You are currently browsing the tag archive for the ‘War Crimes’ tag.

We have to dispel the notion that the US, UK, and Canada are on always on the side of justice and that we can do no wrong.  If this was the case, we would happily welcome the scrutiny of the ICC in our wars and international affairs, as we would (in theory) have nothing to hide.  Vijay Prashad writing for Counterpunch disagrees.

Clearly, this is not the case.

“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.”

We have one set of rules for the rest of the world and another version that we apply to ourselves.  The exceptionalism that is portrayed in our media and repeated by our political classes needs to be dispelled.  We should not be above the ICC’s reach, nor should we be impeding the investigations that it undertakes.  Yet it is the reality we inhabit.

Most nations will act with a certain level of impunity when it comes to their interests at home and abroad.  We in the West need to acknowledge that through our actions, are no better or worse then the countries we seek to censure through the ICC and the war crimes it prosecutes.

I’ve been keeping an eye on what has been happening recently with the Canadian Armed Forces and their handling of the detainee situation.  The prognosis has been rather bleak.  We are most likely responsible for people being abused and tortured while under our aegis.  The Harper government has been doing backflips as of late to keep a lid on the story.  Intransigentia has forwarded this article to my attention.

“The Harper government has effectively suspended parliamentary hearings on allegations that Afghan detainees were transferred to torture – boycotting attempts by opposition MPs to continue a Commons probe of the matter.”

Why are the Conservatives engaged in what seems to be a full on exercise in damage control if in fact, there is no substance to the allegations raised by Richard Colvin?

The Conservatives are blocking parliamentary inquiries saying insipid tidbits like this:

“It’s not the time to be having meetings that are implying, intentioned or not, that Canadians are somehow guilty of war crimes,” Laurie Hawn, the parliamentary secretary for the Defence Minister, said on CTV’s Power Play after the aborted meeting.

Well Mr.Hawn when exactly is the time to investigate possible war crimes perpetrated by our forces?  The optics do not improve by stalling and delaying the House of Commons about the issue.

What is happening is that the Conservatives know they have a situation that will bring down their government.  Delaying parliament is only the first step in the three ring circus that is forming around this issue.  I guarantee this is only going to get worse.

It has been strangely quiet in the news about Iraq. It takes a significant event, as CBC reports, to make headlines about the shattered country.

CarBomb

“At least 136 people died Sunday after two car bombs detonated in Baghdad. With casualty figures still rising, officials said that nearly 600 people had been injured and taken to six area hospitals.

So many people were wounded that even civilian cars were pressed into service to take the casualties to area hospitals, said a Baghdad hospital official who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

The two vehicles were packed with explosives and detonated less than a minute apart in the centre of the Iraqi capital, officials said.”

Are we purging our collective memories of Iraq and the atrocities we have committed there?  Do we think that not bringing Bush and Cheney in for war crimes will not incense the rest of the world?

Iraq is still being torn asunder.  The coverage has moved on to Afghanistan and so has our consciousness.  Our actions leave us accountable for so much destruction and chaos.  We owe the people of Iraq and Afghanistan more than just bullets and bomb craters.


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