
The phrase above may turn out to be the key to whether the United States faces charges in the International Criminal Court for its role in torture of prisoners detained in the “War on Terror”. The International Criminal Court was created by the Rome Statute on July 17, 1998, when 120 countries signed on.
The preamble to the Statute aims, in part, “to put an end to impunity for the perpetrators of these crimes and thus to contribute to the prevention of such crimes” when speaking about crimes that are “unimaginable atrocities that deeply shock the conscience of humanity”. The signatories to the Statute understood this key fact in a way that the Obama Administration does not: punishing those responsible for these crimes is a key step to preventing new instances of the crimes in the future. Simply stating that we must now “look forward” does nothing to prevent torture in the future.
Article 7 of the Statute addresses crimes against humanity:
For the purpose of this Statute, "crime against humanity" means any of the following acts when committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population, with knowledge of the attack
and then goes on to list those crimes. Torture is included on the list. Torture is then defined:
Torture means the intentional infliction of severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, upon a person in the custody or under the control of the accused; except that torture shall not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to, lawful sanctions
Listening to the mainstream media, one would not think that the torture that has been carried out by the United States has been either “directed against” a “civilian population” or “widespread or systematic”. The media would have us believe that the only torture has been waterboarding, that it has only been used on three prisoners and that all of those detained by the US, especially at Guantanamo, are the “worst of the worst” of al Qaeda. The reality is that thousands of civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan have been detained, many of them have been tortured brutally to the point that over a hundred have died with many of these deaths classed as homicides, and these actions have been part of United States policy to achieve strategic objectives in the wars there.
For example, one of the most famous Lynndie England photos from Abu Ghraib is the one where she has a naked prisoner at the end of a leash:

We were told by the government, and the mainstream media has been adamant about repeating the story, that the abuses at Abu Ghraib were the actions of a handful of bad actors. However, buried deep in the documents released in the document dump regarding the media manipulation by retired military officers serving as analysts for the media, we have this from page 6 of this document (pdf):
In GTMO, that ego down translated down to telling the detainee that his mother and sister were whores, he was forced to wear women’s lingerie, multiple allegations of his homosexuality, he was forced to dance with a male interrogator, he was strip searched for control measures, and he was forced to perform dog tricks on a leash.
The very actions of Lynndie England decried as an isolated incident were in fact part of an overall policy aimed at intentional sexual humiliation as a part of an interrogation program.
With regard to detention and torture of innocent civilians, the Academy Award winning documentary Taxi to the Dark Side provides the most prominent example, with innocent taxi driver Dilawar being detained and tortured to death in Afghanistan in 2002. Also, note that even though Guantanamo is depicted in the mainstream media as the detention site for the worst terrorists, an analysis at Seton Hall (pdf) determined that 55% of the detainees at Guantanamo had committed no hostile acts against the United States.
There can be no mistaking that the widespread detention of civilians is a policy the United States has adopted. In the Washington Post article linked above about thousands of Iraqis being detained, we have this:
"The intent is to detain individuals determined to be true threats to coalition forces, Iraqi Security Forces and stability in Iraq," Valenti said. "Unlike situations in the past, these detainees are not conventional prisoners of war."
Instead, he said, they are "diverse civilian internees from widely divergent political, religious and ethnic backgrounds who are detained on the basis of intelligence available at the time of capture and gathered during subsequent questioning." Valenti said 250 of those in custody are third-country nationals, including some high-value detainees.
Look carefully at that second paragraph: citizens are detained “on the basis of intelligence available at the time” they are captured and “gathered during subsequent questioning”. How can a civilian be detained on the basis of intelligence gathered during subsequent questioning? That certainly explains in part how so many detainees are innocent if the policy is to detain them first and then obtain information to justify the detention later.
Sadly, there is now a decision to export this policy of widespread civilian detention from Iraq to Afghanistan. In its editorial endorsing the appointment of war criminal Stanley McChrystal to head the US military effort in Afghanistan, the New York Times said this:
Reducing that toll will require tighter and more strictly enforced rules of engagement. That applies not just to airstrikes but to the search and detention operations that General McChrystal wants to expand this year with the help of 21,000 additional troops that President Obama ordered sent to Afghanistan. Ground operations are less likely to go astray than airstrikes. But as happened far too many times in Iraq, they can sweep up innocent civilians and turn local people against the American presence.
Even in endorsing McChrystal and his policy of detention, the Times was forced to admit that detention of innocents can “turn local people against the American presence”. The fact that it’s expressly forbidden by the Rome Statute seems to be of no concern to the Times, McChrystal or the US government.
June 26 is designated by the United Nations as the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture. More information and links are available at Humanity Against Crimes.
