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by
Mickey Z.
April
17, 2003
Three
days before Operation Iraqi Freedom (sic) was launched, the New York Times
reported that the Bush administration had "identified nine senior Iraqi
officials, including Saddam Hussein and his two sons, who would be tried for
war crimes or crimes against humanity after an American-led attack on
Iraq." The issue of U.S. war
crimes is rarely broached, of course, but how does the record of un-indicted
U.S. war criminals stack up against those who have paid the highest price for their
brutality?
Of
the 185 Nazis indicted at Nuremberg, only 24 were sentenced to death. Among
those two dozen was the German High Commissioner in Holland who ordered the
opening of Dutch dikes to slow the advance of Allied troops. Roughly 500,000
acres were flooded and the result was mass starvation. Less than a decade
later, the United States Air Force bombed the dams during the Korean War in
order to flood North Korea's rice farms, a move designed by the USAF to bring
about "starvation and slow death." During the Vietnam War, the
bombing of dikes in South Vietnam was an uncontroversial measure.
Our
history books teach us: Vanquished war criminals must and will be brought to
justice in unbiased tribunals. The key word here is "vanquished," because
only losers face indictment. The highest-ranking Nazi defendant at Nuremberg,
Hermann Goering, stated it plainly: "The victors will always be the
judges, the accused the vanquished." Other accused Nazis wondered aloud: "What
about Dresden? What about Hiroshima?"
But
the Germans and the Japanese lost in 1945 (as Serbia lost in 1999). The undeniable
transgressions of these and other criminal regimes have been well-documented
elsewhere and some of those responsible for war crimes have been prosecuted. It
was the war planners in the nations that defeated these regimes that sat in
judgment. General Curtis LeMay, commander of the 1945 Tokyo fire bombing
operation that killed 672,000 Japanese, understood this paradigm well. "I
suppose if I had lost the war, I would have been tried as a war criminal,"
he said. "Fortunately, we were on the winning side."
So
far, the U.S. has always ended up on the winning side and therefore hasn't had
to accept responsibility for more than two centuries of its own atrocities...many
of them against civilians.
Civilians
die during war, everyone knows that, but not all of the dead civilians are mere
"collateral damage." In many cases-particularly when invasions
provoke guerilla warfare-civilians are perceived as the enemy and are treated
as such. This practice stands in defiance of the Geneva Conventions. Article 50
states: "In case of doubt whether a person is a civilian, that person
shall be considered a civilian... The civilian population and individual
civilians shall enjoy general protection against dangers arising from military
operations... Indiscriminate attacks are prohibited." In addition, the
Principles of the Nuremberg Tribunal define "crimes against humanity"
as: "Murder, extermination, enslavement, deportation, and other inhumane
acts done against any civilian population."
Examples
of civilians killed by the American military could fill volumes.
For
the purposes of this essay, three Asian nations will serve as examples.
In
the aftermath of the Spanish-American War, the U.S. fought a brutal war of
conquest against Filipinos. By 1900, more than 75,000 American troops-three
quarters of the entire U.S. Army-were sent to the Philippines. In the face of
this overwhelming show of force, the Filipinos turned to guerrilla warfare.
The
February 5, 1901 edition of the New York World shed some light on the U.S.
response to Filipino guerilla tactics: "Our soldiers here and there resort
to terrible measures with the natives. Captains and lieutenants are sometimes
judges, sheriffs and executioners. 'I don't want any more prisoners sent into
Manila' was the verbal order from the Governor-General three months ago. It is
now the custom to avenge the death of an American soldier by burning to the
ground all the houses, and killing right and left the natives who are only
suspects." In an eerie presaging of Vietnam's hamlets, Filipino villagers
were herded into concentration camps called "reconcentrados."
Captive
Filipino soldiers and civilians alike were submitted to the "water cure."
According to the Philippine-American War Centennial Initiative, this method
"consisted of forcing four or five gallons of water down the throat of the
captive whose body becomes an object frightful to contemplate, and then
squeezing it by kneeling on his stomach. The process was repeated until the
'amigo' talked or died." And if
those amigos struck back, the U.S. was ready to up the ante. When a U.S.
platoon was wiped out in an ambush, Brig. Gen. Jacob W. Smith, a veteran of the
Wounded Knee massacre, issued orders to kill "all persons of 10 years and
older."
