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Aren't There War Criminals in The US?
Legitimacy of Global Court Questioned Over Sudan
UNITED NATIONS - The ongoing political crisis in Sudan is expected to worsen in the face of a rash of threats and warnings following the indictment last week of President Omar Hassan al-Bashir by the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.
(Flickr photo by pantagrapher used under Creative Commons license) The beleaguered Sudanese president has threatened to expel diplomats from Khartoum and throw out more humanitarian organisations - in addition to the 13 that were run out of town last week - in retaliation for the indictment.
At the same time, there is considerable speculation that some, or all, of the 30 African countries who are state parties (of a total of 108) to the Rome Statute that created the ICC, may decide to pull out, threatening the virtual collapse of the world's key criminal court.
Michael Ratner, president of the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights, told IPS the creation of the ICC was a major step forward in accountability for human rights atrocities.
"Withdrawal is not great for the court's legitimacy, but it is the United States and other major powers that have done most to diminish its power," he pointed out.
The U.S. failure to join (the ICC), and its undercutting of the court, has sent the message that this is a court that can act against weaker states.
"It gives those states an excuse for questioning the court's legitimacy, especially when coupled with the court's failure to act against those from Western states," said Ratner, who is also an adjunct professor of law at Columbia University where he lectures on human rights litigation.
"Unless (Luis) Moreno-Ocampo (the Chief ICC Prosecutor) includes human rights violators from these states as seriously within his mandate, the court is in trouble," he said.
The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) ran a secret torture site in Poland, an ICC state. "But where is the court?" Ratner asked.
Last week's arrest warrant on al-Bashir charged him with war crimes in the strife-torn region of Darfur, one of the world's volatile political hotspots. The conflict has resulted in 300,000 dead and 2.7 million displaced, according to U.N. estimates.
Many international rights groups welcomed the announcement of the warrant against Bashir, who has been accused of orchestrating mass killings and ethnic cleansing of villages in the region though 'janjaweed' militias.
However, the much-heralded criminal court has so far put only one culprit on trial, Thomas Lubanga, a warlord from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), and convicted none, six years after the ICC's creation.
Of the 13 against whom warrants have been issued by the ICC, four are in custody, the rest are fugitives or presumed dead. All 13 are either from Uganda, DRC, the Central African Republic or Sudan.
The arrest warrant on al-Bashir was unprecedented because it was issued for the first time on a sitting head of state.
According to published figures, an estimated 300,000 people have died in Darfur, either due to the ongoing conflict or disease and malnutrition.
The deaths have occurred over the past five years. A group of rebels has been fighting government forces and their proxies, the Janjaweed Arab militia men, since 2003.
Still, a legitimate question that is being asked by some Africans defies answer: why is the ICC focusing mostly on African leaders and African warlords?
But supporters of the Court, including Nobel Laureate Desmond Tutu, say that active ICC investigations in Africa are not because of prosecutorial prejudice but because three of the countries involved (Central African Republic, DRC and Uganda) themselves requested ICC intervention.
Since Sudan is not a State party to the ICC, the Sudanese case was referred to the court by the 15-member U.N. Security Council, which has a legitimate right to do so, according to the Rome Statute.
But despite this defense, an African diplomat told IPS: "Still, aren't there any perceived war criminals in the U.S. and Western Europe?"
In Iraq, over one million people - mostly civilians - have been killed since the U.S. invasion about six years ago.
In Afghanistan, thousands of civilians have been killed by U.S. and NATO military forces. The killings have been euphemistically described as "collateral damage."
And more recently in Gaza, over 1,000 Palestinians, mostly civilians, were killed by the Israelis.
An indignant Sudanese Ambassador Abdalmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamad described the international justice system as "Euro-American."
It's the same justice system, he said, that callously witnessed the destruction of Iraq, Afghanistan and Gaza, but never did anything about it.
The United States, which like Sudan is also not a party to the ICC, negotiated immunity from war crimes prosecution for its soldiers - if and when they serve in U.N. peacekeeping missions.
"America is an opportunist country," the Sudanese envoy said. "They want to use the ICC without being a party to it." In effect, he said, U.S. soldiers can have immunity, but not the president of Sudan.
At a U.N. press conference last week, he also challenged reporters to show him any photographs or television footage from Darfur that would equal the destruction of human lives and homes in Gaza, Iraq and Afghanistan.
"Show me a single footage," he demanded of journalists, none of whom responded.
"It's a big lie. And lies have become a weapon of mass destruction in our situation," he added.
He also pointed out that the United States once destroyed a pharmaceutical factory in Sudan based on false intelligence that it was a Sudanese chemicals weapons factory.
