President George Bush escapes being charged, as the United
States is not a signatory to the ICC.
The Greeks claim that the U.S.-U.K. invasion of Iraq violates
the United Nations Charter, the Geneva Convention, the Hague Convention and
the International Criminal Court's statute.
Paxinos, who was elected by a conservative majority, says he is
confident that the evidence compiled by the bar association is strong.
Until recently, charges against a head of state could be laughed
away. Unfortunately for Tony Blair, he created the precedent for extraditing
heads of state. The Blair government arrested Chile's Augusto Pinochet and
ruled that Pinochet could be extradited to Spain on specious charges brought
by a Spanish prosecutor.
Arrested in October 1998 while in London for back surgery, the
82-year-old Pinochet was held in England under house arrest while the
majesty of British law decided his fate. The stress on Pinochet of the
drawn-out proceedings resulted in two strokes.
His health destroyed, an
84-year-old Pinochet was released by Blair's Home Secretary, Jack Straw, in
March 2000 and was allowed to return to Chile.
Pinochet was a victim of Soviet propaganda. He was head of the
Chilean army in 1973 when it was forced by popular demand and appeal from
the elected legislature to overthrow Salvador Allende, who was turning Chile
into a Soviet client state.
Pinochet had to combat Marxist terrorists during the 1970s and
1980s, using the equivalent of the U.S. PATRIOT Act and military detention a
la the U.S. camp at Guantanamo Bay. With far fewer resources, Pinochet
successfully put down a far greater terrorist threat than the one currently
faced by the United States.
During these years, Pinochet revived Chile's broken economy and
restored the country's legal and political systems. He succeeded, because he
turned the government over to civilian ministers with graduate educations
from the University of Chicago and Harvard.
He authorized a group of leading
citizens to create a new constitution that would restore democracy and
representative government and used referendum to legitimize the new
political system.
Pinochet kept to the time schedule he had established and
stepped down as president of Chile in 1990, just as he said he would.
Pinochet was demonized by the international political left, and
his health and retirement were destroyed as a consequence.
Pinochet did not fight terrorism by invading foreign countries.
The total number of terrorists killed by the Chilean military is a fraction
of the recent Iraqi civilian casualties at the hands of U.S. and U.K.
forces. Pinochet never dropped bombs on civilians or sent missiles into
residential neighborhoods.
At the time Pinochet was arrested by Blair's government as a sop
to the political left, the International Criminal Court did not exist.
Cornell University Professor Jeremy Rabkin demonstrated that there was no
international law giving Spain jurisdiction over Chile or giving Spanish
magistrate Baltasar Garzon jurisdiction over Pinochet.
Garzon hoped to
create such a law by asserting it, and Blair foolishly went along.
In 1998, it did not occur to Blair that five years later he
would be roped into invading Iraq on trumped-up charges that it was a hotbed
of al-Qaeda terrorists equipped with weapons of mass destruction.
Now Blair finds himself with a nasty bit of aggression on his
record and as many as 10,000 civilian casualties. That puts him in league
with Slobodan Milosovic, who at least was fighting terrorist separatists
within his own borders.
It is fairly certain that the Blair government is not going to
hand over Blair to the Greeks or to the ICC. If it did, Bush would send in
the Special Forces to rescue him. But if the ICC issues a warrant, Blair
won't be able to go to Greece or to any country that might hand him over to
the ICC.
Indeed, once Blair achieves his goal of dissolving Great Britain
into the European Union, there will be no sovereign British government to
protect him. He could be picked up at will by EU police and handed over to
the ICC.
With the United States becoming a multicultural Tower of Babel,
who is to know that Bush, too, in his old age won't be handed over by a
Hispanic president who has no concern for vanquished Anglo-American
hegemony or agreements between vanished cultures and nations.
Copyright 2003 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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