing to be silenced by their complaints and intimidating gestures, as he detailed the vicious nature of the Ba’athist state. As one Iraqi in the front row slowly and demonstratively drew his finger across his throat, Batatu declared: "I am a free man". This was a principle Batatu held to throughout his productive and formative intellectual life. Hanna Batatu’s dignity is not the only memorable thing about that conference. Equally so is the participation of some United Kingdom citizens who had (perhaps) taken money from Iraq for public relations and translation work, and of others who were, to judge by their fulsome praise of Iraq’s leaders, the core members of what one can only call the English branch of the Ba’ath party. They were mainly Conservatives, old "friends of the Arabs", but in more recent times Saddam may have sought to recruit, and reimburse, at the opposite, left-wing end of the political spectrum. In its way that conference was a microcosm of the political and intellectual currents of the time flowing around the issue of Iraq. Its organisers even wanted to open the proceedings by having its participants send a collective telegram supporting Saddam in his recently-launched war with Iran – something the rest of us only just managed to prevent. It had also been preceded by a revealing incident involving the (dis-)invitation of a prominent American expert on Iraq, Joe Stork, then co-editor (with Jim Paul) of the influential journal Middle East Research & Information Project (MERIP), and now director of the Middle East and North Africa division of Human Rights Watch. After Joe had, as instructed, sent his conference paper to Exeter in advance, the professor in charge cancelled his airline ticket. This called for some gentle but persuasive solidarity. As it happened, King Khaled of Saudi Arabia was in London at the time, and in keeping with the replication of tribal mores in the jet-set age associated with his regime, had invited all his English-based clients and friends to stay with him for a week at the luxurious Claridge Hotel. For the first time in my life, I entered Claridges to meet the responsible Exeter professor – a curious, swashbuckling character – for breakfast. He began with predictable indignation against Joe, but I was able, as the meal wore on, to warn him that the scurrilous magazine "Private Eye" had already been alerted to a possible scandal and were calling me about it. Of course, I had not told them anything but these things had a way of getting out..."You understand the English, and their ways". Joe was duly reinvited. Journey to Baghdad The crimes of Saddam Hussein against his people, becoming well-known even in 1981, were chillingly documented in Kanan Makiya’s books "Republic of Fear" (1989) and "Cruelty and Silence" (1993). Both were widely denounced by Arab intellectuals, and some expatriate ones, for feeding western prejudice against the Arabs. In the 1970s I had already made the acquaintance of an Iraqi diplomat, then quite active in London, who (it emerged) was given this job in recompense for his wife having been kidnapped and raped by some of Saddam’s guards. But it was a visit to Iraq in 1980 to give some lectures at Baghdad University that offers me the opportunity to add a modest charge to whatever bill of indictment may now be presented to the captured dictator. Saddam was at that time trying to portray Iraq as the citadel of the Arab world ("qala’at al-thawra al-‘arabiya"). A big summit in Baghdad to that end coincided with the anniversary of the founding of the Ba’ath party, an event surrounded by elaborate ritual blended from European fascist and Soviet communist festivals. During an interview with an unctuous party "theoretician", a group of schoolchildren arrived with much fanfare and photographers to garland him (and by extension his visitors) with bouquets of flowers. This man had defected to Iraq from the rival Ba’ath regime in Syria. Saddam had won a major coup in intra-Ba’ath rivalry by inducing one of the two historic founders of the party, Michel Aflaq, to live in Baghdad: Aflaq, a Syrian Christian, had argued – as many Arab nationalists still do – that the Arabs have a special link to God through Islam. Michel Aflaq was never seen in public, but as he lay dying in 1989 a rumour was diffused to suggest that, as the culmination of his life as a Ba’ath leader, he had converted to Islam. Even the slogan of the party he co-founded, "One Ba’ath Party with One Eternal Message" (..."risala khalida") exploits the dual – political and religious – resonances of the word "message" (the Prophet Mohammad is the "rasul"). The Syrian Ba’athis brought another element to Iraq, one that reinforced an existing prejudice which was inculcated through the nationalist school textbooks of the monarchical period: hostility to Persians. These neighbours ("Zionists of the East") were presented as the greatest, long-term enemies of the Arabs – far more than their more recent, and less populous, counterparts in the west. The mass expulsion of people with Persian antecedents or names from Iraq in the 1980s, no less than the making of an epic film celebrating the Arab victory over the Persians at Qadissiya in 637 CE, rested on this deep ideological morass: this is exemplified in the title of a book written by one of Saddam’s uncles, Khairallah Tulfah, and made compulsory reading in schools, "Three Things Which God Should Never Have Created: Persians, Jews and Flies" – note the order. The Ba’ath party had not just borrowed rituals from Europe’s totalitarian regimes; it used their techniques of violence, fear, and the corruption of language. In April 1980, a filmed party meeting showed Saddam singling out inner-party rivals who were dragged from the room, then executed after show trials. He had learnt the most basic lesson of all dictatorships: that is one thing to kill the guilty, but what really works is to kill the innocent. Saddam and his cronies attended these executions; members of the Ba’ath party, including students in Britain, were summoned to the London embassy to view a video of the occasion. I have visited some unsavoury regimes – from Ayatollah Khomeini’s Iran (where I saw 100,000 people march by shouting "Death to Liberalism" and realised that, among others, they meant me) to Ethiopia’s Red Terror; but never have I sensed such fear as in Iraq. One could cut it with a knife. A In that spring of 1980, the rising tension with Iran led to On the day we were supposed to meet Tariq Aziz, the perennial frontman for Saddam’s rhetoric put the eclecticism of any other modern In September 1980, Saddam launched the Iran-Iraq war by Leaving Baghdad at the end of that 1980 visit presented a This, too, must be counted among Saddam’s crimes. Between the Mafia and Joseph Stalin What was, is, Saddam Hussein like? It is worth recalling, It was said without irony, and may be corroborated by the A Palestinian economist, the late Yusuf Sayigh, was attending a conference on A leading Iraqi economist, Mohammad Salman Hassan, once A few years on, he discovered it had been Saddam. When the I have also recently heard that my friend, resorting to the A republic of jokes It is a curious fact that the last surviving original I once met him walking in north London’s Highgate woods Indeed, for all the horrors and conflicts of the Middle One Iraqi story Khalid told me involved a conversation Khalid has himself just returned from Baghdad with a new One last thought from an Iraqi recently returned from Copyright 2004 openDemocracy |
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