The
Joke of U.S. Justice and “Accountability”
When They Bomb a Hospital
By
Glenn Greenwald
April 30, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"-
Ever
since the U.S. last October bombed a
hospital run by Doctors Without Borders (MSF)
in Kunduz, Afghanistan, the U.S. vehemently
denied guilt while acting exactly like a
guilty party would. First, it
changed its story repeatedly. Then, it
blocked every effort – including
repeated demands from MSF – to have an independent
investigation determine what really
happened. As May Jeong documented in
a richly reported story for The
Intercept yesterday, the Afghan
government – rather than denying that the
hospital was targeted – instead repeatedly
claimed that doing so was justified;
moreover, they were sympathetic to calls for
an independent investigation, which the U.S.
blocked. What is beyond dispute, as Jeong
wrote, is that the “211 shells that were
fired . . . were felt by the 42 men, women,
and children who were killed.” MSF
insisted the bombing was “deliberate,”
and
ample evidence supports that charge.
Despite all this, the U.S. military is about
to release a report that, so predictably,
exonerates itself from all guilt; it was, of
course, all just a terribly tragic mistake.
Worse,
reports The Los Angeles Times‘ W.J.
Hennigan, “no one will face criminal
charges.” Instead, this is the “justice”
being meted out to those responsible:
One officer was suspended from command
and ordered out of Afghanistan. The
others were given lesser punishments:
Six were sent to counseling, seven were
issued letters of reprimand, and two
were ordered to retraining courses.
MSF
continues to insist that the attack was a
“war crime” and must be investigated by an
independent tribunal under the Geneva
Conventions. In
a statement this week, Amnesty
International said that it has “serious
concerns about the Department of Defense’s
questionable track record of policing
itself.” The LA Times story notes
that Physicians for Human Rights said in a
letter to the White House that “the gravity
of harm caused by the reported failures to
follow protocol in Kunduz appears to
constitute gross negligence that warrants
active pursuit of criminal liability.”
But
none of that matters. The only law to which
the U.S. government is subject is its own
interests. U.S. officials scoffed at global
demands for a real investigation into what
took place here, and then doled out
“punishments” of counseling, training
classes, and letters of reprimand for those
responsible for this carnage. That’s almost
a worse insult, a more extreme expression of
self-exoneration and indifference, than no
sanctions at all. But that’s par for the
course in a country that has granted
full-scale legal immunity for those who
perpetrated the most egregious crimes: from
the systemic fraud that caused the 2008
financial crisis to the
worldwide regime of torture the U.S.
government officially implemented.
Yesterday in Syria, an MSF-run hospital was
targeted with an airstrike, almost
certainly deliberately, by what was very
likely the Syrian government or the
Russians, killing at least 50 patients and
doctors, including one of the last
pediatricians in Aleppo. On behalf of the
U.S. government, Secretary of State John
Kerry
pronounced: “We are outraged by
yesterday’s airstrikes in Aleppo on the al
Quds hospital supported by both Doctors
Without Borders and the International
Committee of the Red Cross, which killed
dozens of people, including children,
patients and medical personnel.” On the list
of those with even minimal credibility to
denounce that horrific airstrike, Kerry and
his fellow American officials do not appear.