The Empire Wants War, Not Justice

The following article which appeared on ZNet, on October 28, 2001, has been reposted here. It is an article by Sean Healy looking at the issue of war and justice. It makes observations such as that of not using the concept of crime against humanity to avoid following a different path of justice and the International Criminal Court, which the U.S. has always been opposed to. You can see the original article at http://www.zmag.org/healywar.htm1

The Empire wants war, not justice
By Sean Healy
ZNet, October 28, 2001

Among all the words the Bush administration has used to describe the September 11 terrorist attacks -- "atrocity", "outrage", "act of evil" -- one phrase has been conspicuously missing: "crime against humanity".

It's an odd absence. International law defines a crime against humanity as an act committed as part of a "widespread or systematic attack against any civilian population, with knowledge of the attack".

That would certainly seem to cover terrorists flying civilian aircraft into crowded office buildings in order to kill thousands of innocent people.

Perhaps its absence in official lingo is down to the Bush administration's desire to avoid treating the terrorist attacks as "crimes" and rather to treat them as "acts of war".

If someone has committed a crime, evidence is collected and presented -- but much of the "evidence" against Osama Bin Laden hasn't been made public and what has been seems highly circumstantial.

If someone has committed a crime, they're arrested -- the cities and countries that they live in aren't (usually) bombed and Special Forces assassinations squad aren't sent out after them.

If someone has committed a crime, they're brought to trial -- they're not declared "Wanted: Dead or Alive'', as Bush has declared Bin Laden, with a heavy and obvious lean towards "dead'' being the preferred option.

But if they're acts of war, then the normal rules and procedures don't apply and far wider agendas than "bringing the perpetrators to justice" can be pursued -- which is exactly what the US war machine is doing right now in the Middle East.

But perhaps the US administration's motivation for not calling the terrorist outrages "crimes against humanity" extends beyond simply wanting broader operational parameters for this present war.

Because the United States has sought to frustrate and sabotage international efforts to create the very machinery which could prosecute and try such crimes.

That machinery is the International Criminal Court, long a goal of international jurists and human rights lawyers and now almost a reality -- but facing the very real prospect of being demolished by the US administration.

The statutes of the International Criminal Court were established by the Treaty of Rome, negotiated by a July 1998 conference attended by officials from 140 countries.

The treaty specifies that the court would be an independent judicial body to prosecute the gravest crimes under international law: genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Under the rule of "complementarity", the ICC would only try cases when national courts were unable or unwilling to do so -- such as might occur if the accused was a high-ranking member of a country's government.

Up until now, there have been international tribunals to hear such cases -- such as the present trials of accused Balkan war criminals in the Hague or the trials of those accused of the Rwanda genocide. But these have been ad hoc, set up by the United Nations for a specific purpose only.

There is also an International Court of Justice, but it can only try cases between two countries.

The ICC, in contrast, would be permanent and would try individuals.

Cases could still be referred to it by the UN Security Council, as with the existing tribunal system. But investigations could also be instigated on the application of a state party to the treaty or by the ICC Prosecutor, meaning that it wouldn't necessarily be constrained to investigating what the major powers told it to investigate.

As a treaty-based organisation, the ICC would not be beholden to the United Nations or any other international body, although it would only be able to investigate crimes in countries which aren't signatories to the Treaty of Rome if asked to do so by the UN Security Council.

The court itself would be made up of 18 judges, elected to non-renewable nine-year terms by a two-thirds majority of treaty parties; no two judges can be from the same country. The Prosecutor would be elected in similar fashion.

Like the International Court of Justice and the Balkans tribunal, the ICC would be based in the Dutch capital, the Hague.

To come into force, the treaty needs 60 countries to ratify it. At present, it has 139 signatories (signing a treaty is the intermediate step before ratifying it) and 43 ratifications.

But while human rights lawyers are hopeful that the 60 ratifications will come soon, an International Criminal Court may prove to be still-born if the Bush administration has its way.

The United States backed the establishment of the Balkans and Rwandan war crimes tribunals -- but a permanent body is something different entirely.

Successive administrations have stridently opposed any form of international justice system which might, even conceivably, challenge US "sovereignty", US primacy or US capacity to act as it alone sees fit.

A permanent International Criminal Court might not simply be "victor's justice", as ad hoc, Security Council-established tribunals will almost invariably be.

Even more worryingly for the world's last remaining superpower, the ICC might conceivably launch what the US ambassador for war crimes calls "rogue prosecutions": that is, prosecutions of pro-Western war criminals (Pinochet) or US soldiers who commit war crimes (Calley at My Lai) or even senior US officials (Kissinger).

Then US president Bill Clinton opposed the Treaty of Rome when it was first negotiated. The United States was one of only seven nations to vote against the treaty at the end of 1998 Rome conference, as against 120 nations in favour.

In his last few days in office, however, Clinton changed his mind and signed it -- officially because he believed the chances of influencing the final outcome were greater if the US was a signatory, but reportedly only in order to leave a diplomatic headache for his successor.

The chances of the treaty winning the current president's endorsement or two-thirds Senate support required to ratify it are exceedingly narrow, however.

George Bush has sent his lawyers out to find ways to "unsign" the treaty -- so far without success: there are mechanisms to pull out but they're only open to countries which have ratified. The administration is also considering a global "un-ratification" campaign.

The US, as a matter of course, generally refuses to ratify international treaties of any type, seeing them as a potential threat to its "sovereignty", and will usually only become signatories to them.

Many international treaties work without US ratification, however, because the White House signals that it will cooperate with the treaty's enforcement.

That is unlikely to be the case with the ICC.

On the very eve of the terrorist attacks, September 10, the Senate passed an amendment to the Commerce, Justice, State and Judiciary Appropriations Bill which bars any further US participation in negotiations about the court and obstructs government cooperation with it. Earlier legislation bans any US funding for the court.

Potentially even more damaging to the ICC are attempts by the Republican far-right, led by veteran Senator Jesse Helms, to pass legislation, the American Servicemembers Protection Act, which would direct the President to refuse to cooperate with the ICC in any way.

Helms' attempts to have the bill passed as amendments to a September 10 vote on US payment of its UN dues and to a September 26 bill on defense department appropriations both failed. But backers of the bill are vowing to reintroduce it at the earliest opportunity and say they have the President's backing.

The bill would ban US troops from serving on UN peacekeeping missions unless given immunity from ICC jurisdiction, would prevent any US government agency from helping the court in any way and would block military aid to any non-NATO state which ratifies the treaty.

The ASPA even goes so far as to authorise the President to send in the marines to free any American soldier or official taken into ICC custody -- leading international jurists to dub it the "Hague Invasion Act".

Now the reason why bin Laden is not going to be brought before an international court for "crimes against humanity" becomes somewhat clearer.

The Empire wants to reserve the right to commit such crimes of its own in the future (against Afghanistan certainly, but even conceivably against the Netherlands) and won't brook interference

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