War Crimes

From My Lai to Abu Ghraib, two words prey on the minds of top American officials.

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By Tom Engelhardt

Here was part of a May 4 conversation between Larry King and Colin Powell on Larry King Live about the photos from Abu Ghraib, and it was distinctly from the “a-few-bad-eggs” school of Iraqi analysis:

“KING: Let’s go one by one. First, let’s discuss the abuse of the Iraqi prisoners. I know you’ve called it despicable acts. Now, you’ve had a career in the military, served in Vietnam twice. Did you ever see anything like this?

“POWELL: No.

“KING: Ever have a subordinate do anything like this?

“POWELL: No.

“KING: What do you make of it. What’s your view?

“POWELL: I don’t know what to make of it. I’m shocked. I mean, I was in a unit that was responsible for My Lai. I got there after My Lai happened. So, in war these sorts of horrible things happen every now and again, but they’re still to be deplored. And what happened in this particular instance, as best I know from the pictures, was just totally despicable. There’s no way to describe it. And it isn’t just the fact that soldiers did it, but no American should do this to any other person.

“And so they not only violated all the laws of proper behavior and being a soldier, but it’s just not something Americans should do. It seems to be a limited number of soldiers who may have been involved in this, and they will be subject to the justice of the United States Army, and I’m confident that all the investigations that are now underway will find out who was responsible for what and justice will be served. So it’s a fairly small number of soldiers. Let’s not let that take away from the magnificent contributions being made by most of our soldiers, the vast majority of our soldiers, who are building schools, repairing hospitals, who are defending themselves, going after the bad guys, but also putting in sewer systems for the people of Iraq.”

It’s always interesting to see what floats into the mind. If critics of the Bush administration’s war and occupation policies in Iraq started talking about My Lai in the same breath with Abu Ghraib, you know what would be said. But it’s a fact of this administration that part of its collective brain is still living in Vietnam (though Powell was the only one among its top officials not to escape that war in one fashion or another) — hence the importance of the much-rejected Vietnam analogy. And of course, the murders of small numbers of Iraqis in prison and the abuse, torture and humiliation of many more is not the equivalent of the slaughter of more than 500 unresisting Vietnamese, mostly old people, women, and children in less than a day by Charlie Company of the Americal Division, while higher commanders circled overhead in helicopters. But it’s interesting that My Lai leapt so quickly to Colin Powell’s mind, and in fact there are parallels.

As a start, Powell’s position on the nature of what happened in Vietnam (1968) and in Iraq (2003-04) is the same. A peripheral figure in the My Lai cover-up, Powell, as Nick Turse, an expert on war crimes in Vietnam, writes me,

“put together a memorandum for his superiors, in December 1968, that read in part: ‘Although there may be isolated cases of mistreatment of civilians and POWs this by no means reflects the general attitude throughout the [Americal] division. In direct refutation of this portrayal is the fact that relations between Americal soldiers and the Vietnamese people are excellent.’

“Powell’s words were as soothing as they were disingenuous. Not only had soldiers of the division slaughtered an entire village en mass at My Lai, but on the very same day, in an auxiliary operation, up to 90 villagers of My Khe 4 were also massacred. These, however, were only the bloodiest of the known war crimes committed by the men of the division. In reality, Americal troops had long before, and would long after, March 16, 1968, commit numerous atrocities ranging from torture to assault to murder.”

Beyond the similarities in Powell’s position on two horrific events involving the American military in foreign lands across three and a half decades, lie two words that relatively few in this country were willing to pronounce back then and even less today — “war crimes.” And yet, then as now, war crimes preyed on the minds of top American officials. Back in the days of My Lai, the military, far closer to World War II (rather than, as with a number of members of the present administration, World War II movies), had another fearful analogy in mind — the post-war Nuremberg Trials of Nazi war criminals. And so when the trials of members of Charlie Company were finally held, the defendants were scattered at military bases around the country — the great fear of the military brass being “two dozen or more American soldiers, including generals, lined up in the dock a little like Nuremberg.” In discussions with the Justice Department, Pentagon officials emphasized that a “mass trial” was not an option.

