us politics

2 Feb 2009

Is Bush Guilty Of War Crimes?

It's up to Obama to take the lead in prosecuting American breaches of international law during Bush's war on terror, write Ben Saul and Sadhana Abayasekara

Barack Obama's decisive victory signals the American people's belated rejection of the destructive unilateralism of George W Bush's foreign policy. How President Obama deals with the unfinished legacy of that unilateralism will determine whether Obama is genuine about breaking with the past and forging a new ethical foreign policy — or whether he takes the easier option of moving forward without dealing with America's violent and unlawful recent past.

In the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, there was near-universal sympathy for America as a victim of atrocious and indiscriminate violence against civilians. That sympathy carried over into international support for America's invasion of Afghanistan to topple the Taliban and contain al-Qaeda.

The catastrophe of Bush's reign was that the manner in which he fought a just war of self-defence in Afghanistan, and his unprincipled extension of it in attacking Iraq, succeeded in turning global sympathy into universal antipathy. Torture, abduction, rendition, Guantanamo Bay and its unfair military commissions, and aggression against Iraq all wasted the moral and political capital which American had accumulated as a victim of 9/11.

Bush could have written history differently by mobilising international sympathy into a cooperative but principled campaign to defeat terrorism and to address the causes which underlie it. President Obama has embarked on such a course, respectful of human rights and sensitive to the benefits of multilateral responses. But Obama must also deal with Bush's legacy, particularly in ensuring responsibility for American war crimes arguably perpetrated at the highest levels of government.

There have been a substantial number of prosecutions and disciplinary proceedings brought against low-level US military personnel involved in the torture scandals at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere, many of which have resulted in low penalties — despite the severity of the abuses inflicted. The Bush administration characterised those incidents as the work of a few bad apples which did not reflect American policy.

The real test for the American criminal justice system is whether it can determine ultimate responsibility for American breaches of international criminal law, including those where there is evidence of the command responsibility of senior American political leaders.

A series of events at the end of 2008 sparked a new wave of speculation over whether Bush and other high-ranking US officials could be held responsible for war crimes in American, foreign or international courts. Two lawsuits were revived against former secretary of defence Donald Rumsfeld and attorney general John Ashcroft on particular cases alleging the mistreatment of detainees in US custody, followed by blunt conclusions in a bipartisan Senate report that Rumsfeld and other key officials were directly responsible for acts of abuse.

There have been renewed calls, including by leading international lawyers, to hold Bush, former vice-president Dick Cheney and Rumsfeld, along with legal counsel such as Douglas Feith, John Yoo and Jay Bybee, responsible for war crimes.

The main allegation against Bush and other senior officials is complicity in war crimes, specifically torture. The key issue is whether being in a position of command responsibility for coercive interrogation techniques, which officials in the Bush administration had authorised, amounts to conspiring to commit torture — which qualifies as a war crime under US and international law.

In addition, government lawyers who deliberately interpreted the law on torture in an instrumental fashion to justify torture may also attract criminal responsibility. The decision to invade Iraq also raises the lingering legal question whether it might be prosecuted as the customary international law crime of aggression.

Under international law, torture is a war crime under the 1949 Geneva Conventions and is also a general international crime under the 1984 Convention against Torture. There are three possible avenues through which to pursue the prosecution of senior US officials: in US courts, in foreign domestic courts, or in the International Criminal Court.

US law prohibits torture and conspiracy to torture, including where the victim or perpetrator is a US national or a member of the US armed forces. However, the Military Commissions Act 2006, drafted in the wake of the US Supreme Court's decision in Hamdan v Rumsfeld seeks to exempt responsibility for coercive interrogation techniques from war crimes prosecutions.

The Bush administration denied that its authorised interrogation techniques — such as water-boarding — constituted torture or war crimes, partly because it argued that the Geneva Conventions did not apply to al Qaeda or the Taliban, and partly because it claimed that the interrogation techniques did not amount to torture. The "torture memos" drafted by administration lawyers infamously suggested that only inflicting organ failure or death would constitute "severe pain or suffering" within the meaning of the international legal definition of torture.

Although most of the memos were not legally operative or were rescinded, many of the techniques which were authorised potentially amounted to torture depending upon how they were administered. Such views were clearly out of step with the overwhelming body of international and comparative jurisprudence and legal opinion, including from senior bodies such as the United Nations Committee Against Torture and the European Court of Human Rights.