At the recent conference in Sharm al-Shaik, the United States and Western donors pledged about 5.0 billion dollars to reconstruct Gaza which was bombed by Israel during its 22-day conflict with Hamas.
"Did anybody ask who was accountable for this damage and destruction?"
Asked why Sudan was being singled out, the Sudanese envoy said Western nations were eyeing Sudan's newly-discovered oil riches in one of the largest countries in Africa.
The Western nations have been marginalized, both in oil exploration and arms supplies, by China, which is one of Sudan's closest political, economic and military allies, according to an African diplomat.
"The UK and France harbor a desire to revive their colonial dreams in Sudan," the Sudanese envoy said.
Sudan has said it rejects the warrant on its president and will refuse to cooperate with the ICC.
The Sudanese government seems to have the political support of several powerful regional and international organizations: the African Union, the League of Arab States, the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) and the Non-Aligned Movement, all of which collectively account for more than two-thirds of the U.N.'s 192 member states.
As a result, it is very unlikely that any country, particularly Arab or African, will follow up the ICC warrant by arresting al-Bashir if he lands on their soil.
The Sudanese president is expected to defy the ICC warrant by attending an upcoming summit meeting in Qatar (which incidentally is not a state party to the ICC).
When Richard Dicker of Human Rights Watch was asked about the double standards in the international justice system, he admitted there was no denying the fledgling system was "flawed" and the playing field was uneven - between Westerners and the rest of the world.
"But to those who said such tribunals would never indict an American or European leader, (the ICC) decision nevertheless showed that not even the president of a country was above the law. The work was how to correct the imperfections in the system."
Asked about ICC's double standards, Ratner of the Center for Constitutional Rights told IPS: "The court and some human rights groups seem to think that the best strategy is to go after the easy targets that don't have a lot of political power."
"As can be seen, this is a mistake. It is a short-sighted strategy that will delegitimise the court. It gives the weaker countries an excuse," he said.
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32 Comments so far
Show AllIndeed, it would seem to an observer from Mars, that who is to be put up on charges of crimes against humanity is determined by who is demonised in the mass media. That, in turn, has to do with natural resources in your country and who has the clout to take control of them.
War criminals in the US, Israel, Russia, are untouchable as long as they have power -- whatever moral authority the world community obtained through the Nuremburg trials was pissed away long ago.
_______________
There's a glory in the morning because the earth turns 'round and a promise in the evening when the sun goes down
The military industrial media complex spares no expense to assure good PR.
The Viet Nam War era saying: "war is good business, invest your son" need only be modified to address women in combat in today's military.
As the global economy continues its accelerating downward spiral, more parents will be encouraging their sons and daughters to latch on to one of the few family wage jobs with benefits available...the military. Just how the neocons hoped it would turn out !
Now that the Dubya Regime set a precedent committing 8 years of war crimes without fear of punishment, the military is attracting more sadists and sociopaths.
the descent into chaos led by the worlds leader in weapons production...good ole usa
stupid greedy fools
Hitler would be a world hero if Germany had conquered the world. We need a court from Mars, not observers.
What's so strange to me, is that every politico from the USA that was for the war, they all claim to be Christians and they killed Jesus over there when He was helping some poor Iraqis. Of course they called it collateral damage and never realized what they had done. When they die they will ask, "What war crimes?"
REPEAL CORP. CITIZENSHIP
perhaps if the suspects were tried in absentia and then perhaps a reward posted "DEAD or ALIVE" maybe that might work. After all these are the same people that offerred rewards for "Bin Laden" and his group. That seems to be fair, given that the "United States" have shown their colours to be yellow about justice for or about themselves. Held to a "HIGHER" standard, like I said yellow!!
I think the picture captured the likenesses of FOUR of those war criminals quite well. A fifth one took some sort of office oath about two months ago.
Methinks the term "Shock Doctrine" (coined by Naomi Klein) is quite appropriate here.
The ICC is a joke - everybody knew they'd never challenge the REAL war criminals - hell, the US has been committing war crimes since... gee, even before it was a country!
The ICC is worse than a joke, but rather it is actually a tool to try to legitimize imperialist intervention with the public inside those countries.
.
The ICC is a joke if it doesn't issues warrants for George W. Bush and Company.
The ICC has no credibility if it doesn't issue warrants for the Zionist rulers of
the State of Israel.
The decline of Western Civilization is directly entwined with the moral decay of
our standards of justice and accountability.
We're in a powergame. The ICC is trying to get stronger by indicting a sitting president, but might miscalculate and lose credibility rather than win more. The indictment of President al-Bashir is still a good thing, all told.
At any rate, this indictment - as the article well demonstrates - puts pressure on other similar war crimes and criminals. Like those of the USA, UK and Israel. That pressure is a big step forward, as the issues are being pushed back, away from the headlines of the corporation-dominated mainstream media.
