| Last
week, the House of Representatives passed its non-binding
resolution opposing the troop surge, 246-182. Senate Republicans
having twice succeeded in stifling the same measure, the
House may be as far as that bill gets. But with bills
for military funding still to consider, both legislative
bodies will soon return to the issue of Iraq: when to
get out, and how.
With all the discussion, something exceptional has not
been happening. There has been virtually no serious debate
about whether the Iraq war is legal. Or even how to determine
if it is legal.
This disregard for the rule of law is exceptional!
At Nuremberg in 1945, the U.S. led the world in declaring
that a war of aggression was the “supreme international
crime” — a crime against the peace. The United
States accepted that any war is a war of aggression unless
approved by the UN or in self-defense, and then only until
the UN can be convened.
This is international law as ratified by the United States.
Moreover, international law is incorporated in our military
law. U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10, Section 498, says:
“Any person ... who commits an act which constitutes
a crime under international law is… liable to punishment.
Such offenses in connection with war comprise: (a.) Crimes
against peace. (b.) Crimes against humanity. (c.) War
crimes.”
Lt. Ehren Watada is the first commissioned officer to
have refused deployment to Iraq because he believes the
war is illegal. If the war is illegal, he is legally obligated—under
both military and Constitutional law—not to fight
in it. Yet the military judge in his court martial refused
to permit discussion of the legality of the war.
Richard Falk, Professor Emeritus of International Law
at Princeton University, said that if Lt. Watada “has
no chance to even raise that issue before this military
tribunal [court martial], then it’s such a blatant
denial of justice as to itself constitute a kind of crime
because he’s being criminally disallowed from obeying
the law. Franz Kafka didn’t have such a macabre
imagination.”
What did The Seattle Times have to say on the issue? In
an editorial titled “The case against Lt. Ehren
Watada,” the word “legal” does not appear
once. The paper notes, “Lt. Watada opposes this
war.” That is true, but the paper doesn’t
address the central question of why he opposes the war:
Lt. Watada says it’s illegal. Well, Seattle Times,
is this war legal or illegal? It’s as if the Times
finds it impossible to even consider that the U.S. started
an illegal war.
Take the ill-informed position of Sen. Maria Cantwell.
About 10 months ago, I joined a group of activists who
met with her. We each got to ask one question. Mine was
this: Since the U.S. was not under attack by Iraq and
the UN had not authorized our war, isn’t the
war you voted for illegal? (And aren’t we at risk
of doing the same with Iran?)
Sen. Cantwell surprised us. She said she believed UN authorization
came
from Security Council Resolution 687, which formalized
the Gulf War cease-fire back in 1991. Because Iraq had
violated its commitments, she said, we had the right to
go back to war in 2003. But Sen. Cantwell either hadn’t
read or understood the resolution: The last sentence is
unequivocal that the UN Security Council holds sole authority
to determine any future actions.
On a Jan. 25 broadcast of the NPR program “Fresh
Air,” Terry Gross interviewed a military law expert,
attorney Eugene Fidell. She asked, “In what court
would you decide whether a war was legal or not?”
He answered, “In no court at all!”
Attorney Fidell goes on to say that only Congress can
decide whether a war is illegal. But it is Congress that
authorized the war. Would one sensibly ask Lt. William
Calley to decide if he had committed a war crime at My
Lai? How can one sensibly ask Congress to decide the legality
of a war it itself authorized?
In 1945, Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson, acting
as U.S. chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg War Tribunal,
warned, “We must never forget that the record on
which we judge these defendants today is the record on
which history will judge us tomorrow. To pass these defendants
a poisoned chalice is to put it to our own lips as well.”
We have largely forgotten Justice Jackson’s warning
about the rule of international law. And the poisoned
chalice is passing to our lips, in Iraq and beyond.
Bert Sacks (BertOnIraq.blogspot.com) has a petition before
the Supreme Court challenging the legality of 12 years
of U.S. sanctions on Iraq, believing that because they
led to the deaths of 500,000 Iraqi children. the sanctions
became acts of terrorism.
[The War on Trial]
Bert Sacks was also involved in the Citizens’ Hearing
on the Legality of U.S. Actions in Iraq, a counterpoint
to Lt. Watada’s court martial. Hear testimony from
the Hearing at www.WarTribunal.org.
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