|
America is Guilty: The Civilian Toll
- A. J. Chien
As the bombs fall on Afghanistan, the toll among civilians
mounts: 76 dead and over 100 injured after four days, according
to Reuters. While to many say it is indefensible to kill innocent
people, US and NATO leaders offer a defense: that civilians
are not being targeted. As Tony Blair claimed, "This
military plan has been put together mindful of our determination
to do all we humanly can to avoid civilian casualties."
But there's two problems with this defense: it's not relevant,
and it's not true.
On the first point, consider something called the "mens
rea"analysis of criminal law. According to Michael Tonry,
Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota, "In
the criminal law, purpose and knowledge are equally culpable
states of mind. An action taken with a purpose to kill is
no more culpable than an action taken with some other purpose
in mind but with knowledge that a death will probably result.
Blowing up an airplane to kill a passenger is equivalent to
blowing up an airplane to destroy a fake painting and thereby
to defraud an insurance company, knowing that the passengers
will be killed. Both are murder. Most people would find the
latter killing more despicable" (Malign Neglect, p. 32).
Tonry uses such reasoning to indict the architects of the
US "war on drugs." Writing in 1995, Tonry notes
that from 1980 the rate of incarceration for blacks rose much
faster than that for whites, and that the proportions of blacks
among those admitted to prison reached record levels. These
results were foreseeable. Data available in the late 1980s
showed, on the one hand, an overall national decline in drug
use through the 1980s and, on the other, a general increase
in use of cocaine and heroin as measured by emergency room
admissions and urinalysis results of arrestees in urban areas.
The latter indicators were reflective of a growing drug use
problem in urban poor areas, with minority populations. Inasmuch
as drug czar William Bennett's drug warriors knew this data
well, they knew the consequences of their policies: as Senator
Daniel Patrick Moynihan put it,"...by choosing prohibition
[of drugs] we are choosing to have an intense crime problem
concentrated among minorities." Tonry concludes, by the
"mensrea" analysis of criminal law, that Bennett
and colleagues were just as morally responsible for the destruction
of black communities as they would be if this destruction
had been their goal all along.
Another application is the current bombing. Let's assume,
as we are told, that civilians are not being targeted. It
doesn't matter. The first wave of attacks reportedly consisted
largely of "dumb" bombs dropped or launched from
long distances, and even current "smart" bombs hit
their targets only 70 to 80 percent of the time. So our leaders
know full well that the bombs will kill innocent people, indeed
admit as much. By the principles of our criminal law, they
are therefore just as culpable for these deaths as they would
be if innocents were targeted. Similarly for the foreseeable
starvation of Afghan civilians because of the bombing's disruption
of humanitarian aid efforts - only in this case there are
potentially millions of victims. What if the purpose is noble?
One could defend the predictable deaths of civilians if it
resulted from, say, shooting down an airliner in order to
keep it from smashing a skyscraper. In Afghanistan the purpose
is, as a New York Times correspondent puts it, "to tilt
the balance of power within Afghanistan against the Taliban,"
put forth as a noble goal in the fight against terrorism.
But recall that the Taliban does not stand accused of the
terrorism of September 11. The Taliban is guilty of real crimes,
but the reason we are bombing them is for refusing to hand
over Osama bin Laden without seeing the evidence against him.
Its punishment is to be overthrown by an equally brutal regime.
Notwithstanding the headlines in US dailies, nobility is not
immediately apparent, never mind anything so noble that it
outweighs a great many deaths.
Let's now consider whether all the targets are really military,
in conjunction with some relevant international law. Under
article 48 of the Geneva Conventions, "In order to ensure
respect for and protection of the civilian population and
civilian objects, the Parties to the conflict shall at all
times distinguish between the civilian population and combatants
and between civilian objects and military objectives and accordingly
shall direct their operations only against military objectives."
But the main aim of the US strikes is not military but political,
to remove the Taliban from power. For all its wretchedness,
the Taliban is not simply an army but a political entity,
and its members largely civilians, not combatants. So the
distinctions of article 48 evidently have not been heeded:
many of the targets hit, such as Taliban headquarters and
other buildings in Kabul and Kandahar, would seem to count
as "civilian objects" (just as the White House presumably
would, notwithstanding its hosting of the commander-in-chief).
Then there is article 51: "Indiscriminate attacks are
prohibited...[such as]...an attack which may be expected to
cause incidental loss of civilian life, injury to civilians,
damage to civilian objects or a combination thereof, which
would be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct
military advantage anticipated." And similarly we have
the Nuremberg Charter, which classes as war crimes any "violations
of the laws or customs of war which include...wanton destruction
of cities, towns, or villages, or devastation not justified
by military necessity."
Are there violations here (in Afghanistan)? Among the targets
so far are airports, communication facilities, electrical
plants, government buildings, houses - all attacked for a
political purpose. After a building that housed UN de-mining
workers was destroyed, the UN appealed to the US to protect
civilians in its military strikes: in less polite terms, to
obey international law mandating such protection. Apparently
they do not agree with Tony Blair that the attackers are doing
all they "humanly can." (In Ramsey Clark's The Fire
This Time, similar arguments and many more are made with regard
to the Iraq war.) The Pentagon has expressed satisfaction
with the early results.
Let's conclude by considering a different source: Afghan
civilians. Here's a sampling of testimonials reported by the
Boston Globe and New York Times. Rais Mazloomyar Jabirkhail:
"They are not God. They want to pinpoint every target,
but they can't make every missile go after Osama and terrorist
training camps..." While not a supporter of bin Laden,
he asked why, in response to what bin Laden was accused of
doing, the United States "is destroying our whole country."
Mohammad Akram: "They should find Osama bin Laden and
attack only him. Why did they attack all of Afghanistan? We
are just poor people in Afghanistan." Mohammad Zahir:
"Everyone wants to eliminate terrorism from the face
of the earth, but the way adopted by the US is not fair because
masses of ordinary people also live in Afghanistan. The attack
was not just on terrorist camps...I know those are residential
areas." Abdul Malik: In his village there was "great
panic among the people- they are running toward hilly areas
away from cities...We were telling the women and children
that everything will be OK, we will be safe [in the hills],
we will pray to God." Naseebullah Khan: "It's not
true that the Americans have only been bombing military targets.
Many of the bombs are dropping on residential neighborhoods."
Abdul Qahir: "Though people are fed up with Taliban rulers,
at the same time we are not supporting the US attack on our
beloved country. It is against human dignity." Meanwhile,
thousands of Afghans reaching the Pakistani border have reportedly
joined anti-US demonstrations in Quetta, Peshawar, and elsewhere.
Apparently the view of many ordinary Afghans doesn't match
that of their self-proclaimed saviours.
|