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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Washingtons hypocrisy over Iraqi "war crimes"
By Bill Vann
28 March 2003
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The Bush administration and the Pentagon have seized on Iraqs
treatment of captured US soldiers in an attempt to counter flagging
support for a war that has failed to live up to Washingtons
promises of a speedy campaign of liberation.
Speaking at Macdill Air Force Base in Florida on Wednesday,
Bush condemned Iraqis as war criminals, even as US
bombs and missiles rained down on Baghdad, killing 36 civilians
and wounding another 215 on that day alone.
Bush appeared untroubled by the mounting civilian death toll,
or for that matter, the casualties suffered by young US soldiers.
Half of his speech was taken up with the kind of political backslapping
and one-line jokes normally reserved for campaign fundraisers.
The rest consisted of a warning to the American people that the
war is shaping up to be a long one, and denunciations of Iraqi
resistance.
In the early stages of this war, the world is getting
a clearer view of the Iraqi regime and the evil at its heart,
he said. In the ranks of that regime are men whose idea
of courage is to brutalize unarmed prisoners. They wage attacks
while posing as civilians. They use real civilians as human shields.
They pretend to surrender, then fire upon those who show them
mercy.
These remarks echoed similar statements by Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld in a Pentagon press briefing the day before: The
regime has committed acts of treachery on the battlefield, dressing
their forces as liberated civilians and sending soldiers out waving
white flags and feigning surrender, with the goal of drawing coalition
forces into ambushes; using Red Cross vehicles to courier military
instructions. These are serious violations of the laws of war.
The Pentagons spokeswoman condemned Iraqi fighters for
perfidy or treachery. She added, Some liken
these actions to terrorism.
That the US should open up a public relations campaign that
centers on denouncing the Iraqis for violating the laws
of war is truly staggering, even by the perverse standards
of the Washington lie machine. The principal law regarding warfare
is that no nation has the right to wage an unprovoked war of aggression
against another. It was a law that emerged out of two world wars,
was codified at the Nuremberg trials of leading Nazis, and enshrined
in the founding Charter of the United Nations.
It is this law that the Bush administration has violated, failing
even to obtain the fig leaf of a United Nations resolution authorizing
the use of force before sending an invading army into Iraq and
bombarding its cities with cruise missiles, satellite-guided munitions
and cluster bombs.
At Nuremberg, the first charge in the indictment against the
surviving leaders of the Third Reich was conspiracy to wage aggressive
war. The prosecutors reasoned that all of the other monstrous
crimes carried out by the Nazi regime flowed from this essential
one.
So too in Iraq. Whatever acts of brutality occur against the
Iraqi people, and whatever the retaliation inflicted on American
soldiersthey flow from the Bush administrations illegal
war of plunder. American troops would not be ambushed, killed
or captured if they had not been sent to invade a country that
had carried out no attack whatsoever on the US. The criminal responsibility
rests with Washington, which conspired to launch this war and
used the technique of the Big Lie to justify it.
Claims that Iraq represented a grave threat because of its
supposed weapons of mass destruction were backed up
with documents that US officials knew to be forgeries. Allegations
that the Iraqi regime was somehow tied to those who carried out
the terrorist attacks of September 11 were continuously repeated
long after they were exposed as lies.
Perhaps the most obscene lie of all was told to American soldiers,
who were assured that they were being sent to liberate
Iraq and would be greeted by its people with ovations and flowers.
Instead, even as US and British commanders have attempted to
skirt population centers, the invading forces have confronted
relentless armed opposition from not only Iraqi soldiers and militiamen,
but also from armed civilians. Lightly armed Iraqis have confronted
heavily armored columns backed by helicopter gunships and fighter
planes, and have suffered horrendous casualties. Reporters accompanying
the US and British units report the roadsides to be littered with
Iraqi bodies. Some acknowledge there is widespread popular hatred
for the invaders.
US soldiers complain they are unable to distinguish friend
from foe and, in many cases, have responded by firing on anything
that moves in areas where they encounter resistance. As a result,
Iraqi hospitals are overflowing with casualties, most of them
women, children and old men.
