Bush Says Hussein 'Was Given Justice'

Team Infidel

Forum Spin Doctor
Los Angeles Times
January 5, 2007
By James Gerstenzang, Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON — President Bush said Thursday that he would have preferred that the execution of Saddam Hussein had been conducted in a more "dignified" manner, but said the deposed dictator met the fate he deserved.
"He was given justice. The thousands of people he killed were not," the president said during a session with reporters after he met with Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany.
His remarks on the hanging were the first he had made in public since Hussein was executed Saturday in Baghdad amid taunting shouts in which an observer called out the name of a militant Shiite Muslim cleric.
Soon after the execution, a video of Hussein's death, recorded on a camera phone, was posted on a number of websites.
The scene and the video have caused discomfort among Bush aides. They have tried to focus attention on the brutality of Hussein's regime, rather than on the circumstances surrounding his execution.
Public outcry about the hanging has been pronounced in Europe. Merkel, at Bush's side in the entry area of the White House State Floor, did not address the issue.
Bush said he had spoken about it earlier in the day with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki, during a nearly two-hour videoconference.
Maliki told him that Iraq was investigating the execution, the president said. U.S. officials reportedly tried to persuade Iraqi officials to delay the hanging, rather than proceed with it on the first day of Sunni Muslims' observance of Eid al-Adha, the holiday marking the end of the annual pilgrimage to Mecca.
Bush said Hussein's hanging closed "a horrific chapter" in Iraq's history, adding, "We expect there to be a full investigation of what took place" in the death chamber.
The president also gave Maliki a renewed vote of confidence at a time when officials have begun to question whether he is, as Bush has said, the right person for the job.
 
If Bush's idea of justice was a kangaroo court followed by a lynch mob hanging then yes, it was justice. To most of us, it looked like a drumhead trial. It wasn't justice it was revenge.

Maybe that sort of 'Justice' passes in Texas, but it doesn't in the rest of the world.
 
Last edited:
If Bush's idea of justice was a kangaroo court followed by a lynch mob hanging then yes, it was justice. To most of us, it looked like a drumhead trial. It wasn't justice it was revenge.

Maybe that sort of 'Justice' passes in Texas, but it doesn't in the rest of the world.

A speedy trial usually is the result of overwhelming evidence. As for the timing, that's Iraq's laws, not ours to judge. As for Texas, don't come to Texas and kill folks and you'll have no problems.
 
A speedy trial usually is the result of overwhelming evidence. As for the timing, that's Iraq's laws, not ours to judge. As for Texas, don't come to Texas and kill folks and you'll have no problems.

To be honest I am of the opinion that he should never have survived the hole he was captured in but the trial became a bit of a joke when before the guy is found guilty they are sacking a judge who wont sign an execution order.

As to whether he was guilty or not I think its hard to believe that the guy didn't deserve to die for his crimes but when the verdict is a foregone conclusion you have to wonder what the point to a trial was.
 
Back
Top