War Crimes Act Changes Would Reduce Threat Of Prosecution
By R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
08/09/06 "Washington
Post" -- -- The Bush administration has drafted
amendments to a war crimes law that would eliminate the risk of
prosecution for political appointees, CIA officers and former
military personnel for humiliating or degrading war prisoners,
according to U.S. officials and a copy of the amendments.
Officials say the amendments would alter a U.S. law passed in the
mid-1990s that criminalized violations of the Geneva Conventions, a
set of international treaties governing military conduct in wartime.
The conventions generally bar the cruel, humiliating and degrading
treatment of wartime prisoners without spelling out what all those
terms mean.
The draft U.S. amendments to the War Crimes Act would narrow the
scope of potential criminal prosecutions to 10 specific categories
of illegal acts against detainees during a war, including torture,
murder, rape and hostage-taking.
Left off the list would be what the Geneva Conventions refer to as
"outrages upon [the] personal dignity" of a prisoner and
deliberately humiliating acts -- such as the forced nakedness, use
of dog leashes and wearing of women's underwear seen at the U.S.-run
Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq -- that fall short of torture.
"People have gotten worried, thinking that it's quite likely they
might be under a microscope," said a U.S. official. Foreigners are
using accusations of unlawful U.S. behavior as a way to rein in
American power, the official said, and the amendments are partly
meant to fend this off.
The plan has provoked concern at the International Committee of the
Red Cross, the entity responsible for safeguarding the Geneva
Conventions. A U.S official confirmed that the group's lawyers
visited the Pentagon and the State Department last week to discuss
the issue but left without any expectation that their objections
would be heeded.
The administration has not officially released the draft amendments.
Although they are part of broader legislation on military courts
still being discussed within the government, their substance has
already been embraced by key officials and will not change, two
government sources said.
No criminal prosecutions have been brought under the War Crimes Act,
which Congress passed in 1996 and expanded in 1997. But 10 experts
on the laws of war, who reviewed a draft of the amendments at the
request of The Washington Post, said the changes could affect how
those involved in detainee matters act and how other nations view
Washington's respect for its treaty obligations.
"This removal of [any] reference to humiliating and degrading
treatment will be perceived by experts and probably allies as
'rewriting' " the Geneva Conventions, said retired Army Lt. Col.
Geoffrey S. Corn, who was recently chief of the war law branch of
the Army's Office of the Judge Advocate General. Others said the
changes could affect how foreigners treat U.S. soldiers.
The amendments would narrow the reach of the War Crimes Act, which
now states in general terms that Americans can be prosecuted in
federal criminal courts for violations of "Common Article 3" of the
Geneva Conventions, which the United States ratified in 1949.
U.S. officials have long interpreted the War Crimes Act as applying
to civilians, including CIA officers, and former U.S. military
personnel. Misconduct by serving military personnel is handled by
military courts, which enforce a prohibition on cruelty and
mistreatment. The Army Field Manual, which is being revised,
separately bars cruel and degrading treatment, corporal punishment,
assault, and sensory deprivation.
Common Article 3 is considered the universal minimum standard of
treatment for civilian detainees in wartime. It requires that they
be treated humanely and bars "violence to life and person,"
including murder, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture. It
further prohibits "outrages upon personal dignity" such as
"humiliating and degrading treatment." And it prohibits sentencing
or execution by courts that fail to provide "all the judicial
guarantees . . . recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples."
The risk of possible prosecution of officials, CIA officers and
former service personnel over alleged rough treatment of prisoners
arises because the Bush administration, from January 2002 until
June, maintained that the Geneva Conventions' protections did not
apply to prisoners captured in Afghanistan.
As a result, the government authorized interrogations using methods
that U.S. military lawyers have testified were in violation of
Common Article 3; it also created a system of military courts not
specifically authorized by Congress, which denied defendants many
routine due process rights.
The Supreme Court decided in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld on June 29, however,
that the administration's policy of not honoring the Geneva
Conventions was illegal, and that prisoners in the fight against
al-Qaeda are entitled to such protections.