We're in a struggle here. Like in the Matrix, people are waking up - only to be soothingly told: "Coo, coo, relax, go back to sleeeeep, don't worry, be happy, sleeeeeep now, never mind those disturbing dreams, they were only dreams, here: have a toy, look at this mobile, go to sleeeeep, sleeeeep, that's right, everything's going to be alright, just relaaax, never miiind, that's just your brain, never miiiiind..."
So, as a countermeasure to sleep-induction: make demands to indict Bush and Blair et al. now. Arrest the instigators of the Gaza-massacre. Live up to the rule of equality before the (international) law.
Remember: the power in jUStice is US.
Freedom, Equality, Solidarity 4 all! FES up now! WAKE UP and stay that way - it actually feels good to participate to the full in our own lives and circumstances.
Then laugh a little at the absurdity of us all... But keep going for the Freedom, the Equality and the Solidarity: the Love we're made of.
Sudan has oil. Any other questions why it suddenly is 'internationally important?'
the FULL ANSWER in one word: OIL
just as Judah said.
Same story with Milosevic. There are many bad people, but international institutions only demonize targets designated by the white-trash imperialists. The objective is not justice but destabilization and looting.
By the way :
the story of the "bad serbs" -- those "VILLAINS" according to US and western european media - NEVER report that as vicious as milosevic was - along with his supporters -- the OTHER side of the coin was that there also EQUALLY VICIOUS elements in the Albanians and Croats ...particularly the "ethnic albanians" in the Kosovo province - which always had been part of Serbia ..and who were themselves really intruders INTO serbia generations ago from albania proper -- when THEIR own rulers were so brutal -- and Albania - little-known to today's news , also had ITS delusions of grandeur to become an "empire" in that neighborhood - whcih they called "greater albania" (mcuh like israel does in the "greater israel" thing) .
but the clincher here - for the NATO bombing of SERBIA in order to "protect albanian kosovars" from "serbian aggression" - was really that the albanians themselves -- who had BECOME majority IN kosovo were BRUTAL towards the "become minority" Serbians in that province..
and the USA and NATO USED the pretext to bomb Serbia (clinton time) - as a SLAP IN THE FACE to RUSSIA which was too weak at that time to do anything for SERBIA which
historically had ALWAYS been an ally of Russia because Serbs are ETHNICALLY related to Russians as fellow slavs.
this was really clinton's way of saying to Moscow :
"nya, nyah -- we can DISMEMBER SERBIA as we WISH and YOU can't do a damn thing about it".
that is why as HILLARY goes to russia asking for help but trying to couch it as if the USA has ANY cards to play as the "senior partner" -- you can BET that the RUSSIANS are NOT about to FORGET how the USA not only abrogated the treaties or understanding between USA/NATO and what was left of teh USSR in 1990 NOT TO EXPAND nato towards Russia's borders or INTERFERE IN russia's internal political affairs --
but how -- when Russia was "down and out" for a decade -- the USA and NATO basically not only stepped on Russia's face , bitch-slapped her and spat on her , just for good measure to show "who's boss".
Teddy, I'm all for pointing out the hypocrisy and double-dealing of the US and the West in their mismanagement of the Yugoslavian crisis, but your statement that the Kosovar Albanians were "intruders INTO serbia generations ago from albania proper" is dead wrong. The Albanians are one of the most ancient populations in the Mediterranean basin and their presence in that part of the Balkans long predated the settlement of the area by Slavs, who originally came from the north. While it is true that, ever since the establishment of a Serbian culture there, Kosovo has been considered part of Serbia, Serbs have only ever constituted a majority in the northern corner of the province, as they still do today. The general Kosovo region was Albanian long before there were even any Slavs around. You should avoid making arbitrary assertions if you don't know your history.
The principle wickedness of the US and Europe in the whole Yugoslavia tragedy lay in the fact that they themselves fomented the breakup of what they saw as still a "communist" country, giving aid and comfort and advice to ALL parties--Croats, Slovenians, Bosnians and Albanians--who wished to split from the Titoist federation, whose army and bureaucracy was dominated by Serbs. And, of course, the Serbs reacted as most standing governments normally react to subversion from within and without: with force.
Actually Serbs were in fact a large majority in Kosovo for centuries. It's a complicated and contested history, but it seems clear that Serbs formed a majority there well into the 19th century (beginning as early as the 7th century; before that the region was variously controlled by Romans, Greeks and Thraco-Illyrians, today's modern Albanians, perhaps: see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illyrians). They are a majority today "only in the north" largely due to the disastrous NATO bombing campaign of 1999, and the ongoing expulsions/migrations of Serbs to Serbia proper in the decade since, though Albanians had already likely passed Serbs in total numbers in Kosovo over a century before that. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographic_history_of_Kosovo#History.