The invaders too have suffered losses, though in far smaller
numbers. The fear that a greater toll of US and British dead and
wounded will turn the American public against this military adventure
underlies the outrage expressed by Bush and the Pentagon over
Iraqi tactics and, in particular, the filming of American POWs.
As many have pointed out, Washington taking umbrage over violations
of the Geneva Conventions is the height of hypocrisy. US forces
have freely allowed the filming of surrendering Iraqi troops who
are forced to their knees, searched and herded behind barbed wire.
In Afghanistan, the US openly flouted the Geneva Conventions.
It is holding Taliban forces incommunicado and brutalizing and
humiliating them to the point that suicide attempts have reached
epidemic proportions at the Guantanamo prison camp. Two prisoners
have reportedly died from torture. There is also damning evidence
that US forces participated in the massacre of some 3,000 Taliban
supporters who surrendered to US-backed forces following the battle
of Mazar-i-Sharif, not to mention the US bombing of the prison
fortress itself, which resulted in the slaughter of some 800 captured
Taliban troops.
The Geneva Conventions also bar the deliberate targeting of
civilian installations, a proscription that the Pentagon acknowledges
violating with its missile attacks directed against Iraqi television.
No doubt the Iraqis would prefer to wage the kind of civilized
war being carried out by the US, but they lack cruise missiles
and aircraft carriers that make it possible to kill large quantities
of people from hundreds of miles away. Instead they have attempted
to answer the US shock and awe campaign and demonstrate
to the world that the US military is not all-powerful by airing
film of the bodies of American troops and wounded and trembling
American soldiers being questioned by their Iraqi captors.
A violation of international law, the US protests,
threatening war crimes trials for those responsible. It will not,
however, undertake such proceedings in the newly formed International
Criminal Court. Washington has refused to recognize the institution
for fear that it could find itself in the dock.
The fact that the US has illegally invaded Iraq with overwhelming
military force is of no matter, the administrations legal
experts explain. Who is right and who is wrong in a war,
including who started it, does not matter, said Ruth Wedgwood,
a professor of international law at the Johns Hopkins University.
Even if you think the war is illegal, the rules of war still
apply. Often quoted for her legal expertise on why the US
war of aggression is permissible, Ms. Wedgwood is a member of
both the Committee to Liberate Iraq and the Pentagons
Defense Policy Board. Her statements only confirm that defenders
of US atrocities, prepared to offer up any sophistry or lie, can
be readily found in the halls of academia.
The claim that the invaders and the invaded, the oppressor
and the oppressed, must all be held to the same abstract legal
and moral code is worthy only of contempt.
The complaints of armed Iraqis using rusesincluding fake
surrendersto ambush American troops echo US denunciations
of the National Liberation Front guerrillas during the Vietnam
War. In that war too US officials claimed they were carrying out
carefully targeted military strikes while working to win the hearts
and minds of the people. The end result was a million Vietnamese
dead, the killing of 55,000 American soldiers and a US debacle.
The same kinds of accusations were leveled by the French against
the FLN rebels in Algeria and by the British against rebellious
subjects in India, Africa and Iraq itself some 80 years ago, when
Britain was attempting to colonize the area.
Enjoying overwhelming superiority of armsin the Iraq
of the 1920s the British army would call in strikes by warplanes
equipped with mustard gas bombsthe invading, oppressor nations
have always denounced the oppressed for failing to observe the
norms of civilized warfare.
What they have condemned as savage and a war
crime is their opponents use of their only advantagethat
it is their country and their people and that they are more willing
to die to defend it than the invader is to conquer it. Experience
has shown that this advantage ultimately weighs more on the scales
of history than superior military technology.
Even if the US-British invasion force succeeds in occupying
Baghdad, Basra and all the other population centers in this country
of 23 millionand at the moment this is by no means certainthey
will face a protracted occupation and clashes that will claim
the lives of American soldiers for years to come. Sooner rather
than later, the combination of Iraqi resistance and the outrage
of working people in America and around the world over this illegal
war will force an ignominious end to the attempt to revive colonialism
in the Middle East.
See Also:
Baghdad market massacre sheds ghastly
light on nature of US invasion
[28 March 2003]
Faced with popular resistance
US prepares for slaughter in Iraq
[26 March 2003]
Britain: Media report widespread hostility
to US/UK forces in Iraq
[26 March 2003]
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