"The
interior of Samar must be made a howling wilderness," Smith declared. "I
want no prisoners, I wish you to kill and burn, the more you kill and burn the
better it will please me. I want all persons killed who are capable of bearing
arms in actual hostilities against the United States."
"The
My Lai massacre had its predecessor in the Philippines in 1906," says Howard
Zinn. "The American army attacked a group of 600 Moros in southern Philippines-men,
women, and children living in very primitive conditions, who had no modern
weapons. The American army attacked them with modern weapons, wiped out every
last one of these 600 men, women, and children." The commanding officer
responsible for this war crime received a telegram of congratulations from
Theodore Roosevelt.
"On
summer nights when the breeze is blowing, I can still hear their cries, the
little kids screaming," said Edward Daily. This U.S. Army veteran of the Korean
War was talking about the killing of hundreds of refugees, mostly women,
children and old men at No Gun Ri in Korea on July 26-29, 1950.
"According
to Korean survivors' and victims' relatives," says Norm Dixon in Green
Left Weekly, "following a surprise U.S. air raid that killed about 100 villagers
who had been evacuated from their village by U.S. troops, 300 other villagers,
overwhelmingly women, children and old men, had taken refuge in a narrow
culvert beneath the bridge."
"The
bloody atrocity at No Gun Ri, a hamlet 100 miles south of Seoul, has been known
in South Korea for decades," adds journalist Esther Galen, "but a series
of pro-U.S. military dictatorships suppressed any public protest or investigation."
The
incident came to light when veterans of the U.S. Army First Cavalry Division
told their stories to the Associated Press in 1999. Veterans of No Gun Ri told
AP that Captain Melbourne C. Chandler, "after speaking to superior
officers by radio, ordered machine-gunners from his heavy weapons company to
set up near the bridge tunnel openings and open fire. U.S. commanders had
claimed there were 'infiltrators' among the villagers." Chandler told his
men: "The hell with all those people. Let's get rid of all of them."
Survivors
of the massacre told of the experience. Park Hee-sook, a girl of 16 in 1950,
said, "I can still hear the moans of women dying in a pool of blood.
Children cried and clung to their dead mothers." Chun Choon Ja, 12 years
old at the time, said the U.S. troops, "dug into positions over hundreds
of yards of hilly terrain" where they could fire on the civilians. "The
American soldiers played with our lives like boys playing with flies," said
Chun.
"The
U.S. Armed Forces Claims Service told AP that there was no evidence that the
First Cavalry Division was in the area," Dixon says. "AP reporters using
map coordinates from declassified documents have established that four First
Cavalry Division battalions were in the area at the time."
The
AP investigation unearthed other U.S. war crimes against Korean civilians.
"On August 3, 1950," Galen reports, "a U.S. general and other army
officers ordered the destruction of two bridges, as South Korean refugees
streamed across, killing hundreds of civilians. One bridge ran across the
Naktong River at Waegwan." That same day, 7,000 pounds of explosives were used
to destroy a steel-girder bridge crowded with "women and children, old
men, and ox carts with their belongings."
"These
two incidents were not aberrations or the product of exceptional circumstances,
but rather characteristic of the entire American military intervention in Korea
from 1950 to 1953, one of the bloodiest chapters in U.S. history," says
Galen.
Un-indicted
war criminal and U.S. Air Force commander in Korea, General Curtis LeMay
concurred with this observation, boasting that U.S. warplanes "killed off
twenty percent of the population of Korea as direct casualties of war, or from
starvation and exposure."
"In
all my years in the Army I was never taught that communists were human beings,"
said Lt. William Calley. "We were there to kill ideology carried by-I
don't know-pawns, blobs of flesh. I was there to destroy communism. We never
conceived of people, men, women, children, babies."
The
date was March 16, 1968. "Under the command of Lieutenant William L. Calley,
Charlie Company of the Americal Division's Eleventh Infantry had 'nebulous
orders' from its company commander, Captin Ernest Medina, to 'clean the village
out'," explains historian Kenneth C. Davis. All they found at My Lai were
women, children, and old men...no weapons, no signs of enemy soldiers. Calley
ordered villagers to be killed and their huts destroyed. Women and girls were
raped before they were machine-gunned. By the end of the massacre, hundreds of
villagers were dead.