Oh, and here’s another small but quite remarkable link between then and now, which, with (as far as I know) the exception of the New York Times’ Frank Rich and the superb Paul Krugman, has not been seriously mentioned, no less highlighted in our press. The journalist who forced the story of the Abu Ghraib photos into the light of day — after all, until CBS’s 60 Minutes II heard that his piece was coming out in the New Yorker, they were still holding up their own report, as per the request of Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Richard Myers — and so brought the issue of war crimes to the very tips of American tongues, had done exactly the same thing back in that ugly year of 1969. Until Seymour Hersh, the former Associated Press reporter, published his piece on My Lai with the then-unknown Dispatch News Service, the massacre had moldered in cover-up and silence for twenty full months. (The Abu Ghraib cover-up, though noticeably shorter thanks to the permeability of the Internet and email, still lasted from January 13 to the beginning of May.) Hersh won a Pulitzer Prize for breaking the story then; and, to push this analogy into the future, he should win another for his New Yorker two-parter about Abu Ghraib.

Note, by the way, that in 1969, as now, the My Lai story was first pushed to consciousness by a GI whistleblower who distinctly knew right from wrong (Ron Ridenhour then, Joe Darby this time around); and, as now, that nightmare story was driven by horrific images splashed across the mainstream media. Those were, of course, the color photographs of Ronald Haeberle, an Army photographer who had helicoptered into My Lai with Charlie Company. (“Guys were about to shoot these people. I yelled, ‘Hold it,’ and shot my picture. As I walked away, I heard M16s open up.”) Haeberle took many of his massacre photos back to Cleveland when he left the service and there, for a year, he showed them to civic organizations in a slide show of his own creation. (“They caused no commotion… Nobody believed it. They said Americans wouldn’t do this.”) Finally, after the Hersh story broke, Haeberle’s horrific photos appeared in a famous ten-page spread in LIFE magazine (an issue with an African antelope on the cover), labeled “a story of indisputable horror — the deliberate slaughter of old men, women, children and babies.” Now… well, I hardly need describe the photos of this moment as more of them are reaching the front pages of newspapers and TV screens every day. Then, President Nixon called My Lai an “isolated incident.” Now George Bush calls Abu Ghraib, “the actions of a few people” and Gen. Myers blames a bare “handful” of Americans (even as Red Cross reports of the widespread nature of these abuses throughout our penal system in Iraq spread daily).

War crimes proved unacceptable as a category for Americans back then and so, as I wrote in my history of American triumphalism, The End of Victory Culture (from which I dug out many of the above details): “Of all the charges of the antiwar movement, the ones that disappeared most quickly were those concerning war crimes — and the people who made them were as quickly forgotten.” (At least, that is, until John Kerry became the Democratic candidate for president this year.)

“Containment” of the crisis back in 1969 (as in 2004) meant doing one’s official best to keep the story to one location which, in turn, was to be identified with a single aberrant event; though such crimes were far more widespread as witness the ones still leaking out so many decades later. After all, the Toledo Blade won a Pulitzer this year for its vivid coverage of a never-prosecuted “seven-month rampage” of horror in Vietnam’s Central Highlands in 1967 by a platoon of the 101st Airborne known as the Tiger Force. And on the 9/11 commission, of course, is Bob Kerrey, whose Vietnam horror story only made it into the press in 2001. Containment, then as now, also meant keeping whatever prosecutions there were to as low- level individuals as possible. (Does this sound faintly familiar?)