U.S. officials have since responded in three ways: They have asked
Congress to pass legislation blocking the prisoners' right to sue
for the enforcement of those protections. They have drafted
legislation allowing the consideration of intelligence-gathering
needs during interrogations, in place of an absolute human rights
standard.
They also formulated the War Crimes Act amendments spelling out some
serious crimes and omitting altogether some that U.S. officials
describe as less serious. For example, two acts considered under
international law as constituting "outrages" -- rape and sexual
abuse -- are listed as prosecutable.
But humiliations, degrading treatment and other acts specifically
deemed as "outrages" by the international tribunal prosecuting war
crimes in the former Yugoslavia -- such as placing prisoners in
"inappropriate conditions of confinement," forcing them to urinate
or defecate in their clothes, and merely threatening prisoners with
"physical, mental, or sexual violence" -- would not be among the
listed U.S. crimes, officials said.
"It's plain that this proposal would abrogate portions of Common
Article 3," said Derek P. Jinks, a University of Texas assistant
professor of law and author of a forthcoming book on the Geneva
Conventions. The "entire family of techniques" that military
interrogators used to deliberately degrade and humiliate, and thus
coerce, detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and at Abu Ghraib "is not
addressed in any way, shape or form" in the new language authorizing
prosecutions, he said.
At a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing last Wednesday,
however, Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales complained repeatedly
about the ambiguity and broad reach of the phrase "outrages upon
personal dignity." He said that, "if left undefined, this provision
will create an unacceptable degree of uncertainty for those who
fight to defend us from terrorist attack."
Lawmakers from both parties expressed skepticism at the hearing.
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) said the military's top uniformed lawyers
had told him they are training to comply with Common Article 3 and
that complying would not impede operations.
If the underlying treaty provision is too vague, asked Sen. Susan
Collins (R-Maine), then how could the Defense Department instruct
its personnel in a July 7 memorandum to certify their compliance
with it? Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England, who had signed the
memo, responded at the hearing that he was concerned that
"degrading" and "humiliating" are relative terms.
"I mean, what is degrading in one society may not be degrading in
another, or may be degrading in one religion, not in another
religion," England said. "And since it does have an international
interpretation, which is generally, frankly, different than our own,
it becomes very, very relevant" to define the meaning in new
legislation.
This viewpoint appears to have won over the top uniformed military
lawyers, who have criticized other aspects of the administration's
detainee policy but said that they support the thrust of these
amendments. Maj. Gen. Scott C. Black, the Army's judge advocate
general, said in testimony that the changes can "elevate" the War
Crimes Act "from an aspiration to an instrument" by defining
offenses that can be prosecuted instead of endorsing "the ideals of
the laws of war."
Lawyer David Rivkin, formerly on the staff of the Justice Department
and the White House counsel's office, said "it's not a question of
being stingy but coming up with a well-defined statutory scheme that
would withstand constitutional challenges and would lead to
successful prosecutions." Former Justice Department lawyer John C.
Yoo similarly said that U.S. soldiers and agents should "not be
beholden to the definition of vague words by international or
foreign courts, who often pursue nakedly political agendas at odds
with the United States."
But Corn, the Army's former legal expert, said that Common Article 3
was, according to its written history, "left deliberately vague
because efforts to define it would invariably lead to wrongdoers
identifying 'exceptions,' and because the meaning was plain -- treat
people like humans and not animals or objects." Eugene R. Fidell,
president of the nonprofit National Institute of Military Justice,
said that laws governing military conduct are filled with broadly
described prohibitions that are nonetheless enforceable, including
"dereliction of duty," "maltreatment" and "conduct unbecoming an
officer."
Retired Rear Adm. John D. Hutson, the Navy's top uniformed lawyer
from 1997 to 2000 and now dean of the Franklin Pierce Law Center,
said his view is "don't trust the motives of any lawyer who changes
a statutory provision that is short, clear, and to the point and
replaces it with something that is much longer, more complicated,
and includes exceptions within exceptions."
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