Iraq and the Laws of War
US as Belligerent Occupant
By FRANCIS A. BOYLE
12/22/05 "Counterpunch" -- -- On 19 March 2003 President
Bush Jr. commenced his criminal war against Iraq by ordering a
so-called decapitation strike against the President of Iraq in
violation of a 48-hour ultimatum he had given publicly to the Iraqi
President and his sons to leave the country. This duplicitous
behavior violated the customary international laws of war set forth
in the 1907 Hague Convention on the Opening of Hostilities to which
the United States is still a contracting party, as evidenced by
paragraphs 20, 21, 22, and 23 of U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10
(1956). Furthermore, President Bush Jr.'s attempt to assassinate the
President of Iraq was an international crime in its own right. Of
course the Bush Jr. administration's war of aggression against Iraq
constituted a Crime against Peace as defined by the Nuremberg
Charter (1945), the Nuremberg Judgment (1946), and the Nuremberg
Principles (1950) as well as by paragraph 498 of U.S. Army Field
Manual 27-10 (1956).
Next came the Pentagon's military strategy of inflicting "shock
and awe" upon the city of Baghdad. To the contrary, article 6(b) of
the 1945 Nuremberg Charter defined the term "War crimes" to include:
". . . wanton destruction of cities, towns or villages, or
devastation not justified by military necessity. . ." The Bush Jr.
administration's infliction of "shock and awe" upon Baghdad and its
inhabitants constituted the wanton destruction of that city, and it
was certainly not justified by "military necessity," which is always
defined by and includes the laws of war. Such terror bombings of
cities have been criminal behavior under international law since
before the Second World War: Nagasaki, Hiroshima, Tokyo, Dresden,
London, Guernica-Fallujah.
On 1 May 2003 President Bush Jr. theatrically landed on a U.S.
aircraft carrier off the coast of San Diego to declare: "Major
combat operations in Iraq have ended." He spoke before a large
banner proclaiming: "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED." As of that date, the
United States government became the belligerent occupant of Iraq
under international law and practice.
This legal status was formally recognized by U.N. Security
Council Resolution 1483 of 22 May 2003. For the purpose of this
analysis here, the relevant portions of that Security Council
Resolution 1483 (2003) are as follows:
Noting the letter of 8 May 2003 from the Permanent
Representatives of the United States of America and the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland to the President
of the Security Council (S/2003/538) and recognizing the
specific authorities, responsibilities, and obligations under
applicable international law of these states as occupying powers
under unified command (the "Authority"),
5. Calls upon all concerned to comply fully with their
obligations under international law including in particular the
Geneva Conventions of 1949 and the Hague Regulations of 1907; .
. .
In that aforementioned 8 May 2003 letter from the United States
and the United Kingdom to the President of the Security Council,
both countries pledged to the Security Council that: "The States
participating in the Coalition will strictly abide by their
obligations under international law, including those relating to the
essential humanitarian needs of the people of Iraq." No point would
be served here by attempting to document the gross and repeated
violations of that solemn and legally binding pledge by the United
States and the United Kingdom from that date until today since it
would require a separate book to catalog all of the war crimes,
crimes against humanity, and grave human rights violations inflicted
by the United States and the United Kingdom in Iraq and against its
people.
Suffice it to say here that no earlier than President Bush's 1
May 2003 Declaration of the end of hostilities in Iraq, and
certainly no later than U.N. Security Resolution 1483 of 22 May
2003, both the United States and the United Kingdom have been the
belligerent occupants of Iraq subject to the Four Geneva Conventions
of 1949, the 1907 Hague Regulations on land warfare, U.S. Army Field
Manual 27-10 (1956) or respectively its British equivalent, the
humanitarian provisions of Additional Protocol I of 1977 to the Four
Geneva Conventions of 1949, and the customary international laws of
war. I do not take the position that the United States is the
belligerent occupant of the entire state of Afghanistan. But
certainly the laws of war and international humanitarian law apply
to the United States in its conduct of hostilities in Afghanistan as
well as to its presence there.