War crimes. Such a nasty term. In everyday logic, in fact, not that far from an oxymoron. In 1969, at the height of the Vietnam War, when Hersh broke the My Lai story, the subject of war crimes burst on American consciousness (and there was quite a backlash against it). Right now, it’s at the very edge of being spoken — but only in the most limited way, only in relation to the abuses that can be seen on photos from Abu Ghraib prison and only for a few “bad eggs” at the lowest level of a procedure which should really make its way up, up the ladder of command. But rest assured, there’s so much more to come, and not just all the new photos, videos, and even possibly audios, promised by Donald Rumsfeld either. Terrible as it may be, we’re only at the beginning — and the one thing we know is that digital cameras and computers are everywhere.

In the meantime, historian Mark LeVine, who returned not so long ago from a trip to Baghdad, takes the necessary next step. He writes out words until now largely absent from print and considers whether not just Abu Ghraib, or even the whole American detention system in Iraq, but the occupation itself, given the obligations of any occupying power, isn’t, in fact, a vast war crime. Tom

War Crimes Have Doomed the Occupation

By Mark LeVine

Following the revelations of prisoner abuse and torture at the Abu Ghraib prison, the swirl of apologia, controversy, and debate has managed to avoid a basic truth: the occupation is essentially one giant war crime, and there’s no longer a way for it to be anything but a war crime, which is why it has to end now; not be fixed, not improved, not stayed-the-course. Ended.

As the internationally recognized occupying power in Iraq, the United States and other members of the coalition are obligated under UN Security Council Resolution 1483 of May 22, 2003 to “promote the welfare of the Iraqi people through the effective administration of the territory, including in particular working towards the restoration of conditions of security and stability and the creation of conditions in which the Iraqi people can freely determine their own political future.” More broadly, the resolution also calls upon the coalition to “comply fully with their obligations under international law.” What this means is that the coalition — in practice, the Americans and the British — must assure humane treatment for the civilian population (under Article 27 of the 4th Geneva Convention) and permit life in Iraq to continue as unaffected by its presence as possible.

At the same time it must ensure the public order, safety and welfare of the Iraqi people. This includes using all the means at its disposal to meet the basic food (Article 50), health (Articles 20, 50, 55, 56 and 59, among others), and education needs (Article 50) of the population. Moreover, Articles 68 and 69 of Protocol 1 of the Geneva Conventions (which is accepted as customary international law by the U.S. even though it hasn’t signed the Protocol) reaffirm as a central obligation the provision of medical care while adding the requirement to provide “clothing, bedding, means of shelter and other supplies essential to the survival of the civilian population.”

The problem of possibly systematic U.S. and coalition war crimes has been an issue in the foreign press over the past months and has resulted in direct accusations by normally cautious human rights organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. As, speaking of the occupiers, an April report by Amnesty on the human rights situation in Iraq makes clear, “Under international humanitarian law, as occupying powers it was their duty to maintain and restore public order, and provide food, medical care and relief assistance. They failed in this duty, with the result that millions of Iraqis faced grave threats to their health and safety.”

If millions are threatened, then thousands are surely dying. Some of this I saw myself in a recent visit to Iraq and tour of Baghdad’s desperately starved hospitals, clinics, schools and poor neighborhoods. As international law professor and author Victor Conde explains, with each death due to a decrepit health care system that could have been fixed with modest inputs of money, supplies, and effort, the purposeful targeting of ambulances, or the prevention of or delay in the receiving of medical care, as happened during the fighting in Falluja and on numerous other occasions, the U.S. crosses the line between “merely” violating international humanitarian law (specifically articles 17 through 19 of the 4th Geneva Convention) and the commission of actual war crimes. These are defined as grave breaches of the 4th Geneva Convention as described in article 147, including “willful killing, torture or inhuman treatment, including… willfully causing great suffering or serious injury to body or health, unlawful deportation or transfer or unlawful confinement of a protected person… or willfully depriving a protected person of the rights of fair and regular trial …taking of hostages and extensive destruction and appropriation of property, not justified by military necessity and carried out unlawfully and wantonly.”

Though the issue of war crimes is almost inescapable in Iraq itself and has been a subject of much discussion abroad, the American media has largely avoided the issue. I searched the archives of the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and the Washington Post to no avail for any article dealing with this issue substantively; CNN and the Christian Science Monitor have occasionally discussed it, but only on progressive webzines or at blogs can one find the issue considered in any detail.

