The
Drums of War are Beating: Killing Civilians to Protect Civilians in Syria
Global Research, August 28, 2013
The drums of war are beating again. The Obama administration
will reportedly launch a military strike to punish Syria’s Assad government for
its alleged use of chemical weapons. A military attack would invariably kill
civilians for the ostensible purpose of showing the Syrian government that
killing civilians is wrong. “What we are talking about here is a potential
response . . . to this specific violation of international norms,” declared
White House press secretary Jay Carney. But a military intervention by the
United States in Syria to punish the government would violate international law.
For the United States to threaten to and/or launch a
military strike as a reprisal is a blatant violation of the United Nations
Charter. The Charter requires countries to settle their international disputes
peacefully.
Article 2(4) makes it
illegal for any country to either use force or threaten to use force against
another country. Article 2(7) prohibits intervention in an internal or domestic
dispute in another country. The only time military force is lawful under
the Charter is when the Security Council approves it, or under Article 51,
which allows a country to defend itself if attacked. “The use of chemical
weapons within Syria is not an armed attack on the United States,” according to
Notre Dame law professor Mary Ellen O’Connell.
The United States and the international community have
failed to take constructive steps to promote peace-making efforts, which could
have brought the crisis in Syria to an end. The big powers instead have waged a
proxy war to give their “side” a stronger hand in future negotiations,
evaluating the situation only in terms of geopolitical concerns. The result has
been to once again demonstrate that military solutions to political and
economic problems are no solution at all. In the meantime, the fans of enmity between
religious factions have been inflamed to such a degree that the demonization of
each by the other has created fertile ground for slaughter and excuses for not
negotiating with anyone with “blood on their hands.”
Despite U.S. claims of
“little doubt that Assad used these weapons,” there is significant doubt among
the international community about which side employed chemical weapons. Many
view the so-called rebels as trying to create a situation to provoke U.S.
intervention against Assad. Indeed, in May, Carla del Ponte, former
international prosecutor and current UN commissioner on Syria, concluded that
opposition forces used sarin gas against civilians.
The use of any type of chemical weapon by any party would
constitute a war crime. Chemical weapons that kill and maim people are illegal
and their use violates the laws of war. The illegality of chemical and poisoned
weapons was first established by the Hague regulations of 1899 and Hague
Convention of 1907. It was reiterated in the Geneva Convention of 1925 and the
Chemical Weapons Convention. The
Rome Statute for the International Criminal Court specifically states that
employing “poison or poisoned weapons” and “asphyxiating, poisonous or other
gases, and all analogous liquids, materials or devices” are war crimes, under
Article 8. The prohibition on the use of these weapons is an international norm
regardless of whether any convention has been ratified. As these weapons do not distinguish between
military combatants and civilians, they violate the principle of distinction
and the ban on weapons which cause unnecessary suffering and death contained in
the Hague Convention. Under the Nuremberg Principles, violations of the laws of
war are war crimes.
The self-righteousness of the United States about the
alleged use of chemical weapons by Assad is hypocritical. The United States
used napalm and employed massive amounts of chemical weapons in the form of
Agent Orange in Vietnam, which continues to affect countless people over many
generations.
Recently declassified
CIA documents reveal U.S. complicity in Saddam Hussein’s use of chemical
weapons during the Iran-Iraq war, according to Foreign Policy: “In contrast to today’s wrenching debate over whether the United States should
intervene to stop alleged chemical weapons attacks by the Syrian government,
the United States applied a cold calculus three decades ago to Hussein’s
widespread use of chemical weapons against his enemies and his own people. The
Reagan administration decided that it was better to let the attacks continue if
they might turn the tide of the war. And even if they were discovered, the CIA
wagered that international outrage and condemnation would be muted.”
