
The blogger Michael Totten continues his tour of Kurdistan. Here’s his latest – a visit to Saddam’s former torture chambers. The photograph above is a memorial to six Kurdish children murdered by Saddam’s thugs. I have made a great deal of fuss over torture committed by the Bush administration, but that is because I believe in this country as a beacon for freedom, not because I hate it, or want to see its honorable war fail. It’s because I love this country and believe in the cause of this war that I am so distressed by this horror. And it’s always important to say, although it of course goes often without saying, that there is no moral equivalence between the kind of abuse and torture allowed during military detention by George Bush, as a misguided part of intelligence gathering, and the orchestrated, impervious, brutal torture-state controlled by Saddam. Totten tours a building where over 10,000 people were murdered. In Abu Ghraib under General Miller, we’re talking six. All torture is evil; but there is no equating the sins of the liberator with the crimes of the dictator. Totten observes:
"The hardest thing to see was the cell used to hold children before they were murdered. My translator Alan read some of the messages carved into the wall. ‘I was ten years old. But they changed my age to 18 for execution.’ ‘Dear Mom and Dad. I am going to be executed by the Baath. I will not see you again.’"
We absolutely should hold ourselves to account for our failings; but I am not about to believe that sustaining the evil of Saddam indefinitely was a coherent long-term or even short-term alternative. That’s why I am not yet prepared to throw in the towel. Far from it. Michael begins his account with this:
"The Iraqi Kurds I met who have been to Iran wanted me to know ‚Äì and they want you to know, as well ‚Äì that the distance between the Iranian people and their hideous regime is galactic. I heard the same refrain over and over again: ‘Persians are just like us.’ In other words, they are liberal, secular, pro-Western, and fed up with tyrants. ‘Iranians love America,’ the Kurds told me. ‘They have nothing to do with Ahmadinejad.’"
It’s these people we have to keep faith in, the quiet ones, those not in angry mobs, those who appear whenever they have a chance to have a meaningful vote, those who simply want to live a free life, and follow their faith, without terror or tyranny. Those people live in Iraq and Iran. Their voices are being drowned out by a cacophony of hatred. But they are still there. And, now as much as ever, we need to stand by them.
P.S. Visit Michael’s tip-jar. He has no corporate support, as I now do. And he’s doing important work.