Given the lack of coverage of such an important issue, perhaps Americans should take a minute next time they’re online to actually read the 4th Geneva Convention. Or they could simply read the US Army Field Manual 27-10. If we assume that, among the thousands of people in coalition prisons, significant numbers aren’t simply civilians arbitrarily detained in sweeps of supposed insurgent neighborhoods (which is probably not a good assumption), then this manual clearly defines prisoners like the ones in the infamous Abu Ghraib photos as “prisoners of war,” since the Army considers “members of other militias and members of other volunteer corps, including those of organized resistance movements” (art. 61(2)) as falling under this category.

And so “softening them up” for interrogation, as several of the soldiers now charged with their abuse have said they were ordered (or was it merely asked?) to do, is expressly prohibited both according to U.S. military law and the 4th Geneva Convention. Yet both the U.S and British armed forces have special training camps to teach their military intelligence personnel techniques — code named “R2I” (Resistance to Interrogation)–to do just what was done at Abu Ghraib. In other words, they are literally training their soldiers to commit war crimes as part of the normal practice of war.

This is not an issue of soldiers exceeding their authority. It’s an issue of the commander-in-chief of the United States armed forces, along with his top commanders and civilian officials, being responsible for a military system that, once unleashed, cannot but commit systematic violations of humanitarian law. Without making ludicrous comparisons between President Bush and Slobodan Milosevic or Saddam Hussein, the same logic and international laws that led the U.S. to support their captures and trials could leave both President Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair open to prosecution for the systematic commission of war crimes by the military forces and civilian personnel under their command.

Indeed, well before the circulation of the torture photos, evidence of war crimes was in the morning newspaper, for those who cared to note it. To take but one example, in the midst of cease-fire negotiations in the city of Falluja, an extemporaneous remark by American commanders might have alerted Americans to the commission of war crimes by their troops. In explaining to reporters that they would start “letting in medical and relief supplies” after two weeks in which the main hospital was also closed and medical personnel were prohibited from entering the city, Marine commanders implicitly admitted that they had, in fact, prevented those supplies from reaching the city and so, to that moment, were in “grave breach” of Articles 55 and 147 of the 4th Geneva Convention. These articles, so crucial to the protection of civilians in wartime, insist that “to the fullest extent of the means available to it, the Occupying Power has the duty of ensuring the food and medical supplies of the population; it should, in particular, bring in the necessary foodstuffs, medical stores and other articles if the resources of the occupied territory are inadequate.” Not only is the prevention of medical care prohibited, but any deaths resulting from such an action are considered war crimes.

The sad reality is that evidence of systematic war crimes in Iraq is impossible to ignore, especially when you’re in Iraq. From the sorry state of the country’s hospitals, to torture at Abu Ghraib — when I was there in March the reality of torture at the prison was already old news to Iraqis — to the innumerable civilians killed by coalition forces, even the most modest of tours of the country left one with the feeling that the Americans and British were no better than the Israelis at the game of belligerent occupation. Even before the outbreak of the current insurrection it was hard to travel around the country and not feel that the level of violence deployed to maintain the occupation was a major reason it had lost legitimacy in the Arab two-thirds of the country.

And so to Iraqis and much of the rest of the world — but not most shocked Americans — the torture photos did not reveal an isolated phenomenon; they reflected a larger well-known structural problem (at the heart of which was the commission of “war crimes” as defined both by American military manuals and by international law). The situation had, in fact, become so bad that UN special envoy to Iraq Lakdar Brahimi alluded to the problem of war crimes This Week when speaking of the situation in Falluja. He asked ABC News’ George Stephanopoulous, “When you surround a city, you bomb the city, when people cannot go to hospital, what name do you have for that?” Indeed, only weeks after the occupation began a group of Belgian doctors who have spent the last year in Baghdad explained that, whatever crimes might be committed by Iraqis, as the internationally recognized belligerent occupiers “the current humanitarian catastrophe is entirely and solely the responsibility of the US and British authorities.” Even that early into the occupation they documented violations of at least a dozen articles of the 4th Geneva Convention by coalition forces (including articles 10, 12, 15, 21, 35, 36, 41, 45, 47, 48, 51, and 55).