When Bush and Cheney stand before the court I'll be a
believer.
If Sudan has OIL they can expect lots of attention from the US of A. I'm sure we are thinking of ways to "help" them as
we speak.
Allow me to suggest an alternative to your first statement.
First, the indictment (not in a courtroom)...a good ol' fashioned patriotic tar 'n' featherin'.
Next, the sentence...no elaboration necessary.
Finally, the execution...and since we've executed so many "over there" "our" way (read "shock and awe") for public viewing, and yet have resorted to age-old measures in private (read "torture"), let's go extremely old-school and stone them in the desert.
Of course, I'm not talking about your friendly 420 stoning. I'm talking Old Testament.
If the ICC started indicting USA war criminals their case load would be overwhelmed. Personally, I'm sick of these criminal psychos from Bush to Limbaugh advocating hate & murder. IMHO, they are as guilty as little Lyndie England, I notice they put her ass in jail where it belongs.
The flap over Scooter Libby showed the country the hypocracy of my nation:
the rich don't do time, they just keep on keepin on doin the crimes.
Let the nonviolent drug offenders go & replace them with the scum who got gov. jobs + benefits then shit all over USA values. Do it alphabetically, there is
Albright, Bush I, Bush II, Cheney, Condi, Ashcroft, Addington, Feith, Abrams, Ari Fleisher, Emanuel, Clinton-Mr&Mrs., Biden, Conyers, the real Bob Casey, Jack Abramoff, Bily O'Liely, Barbara Bush, Jeb Bush, Neil Bush, Petrayus, Daniel Pipes,John Bolton, Kissinger, Lindsey Graham, Tancredo, McCain, Mitt Romney, George Will, Krauthammer, Mort Zuckerman, Pelosi, Ros-Leimen from Fla.,the head of Fema during Katrina, John Yoo, Bybee, the infamous supreme court judges that appointed the wealthy unelected frat boy to be the most inept disasterous president in our history.
These are just a few of the arch criminals who've gotten away with the murder of over a million Iraqis, numerous Afghanis, Columbians, warmongers against Venezula, Bolivia, Syria, Iran, Pakistan, Panama, Nicaraugua and zionist dual citizens who put Israel first.
After cleaning up some of the most egregious go back & convict Reagan, Ford, Nixon posthumously, we can't begin to change until we clean up our history by teaching and learning the truth.
These
Maybe the Bush Library should be built with bars on the windows. The individual rooms could be made into cells. Imagine visiting there and hearing the lies about Iraq from the people who made them.
P.S. You forgot to include Colon Powell on your list. His U.N. speech should be shown over and over at the library, intersperced with pictures of the war dead.
"The preservation of the interests of power, not the demands of principle or precedent, is the guiding force behind legal judgments."
Obama's puppet should've been in the picture as well.
"Obama's interview with the Times is the latest demonstration of the fraudulent character of his campaign rhetoric of "change" and his anti-war posturing, and underscores the impossibility of effecting any real change in government policy under a political system dominated by two parties of American imperialism."
more at:
http://wsws.org/articles/2009/mar2009/obam-m10.shtml
The International Criminal Court likely failed to prosecute Poland for cooperating with illegal US "secret renditions" due to US economic threats. Europe depends on the US for security and trade. This isn't the first time that morality suffered by US policy. If the African states break out of their ICC ratification, it will be the Europeans' fault. The Europeans failed to react responsibly to the 8 year US imperial rampage, so they are getting a little blowback for that.
What constitutes mass murder? How many people must be killed before it is called a genocide?
AREN'T THERE WAR CRIMINALS IN THE U.S.? Yes, and that would include most of the criminals in congress that voted for war and condoned torture.
"... We WILL DO A FAIR AMOUNT OF KILLING.
We are building an information-based military
to do that killing."
cited from: U.S. MAJOR RALPH PETERS, "Constant Conflict," published in "Parameters" (Summer 1997), pp. 4-14, my emphasis.
just hold Obama to the same standards you want Bush and Co. held too. And don't forget the US Congress from Day 1 of the war on Iraq. BTW -- how many civilians have died since Jan 20th? And how many more troops are going to Afghanistan??? Are there US troops in Pakistan??? The Obama loving media does not report on such things. Arrest Bush and Cheney now. That will stop the wars!
Just think what would happen if we tried Bush/Cheney for the same things we wanted to try the Sudan, Afghanistan, Iraq for?
Signed: Lawlessone [for more irreverence, see resistence-is-possible.blogspot.com]