In Iraq and Afghanistan, the United States used cluster
bombs, depleted uranium, and white phosphorous gas. Cluster bomb cannisters
contain tiny bomblets, which can spread over a vast area. Unexploded cluster
bombs are frequently picked up by children and explode, resulting in serious
injury or death. Depleted uranium (DU) weapons spread high levels of radiation
over vast areas of land. In Iraq, there has been a sharp increase in Leukemia
and birth defects, probably due to DU. White phosphorous gas melts the skin and
burns to the bone.
The Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of
Civilian Persons in time of War (Geneva IV) classifies “willfully causing great
suffering or serious injury to body or health” as a grave breach, which
constitutes a war crime.
The use of chemical weapons, regardless of the purpose,
is atrocious, no matter the feigned justification. A government’s use of such
weapons against its own people is particularly reprehensible. Secretary of
State John Kerry said that the purported attack by Assad’s forces “defies any code of
morality” and should “shock the conscience of the world.” He went on to say
that “there must be accountability for those who would use the world’s most
heinous weapons against the world’s most vulnerable people.”
Yet the U.S.
militarily occupied over 75% of the Puerto Rican island of Vieques for 60
years, during which time the Navy routinely practiced with, and used, Agent
Orange, depleted uranium, napalm and other toxic chemicals and metals such as
TNT and mercury. This occurred within a couple of miles of a civilian
population that included thousands of U.S. citizens. The people of Vieques have lived under the
colonial rule of the United States now for 115 years and suffer from terminal
health conditions such as elevated rates of cancer, hypertension, respiratory
and skin illnesses and kidney failure. While Secretary Kerry calls for
accountability by the Assad government, the U.S. Navy has yet to admit, much
less seek atonement, for decades of bombing and biochemical warfare on Vieques.
The U.S. government’s
moral outrage at the use of these weapons falls flat as it refuses to take
responsibility for its own violations.
President Barack Obama admitted, “If the U.S. goes in and
attacks another country without a UN mandate and without clear evidence that
can be presented, then there are questions in terms of whether international
law supports it . . .” The Obama administration is studying the 1999 “NATO air
war in Kosovo as a possible blueprint for acting without a mandate from the
United Nations,” the New York Times reported. But NATO’s Kosovo bombing also
violated the UN Charter as the Security Council never approved it, and it was
not carried out in self-defense. The UN Charter does not permit the use of
military force for “humanitarian interventions.” Humanitarian concerns do not
constitute self-defense. In
fact, humanitarian concerns should spur the international community to seek
peace and end the suffering, not increase military attacks, which could
endanger peace in the entire region.
Moreover, as Phyllis Bennis of the Institute for Policy
Studies and David Wildman of Human Rights & Racial Justice for the Global
Ministries of the United Methodist Church wrote, “Does anyone really believe
that a military strike on an alleged chemical weapons factory would help the
Syrian people, would save any lives, would help bring an end to this horrific
civil war”?
Military strikes will likely result in the escalation of
Syria’s civil war. “Let’s be clear,” Bennis and Wildman note. “Any U.S.
military attack, cruise missiles or anything else, will not be to protect
civilians – it will mean taking sides once again in a bloody, complicated civil
war.” Anthony Cordesman, military analyst from the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, asks, “Can you do damage with cruise missiles? Yes. Can
you stop them from having chemical weapons capability? I would think the answer
would be no.”
The United States and its allies must refrain from
military intervention in Syria and take affirmative steps to promote a durable
ceasefire and a political solution consistent with international law. If the
U.S. government were truly interested in fomenting peace and promoting
accountability, it should apologize to and compensate the victims of its own
use of chemical weapons around the world.
Marjorie Cohn is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School
of Law, former president of the National Lawyers Guild (NLG), and deputy
secretary general of the International Association of Democratic Lawyers
(IADL). New York attorney Jeanne Mirer is president of the IADL and co-chair of
the NLG’s International Committee. Both Cohn and Mirer are on the board of the
Vietnam Agent Orange Relief and Responsibility Campaign
Copyright © 2013 Global Research
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