Donald
Trump’s War Crimes
By
Marjorie Cohn
April
11, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Just two and a half months into his
presidency, Donald Trump has already
distinguished himself as a war criminal. His
administration is killing unusually large
numbers of civilians, in violation of US and
international law.
Killing
Civilians in Record Numbers
The
Trump administration began to kill civilians
over inaugural weekend, with two drone strikes
in Yemen that claimed 10 lives. One drone struck
three people on a motorcycle. The other hit
seven people riding in a car. Neither Trump nor
Defense Secretary James Mattis admits to having
approved the strikes. It is not clear who
authorized them.
One
week after his inauguration, Trump bemoaned the
death of a US Navy Seal in a botched raid he
personally ordered in southern Yemen. Trump made
no mention of the 30 people, including at least
10 women and children, killed by the US
bombers. The attack badly damaged a health
facility, a school and a mosque.
Over
the past month, the US-led coalition has killed
an inordinate number of civilians.
“Almost
1,000 non-combatant deaths have already been
alleged from coalition actions across Iraq and
Syria in March — a record claim,” according to Airwars,
a non-governmental organization (NGO) that
monitors civilian casualties from airstrikes in
the Middle East. “These reported casualty levels
are comparable with some of the worst periods of
Russian activity in Syria.”
Airwars
says that US aircraft have inflicted most of the
casualties in the coalition strikes.
Indeed,
so many civilians have died from coalition
airstrikes since Trump took office, Airwars is
reducing its work on “alleged Russian actions in
Syria — so as best to focus our limited
resources on continuing to properly monitor and
assess reported casualties from the US and its
allies.”
During
the last part of March alone:
— US
drones bombed a mosque in Aleppo, Syria,
claiming at least 47 civilian lives.
— US
aircraft bombed homes, a school and a hospital
in Tabqah, Syria, killing 20 civilians.
— A
US-led coalition airstrike on a school that was
housing 50 families displaced by the fighting
near Raqqa, Syria, killed at least 33 civilians.
— A US
airstrike in Mosul, Iraq, killed more than 200
people, causing the largest loss of civilian
life since the United States began bombing ISIS
in Syria and Iraq in 2014. The attack was
approved somewhere in the Middle East, according
to US defense officials, probably by a one-star
general or a team working under her or him.
Abu
Ayman, who lives in Mosul, told Reuters he saw
several flattened houses and severed limbs
scattered around. “I ran to my next-door
neighbor’s house and with others we managed to
rescue three people, but at least 27 others in
the same house were killed, including women and
children of relatives who fled from other
districts,” he said. “We pulled some out of the
rubble, using hammers and shovels to remove
debris. We couldn’t do anything to help others
as they were completely buried under the
collapsed roof.”
Another
Mosul resident said, “Now it feels like the
coalition is killing more people than ISIS.”
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Chris
Woods, director of Airwars, told the Washington
Post. “Casualty numbers from western Mosul are
absolutely shocking. In Syria it’s a car here, a
family there. It happens every day.”
The
coalition forces’ use of white phosphorous, a
chemical weapon that burns to the bone, has been
documented in Mosul. And the US Central Command
has confirmed that it has used depleted uranium,
arguably a war crime, against ISIS in Syria.
Coalition
Airstrikes Violate US Law
The
Trump administration, like its two immediate
predecessors, justifies the use of armed drones
and other forms of targeted killing with
reference to the Authorization for the Use of
Military Force (AUMF) that Congress passed just
days after the September 11, 2001, attacks. In
the AUMF, Congress authorized the president to
use force against groups and countries that had
supported the terrorist strikes. But Congress
rejected the Bush administration’s request for
open-ended military authority “to deter and
preempt any future acts of terrorism or
aggression against the United States.”
Deterrence and preemption are exactly what Trump
is purportedly trying to accomplish by sending
robots to kill “suspected militants” or those
who happen to be present in an area where
suspicious activity has taken place.
In
2013, the Obama administration promulgated a
Presidential Policy Guidance for targeted
killing “outside areas of active hostilities.”
The
guidance allows the targeting of a person who
poses a “continuing, imminent threat” not just
to “U.S. persons” but also to “another country’s
persons.” A 2011 Department of Justice white
paper, leaked in 2013, said a US citizen could
be killed even when there is no “clear evidence
that a specific attack on U.S. persons and
interests will take place in the immediate
future.” This makes a mockery of the “imminent
threat” requirement. There is presumably an even
lower bar for noncitizens.
In
addition, the guidance requires “near certainty
that an identified HVT [high-value target] or
other lawful terrorist target” is present before
using lethal force against him. Yet, like the
Obama administration, the Trump regime probably
mounts “signature strikes” that don’t
necessarily target individuals, but rather all
males of military age present in an area of
suspicious activity.
And the
guidance says there must be “near certainty that
non-combatants [civilians] will not be injured
or killed.” Given the large number of civilian
casualties from drone strikes and other targeted
killings, the Trump administration does not
appear to be complying with this requirement.
Now,
the Pentagon is proposing to expand “the
battlefield” beyond Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria,
so that other designated countries won’t be
considered “outside areas of active
hostilities.” The threshold for protecting
civilians would thus be lowered from “near
certainty” that civilians won’t be injured or
killed to a “reasonable certainty.” This will
invariably result in even more civilian
casualties.
Trump
has designated three areas in Yemen, and will
soon designate Somalia, “areas of active
hostilities,” or “temporary battlefields.”
