From Mosul to Raqqa to Mariupol, Killing Civilians Is a Crime
by Medea
Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies Posted on April 13, 2022
Americans have been shocked by the death and
destruction of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, filling our screens with bombed
buildings and dead bodies lying in the street. But the United States and its
allies have waged war in country after country for decades, carving swathes of
destruction through cities, towns and villages on a far greater scale than has
so far disfigured Ukraine.
As we recently reported,
the U.S. and its allies have dropped over 337,000 bombs and missiles, or 46 per
day, on nine countries since 2001 alone. Senior US Defense Intelligence Agency
officers told Newsweek that the first 24 days of
Russia’s bombing of Ukraine was less destructive than the first day of US
bombing in Iraq in 2003.
The U.S.-led campaign against ISIS in Iraq and Syria
bombarded those countries with over 120,000 bombs and missiles, the heaviest
bombing anywhere in decades. US military officers told
Amnesty International that the US assault on Raqqa in Syria was also the
heaviest artillery bombardment since the Vietnam War.
Mosul in Iraq was the largest city that the United
States and its allies reduced to rubble in
that campaign, with a pre-assault population of 1.5 million. About 138,000 houses were
damaged or destroyed by bombing and artillery, and an Iraqi Kurdish
intelligence report counted at least 40,000 civilians killed.
Raqqa, which had a population of 300,000, was gutted even more.
A UN assessment mission reported
that 70-80% of buildings were destroyed or damaged. Syrian and Kurdish forces
in Raqqa reported counting
4,118 civilian bodies. Many more deaths remain uncounted in the rubble of Mosul
and Raqqa. Without comprehensive mortality surveys, we may never know what
fraction of the actual death toll these numbers represent.
The Pentagon promised to review its policies on
civilian casualties in the wake of these massacres, and commissioned the Rand
Corporation to conduct a study titled,
"Understanding Civilian Harm in Raqqa and Its Implications For Future
Conflicts," which has now been made public.
Even as the world recoils from the shocking violence
in Ukraine, the premise of the Rand Corp. study is that US forces will continue
to wage wars that involve devastating bombardments of cities and populated
areas, and that they must therefore try to understand how they can do so
without killing quite so many civilians.
The study runs over 100 pages, but it never comes to
grips with the central problem, which is the inevitably devastating and deadly
impacts of firing explosive weapons into inhabited urban areas like Mosul in
Iraq, Raqqa in Syria, Mariupol in Ukraine, Sanaa in Yemen, or Gaza in
Palestine.
The development of "precision weapons" has
demonstrably failed to prevent these massacres. The United States unveiled its
new "smart bombs" during the First Gulf War in 1990-1991. But they in
fact comprised only 7% of
the 88,000 tons of bombs it dropped on Iraq, reducing "a rather highly
urbanized and mechanized society" to "a pre-industrial age
nation" according to a UN survey.
Instead of publishing actual data on the accuracy of
these weapons, the Pentagon has maintained a sophisticated propaganda campaign
to convey the impression that they are 100% accurate and can strike a target
like a house or apartment building without harming civilians in the surrounding
area.
However, during the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, Rob
Hewson, the editor of an arms trade journal that reviews the performance of
air-launched weapons, estimated that 20 to 25% of
US"precision" weapons missed their targets.
Even when they do hit their target, these weapons do
not perform like space weapons in a video game. The most commonly used bombs in
the US arsenal are 500 lb bombs,
with an explosive charge of 89 kilos of Tritonal. According to UN safety data,
the blast alone from that explosive charge is 100% lethal up to a radius of 10
meters, and will break every window within 100 meters.
That is just the blast effect. Deaths and horrific
injuries are also caused by collapsing buildings and flying shrapnel and debris
– concrete, metal, glass, wood etc.
A strike is considered accurate if it lands within a
"circular error probable," usually 10 meters around the object being
targeted. So in an urban area, if you take into account the "circular
error probable," the blast radius, flying debris and collapsing buildings,
even a strike assessed as "accurate" is very likely to kill and
injure civilians.
US officials draw a moral distinction between this
"unintentional" killing and the "deliberate" killing of
civilians by terrorists. But the late historian Howard Zinn challenged this
distinction in a letter to
the New York Times in 2007. He wrote,
"These words are misleading because they
assume an action is either ‘deliberate’ or ‘unintentional.’ There is something
in between, for which the word is ‘inevitable.’ If you engage in an action,
like aerial bombing, in which you cannot possibly distinguish between
combatants and civilians (as a former Air Force bombardier, I will attest to
that), the deaths of civilians are inevitable, even if not ‘intentional.’
Does that difference exonerate you morally? The
terrorism of the suicide bomber and the terrorism of aerial bombardment are
indeed morally equivalent. To say otherwise (as either side might) is to give
one moral superiority over the other, and thus serve to perpetuate the horrors
of our time."
