By John Tabin on 12.15.03 @ 12:06AM
So, History happened. Reactions were mixed.
So, History happened. Reactions were mixed.
The Arab world's values are driven largely by pride and shame
(it's a "face" culture, as the jargon goes), so Saddam's
humiliation naturally caused quite a stir: this disheveled, unkempt
man looked less like a madman who strikes fear into the hearts of
millions and more like a madman who falls asleep on the street
talking to himself, stinking of dirt-cheap liquor. He had two
AK-47s and a pistol, but went without so much as firing a shot
before being dragged out of his "spider hole" (and oughtn't that
join "shock and awe" in the buzzword file?). "He disappointed a lot
of us, he's a coward," noted Yemeni teacher Mohammed Abdel Qader
Mohammadi to the AP. "They say he's been captured, do you believe
that?" went the refrain at an outdoor market in Cairo, and many
couldn't. Those less invested in Saddam as an Arab icon took the
news better. "Saddam should not be spared, he should get the death
penalty, which is the least he deserves," said 22-year-old Saudi
student Rasheed al-Osaimi.
It might be said that American newscasters live in a face
culture of their own, albeit with a different connotation; it is
the non-facial portions of their heads that seem the most
undernourished. Case in point is CNN's Aaron Brown, who, noting
Saddam's meager end, seemed to reduce Saddam's long reign of terror
to a class-warfare, calling the dictator "a man who had lived in
enormous luxury and wealth." That was slightly more coherent than
Dan Rather's early-morning warning that "We're in the school of 'you
trust your mother but you cut your cards.'" (Those Ratherism are
said to be Texan. Have any of our Texan readers actually heard that
expression?)
Of course, for sheer malevolence, few American journalists can
possibly compete with their colleagues in the left-wing press
across the pond. Reuters, the British news service that won't use
the word "terrorist" outside of quotes, chose for its lede, "U.S. troops captured Saddam
Hussein near his home town of Tikrit in a major coup for
Washington's beleaguered occupation force in Iraq." ("I'm actually
HERE and I don't consider ANY of us 'beleaguered,'" responded Major Sean Bannion in Baghdad.)
John Simpson of the BBC called the capture "a remarkable end to an
extraordinary life." Perhaps to British ears that doesn't sound so
bizarrely fawning, but there's no mistaking the anti-Americanism of
his bewildered colleague Guto Harri: "We all imagined that if the
Americans got a tip off they would just bomb somewhere off the face
of the earth." Imagine how shaken Harri must be to learn that
Saddam, not Bush, is the genocidal coward!
Meanwhile, in Iraq, the bloggers provide the best copy once
again, having recently been filling out the front-of-the-book of
conservative magazines (the current National Review's
"This Week" quotes The Mesopotamian, and the current Weekly
Standard gives over its "Scrapbook" section to photos of an
under-reported pro-democracy rally by Zeyad of Healing Iraq.)
Perhaps the purest expression of joy comes from the blogger
at Iraq at a Glance, to whom I'll give the last words (ellipses in
original):
"I don't know what to say.. I am confused.. no … I am
very happy.. I am very happy.. .. I am very happy.. .. I am very
happy.. .. I am very happy.. .. I am very happy.. .. I am very
happy.. This is the end of tyranny.. congratulations .. a great
day.. for Iraqi and all the good people.. share us our great day..
I can't express my feelings.. thanks to the coalition forces and
all the honest people who helped in that great
operation….thank you thank you thousand times.."
topics:
Iraq