Moreover, the National Security Council is contemplating whether
to rescind the Obama guidance altogether,
eliminating the “continuing and imminent threat”
requirement. It’s possible that it could modify
the “near certainty” standard to apply only to
women and children, but not to men of military
age.
Trump
has granted broad power to the CIA to conduct
lethal drone attacks. Obama had largely limited
that power to the Defense Department’s Joint
Special Operations Command. The CIA, unlike the
Pentagon, doesn’t have to report how many people
it kills during a strike.
In
mid-March, 37 former government officials and
national security experts from across the
political spectrum sent a letter to
Defense Secretary James Mattis, warning the
administration to proceed cautiously when
reviewing the targeted killing guidance. The
letter said, “Even small numbers of
unintentional civilian deaths or injuries … can
cause significant setbacks.”
Regardless of the guidance, however, the
coalition is still constrained by international
humanitarian law.
Coalition
Airstrikes Violate International Law
“Self-defense,” under Article 51 of the United
Nations Charter, is a narrow exception to the
Charter’s prohibition of the use of force.
Countries may engage in individual or collective
self-defense only in the face of an armed
attack. To the extent the United States claims
the right to kill suspected terrorists or their
allies before they act, there must exist “a
necessity of self-defense, instant,
overwhelming, leaving no choice of means, and no
moment for deliberation,” under the
well-established Caroline Case. Trump’s
targeted killings do not meet this standard.
Drone
attacks off the battlefield violate
well-established principles of international
law. Targeted or political assassinations —
sometimes known as extra-judicial executions —
run afoul of the Geneva Conventions, which
include willful killing as a grave breach. Grave
breaches of Geneva are punishable as war crimes
under the US War Crimes Act.
The
United States has ratified the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which
states: “Every human being has the inherent
right to life. This right shall be protected by
law. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his
life.” The Covenant also guarantees those
accused of a crime the rights to be presumed
innocent and to a fair trial by an impartial
tribunal. Targeted killings abrogate these
rights.
There
is also a legal obligation to comply with the
requirements of proportionality and distinction,
two bedrock principles of international
humanitarian law, as delineated in the First
Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions.
Proportionality means
an attack cannot be excessive in relation to the
anticipated military advantage sought. The
administration is using drones to take out
convoys and is killing large numbers of
civilians, compared with the number of
“militants” it is targeting.
Distinction requires
that the attack be directed only at a legitimate
military target. The coalition has been
targeting sites with no clear military purpose,
including hospitals, schools, mosques and
passenger ferries. And if the Trump
administration is continuing Obama’s policy of
launching signature strikes, bombs are being
dropped on unidentified people located in an
area of “suspicious” activity.
The
Rome Statute for the International Criminal
Court defines the following as war crimes:
willful killing; willfully causing great
suffering or serious injury; intentional attacks
against civilians or civilian objects; and
intentionally launching unjustified attacks,
knowing they will kill or injure civilians.
US-led
coalition bombings of schools, hospitals, homes
and mosques, resulting in high numbers of
civilian casualties, constitute war crimes.
Mosul
Eye, a monitoring organization, warned Iraqi
troops that civilians were trapped in homes days
before the US airstrike, even sending the
coordinates. Amnesty International concluded
that the US-led coalition should have known its
airstrikes would cause many civilian casualties
because the government had told people to remain
in their homes.
Amnesty
International said the coalition was not
using sufficient precautions to avoid civilian
casualties in Mosul, calling it a “flagrant
violation” of international humanitarian law.
“Disproportionate attacks and indiscriminate
attacks violate international humanitarian law
and can constitute war crimes,” Amnesty
International noted.
Trump
Escalates in the Middle East
Meanwhile, the US military is planning to deploy
an additional 1,000 troops to northern Syria.
There are roughly 500 US Special Operations
forces there already, as well as 200 Marines and
250 Rangers.
The
administration reportedly plans to lift the
troop caps of 5,000 in Iraq and 500 in Syria
that were established by the Obama
administration.
Trump
is asking Congress to add $54 billion annually
to the military budget for what he refers to as
his “public safety and national security
budget.”
Disturbingly, Trump has not ruled out the use of
nuclear weapons as he prosecutes his “war on
terror.” In an interview on MSNBC, he
wondered, “Somebody hits us within ISIS [also
known as Daesh], you wouldn’t fight back with a
nuke?”
And
Trump made the troubling assertion that he would
consider killing innocent families of suspected
terrorists, declaring, “When you get these
terrorists, you have to take out their
families.” Targeting civilians violates the
Geneva Conventions.
The
Trump administration will likely relax the rules
of engagement for targeted killing, resulting in
the deaths of increasingly large numbers of
civilians, in violation of US and international
law.
Under
the doctrine of command responsibility,
commanders — all the way up the chain of command
to the Commander-in-Chief — can be liable for
war crimes if they knew or should have known
their subordinates would commit them and did
nothing to stop or prevent them. Command
responsibility is enshrined in Supreme Court
case law and the US Army Field Manual.
Trump
and other high officials in his administration
should be held accountable for war crimes.
Marjorie Cohn is
professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of
Law where she taught from 1991-2016, and a
former president of the National Lawyers Guild.
She lectures, writes, and provides commentary
for local, regional, national and international
media outlets. Professor Cohn has served as a
news consultant for CBS News and a legal analyst
for Court TV, as well as a legal and political
commentator on BBC, CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, NPR,
and Pacifica Radio.
This
article first appeared on Truthout.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.