It is not generally believed that the United States is the
belligerent occupant of Guantanamo, Cuba. But those detainees held
there by United States armed forces who were apprehended in or near
the theaters of hostilities in Afghanistan and Iraq are protected by
either the Third Geneva Convention protecting prisoners of war or
the Fourth Geneva Convention protecting civilians. In any event
every detainee held by the United States government in Guantanamo is
protected by the International Covenant on a Civil and Political
Rights, to which the United States is a contracting party. A similar
analysis likewise applies pari passu to those numerous but
unknown victims of torture and detention facilities operated around
the world by the Central Intelligence Agency. America's own Gulag
Archipelago. No wonder the Bush Jr. administration has done
everything humanly possible to sabotage the International Criminal
Court!
The United States government's installation of the so-called
Interim Government of Iraq during the summer of 2004 did not
materially alter this legal situation. Under the laws of war, this
so-called Interim Government of Iraq is nothing more than a "puppet
government." As the belligerent occupant of Iraq the United States
government is free to establish a puppet government if it so
desires. But under the laws of war, the United States government
remains fully accountable for the behavior of its puppet government.
These conclusions are made quite clear by paragraph 366 of U.S.
Army Field Manual 27-10 (1956):
366. Local Governments Under Duress and Puppet Governments
The restrictions placed upon the authority of a belligerent
government cannot be avoided by a system of using a puppet
government, central or local, to carry out acts which would be
unlawful if performed directly by the occupant. Acts induced or
compelled by the occupant are nonetheless its acts.
As the belligerent occupant of Iraq, the United States government
is obligated to ensure that its puppet Interim Government of Iraq
obeys the Four Geneva Conventions of 1949, the 1907 Hague
Regulations on land warfare, U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10 (1956),
the humanitarian provisions of Additional Protocol I of 1977 to the
Four Geneva Conventions of 1949, and the customary international
laws of war. Any violation of the laws of war, international
humanitarian law, and human rights committed by its puppet Interim
Government of Iraq are legally imputable to the United States
government. As the belligerent occupant of Iraq, both the United
States government itself as well as its concerned civilian officials
and military officers are fully and personally responsible under
international criminal law for all violations of the laws of war,
international humanitarian law, and human rights committed by its
puppet Interim Government of Iraq such as, for example, reported
death squads operating under the latter's auspicies.
Furthermore, it was a total myth, fraud, lie, and outright
propaganda for the Bush Jr. administration to maintain that it was
somehow magically transferring "sovereignty" to its puppet Interim
Government of Iraq during the summer of 2004. Under the laws of war,
sovereignty is never transferred from the defeated sovereign such as
Iraq to a belligerent occupant such as the United States. This is
made quite clear by paragraph 353 of U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10
(1956): "Belligerent occupation in a foreign war, being based upon
the possession of enemy territory, necessarily implies that the
sovereignty of the occupied territory is not vested in the occupying
power. Occupation is essentially provisional."
If there were any doubt about this matter, paragraph 358 of U.S.
Army Field Manual 27-10 (1956) makes this legal fact crystal clear:
358. Occupation Does Not Transfer Sovereignty
Being an incident of war, military occupation confers upon
the invading force the means of exercising control for the
period of occupation. It does not transfer the sovereignty to
the occupant, but simply the authority or power to exercise some
of the rights of sovereignty. The exercise of these rights
results from the established power of the occupant and from the
necessity of maintaining law and order, indispensable both to
the inhabitants and the occupying force. . . .
Therefore, the United States government never had any
"sovereignty" in the first place to transfer to its puppet Interim
Government of Iraq. In Iraq the sovereignty still resides in the
hands of the people of Iraq and in the state known as the Republic
of Iraq, where it has always been. The legal regime described above
will continue so long as the United States remains the belligerent
occupant of Iraq. Only when that U.S. belligerent occupation of Iraq
is factually terminated can the people of Iraq have the opportunity
to exercise their international legal right of sovereignty by means
of free, fair, democratic, and uncoerced elections. So as of this
writing, the United States and the United Kingdom remain the
belligerent occupants of Iraq despite their bogus "transfer" of
their non-existent "sovereignty" to their puppet Interim Government
of Iraq.
