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-Caveat Lector-

J'accuse: War Crimes & Iraq
===========================

By Conn Hallinan

Submitted to Portside


    "...The Parties to the conflict shall at all times
    distinguish between the civilian population and
    combatants and between civilian objects and
    military objectives and accordingly shall direct
    their operations only against military objectives"
    Article 48, 1977 addition to the Geneva
    Conventions, Part IV

The above "Basic Rule" is at the heart of the Geneva
Conventions, the international treaty that tries to be
the thin line that separates civilization from
savagery. It is not something the Bush Administration
has paid much attention to as it goes about the
"pacification" of Iraqi cities where local insurgents
are resisting the American occupation.

Consider the following.

On Oct. 8, U.S. fighter bombers carried out what the
Pentagon called a "precision strike" against "terrorist
leaders" in Falluja, a sprawling city of 300,000 west
of Baghdad. For the past two months Falluja has been
the target of a bombing campaign. According to the New
York Times, the attack wounded 17 people, nine of whom
were women and children. The victims were apparently
from a wedding party that had just dispersed.

The Times went on to quote a "senior Pentagon official"
who said, "We know what the strike was supposed to hit
and we hit it. If a wedding party was going on, well,
it was in concert with a meeting of a top Zarqawi
lieutenant." Zarqawi is a Jordanian who has claimed
credit for numerous roadside bombings and
assassinations in Iraq.

But according to Article 50 of the Conventions, "The
presence within the civilian population of individuals
who do not come within the definition of civilians does
not deprive the population of its civilian character."

In short, the attack violated the Conventions, and the
"Pentagon official"---most likely Assistant Secretary
of Defense, Paul Wolfowitz--- should be arrested and
tried for violating international law. Since the attack
constituted a "grave breach" of the Conventions, the
official could also be charged under the 1996 U.S. War
Crimes Act.

In the same article, the Times also quoted a "senior
Bush Administration official" as saying that the
bombing was helpful for exploiting "fault lines" in
Falluja, and that it would push the "citizenry" of
Falluja to deny sanctuary and assistance to the
insurgents, "adding "that's a good thing."

The "official" might, indeed, think it was "a good
thing," but it also violated Article 51, which states:
"The civilian population as such, as well as individual
civilians, shall not be the object of attack."

A "Pentagon official" also told the Times: "If there
are civilians dying in connection with these attacks,
and with the destruction, the locals at some point have
to make a decision. Do they want to harbor the
insurgents and suffer the consequences that come with
that?"

In other words, terrify the civilian population into
cooperating, a strategy that Article 51 explicitly
forbids: "Acts or threats of violence, the primary
purpose of which is to spread terror among the civilian
population, are prohibited."

The violations of the Convention are not limited to the
bombing campaigns. The Washington Post recently
revealed that the Bush Administration allowed the CIA
to transfer Iraqi combatants out of the country (a
violation of Article 49) and to hide them from the Red
Cross (a violation of Article 63).

According to an FBI report, FBI agents visiting Abu
Ghraib Prison, witnessed hooded and chained Iraqi
prisoners being slapped by U.S. soldiers, who told the
agents it was a sleep depravation technique. The agents
also saw prisoners held naked in tiny isolation cells.
The Defense Department readily admits it uses loud
music, painful restraints, and a semi-drowning
technique called "water boarding," to "soften up"
prisoners for interrogation.

All of the above behavior breaks numerous parts of the
Convention. Article 85, for instance, says that,
"Sleeping quarters shall be sufficiently spacious and
well ventilated." Article 90 instructs that, "The
clothing supplied by the Detaining Power to internees
and the outward marking placed on their clothing shall
not be ignominious or expose them to ridicule." Article
117 says, "Imprisonment in premises without daylight,
and in general, all forms of cruelty without exception
are prohibited"

Besides transgressions of Geneva, the agents also
witnessed violations of several other international
treaties the U.S. is a signatory to.

Article 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
states: "No one shall be subjected to torture or to
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment."