When
the truth about My Lai was eventually revealed, Henry Kissinger sent a note to
White House Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman: "Now that the cat is out of the
bag, I recommend keeping the President and the White house out of the matter
entirely." Nixon, for his part, blamed the New York Times, what he called
"dirty rotten Jews from New York," for covering the story. Perhaps what
had the White House on edge was best articulated by Colonel Oran Henderson,
charged with covering-up the My Lai killings, who explained in 1971:
"Every unit of brigade size has its My Lai hidden someplace."
"This
was not the only crime against civilians in Vietnam," Davis states. "It
was not uncommon to see GIs use their Zippo lighters to torch an entire village."
Indeed, My Lai was not an aberration. On the very same day that Lt. Calley
entered into infamy, another U.S. Army company entered My Khe (a sister
subhamlet of My Lai) and killed a reported 90 peasants. One of the My Khe
veterans later said, "What we were doing was being done all over."
In
his book, Nuremberg and Vietnam: An American Tragedy, Telford Taylor, chief
United States prosecutor at Nuremberg, suggested that General William Westmoreland
and others in the Johnson administration could be found guilty of war crimes
under criteria established at Nuremberg.
The
information presented within this article is not buried (except in mounds of
spin) by the guilty. Anyone with a search engine or a library card can
construct a convincing war crimes case against the United States. Acutely aware
of this reality, Washington has refused to sign on to the recently proposed
International Criminal Court (ICC).
Established
by the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court on July 17, 1998, the
ICC is the "first ever permanent, treaty based, international criminal
court established to promote the rule of law and ensure that the gravest
international crimes do not go unpunished."
The
United States is not happy about the ICC and Human Rights Watch explains why:
"The Bush Administration is
attempting to negotiate bilateral impunity agreements with numerous countries
around the globe. The goal of these agreements is to exempt U.S. military and
civilian personnel from the jurisdiction of the ICC."
The
need to protect its soldiers is the common U.S. justification for not signing
on, but an "anonymous top Bush official," quoted in the Sept. 7, 2002
New York Times, articulated the real reasons: "The soldiers are like the
capillaries; the top public officials-President Bush, Secretary Rumsfeld,
Secretary Powell-they are at the heart of our concern."
Currently
the under secretary of state for arms control and international security, John
Bolton further explained the U.S. position in 1998. "Much of the media
attention to the American negotiating position on the ICC concentrated on the
risks perceived by the Pentagon to American peacekeepers stationed around the
world," said Bolton, in his role as head of the American Enterprise
Institute. "Our real concern should be for the president and his top
advisers. The definition of 'war crimes' includes, for example: 'intentionally
directing attacks against the civilian population as such or against individual
civilians not taking direct part in hostilities.'"
Of
course, war crimes can be made to disappear. On April 6, 2003, the New York
Times reported of a post-war U.S. plan aimed at "demilitarizing" the Iraqi
curriculum.
"Iraqi
textbooks, such as this one for sixth-graders, tout Iraqi weaponry and war
prowess and cite the United States as an enemy," reporters David B. Ottaway
and Joe Stephens state without irony before explaining that the Bush administration
hopes to "have in place wholesale revisions to textbooks that have taught
a generation of Iraqis to be ready to die for Saddam Hussein."
A
few paragraphs into the article, we learn that the U.S. Agency for International
Development (AID) is "preparing to award education-related contracts worth
an estimated $65 million" with the front-runner being Creative Associates
International of Northwest Washington, the architect of a similar
"educational reform" in Afghanistan.
"One
of the most important things [taught] is the bearing of arms and the constant
readiness to fight enemies," said former National Defense University
professor Phebe Marr, presumably with a straight face. "The definition of
the nation and your identity is very much tied up with the military... All the
way through the texts, you are supposed to be ready to fight for and defend
your country."
Imagine
that...
Mickey Z. is the author of
The Murdering of My Years: Artists and Activists Making Ends Meet (www.murderingofmyyears.com) and an editor
at Wide Angle (www.wideangleny.com). He can be reached at: mzx2@earthlink.net.