Saddam hanging will not end bloodshed, warns Bush
US President George Bush called Saddam Hussein's execution a milestone on Iraq's road to democracy, but warned it would not halt the bloodshed and political discord splitting the country.
Bush, who has spent weeks crafting a new US policy in Iraq, warned of more challenges ahead for American troops.
"Many difficult choices and further sacrifices lie ahead," he said in a statement released Friday night from his Texas ranch. "Yet the safety and security of the American people require that we not relent in ensuring that Iraq's young democracy continues to progress."
The president's statement had a sober, measured tone that contrasted with his offhand remark after US troops found the deposed Iraqi dictator in an underground hide-out in 2003.
"Good riddance," Bush said then. "The world is better off without you, Mr Saddam Hussein."
Bush said Hussein received a fair trial - "the kind of justice he denied the victims of his brutal regime".
He said the trial, which ended with Saddam being sentenced to death, was a testament to the Iraqi people's resolve to move beyond decades of oppression and create a society governed by the rule of law.
"Fair trials were unimaginable under Saddam Hussein's tyrannical rule," Bush said.
Saddam's hanging comes at the end of a difficult year for Iraqis and for US troops, he said. The US death toll is nearing 3,000, and December is going down as one of the deadliest for American troops since the US-led invasion in March 2003.
"Bringing Saddam Hussein to justice will not end the violence in Iraq, but it is an important milestone on Iraq's course to becoming a democracy that can govern, sustain, and defend itself, and be an ally in the war on terror," he said.
Bush was asleep when Saddam was executed for the killings of 148 Shiite Muslims from an Iraqi town where would-be assassins tried to kill him in 1982. On Monday, Iraq's highest court rejected Saddam's appeal of the sentence and ordered him put to death.
At 6.15pm Friday (12.15am Irish time), national security adviser Stephen Hadley briefed Bush on the procedures for the execution, and told him it would take place in the next few hours. Hadley had been in touch with the US ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, who had been in contact with Iraqi prime minister Nouri Maliki.
"The president concluded his day knowing that the final phase of bringing Saddam Hussein to justice was under way," deputy White House press secretary Scott Stanzel said.
American sentiment about the war has changed dramatically since the spring of 2003 when jubilant crowds toppled a 40ft statue of the dictator and a dishevelled Saddam, in US custody months later, was seen on television being examined by a doctor who probed his mouth with a tongue depressor.
Then, Saddam's capture boosted Bush's political stature, following months of rising casualties and the manhunt for the former Iraqi dictator, which had damaged US prestige and claims of progress in Iraq.
Now, unrelenting violence and a US death toll nearing 3,000 has sent Bush's approval ratings on the war plummeting to their lowest levels. Some 71% disapprove of his management of the war; almost two-thirds doubt that a stable, democratic government will ever be established in Iraq, according to early December AP-Ipsos poll.
As Saddam's execution drew near, his lawyers lost an appeal in US court to try to stave it off.
In a 21-page request filed Friday, Saddam's attorneys argued that because he also faced a civil lawsuit in Washington, he had rights as a civil defendant that would be violated if he was executed.
But US District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, who heard arguments from attorneys by phone, rejected the challenge Friday night, saying US courts do not have jurisdiction to interfere in another country's judicial process.
In Iraq, US forces were ready for any escalation of violence, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said hours before Saddam was hanged.
Closer to home, the FBI and the Homeland Security Department warned Americans to be vigilant about the possibility of a terror attack. The advisory sent to local law enforcement did not cite a specific threat.
Members of Congress welcomed the news of Saddam's death.
"Iraq has closed one of the darkest chapters in its history and rid the world of a tyrant," said Democratic Senator Joseph Biden, incoming chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
The Republican leader-elect of the Senate, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, said Saddam finally had met justice.
"The free people of Iraq must now go forward together to build a unified nation, and leave behind sectarian divisions."
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