A previous effort by Humanity Against Crimes to engage the International Criminal Court in prosecuting the US torture crimes resulted in the ICC declining to proceed on the basis of lack of jurisdiction:
A fundamental feature of the Rome Statute (Articles 12 and 13) is that the Court may only exercise jurisdiction over international crimes if (i) its jurisdiction has been accepted by the State on the territory of which the crime was committed, (ii) its jurisdiction has been accepted by the State of which the person accused is a national, or (iii) the situation is referred to the Prosecutor by the Security Council acting under Chapter VII of the UN Charter.
An early action of the Bush Administration was to withdraw the participation of the US from the ICC, even though President Clinton had endorsed the Rome Statute. Jurisdiction could be achieved for the US to be prosecuted if Iraq or Afghanistan joins the ICC, the US rejoins or if the UN Security Council refers the issue to the ICC. No action is likely on ICC prosecution unless there is a very large public outcry. As noted by Glenn Greenwald, President Obama showed rank hypocrisy in citing the power of the “Neda video” to support the dissidents in Iran while quashing Helen Thomas’ attempt to link that video to Obama’s suppression of additional torture photos:
The premise of Thomas’ question was compelling and (contrary to Obama’s dismissal) directly relevant to Obama’s answers: how is it possible for Obama to pay dramatic tribute to the "heartbreaking" impact of that Neda video in bringing to light the injustices of the Iranian Government’s conduct while simultaneously suppressing images that do the same with regard to our own Government’s conduct?
Perhaps the real reason for Obama suppressing the remaining torture photos is because he knows they would have power similar to that of the “Neda video” and would renew cries for prosecution of torture by the United States. It is up to each of us to do what we can to promote accountability for torture carried out in our names. Please consider what you can do on June 26.





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The RWAs became too skilled at framing issues and the American people believe in a just and fair America, thus we not only have the disgrace that our nation’s leaders have brought on our country, we still have, as you point out far too many citizens thinking only waterboarding and Gitmo. We not only have detained and tortured under legal limbo far more innocent people than were guilty of any war or terrorist act, we also have used rendition outside of any war area, so we can send them to countries with goons who will torture in our name.
A case came to light Tuesday that shows not only how criminal facts are played very loosely, like allowing mercenaries to capture innocents and sell them to us, but even with videotape, we detain and torture someone who was being tortured by al-Qaeda. Then to make it worse, our DOJ still maintains he is guilty.
The June 23, 2009 AP story by Devlin Barret reported:
“The discovery of suicide martyr videos seemed certain proof that Abd al Rahim Abdul Rassak was part of al-Qaida. A closer look at his video, though, showed he was actually being tortured by al-Qaida.
The confusion over the video collection found in an al-Qaida safehouse is one of the stranger twists in the unusual case of Rassak, a Guantanamo detainee. On Monday, a federal judge ordered Rassak released, chastising the government for claiming he was still part of the same terror network that tortured, imprisoned and abandoned him. U.S. District Judge Richard Leon emphatically rejected the government’s claims against Rassak, even going so far as to add punctuation to get his point across.
Federal prosecutors had argued that even though Rassak was tortured by al-Qaida as a suspected Western spy and imprisoned by the Taliban for a year and a half, he still maintained some kind of allegiance to his tormentors.
“I disagree!” wrote the judge, adding that U.S. officials are “taking a position that defies common sense.”
The judge said the government and the U.S. media initially mistook Rassak as one of a number of suicide martyrs, based on a videotape captured at an al-Qaida safehouse. Further investigation found the tape actually showed al-Qaida torturing him. In a 13-page written decision, the judge heaped scorn on the suggestion that Rassak could be part of the same terrorist organizations that had abused him.”
http://tinyurl.com/mm2mp9
I was proudly a member, along with you and others, of the PosseCommentUS group that petitioned the ICC only to learn that it is America’s job first to charge and convict our torturers and their leaders before the world can. Although there is far more media attention than there was then, we can not rest until our rule of law prevails and our criminals are charged and convicted.
On June 26, all those who love our country should pledge to maintain sufficient pressure until the integrity of our government and respect for our country is restored. We elected a president who pledged to do that and so far he has not and even worse he has allowed the DOJ to continue Bush policies and tactics as in the most recent, egregious case I outlined above.
Thanks, Jim, for all of the hard work that went into putting this piece together. It is much appreciated.