Credible evidence is building that senior government and legal officials knew that they were authorising torture when overseeing the treatment of detainees. In 2008, the US Senate Armed Services Committee conducted an Inquiry into the Treatment of Detainees in US Custody, most notably in Guantanamo Bay, Iraq and Afghanistan. The Committee concluded that Rumsfeld, General Counsel William Haynes and other military and civilian senior officials bore responsibility for the abuse of detainees in US custody, due to their authorisation of aggressive interrogation techniques. The report asserted that Rumsfeld's actions were a "direct cause" of detainee abuse at Guantanamo Bay, including in the high profile case of Mohammed al-Qahtani.

It is, however, difficult to know whether US prosecutors and courts will have the stomach for prosecuting senior US political leaders in the conduct of American foreign and national security policy. Such parties have often received light treatment from domestic courts keen to defer to the executive in matters of foreign relations and security. US presidents also enjoy a legal power to pardon anyone for any reason — although as a former constitutional law professor, President Obama would likely be reluctant to pardon any former government official convicted of torture.

If prosecutions are not pursued in American courts, prosecutions in foreign domestic courts are always a possibility. Because torture is a war crime of universal jurisdiction, all countries may legislate to criminalise and prosecute torture, wherever it occurs and by whomever committed. If, for instance, Bush, Rumsfeld or Cheney travelled to Australia on holiday, Australian war crimes laws would permit their arrest and prosecution. Prosecutors in Germany and France have, however, declined to pursue cases filed against Rumsfeld.

Following from the Pinochet case in Britain, former US officials would arguably not enjoy State immunity for war crimes now that they are no longer in office, although a French court in 2007 dismissed the claim against Rumsfeld in part because of a belief that he still enjoyed immunity even out of office, where his acts were committed in an official capacity. The better view is either that the war crime of torture can never be viewed as an official act of government, or that States have agreed to waive the immunity by signing the Geneva Conventions and Convention against Torture. At the very least, the existence of universal jurisdiction over torture will make former Bush administration officials and lawyers think twice before leaving America.

Finally, prosecution before the permanent International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague is possible, though remote. Neither the United States nor Iraq is a party to the ICC, and ordinarily the ICC only has jurisdiction over crimes which occurred in the territory of a State party or in relation to their nationals. However, in exceptional cases the United Nations Security Council can refer any matter to the ICC, but this is highly unlikely given that the US enjoys a power of veto over such decisions.

Furthermore, the former US administration made it clear that it would invade the Netherlands to retrieve Americans put on trial there, although Obama is unlikely to follow suit. The ICC prosecutor has also previously indicated that many of the complaints concerning US conduct in Iraq are not of sufficient gravity to warrant the ICC's attention.

Most recently, the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture called for prosecuting Bush and Rumsfeld for torture, claiming that there is enough evidence to establish a violation of international law. A prosecution in the US itself would seem highly unlikely. It is almost certain that the International Criminal Court will not hear such cases.

Other countries enjoy a legal authority to prosecute, but may be reluctant to sour relations with a superpower by hauling its former senior political leaders before their courts. In many ways, prospects for justice lie with President Obama, who has the power to order a special investigation to determine whether his predecessors are war criminals.

Discuss this article

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rosross 02/02/09 6:53PM

The simple answer is yes, Bush is guilty of war crimes. The even simpler answer is that Obama will do nothing about it because he might be so charged in the future over Afghanistan and support for Israel.

dereklane 03/02/09 8:55AM

"The main allegation against Bush and other senior officials is complicity in war crimes, specifically torture. "

No, the main allegation, with ample evidence on the international stage, is that Bush, Blair, Howard, and others are guilty of the *supreme* international war crime, as laid out at the Nuremburg trials by Robert Jackson, of wars of aggression. There need be no more conjecture on the ‘lesser’ charges of torture, because the supreme international crimes includes all other war crimes within it. Iraq is a perfect example of why wars of agression were officially recognised as the most heinous crime to be committed by a head of state, with more than a million dead that wouldn’t have been had Bush and co not invaded.

