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In the Name of Democracy
American War Crimes in Iraq and Beyond
By Jeremy Brecher, Jill Cutler and Brendan Smith
11/07/05 "ZNet" -- -- Brandon Hughey was a private at Fort Hood when
he discovered that his army unit was about to be sent to Iraq. The
eighteen-year-old from San Angelo, Texas, was desperate-not because
he was afraid to go to war, but because he was convinced that the
Iraq war was immoral. He considered solving the problem by taking
his own life. Instead, he got in a car and drove to Canada. He
explained, "I would fight in an act of defense, if my home and
family were in danger. But Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction.
They barely had an army left, and [UN Secretary-General] Kofi Annan
actually said [attacking Iraq was] a violation of the UN charter.
It's nothing more than an act of aggression. You can't go along with
a criminal activity just because others are doing it." If, as the
Bush administration has maintained, the United States is fighting in
Iraq to protect itself from terrorism, free the people of Iraq from
tyranny, enforce international law, and bring peace and democracy to
the Middle East, then war resisters like Brandon Hughey appear
deluded if not cowardly and criminal.
But what if Private Hughey is right? What if the U.S. operation in
Iraq is "nothing more than an act of aggression?" What if it indeed
constitutes "criminal activity"? What, then, is the culpability of
President George W. Bush, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and
other top U.S. officials? And what is the responsibility of ordinary
Americans? Until recently, the possibility that top U.S. officials
were responsible for war crimes seemed to many Americans nothing but
the invidious allegations of a few knee-jerk anti-Americans. But as
more and more suppressed photos and documents have been disclosed,
and as more and more eyewitness accounts from prisons and
battlefields have appeared in the media, Americans are undergoing an
agonizing reappraisal of the Iraq war and the broader war on terror
of which it is allegedly a part.
the evidence
There are three sets of questions regarding possible U.S. war crimes
in Iraq. The first set of questions concerns the legality of the
U.S. attack on Iraq under international law. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan of the United Nations stated shortly before the attack that
the UN Charter is "very clear on the circumstances under which force
can be used. If the U.S. and others were to go outside the Council
and take military action, it would not be in conformity with the
charter." He subsequently stated that the invasion of Iraq was "not
in conformity with the UN Charter, from our point of view, and from
the Charter part of view, it was illegal." The U.S. admission that
Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction, and the growing evidence
that the United States fabricated the evidence on which that charge
was based, has provided added weight to Annan's view.
The second set of questions involves the possible illegality of the
U.S. occupation of Iraq and its conduct. The seriousness of such
questions was recently underlined by the warning of Louise Arbour,
the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, that those guilty of
violations of international humanitarian rights laws-including
deliberate targeting of civilians, indiscriminate and
disproportionate attacks, killing of injured persons, and the use of
human shields-must be brought to justice, "be they members of the
Multinational Force or insurgents."
The military technology the United States is using in Iraq, such as
cluster bombs and depleted uranium, may be illegal in itself. Under
Article 85 of the Geneva Conventions it is a war crime to launch "an
indiscriminate attack affecting the civilian population in the
knowledge that such an attack will cause an excessive loss of life
or injury to civilians." A UN weapons commission described cluster
bombs as "weapons of indiscriminate effects." A reporter for The
Mirror (United Kingdom) wrote from a hospital in Hillah, "Among the
168 patients I counted, not one was being treated for bullet wounds.
All of them, men, women, children, bore the wounds of bomb shrapnel.
It peppered their bodies. Blackened their skin. Smashed heads. Tore
limbs. A doctor reported that 'All the injuries you see were caused
by cluster bombs'...The majority of the victims were children who
died because they were outside."
The third set of questions has to do with the torture and abuse of
prisoners in U.S. custody. This has been a huge but unresolved issue
since it was first indelibly engraved in the public mind by the
photos from Abu Ghraib prison. Cascading disclosures have revealed
that torture and other forms of prisoner abuse have been endemic not
only in Iraq but in Afghanistan, Guantanamo, and many other U.S.
operations around the world.
facing the implications
The possibility that high U.S. officials may be guilty of war crimes
and may be preparing to commit more raises questions that few
Americans have yet faced. These questions go far beyond technical
legal matters to the broadest concerns of international security,
democratic government, morality, and personal responsibility. Part
IV presents perspectives from a variety of disciplines and political
viewpoints designed to help us address those questions.