Countrywide, beyond the decrepit health, education, and infrastructure systems, of the estimated over ten thousand civilian deaths at the hands of coalition forces, many would certainly qualify as war crimes as defined in Article 147 of the 4th Geneva Convention as well as Article 3 of the Hague Tribunal statute — which was drafted in large part by the U.S. as the basis for trials of war crimes committed in the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. (It describes the “wanton destruction… or devastation not justified by military necessity [and] attack, or bombardment, by whatever means, of undefended towns, villages, dwellings, or buildings, [and] the seizure of, destruction or willful damage done to institutions dedicated to religion, charity and education…” as war crimes). In fact, a recent New York Times article describing battlefield baptisms of American soldiers taking place in the yard of a Falluja elementary school commandeered by US forces completely missed the fact that seizing the school (not to mention preventing students from continuing their studies) would, under Article 3 of the Hague Tribunal statute and the above mentioned articles of the 4th Geneva Convention, be considered war crimes.

Moreover, there are at least 8,000 Iraqis being held without charge in what were previously Saddam’s prisons as well as new detention camps set up by the Coalition forces, 70-90% of whom coalition military intelligence officials (according to the International Red Cross) now admit were likely arrested by mistake. Since almost none (if indeed any) of them have been charged with and convicted of a crime, or defined as prisoners of war (a label it seems the U.S. will only willing to bestow on Iraqi soldiers captured during the invasion last year), their detention is a war crime under Geneva IV (articles 17, 18, 33 and 147), which states that “no protected person [that is, civilian] may be punished for an offence he or she has not personally committed. Collective penalties and likewise all measures of intimidation or of terrorism are prohibited.” And prohibited as well is the detention of relatives of wanted persons (“the taking of hostages” in Articles 34, 53 and 147) and the destruction of homes of suspected insurgents or their families (Article 147), all of which have been widely reported in the international, and especially Arab press, and generally more grudgingly in the American press, and admitted to by U.S. forces.

The silence of much of the political opposition in our country on the most essential aspects of the war and occupation is making the issue of war crimes particularly damaging to America’s position in the world. Even John Kerry, who today may or may not be part of that opposition, but who once had the courage to call American actions in Vietnam “war crimes,” has offered only the most muted criticisms of American actions in Iraq. In fact, like many of his colleagues, he’s called for even more troops to be sent in, which, given his Vietnam experience, he surely must realize can only mean more war crimes and other violations of international law. As for the peace movement, it’s been strangely silent on the war crimes issue. While critics are focusing on the “privatization” of military prisons or a loose chain of command as culprits in the abuses now confronting us, generally speaking, occupying other people’s countries is by nature a criminal enterprise that requires increasingly brutal and dehumanizing means to keep the occupied, and no less important the occupiers, in line.

When I’m outside the US, whether in the Muslim world, Europe or almost anywhere else, people invariably ask me why Americans don’t care that their country is violating the very principles of international law the U.S. helped design. Some might say it isn’t fair that the occupiers, and not the occupied, are the only ones facing international condemnation and even prosecution for the violence. And in fact, while under international humanitarian law Iraqi civilians have no obligation of loyalty towards the occupying power, they are also prohibited by international humanitarian law from violently resisting the occupation or attempting to liberate Iraq., and according to Article 5 of the 4th Geneva Convention can in fact be detained by the coalition if they are “definitely suspected” of engaging in violent opposition.