The UN Convention Against Torture prohibits, "any act
by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or
mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such
purposes as obtaining from him or a third person
information or a confession," adding "no exceptional
circumstances whatsoever may be invoked as a
justification for torture."

On Oct. 27, Theo van Boven, UN director of reports on
torture, expressed "serious concern" over "allegations
of attempts to circumvent the absolute nature of the
prohibition of torture and other forms of ill treatment
in the name of countering terrorism, particularly in
relationship to interrogation and conditions of
detention of prisoners." While he did not charge the
U.S. by name, there is no argument about to whom he was
referring to.

The Bush Administration likes to invoke the so-called
changed nature of the post-9/11 world as the attacks
created new conditions that the Conventions no longer
apply to, somehow trumping U.S. adherence to
international law. White House counsel Alberto Gonzales
dismisses the Geneva Conventions as "quaint," and the
U.S. Justice Department wrote up memos giving the CIA
the right to violate both international laws and the
U.S. War Crimes Act.

But systematic violations of the Geneva Conventions by
the U.S. hardly started with 9/11. Indeed, they are
characteristic of virtually every conflict the U.S. has
been involved in since the end of World War II. The
following are just a few examples:

�     According to a 1999 Pulitzer Prize winning series
by Associated Press, it was the official policy of the
U.S. military to fire on South Korean civilians during
the Korean War. U.S. bombing also obliterated virtually
every civilian target in North Korea.

�     In Vietnam, civilians living in "free fire
zones"---most of the country---were considered valid
targets, and civilians were overwhelmingly the victims
of bombing during the Indochina war. Then National
Security Advisor Henry Kissinger instructed the U.S.
Air Force to bomb "anything that moved" in Cambodia. >
>From 1967 to 1970, the "Phoenix Program" assassinated
some 60,000 to 70,000 civilians in South Vietnam. A
U.S. Congressional study found that the Program
"appears to have violated the 1948 Geneva Conventions
for the protection of civilians."

�     Bombing attacks in the first Gulf War and the
Kosovo War, systematically targeted power plants and
grids, railway stations, refineries, communication
networks, sewerage treatment facilities, and water
purification plants, in spite of Article 54 of the
Geneva Conventions which prohibits attacking any
objectives "indispensable to the survival of the
civilian population."

One could even make a case that the use of hundreds of
tons of Depleted Uranium Ammunition (DUA) in Kosovo and
the two Gulf wars constitutes a war crime. The
Conventions clearly require the victorious party to
assume responsibility for the conquered civilian
population and to clean up the chaos of war. DUA has
poisoned water supplies in Iraq, parts of Kuwait, and
Yugoslavia, and birth defectsand cancer incidences are
far higher in areas where DUA was used. The U.S.,
however, claims that DUA poses no potential health
risks,therefore it doesn't have to remove the low-
level radioactive debris.

It is not only a record Americans should be ashamed of,
it is one that should make us afraid. The Geneva
Conventions and other international laws were not drawn
up by bleeding heart liberals, nor were they designed
to protect weaker nations. They were a response to the
enormous numbers of civilian casualties inflicted by
World War II, and as a practical way to shield
everyone's armed forces from humiliation, torture and
death at the hands of an adversary.

If we are cavalier or dismissive about international
law, it will encourage others to be so as well. The
most likely victims of that policy will be we
civilians, as well as our own uniformed forces. If we
torture prisoners and hide them from the eyes of
organizations like the Red Cross, why shouldn't others
do the same to our soldiers and civilians?

In a recent commentary in the Financial Times, Jakob
Kellenberger, president of the International Committee
of the Red Cross, wrote: "The struggle against
terrorism cannot be legitimate if it undermines basic
values shared by humanity. The right to life and
protection against murder, torture and degrading
treatment must be at the heart of the actions of those
engaged in this struggle. The struggle will lose
credibility if it is used to justify acts otherwise
considered unacceptable, such as the killing of people
not participating in hostilities."

Apart from the inhumanity our actions engender, as an
entirely practical matter, to do anything less than
Kellenberger suggests is to place our own people in
harm's way.

_______________________________________________________

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www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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