Its very likely also, that, having approved at least 2 strikes on citizens already in Afghanistan, that Obama is already a war criminal. He certainly already has blood on his hands, as is the time-honoured tradition of US presidents.

cheers, Derek

Jacqueline Reidpath 03/02/09 2:02PM

Doubtless the old Bush administration will see it this way but once the true extent of US government interference is known, finally the word gets out what part they played in crimes against humanity.

Dragging Australia into it when it was never our war as much as it should have never been theirs.

Who can forget those images of American soldiers torturing Iraqui prisoners? Other bloodhsed they initiated in the pursuit of world domination? The billions of dollars soent on furthering that ideal?

Obama is in a position where he is faced with some awesome decisions; does he even know the full extent of the covert operations carried on by the Bush administration? He is not naive however. If he sanctioned those bombings then he is as guilty of war crimes as is Bush.

The saddest, most dire thought is, it could have been avoided if they’d only kept their nose out of it.

Trying to prove it in a court of law, well, I’d like to see that.

Jacqueline Reidpath 03/02/09 2:17PM

**That should have read, ‘doubtless…will not see it this way’.

Just to clarify.

dereklane 03/02/09 6:22PM

As for Obama’s tough stance on torture,

"Under executive orders issued by Obama recently, the CIA still has authority to carry out what are known as renditions, secret abductions and transfers of prisoners to countries that cooperate with the United States.

Current and former U.S. intelligence officials said that the rendition program might be poised to play an expanded role going forward because it was the main remaining mechanism — aside from Predator missile strikes — for taking suspected terrorists off the street."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-rendition1-2009feb0…

… and if that’s still happening (indeed, expanding), does anyone really believe that the associated torture that’s part and parcel of it isn’t going to happen? Of course, it won’t be official, but that hardly matters. A friend observed recently that the difference between a conservative administration and a democrat administration is only that the democrat administration *knows* that what they do is wrong, and attempts to keep it under wraps. Good for the more fragile of us, because it means we don’t need to think so much about it. But that shouldn’t mean we take the illogical step of thinking that things have actually changed.

cheers, Derek

LukeMR 03/02/09 7:53PM

We all need America. This America can take multiple faces, so lets poke a hornets nest of blind patriotism at a time when a multilateral negotiating America may soon be a reality.

We need America’s army, we need their consumers to keep buying and their government to resist the temptation for protection if many of us plan on keeping our job.

We need their ability to force virtually any world power to sit a table with them and negotiate. We need their 270 million strong democracy that just elected Obama.

Bush and Co. didn’t use their power to help us, but maybe Obama will. All this talk of war crimes prosecution for high ranking US officials is ridiculous. It’s not gonna happen. No western country will do it, and rightly so.

It is a cold hard reality that Americans, except for a small minority, wont stand for it. Many of these Americans are people we need. We need them to keep voting for governments that work multilaterally.

Have an enquiry, say it was war crimes. Name and shame. But any talk of actual prosecution is very very flawed.

dereklane 04/02/09 8:06AM

Luke,

I assume your post is a joke, but I’m not sure - I’ve been out of the country sufficiently long to not recognise Australian ‘satire’ on the first take.

So if not, can you explain any of the ‘needs’ you listed (as in, why are any of these things ‘needs’)? By Bush and Co, I assume you mean Bush and the previous 41 presidents? By ‘working multilaterally’ I assume you mean ‘working unilaterally as a matter of course and multilaterally when other nation states do - as Chomsky says - ‘What I say’?

Naming and shaming for war criminals? Why stop there - let’s just name and shame 2 bit murderers and rapists too, rather than imprisoning them. After all, its not like most of them *mean* to commit crimes…

cheers, Derek

martyns 07/02/09 4:40PM

Another good NM article. As Roscross rightly says, "Yes, Bush is guilty of war crimes" and "No, nothing will be done about it". In a fair and perfect world he would be breaking rocks in Melbourne’s mid-summer sun, along with senior members of his government and his minions Howard, Blair and their senior members of government. As we all know the world is not fair and perfect. When someone becomes extremely wealthy they never become poor again, even if their enterprises collapse and though lots of others are ruined by them. Similarly, in the case of politicians, once they reach a certain level they never ever get punished for their misdemenours, unless they have started a war and lost their country because of it. Sorry to be cynical, but we are looking at a ‘club’ of the rich and powerful’ here. Its been around for a long time and it protects it’s members.