Even U.N. Security Council Resolution 1546 of 8 June 2004
"Welcoming" the installation of the puppet Interim Government of
Iraq recognized this undeniable fact of international law.
Preambular language in this Resolution referred to "the letter of 5
June 2004 from the United States Secretary of State to the President
of the Council, which is annexed to this resolution." In other
words, that annexed letter is a legally binding part of Resolution
1546 (2004). Therein U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell pledged to
the U.N. Security Council with respect to the so-called
Multinational Force (MNF) in Iraq: "In addition, the forces that
make up the MNF are and will remain committed at all times to act
consistently with their obligations under the law of armed conflict,
including the Geneva Conventions." Pursuant thereto, the United
States and the United Kingdom still remain the belligerent occupants
of Iraq subject to the Four Geneva Conventions of 1949, the Hague
Regulations of 1907, U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10 (1956) or
respectively its British equivalent, the humanitarian provisions of
Additional Protocol I of 1977 to the Four Geneva Conventions of
1949, and the customary international laws of war.
This brings the analysis to the so-called Constitution of Iraq
that was allegedly drafted by the puppet Interim Government of Iraq
under the impetus of the United States government. Article 43 of the
1907 Hague Regulations on land warfare flatly prohibits the change
in a basic law such as a state's Constitution during the course of a
belligerent occupation: "The authority of the legitimate power
having in fact passed into the hands of the occupant, the latter
shall take all the measures in his power to restore, and ensure as
far as possible, public order and safety, while respecting, unless
absolutely prevented, the laws in force in the country." This exact
same prohibition has been expressly incorporated in haec verba into
paragraph 363 of U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10 (1956). To the
contrary, the United States has demonstrated gross disrespect toward
every law in Iraq that has stood in the way of its imperial designs
and petroleum ambitions, including and especially the pre-invasion
1990 Interim Constitution for the Republic of Iraq.
Most recently, to the same effect is U.N. Security Council
Resolution 1637 of 9 November 2005, which extends the foreign
military occupation of Iraq until 31 December 2006 but expressly
subject to Annex II thereof setting forth a 29 October 2005 letter
by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to the President of the
Security Council guaranteeing that: "The forces that make up the MNF
will remain committed to acting consistently with their obligations
under international law, including the law of armed conflict."
Thereunder, the new Iraqi government that will be installed after
the self-styled elections of 15 December 2005 will still remain a
puppet government according to the laws of war.
As for any subsequent Security Council Resolutions, the United
Nations Security Council has no power or authority to alter one iota
of the laws of war since they are peremptory norms of international
law. For the Security Council even to purport to authorize U.S.
violations of the laws of war in Iraq would render its so-voting
Member States aiders and abettors to U.S. war crimes and thus guilty
of committing war crimes in their own right. Any Security Council
attempt to condone, authorize, or approve violations of the Four
Geneva Conventions of 1949, the 1907 Hague Regulations, the
humanitarian provisions of Additional Protocol I of 1977 to the Four
Geneva Conventions of 1949, and the customary international laws of
war by the United States and the United Kingdom in Iraq would be
ultra vires, a legal nullity, and void ab initio.
In fact, the United Nations Organization itself has become
complicit in U.S. and U.K. international crimes in Iraq in violation
of the customary international laws of war set forth in paragraph
500 of U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10 (1956): ". . . complicity in the
commission of, crimes against peace, crimes against humanity, and
war crimes are punishable." The United Nations Organization is
walking down the path of the League of Nations toward Trotsky's
"ashcan" of history. And George Bush Jr. and Tony Blair are heading
towards their own Judgment at Nuremberg, whose sixtieth anniversary
the rest of the world gratefully but wistfully commemorates this
year. Never again!
Francis A. Boyle, Professor of Law, University of
Illinois, is author of
Foundations of World Order, Duke University Press,
The Criminality of Nuclear Deterrence, and
Palestine, Palestinians and International Law, by Clari
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