Earlier, I was reading some of the Lieber Code that Dirigo had mentioned in a comment on one of my posts, and I had a similar reaction… that it’s all going to turn on whether the actions taken can be presumed to have been necessary for the security of the nation. The Lieber code did allow for things such as collateral damage, and even for killing prisoners, if they were a threat to the troops detaining them. The force of the spinning is going to be enough (metaphorically speaking) to change the direction of the Earth’s rotation. ;~)
I’ll tell you what I find so discouraging – the untold legions of lawyers, politicians, and ideologues who will twist and parse the words of the pertinent statutes in an effort to maintain the false hood that “the U.S. doesn’t Torture”. Thank you for continuing to hammer away at this, Jim.
Thanks Jim,
If Iraq or Afghanistan joined the ICC, would the court evade their obligations due to the fact crimes happened prior to their joining? Thoughts on this?
Do you know if anyone has asked obama whether or not he will reinstate endorsement?
Thanks, Jim, and all commenters above. Below is my comment over at The Dog’s Oxdown diary which deals specifically with those who died by torture dealt out by directive of the Bush/Cheney administration.
My condemnation is not limited to only those who died, but to all whose bodies and minds have been forever damaged by this torture wrapped in the cotton wool of high sounding phrases.
thank you mr. white for a very well organized and cogent presentation of this issue .. and yes ..we must regain our nations sacred honor and bring those responsible for these war crimes to the bar of justice ..
(PDF)
“(U) The abuse of detainees in U.S. custody cannot simply be attributed to the actions of “a few bad apples” acting on their own. The fact is that senior officials in the United States government solicited information on how to use aggressive techniques, redefined the law to create the appearance of their legality, and authorized their use against detainees. Those efforts damaged our ability to collect accurate intelligence that could save lives, strengthened the hand of our enemies, and compromised our moral authority. This report is a product of the Committee’s inquiry into how those unfortunate results came about. “
UNCLASSIFIED
xii
(U) Interrogation techniques used by the Special Mission Unit Task Force eventually
made their way into Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) issued for all U.S. forces in Iraq. In the summer of 2003, Captain Wood, who by that time was the Interrogation Officer in Charge at Abu Ghraib, obtained a copy of the Special Mission Unit interrogation policy and submitted it, virtually unchanged, to her chain of command as proposed policy.
UNCLASSIFIED
xxiii
(U) Captain Wood submitted her proposed policy around the same time that a message was being conveyed that interrogators should be more aggressive with detainees. In mid-August 2003, an email from staff at Combined Joint Task Force 7 (CJTF-7) headquarters in Iraq requested that subordinate units provide input for a “wish list” of interrogation techniques, stated that “the gloves are coming off,” and said “we want these detainees broken.” At the end of August 2003, Major General Geoffrey Miller, the GTMO Commander, led a team to Iraq to assess interrogation and detention operations. Colonel Thomas Pappas, the Commander of the 205th Military Intelligence Brigade, who met with Major General Miller during that visit, said that the tenor of the discussion was that “we had to get tougher with the detainees.” A Chief Warrant Officer with the Iraq Survey Group (ISG) said that during Major General Miller’s tour of the ISG’s facility, Major General Miller said the ISG was “running a country club” for detainees.
(U) On September 14, 2003 the Commander of CJTF-7, Lieutenant General Ricardo
Sanchez, issued the first CJTF-7 interrogation SOP. That SOP authorized interrogators in Iraq to use stress positions, environmental manipulation, sleep management, and military working dogs in interrogations. Lieutenant General Sanchez issued the September 14, 2003 policy with the knowledge that there were ongoing discussions about the legality of some of the approved techniques.
UNCLASSIFIED
xxiv
http://armed-services.senate.g…..202009.pdf
Thanks for all of the great comments, folks.
Another great resource is the “Tortuous Timeline” put together by Harpie and Jebbie from Glenn Greenwald’s commenters. It can be found here.
You are probably right that it would be tough for Iraq and Afghanistan to prosecute for crimes occurring before they joined the ICC. However, I’m pretty sure that a withdrawal takes a year to be effective, so there might be some grounds for pursuing crimes in the first year after Bush got us out of signing on. However, I think there was also some wobbly language from the Senate when they took up ratification, so our best course is still to make it politically impossible for prosecutions not to occur in some venue, whatever it might be.
As for Obama getting us back into the ICC, I don’t think I’ve heard any public comments from him on this, but given the way he’s channeled Bush lately, I see no reason to think he’d rejoin.
“As violence continues on the streets of Tehran, RebelReports has learned that former US National Security Advisor Brent Scowcroft has confirmed that the US government has spies on the ground in Iran. Scowcroft made the assertion in an interview to be broadcast on the Al Jazeera program “Fault Lines.” When asked by journalist Josh Rushing if the US has “intelligence operatives on the ground in Iran,” Scowcroft replied, “Of course we do.” (See Video) “
http://rebelreports.com/post/1…..nd-in-iran