A War Crime in Real Time
Obliterating Fallujah
By FRANCIS A. BOYLE
The obliteration of Fallujah continues apace. Article 6(b) of the 1945
Nuremberg Charter defines a Nuremberg War Crime in relevant part as the
". . . wanton destruction of cities, towns or villages. . ." According
to this definitive definition, the Bush Jr. administration's
destruction of Fallujah constitutes a war crime for which Nazis were
tried and executed. There is nothing surprising about that.
Since the Bush Jr. administration's installation in power by the United
States Supreme Court in January of 2001, the peoples of the world have
witnessed a government in the United States of America that has
demonstrated little if any respect for fundamental considerations of
international law, international organizations, and human rights, let
alone appreciation of the requirements for maintaining international
peace and security. What the world has watched instead is a
comprehensive and malicious assault upon the integrity of the
international legal order by a group of men and women who are
thoroughly Machiavellian in their perception of international relations
and in their conduct of both foreign policy and domestic affairs. This
is not simply a question of giving or withholding the benefit of the
doubt when it comes to complicated matters of foreign affairs and
defense policies to a U.S. government charged with the security of both
its own citizens and those of its allies in Europe, the Western
Hemisphere, and the Pacific. Rather, the Bush Jr. administration's
foreign policy constitutes ongoing criminal activity under
well-recognized principles of both international law and U.S. domestic
law, in particular the Nuremberg Charter, the Nuremberg Judgment, and
the Nuremberg Principles. So their obliteration of Fallujah was to be
expected.
One generation ago the peoples of the world asked themselves: Where
were the "good" Germans? Well, there were some good Germans. The
Lutheran theologian and pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer was the foremost
exemplar of someone who led a life of principled opposition to the
Nazi-terror state even unto death.
Today the peoples of the world are likewise asking themselves: Where
are the "good" Americans? Well, there are some good Americans. Like
three Catholic Nuns in Denver, they are getting arrested and going to
jail for protesting against United States weapons of mass destruction
(WMD) whose power for human extermination far exceeds even the wildest
fantasies of Hitler and the Nazis. Or else for protesting against
illegal U.S.. military interventions around the world. Just recently
the Nuclear Resister estimated that since the Fall of 2002, there have
been more than 9,500 anti-war related arrests in the United States
alone. Many more will be coming.
In international legal terms, the Bush Jr. administration itself should
now be viewed as constituting an ongoing criminal conspiracy under
international criminal law in violation of the Nuremberg Charter, the
Nuremberg Judgment, and the Nuremberg Principles, due to its
formulation and undertaking of aggressive war policies that are legally
akin to those perpetrated by the Nazi regime. As a consequence,
American citizens possess the basic right under international law and
the United States domestic law, including the U.S. Constitution, to
engage in acts of non-violent civil resistance in order to prevent,
impede, thwart, or terminate ongoing criminal activities perpetrated by
U.S. government officials in their conduct of foreign affairs policies
and military operations purported to relate to defense and
counter-terrorism.
This same right of civil resistance extends pari passu
to all citizens of the world community of states. Everyone around the
world has both the right and the duty under international law to resist
ongoing criminal activities perpetrated by the Bush Jr. administration
and its nefarious foreign accomplices such as Blair, Berlusconi,
Howard, Koizumi, Kwasniewski, etc. by all non-violent means possible.
If it is not so restrained, the Bush Jr. administration could very well
precipitate a Third World War.
The time for
preventive action is now. Civil resistance is the way to go. People
power can overcome power politics. Popular movements have succeeded in
toppling tyrannical, dictatorial and authoritarian regimes throughout
former Communist countries in Eastern Europe, as well as in Asia, and
most recently in Latin America. It is time once again to exercise
People Power here in the United States of America: "When in the Course
of human Events. . . We hold these Truths to be self-evident. . . . we
mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and sacred
Honor."
Despite the best efforts by the Bush Jr. Leaguers to the contrary, we
American Citizens still have our First Amendment Rights: Freedom of
Speech, Freedom of Association, Freedom of Assembly, Freedom to
Petition our Government for the Redress of these massive Grievances,
Civil Resistance, etc. We are going to have to start vigorously
exercising all of our First Amendment Rights right now. We must use
them or else, as the saying goes, we will lose them. We must act not
only for the good of the Peoples of Southwest Asia, but for our future,
that of our children, that of our nation as a democratic society
committed to the Rule of Law and the U.S. Constitution. The Nazis had
their "homeland" too.
Francis A. Boyle, Professor of Law, University of Illinois, is author of
Foundations of World Order, Duke University Press,
The Criminality of Nuclear Deterrence, and Palestine, Palestinians and International Law, by Clarity Press.
He can be reached at: FBOYLE@LAW.UIUC.EDU
Di pos oleh Arbain Muhayat pada 27 December 2008