By Jeremy Brecher & Brendan Smith
09/05/06 "The
Nation" --
The US War Crimes Act of 1996 makes it a
felony to commit grave violations of the
Geneva Conventions. The Washington Post
recently reported that the Bush
administration is quietly circulating
draft legislation to eliminate crucial
parts of the War Crimes Act. Observers
on The Hill say the Administration plans
to slip it through Congress this fall
while there still is a guaranteed
Republican majority--perhaps as part of
the military appropriations bill, the
proposals for Guantánamo tribunals or a
new catch-all "anti-terrorism" package.
Why are they doing it, and how can they
be stopped?
American prohibitions on abuse of
prisoners go back to the Lieber Code
promulgated by Abraham Lincoln in 1863.
The first international Geneva
Convention dates from the following
year.
After World War II, international law
protecting prisoners of war and all
noncombatants was codified in the Geneva
Conventions. They were ratified by the
US Senate and, under Article II of the
Constitution, they thereby became the
law of the land.
Wishing to rebuke the unpunished war
crimes of dictators like Saddam Hussein,
in 1996 a Republican-dominated Congress
passed the War Crimes Act without a
dissenting vote. It defined a "war
crime" as any "grave breach" of the
Geneva Conventions. It thereby advanced
a global trend of mutual reinforcement
between national and international law.
The War Crimes Act was little noticed
until the disclosure of Alberto
Gonzales's infamous 2002 "torture memo."
Gonzales, then serving as presidential
counsel, advised President Bush to
declare that the Geneva Conventions did
not apply to people the United States
captured in Afghanistan. That, Gonzales
wrote, "substantially reduced the threat
of domestic criminal prosecution under
the War Crimes Act."
Noting that the statute "prohibits
the commission of a 'war crime' by or
against a US person, including US
officials," he warned that "it is
difficult to predict the motives of
prosecutors and independent counsels who
may in the future decide to pursue
unwarranted charges." The President's
determination that the Geneva
Conventions did not apply "would provide
a solid defense to any future
prosecution."
Unfortunately for top Bush officials,
that "solid defense" was demolished this
summer when the Supreme Court in Hamdan
v. Rumsfeld ruled that the Geneva
Conventions were indeed the law of the
land.
The Court singled out Geneva's Common
Article 3, which provides a minimum
standard for the treatment of all
noncombatants under all circumstances.
They must be "treated humanely" and must
not be subjected to "cruel treatment,"
"outrages upon personal dignity, in
particular humiliating and degrading
treatment," or "the passing of sentences
and the carrying out of executions
without previous judgment pronounced by
a regularly constituted court, affording
all the judicial guarantees which are
recognized as indispensable by civilized
peoples."
As David Cole of the Georgetown
University Law Center pointed out in the
August 10 issue of The New York Review
of Books, the Supreme Court's decision
in Hamdan v. Rusmfeld "suggests that
President Bush has already committed a
war crime, simply by establishing the
[Guantánamo] military tribunals and
subjecting detainees to them" because
"the Court found that the tribunals
violate Common Article 3--and under the
War Crimes Act, any violation of Common
Article 3 is a war crime." A similar
argument would indicate that top US
officials have also committed war crimes
by justifying interrogation methods
that, according to the testimony of US
military lawyers, also violate Common
Article 3.
Lo and behold, the legislation the
Administration has circulated on Capitol
Hill would decriminalize such acts
retroactively. Eugene Fidell, president
of the National Institute of Military
Justice, told the Associated Press on
August 10, "I think what this bill can
do is in effect immunize past crimes.
That's why it's so dangerous." Human
rights attorney Scott Horton told
Democracy Now! on August 16 that one of
the purposes of the proposed legislation
is "to grant immunity or impunity to
certain individuals. And these are
mostly decision-makers within the
government."
The Coming Debate
Bush officials have not acknowledged
that one of their real motives for
gutting the War Crimes Act is to protect
themselves from being prosecuted for
their own crimes. But so far they have
apparently offered only one other reason
for tampering with the law: The existing
law, especially the Geneva language
prohibiting "outrages upon personal
dignity, in particular humiliating and
degrading treatment," is too vague to
enforce. (Perhaps the Bush
Administration should declare the US
Constitution's ban on "cruel and unusual
punishment" as too vague to enforce as
well.)
Fidell noted in an August 9
Washington Post article that military
law includes many terms like
"dereliction of duty," "maltreatment"
and "conduct unbecoming an officer" that
may appear vague but that are
nonetheless enforceable. The Army Field
Manual bars cruel and degrading
treatment. When Attorney General
Gonzales recently testified at a Senate
Armed Services Committee hearing that
"outrages upon personal dignity" was too
ambiguous, Senator John McCain stated
that top military lawyers see no problem
in complying with Common Article 3.
The arguments for preserving the War
Crimes Act and rejecting the Bush
amendments, in contrast, are multiple
and overwhelming:
1. Commitment to the Geneva
Conventions protects US service people
from future retaliation.
As former Secretary of State Colin
Powell has argued, abandoning the Geneva
Conventions would put US soldiers at
greater risk, would "reverse over a
century of US policy and practice in
supporting the Geneva Conventions" and
would "undermine the protections of the
law of war for our troops, both in this
specific conflict [Afghanistan] and in
general."
2. The War
Crimes Act will prohibit "torture-lite"
in the future.
According to Scott Horton, the
proposed legislation is "designed to
provide an OK to certain techniques
which fall just short of torture that
are being used by the CIA," including
"waterboarding, longtime standing and
hypothermia," techniques that have been
"linked to severe injuries and
fatalities."
3. The War
Crimes Act will prohibit future Abu
Ghraib-type outrages.
