December 08, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
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U.S.
President Donald Trump sacked his Navy
secretary on Twitter. The main reason is
that the Navy secretary did not follow
Trump’s advice regarding Navy Special
Warfare Operator Edward Gallagher. Trump
wanted Gallagher to retain his position as a
Navy Seal. Gallagher was accused of stabbing
to death a wounded fighter of the Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) in 2017;
he was also accused of other incidents of
murder (of a schoolgirl and an elderly man),
and then of obstruction of justice. In July
2019, a military court acquitted Gallagher
of most of the charges but found him guilty
of posing with the body of the fighter who
had been stabbed to death.
Gallagher’s situation emerged onto the front
pages only because of the intervention of
Trump. Otherwise, these accusations of war
crimes or “misconduct” emerge, they are
sometimes investigated, and then they just
dissipate. Report upon report has
accumulated over the past 16 years of war
crimes committed in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The U.S.-NATO war on Afghanistan began in
2001, while the U.S. war on Iraq began in
2003. Hardly a day goes by in these
countries where their combatants aren’t
committing war crimes.
As early as
December 21, 2001, the United Nations
inquired about reports of “summary execution
of prisoners after capture”; the immediate
news was that about 2,000 Taliban prisoners
at Qala-i-Jangi, near Mazar-i-Sharif,
Afghanistan, had been “suffocated to death
or shot in container trucks,” according to a
report
by the Physicians for Human Rights. In 2009,
it became clear that the administration of
George W. Bush had
obstructed
any investigation into this particular
atrocity. Not one person has seen the inside
of a court for this war crime.
What is a “war
crime”? The Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court—which went into
effect in 2002 but was drafted in 1998—defines
war crimes as “serious violations of the
laws and customs applicable in international
armed conflict.” These include attacks
against civilians, attacks against those who
have surrendered, attacks with biological
and chemical weapons, and attacks against
medical and cultural institutions.
The
Rome Statute builds on 100 years of legal
precedent established in the Geneva
Conventions and the Hague Conventions. There
is no ambiguity in the Statute, which should
be read by schoolchildren in countries that
are prone to prosecute wars.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
The
United States is not a party to the
International Criminal Court (ICC). It had
helped establish the Court, but then
reversed course and refused to allow itself
to be under the ICC’s jurisdiction. In 2002,
the U.S. Congress passed the American
Service-Members’ Protection Act, which
allows the U.S. government to “use all
means” to protect its troops from the ICC
prosecutors. Article 98 of the Rome Statute
does not require states to turn over wanted
personnel from a third party if these states
had signed an immunity agreement with the
third party; the U.S. government has
therefore encouraged states to sign these
“article 98 agreements” to give its troops
immunity from prosecution.
The enormity of
evidence of war crimes by U.S. troops and
U.S.-affiliated troops in Afghanistan and
Iraq weighed on the credibility of the ICC.
In 2016, after a decade of investigation,
the ICC released a
report
that offered hope to the Afghan people. The
ICC said that there is “a reasonable basis”
to pursue further investigation of war
crimes by various forces inside
Afghanistan—such as the Taliban, the Haqqani
network, and the United States military
forces alongside the Central Intelligence
Agency. The next year, the ICC went forward
with more detailed acknowledgment of the
possibility of war crimes. Pressure on the
ICC’s prosecutor mounted.
Pressure on the Court
This is where
everything seemed to end. The Trump
administration, via John Bolton and Mike
Pompeo,
made it clear
to the ICC that if they pursued a case
against the U.S., then the Trump
administration would go after the ICC
prosecutor and judges personally.
An
application for a U.S. visa by Fatou
Bensouda, the ICC prosecutor, was denied;
she had intended to come to the U.S. to
appear before the United Nations. This was a
shot across the bow of the Court. The U.S.
was not going to play nice. Not long
thereafter, in April 2019, the ICC said that
it would not go ahead with a war crimes case
against the United States, or indeed against
any of the belligerents in Afghanistan. The
Court
said
it would “not serve the interests of
justice” to pursue this investigation.
Trump
responded
to this decision by calling the ICC
“illegitimate” and—at the same time—that the
ICC’s judgment was “a victory, not only for
these patriots, but for the rule of law.”
Staff at the ICC were dismayed by the ICC’s
decision. They were eager to challenge it,
fearing that if they let the U.S. mafia
tactics prevent their own procedures then
the ICC would lose whatever shred of
legitimacy remains. As it is, the ICC is
seen as being deployed mainly against the
enemies of the United States; there have
been no serious investigations of any power
that is closely aligned with the United
States.
In June, Fatou
Bensouda, the ICC prosecutor,
filed
a request inside the cumbersome system of
the ICC to essentially appeal the decision
not to pursue the investigation of the war
crimes in Afghanistan. Bensouda’s appeal was
joined
by various groups from Afghanistan,
including Afghan Victims’ Families
Association and the Afghanistan Forensic
Science Organization. In September, the
Pre-Trial Chamber of the Court said it would
allow
the appeal to go forward. Bensouda’s office
is now going to have to assemble an enormous
case for her appeal; this could itself take
the better part of six months. It is likely
that the Trump administration has already
begun to pressure the Court, which the
Court’s staff worries will have an impact on
the appeal as it did on the first filing.
Britain and the Court
The main U.S.
ally in these wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
has been the United Kingdom. A recent
television
program
in the UK provided chilling evidence of
British war crimes in Iraq. In 2017, the ICC
said
it had “credible” evidence that UK armed
forces had committed horrific war
crimes—including murder, torture, and
rape—between 2003 and 2009. Reports piled
up, but action was not taken. Now, given the
new revelations on BBC’s “Panorama,” the ICC
says that it will likely take up the case
again.
There is no doubt that if the UK’s case is
fairly adjudicated, it will raise many
issues about the senior partner in these
wars, namely the United States. Boris
Johnson, the prime minister of the UK for
now, says that he wants to pass legislation
that—like in the U.S.—gives immunity for its
troops. Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour Party has
said, on the other hand, that it welcomes
the scrutiny.
No
soldier should be above the law. Nor should
those who sent the soldiers into battle.
None of these inquiries asks that more
fundamental question.
Former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi
Annan called the U.S. war on Iraq “illegal.”
No one, not even Bensouda, has suggested
that George W. Bush, his Cabinet, and Tony
Blair be brought into the dock.
If
justice is to be sought, it is not at the
level of someone like Edward Gallagher
alone; it should be his superiors on the
political side who need to answer questions
about not just this or that war crime, but
about the entire war and the crime of it
all.
Vijay
Prashad - Independent Media
Institute
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