Americans are rightfully horrified when they see
civilians killed by Russian bombardment in Ukraine, but they are generally not
quite so horrified, and more likely to accept official justifications, when
they hear that civilians are killed by US forces or American weapons in Iraq,
Syria, Yemen or Gaza. The Western corporate media play a key role in this, by
showing us corpses in Ukraine and the wails of their loved ones, but shielding
us from equally disturbing images of people killed by US or allied forces.
While Western leaders are demanding that Russia be
held accountable for war crimes, they have raised no such clamor to prosecute
US officials. Yet during the US military occupation of Iraq, both the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the UN
Assistance Mission to Iraq (UNAMI)
documented persistent and systematic violations of the Geneva Conventions by US
forces, including of the 1949 Fourth Geneva Convention that protects civilians
from the impacts of war and military occupation.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and human rights groups documented
systematic abuse and torture of prisoners in Iraq and Afghanistan, including
cases in which US troops tortured prisoners to death.
Although torture was approved by US officials all the
way up to the White House, no officer
above the rank of major was ever held accountable for a torture death in
Afghanistan or Iraq. The harshest punishment handed down for torturing a
prisoner to death was a five-month jail sentence, although that is a capital
offense under the USWar Crimes Act.
In a 2007 human rights report that
described widespread killing of civilians by US occupation forces, UNAMI wrote,
"Customary international humanitarian law demands that, as much as
possible, military objectives must not be located within areas densely
populated by civilians. The presence of individual combatants among a great
number of civilians does not alter the civilian character of an area."
The report demanded "that all credible
allegations of unlawful killings be thoroughly, promptly and impartially
investigated, and appropriate action taken against military personnel found to
have used excessive or indiscriminate force."
Instead of investigating, the US has actively covered
up its war crimes. A tragic example is
the 2019 massacre in the Syrian town of Baghuz, where a special US military
operations unit dropped massive bombs on a group of mainly women and children,
killing about 70. The military not only failed to acknowledge the botched
attack but even bulldozed the blast site to cover it up. Only after a New
York Times exposé
years later did the military even admit that the strike took place.
So it is ironic to hear President Biden call for
President Putin to face a war crimes trial, when the United States covers up
its own crimes, fails to hold its own senior officials accountable for war
crimes and still rejects the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court
(ICC). In 2020, Donald Trump went so far as to impose US sanctions on the most
senior ICC prosecutors for investigating US war crimes in Afghanistan.
The Rand study repeatedly claims that US forces have
"a deeply ingrained commitment to the law of war." But the
destruction of Mosul, Raqqa, and other cities and the history of US disdain for
the UN Charter, the Geneva Conventions and international courts tell a very
different story.
We agree with the Rand report’s conclusion that,
"DoD’s weak institutional learning for civilian harm issues meant that
past lessons went unheeded, increasing the risks to civilians in Raqqa."
However, we take issue with the study’s failure to recognize that many of the
glaring contradictions it documents are consequences of the fundamentally
criminal nature of this entire operation, under the Fourth Geneva Convention
and the existing laws of war.
We reject the whole premise of this study, that U.S.
forces should continue to conduct urban bombardments that inevitably kill
thousands of civilians, and must therefore learn from this experience so that
they will kill and maim fewer civilians the next time they destroy a city like
Raqqa or Mosul.
The ugly truth behind these US massacres is that the
impunity senior US military and civilian officials have enjoyed for past war
crimes encouraged them to believe they could get away with bombing cities in
Iraq and Syria to rubble, inevitably killing tens of thousands of civilians.
They have so far been proven right, but US contempt
for international law and the failure of the global community to hold the
United States to account are destroying the very "rules-based order"
of international law that US and Western leaders claim to cherish.
As we call urgently for a ceasefire, for peace and for
accountability for war crimes in Ukraine, we should say "Never
Again!" to the bombardment of cities and civilian areas, whether they are
in Syria, Ukraine, Yemen, Iran or anywhere else, and whether the aggressor is
Russia, the United States, Israel or Saudi Arabia.
And we should never forget that the supreme war crime
is war itself, the crime of aggression, because, as the judges declared at
Nuremberg, it "contains within itself the accumulated evil of the
whole." It is easy to point fingers at others, but we will not stop war
until we force our own leaders to live up to the principle spelled out by
Supreme Court Justice and Nuremberg prosecutor Robert Jackson:
"If certain acts in violation of treaties
are crimes, they are crimes whether the United States does them or whether
Germany does them, and we are not prepared to lay down a rule of criminal
conduct against others which we would not be willing to have invoked against
us."
Medea Benjamin is cofounder of CODEPINK for Peace,
and author of several books, including Inside Iran: The Real History and Politics of
the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Nicolas J. S. Davies is an independent
journalist, a researcher with CODEPINK, and the author of Blood on Our Hands: The American Invasion and
Destruction of Iraq.
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