But however bloody or criminal the actions of the Iraqi insurgency, the onus is on the coalition, as Iraq’s internationally recognized occupying power, to conduct itself strictly according to international law. In this context, expressions of “disgust” or even apologies, however slow in coming, by President Bush or Prime Minister Blair, or promises of “independent” investigations by people connected to the occupying powers are meaningless, while admissions that the abuses at Abu Ghraib are “systematic” are misleading if the system referred to is only the prison system, and not the occupation as a whole.

As a matter of fact, the rest of the world is not just sitting back watching events unfold. There have already been attempts to indict U.S. military commanders in Belgian courts based on that country’s law of “universal competence,” although political pressures have prevented a case from proceeding. There are at least three other ways of bringing U.S., coalition (and let us not forget, Iraqi) perpetrators of war crimes to justice that are being considered by progressive international lawyers. If successful, these could severely damage American credibility for the foreseeable future.

The first would be the indictment of Tony Blair and other senior British officials at the International Criminal Court, to which Britain, unlike the United States, remains a signatory. Several international lawyers with whom I’ve spoken believe that President Bush and other American officials could actually be listed as co-conspirators and/or perpetrators of any crimes for which Blair and his subordinates might be indicted, based on Article 25 of the Rome ICC treaty, despite extensive efforts by the Bush Administration in the months before the invasion to force the EU (and other countries around the world) to grant “total exemption” from prosecution by the ICC to all American civilians and military personnel. The second would be to convince the UN General Assembly to convene a war crimes tribunal (or at least a Truth Commission) to investigate abuses by coalition and rebel forces. Finally, war crimes charges could be brought right here in the U.S. through Federal war crimes statutes. If the Justice Department (as is likely) refused to open such an investigation, plaintiffs could still sue in Federal court to compel it to do so. And if the Republican-dominated courts refused to order an investigation it would only further strengthen the worldwide sentiment that the U.S. operates by double standards in Iraq and the world at large.

Given the possibilities, why is the peace movement not moving on this issue? Certainly it can’t be because it’s not relevant to the larger issues of peace and justice in Iraq. As Voltaire reminded us over 250 years ago: “Those who can make you believe absurdities will get you to commit atrocities… As long as we believe in absurdities we will commit atrocities.” In other words, as long as the occupation of Iraq is based on the absurdities sold to us by the Bush and Blair governments, its very structure will make atrocities a necessary part of the functioning of the system it’s put in place. And as long as Americans continue to believe in the absurdities behind the much larger “war on terrorism,” they will continue to be accomplices to international crimes, and to increasing violations of the rights of their fellow citizens as well — and on a grand scale at that.

As damaging to the image and credibility of the United States, millions of people around the world — yes, egged on by al-Jazeera (which increasingly feels like the Arab equivalent of Fox News), but also informed by the BBC, Le Monde or al-Hayat — will believe that the United States has arrogated to itself the right to engage in practices it correctly condemns when done by other states it defines as enemies. If such perceptions and the reality shaping them are not changed soon, not only will Iraq descend into chaos and large-scale violence out of which — if past wars of liberation are any indication — it will take years to emerge, but the larger war on terror, for whose benefit Iraq was ostensibly occupied, will surely be lost, with grave consequences for the entire world.

Mark LeVine, assistant professor of history at the University of California, Irvine, is the co-editor, with Pilar Perez and Viggo Mortensen, of Twilight of Empire: Responses to Occupation (Perceval Press, 2003) and author of the forthcoming Why They Don’t Hate Us: Islam and the World in the Age of Globalization (Oneworld Publications, 2004).

Copyright C2004 Mark LeVine

Additional dispatches from Tom Engelhardt can be read throughout the week at TomDispatch.com, a web log of The Nation Institute.

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The crisis facing journalism and democracy isn’t going away anytime soon. And neither is Mother Jones, our readers, or our unique way of doing in-depth reporting that exists to bring about change.

Which is exactly why, despite the challenges we face, we just took a big gulp and joined forces with the Center for Investigative Reporting, a team of ace journalists who create the amazing podcast and public radio show Reveal.

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