The UN Charter, the Geneva Conventions, and the principles of
international law, while all too often violated, have provided some
basis for international peace and security. What is the likely
result of following the advice of the Bush administration's John
Bolton that it is "a big mistake for us to grant any validity to
international law"? Is it likely to be greater freedom and security,
or an unending war of all against all? Are the American people-not
to mention the people of the world-ready to abandon the
international rule of law and return to what Justice Jackson called
"a system of international lawlessness"?
resisters
Some of the most difficult issues are faced by those in the military
and the government who may be directly complicit in war crimes. Some
have said no to participation in the war in Iraq and the cover-up of
related criminal activity.
Specialist Jeremy Hinzman of Rapid City, South Dakota, joined the
Eighty-second Airborne as a paratrooper in 2001. He wanted a career
in the military and did a stint in Afghanistan. Then he was ordered
to Iraq. "I was told in basic training that, if I'm given an illegal
or immoral order, it is my duty to disobey it. And I feel that
invading and occupying Iraq is an illegal and immoral thing to do."
In September 2004, Stephen Funk, a marine reservist of Filipino and
Native American origin was tried for refusing to fight in Iraq. "In
the face of this unjust war based on deception by our leaders, I
could not remain silent. In my mind that would have been true
cowardice...I spoke out so that others in the military would realize
that they also have a choice and a duty to resist immoral and
illegitimate orders."
In December 2004, the Hispanic sailor Pablo Paredes reported to his
ship in San Diego Harbor wearing a T-shirt reading, "Like a cabinet
member, I resign." Refusing to help take troops to Iraq, the Bronx
native said, "I don't want to be a part of a ship that's taking
three thousand marines over there, knowing a hundred or more of them
won't come back...I'd rather do military prison time than six months
of dirty work for a war that I and many others do not support. War
should be an absolute last resort...Never in a million years did I
imagine we would go to war with somebody who had done nothing to
us."
halting war crimes
Under the principles established by the Nuremberg and Tokyo war
crimes tribunals, those in a position to give orders are responsible
for war crimes and crimes against humanity conducted under their
authority. But responsibility does not end there. Anyone with
knowledge of illegal activity and an opportunity to do something
about it is a potential criminal under international law unless the
person takes affirmative measures to prevent the commission of the
crimes.
Crimes are ordinarily dealt with by the institutions of law
enforcement. But those institutions are largely in the hands of
people who may be complicit in the very crimes that need to be
investigated. Can they be held accountable? Or can war criminals
forever act with impunity?
The problem of a government that is ostensibly democratically
elected but that defies actual accountability is one that citizens
in many countries have faced at one time or another. We can take
inspiration from the way citizens from Serbia to the Philippines and
from Chile to Ukraine have utilized "people power" to block illegal
action and force accountability on their leaders. We can similarly
take inspiration from resistance to illegitimate authority in our
own country from the American Revolution to the Watergate
investigations that ultimately brought the Nixon administration to
account for its criminal abuse of power.
in the name of democracy
If war crimes are being committed, they are being committed in the
name of democracy. Their ostensible purpose is to extend democracy
throughout the world. They are committed by a country that proudly
proclaims itself the world's greatest democracy.
Such acts in Iraq and elsewhere represent, on the contrary, the
subversion of democracy. They reflect the imposition by violence and
brutality of a rule that is not freely chosen. Such acts also
represent a subversion of democracy at home. They represent a
presidency that has denied all accountability to Congress, courts,
or international institutions. As Elizabeth Holtzman puts it: "The
claim that the President...is above the law strikes at the very
heart of our democracy. It was the centerpiece of President Richard
Nixon's defense in Watergate-a defense that was rejected by the
courts and lay at the foundation of the articles of impeachment
voted against him by the House Judiciary Committee." It denies the
constitutional constraints that have made the United States a
government under law. It subverts democracy in the name of
democracy.
War crimes represent the defiance not only of international but also
of U.S. law. The effort to halt them is at once a movement for peace
and a struggle for democracy.
[This is an edited excerpt of the
Introduction to IN THE NAME OF DEMOCRACY: AMERICAN WAR
CRIMES IN IRAQ AND BEYOND edited by Jeremy Brecher, Jill
Cutler, and Brendan Smith. Metropolitan Books.
www.americanempireproject.com]
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