In the Silence,
War Continues
by Larry Beinhart
CommonDreams.org
During the first half of the 20th Century the United States spearheaded
the movement to make war illegal.
Based on the standards that were set then, based on international and
American law, and based on the facts, a clear-cut and convincing case
can be made that the invasion of Iraq was a crime.
It is impossible to imagine that George Bush and Dick Cheney and the
rest of their group will actually be brought into court and charged,
and perhaps that is the reason that the response has been silence. We
do not even discuss what makes a war legal or illegal. It has not and
will not be debated on the floor of the US Senate. It won’t be
the subject of an investigation in the Washington Post or the New York
Times. It won’t be a segment on 60 Minutes or an item the NBC
Nightly News. Anyone who says that the invasion of Iraq was a war crime
will probably be dismissed as a member of the loony left.
Nonetheless, it is worthwhile to know where the moral high ground used
to be.
* * *
The movement to seriously end war came out of the First World War.
All the nations marched to the battlefields eagerly. They had visions
of flying banners, glorious cavalry charges, feats of courage and derring-do.
What they met was a new kind of war. War as an industrial slaughter.
It decimated an entire generation. It bankrupted a continent.
The Second World War reinforced that experience.
Although some of the victors emerged rich and powerful and although
the movies and memoirs were filled with heroism and glory, the participants
got together and said, this was a horror and whoever starts one of these
things has committed a crime.
A terrible crime.
The Law
In 1928 the Kellogg-Briand Pact was signed. It renounced war as "an
instrument of policy."
It’s a treaty and it’s still in effect and that makes it,
according to Article VI of the Constitution, American law:
... all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority
of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the
judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the Constitution
or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding.
Germany and Japan were also among the signatories. Obviously, they
did not abide by it. But their violation of the treaty became one of
the legal foundations for the war crimes trials.
Three types of war crimes were defined at Nuremberg in 1945: crimes
committed during war as violations of the norms of war, crimes against
humanity, like genocide, and, on top of the list, was to start a war:
To initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international
crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other
war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of
the whole.
That same year, in another step toward trying to end war, at least
between countries, the United Nations was formed. The UN Charter, Article
2, Section 4, says:
All Members shall refrain in their international relations from the
threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political
independence of any state ...
The United States, one of the founders of the UN, signed the charter.
It is, like the Kellogg-Briand Pact, a treaty. Therefore it becomes,
according to the Constitution, part of US law.
Self-Defense
Self-defense is legal.
Nothing in Kellogg-Briand or the UN Charter says or implies that a
nation can’t defend itself.
Preventive War
Preventive war is an extension of self-defense.
The idea is that if a bad guy is coming down the street with a gun
you don’t have to wait until he’s in your house before you
can shoot back.
That sounds like rough common sense and it has a great deal of emotional
appeal.
But bear in mind that if you yell at the guy and he runs away, or if
he drops his gun, or if you have time to call the police and they’ve
arrived, shooting the guy is no longer self-defense, it’s somewhere
between hysterical manslaughter and murder.
Historically, the idea of preventive war has been very narrowly construed,
just like shooting someone down in the street on the grounds that they
are a threat to you. There has to be "a necessity of self-defense,”
and it has to be “instant, overwhelming, leaving no choice of
means, and no moment for deliberation," and the act of self-defense
“must be limited by that necessity, and kept clearly within it."
Preemptive War
Preemptive war, also called Bush Doctrine, is an extension of preventive
war.
The big difference is that the threat no longer has to be “instant”
or even immanent.
The idea is that if an opponent has both nuclear weapons and the will
to use them, then the downside risk is so grave that it requires action
to be taken before “the smoking gun is a mushroom cloud.”
Once that’s said, the idea extends itself even further. It spreads
out like an oil slick. The enemy doesn’t actually have to have
nukes. They could have a program. Or merely the intent to have a program.
Nor does it have to be nuclear. They could have the intent to have biological
or chemical weapons programs. Nor is it necessary for them to exhibit
or have a history of threatening to use those weapons against us. It
is enough that if they have such a weapon sometime in the future, they
might give it to someone else who is willing to use it.
Let us say that all makes sense and it is justifiable, the underlying
justification still remains the same – self-defense.
If the enemy is disarmed, then the necessity for self-defense disappears.
Just as once a suspect has dropped his gun and raised his hands, no
matter how horrible his crime is, no matter how good a person the policeman
is, if the policeman shoots him, it’s murder.
Rogue States
There is one more legal way to go to war.
The UN Charter calls for “collective action” against a
state that is out of control and dangerous to the rest of the world,
a region or to one of it’s neighbors.
It requires Security Council agreement and there have been three UN
authorized wars, the Korean War, Gulf War One and Somalia.
The United Nations did not authorize military action Iraq.
It authorized pressure against Saddam Hussein to get him to admit inspectors
and to disarm.
The Facts
The United States and the United Nations demanded that Saddam Hussein
accept weapons inspectors and give them unlimited access so as to prove
that he had disarmed as he had agreed to do after the First Gulf War.
Saddam Hussein agreed to that, in both word and deed.
The inspectors went to Iraq. They got in everywhere they asked to go.
They did not find prohibited weapons, except for a few that had been
overlooked or lost in the shuffle and the Iraqis promptly destroyed
them. They did not find any programs to produce prohibited weapons.
As proving a negative is difficult, the inspectors could not guarantee
that no weapons existed. They asked for more time.
Let us stop right there. Let us examine that moment.
If there was any doubt that Saddam was somehow not fully disarmed,
he was like a “perp” up against the wall, arms and legs
spread wide, being frisked.
Effectively, he was disarmed.
The need for self-defense, even a preventive or preemptive self-defense,
was over. The justification for war was gone.
Instead of being pleased that the threat was over, the Bush administration
demanded that the inspectors stop their work and leave Iraq.
Then they changed the rules. They no longer demanded that Saddam disarm.
Or even that he prove that he had disarmed. Now, the only way to stop
the invasion, was for Saddam to abdicate and leave the country.
If the invasion of Iraq was not a matter of self-defense – however
much the definition was stretched – and it was not sanctioned
as collective action – it was a war of aggression.
There are no mitigating circumstances, except, perhaps, the silence.
The silence, vast and still, came from the media. It came from our
other politicians. From our historians, lawyers and generals, from our
priests, ministers, rabbis, and imams, who failed to step forward and
say, wait, once upon a time we said that waging an aggressive war was
the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes
in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole.
Once upon a time we hung people for the crime of waging an aggressive
war.
We are continuing that war. We have already begun the preparations
for another war.
We may not be able to stop this administration from committing war
crimes, we may not be able to bring them to justice, but we can end
the silence.
Larry Beinhart is the author of "Fog Facts: Searching for
Truth in the Land of Spin," "The Librarian," and "Wag
the Dog."
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