The Bush Administration's legislation
would remove the prohibition on
"outrages upon personal dignity, in
particular humiliating and degrading
treatment." Repealing the War Crimes
Act, the Washington Post's R. Jeffrey
Smith reported, is decriminalizing the
forced nakedness, use of dog leashes and
wearing of women's underwear that
shocked the world at Abu Ghraib prison.
Derek P. Jinks an assistant law
professor at the University of Texas,
author of a forthcoming book on the
Geneva Conventions, said in an August 9
Washington Post article that the "entire
family of techniques" used to degrade,
humiliate and coerce prisoners at Abu
Ghraib and Guantánamo "is not addressed
in any way, shape or form" in the Bush
Administration's proposal. Retired Army
Lieut. Col. Geoffrey Corn, until
recently chief of the war law branch of
the Army's Office of the Judge Advocate
General, said in the same article, "This
removal of [any] reference to
humiliating and degrading treatment will
be perceived by experts and probably
allies as 'rewriting'" the Geneva
Conventions.
This "rewriting" could have very
concrete ramifications in practice. The
international tribunal prosecuting war
crimes in the former Yugoslavia deemed
acts like placing prisoners in
"inappropriate conditions of
confinement," forcing them to urinate or
defecate in their clothes, and
threatening them with "physical, mental,
or sexual violence" to be humiliations,
degrading treatment and outrages. The
proposed changes to the War Crimes Act
would indicate that it is not a crime
for Americans to conduct such acts.
4. Gutting
the War Crimes Act will promote the
perception of the United States as an
outlaw country.
As a letter signed by sixteen members
of Congress recently said, such
legislation "would harm the reputation
of the United States as a leader
promoting and protecting human rights."
What would be more deserving of scorn
than a country that lets potential
war-crime defendants repeal the very law
under which they might be prosecuted?
5. The Bush
legislation unfairly exempts high
government officials from the very war
crimes charges they are leveling against
lowly "grunts."
Since the start of the Iraq War there
have been more than thirty prosecutions
under the military law that prohibits
war crimes, with many more pending. But
they have all prosecuted low-level
military personnel. Gutting the War
Crimes Act would leave the military "bad
apples" at the bottom subject to
prosecution but would let the civilian
"bad apples" at the top evade all
responsibility.
As Horton points out, the Uniform
Code of Military Justice already
incorporates the Geneva Convention
rules, but it does not apply "to Donald
Rumsfeld or Stephen Cambone or to people
in the White House." The point of the
War Crimes Act is that it "spreads the
application of the Geneva Conventions
the next level up to civilians, and
particularly to civilian policymakers."
From the beginning, the "prosecutorial
focus" of the War Crimes Act "was
intended to provide deterrence at that
level." Repealing it undermines the
fundamental principle of equal justice
under law.
6.
Preserving the War Crimes Act is part of
reasserting the rule of law in America.
The War Crimes Act has been a central
focus of the Bush Administration's scorn
for all Constitutional limits on the
power of the President and the executive
branch. It was the idea that the
President could by fiat declare US and
international law null and void that
animated the Gonzales torture memo. It
was this denial of constitutional limits
that the Supreme Court resoundingly
rebuked in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld. A rebuff
to the Bush Administration's attack on
the War Crimes Act is a reassertion of
those constitutional limits.
The War Crimes Act can be a bridge to
a more just and peaceful world. The
incorporation of the Geneva Conventions'
prohibitions on war crimes into national
law affirms America's commitment to
international law. It embodies an
implementation of the global heritage of
the Nuremberg trials, the UN Charter and
the Geneva Conventions. It embeds that
tradition within our own national law.
In the wake of World War II, Justice
Robert Jackson, chief American
prosecutor at the Nuremberg Tribunal,
observed that "the ultimate step in
avoiding periodic wars, which are
inevitable in a system of international
lawlessness, is to make statesmen
responsible to law." Making statesmen
responsible to law is what the War
Crimes Act is all about.
Defending
the Law
The arguments for preserving the War
Crimes Act are conclusive (except
perhaps to those who might face criminal
prosecution under them). Indeed, the
Administration's decision to gut the War
Crimes Act is a gift to those who want
to see American statesmen held
accountable to national and
international law. It suggests that the
Bush Administration itself recognizes
the criminality of many of its actions.
And it shows in the sharpest relief why
the War Crimes Act is needed.
But, at least for the moment, Bush's
Republican allies still control both
houses of Congress; they are in a
position to slip a repeal of the War
Crimes Act into any piece of legislation
they choose. Massachusetts Democrat Ed
Markey, senior member of the House
Committee for Homeland Security, told
The Nation, "The Bush Administration and
the GOP leadership in Congress is trying
to quietly excuse and even codify cruel
and inhuman treatment of prisoners in US
custody, at secret CIA prisons abroad
and even the abhorrent practice of
extraordinary rendition [the outsourcing
of torture and other cruel treatment to
other countries]."
While the Administration has been
lining up its ducks, the campaign to
save the War Crimes Act has just begun.
The advocacy group Just Foreign Policy
has started an online campaign to save
the War Crimes Act. "This is not an
obscure point in the law. What's at
stake here is whether, for example, the
abuses of prisoners by sexual
humiliation that shocked us at Abu
Ghraib are clearly illegal under US
law," national coordinator Robert Naiman
observes. "If we found these actions
outrageous, we are obligated to tell our
members of Congress to protect the law
that bans them."
Markey adds, "Every American citizen
should call the White House and their
members of Congress because these
changes being made in the dead of night
could be the green light for other
countries that capture American troops
to treat them cruelly or torture them."
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