
We are the war criminals now
by Robert Fisk
Independent Digital (UK), Ltd 22 May 2002

We are becoming war criminals in Afghanistan. The US Air Force
bombs Mazar-i-Sharif for the Northern Alliance, and our heroic
Afghan allies who slaughtered 50,000 people in Kabul between
1992 and 1996 move into the city and execute up to 300 Taliban
fighters. The report is a footnote on the television satellite
channels, a "nib" in journalistic parlance. Perfectly
normal, it seems. The Afghans have a "tradition" of
revenge. So, with the strategic assistance of the USAF, a war
crime is committed.
Now we have the Mazar-i-Sharif prison "revolt",
in which Taliban inmates opened fire on their Alliance jailers.
US Special Forces and, it has emerged, British troops
helped the Alliance to overcome the uprising and, sure enough,
CNN tells us some prisoners were "executed" trying to
escape. It is an atrocity. British troops are now stained with
war crimes. Within days, The Independent's Justin Huggler has
found more executed Taliban members in Kunduz.
The Americans have even less excuse for this massacre. For
the US Secretary of Defence, Donald Rumsfeld, stated quite specifically
during the siege of the city that US air raids on the Taliban
defenders would stop "if the Northern Alliance requested
it". Leaving aside the revelation that the thugs and murderers
of the Northern Alliance were now acting as air controllers to
the USAF in its battle with the thugs and murderers of the Taliban,
Mr Rumsfeld's incriminating remark places Washington in the witness
box of any war-crimes trial over Kunduz. The US were acting in
full military co-operation with the Northern Alliance militia.
Most television journalists, to their shame, have shown little
or no interest in these disgraceful crimes. Cosying up to the
Northern Alliance, chatting to the American troops, most have
done little more than mention the war crimes against prisoners
in the midst of their reports. What on earth has gone wrong with
our moral compass since 11 September?
Perhaps I can suggest an answer. After both the First and
Second World Wars, we the "West" grew a
forest of legislation to prevent further war crimes. The very
first Anglo-French-Russian attempt to formulate such laws was
provoked by the Armenian Holocaust at the hands of the Turks in
1915; The Entente said it would hold personally responsible "all
members of the (Turkish) Ottoman government and those of their
agents who are implicated in such massacres". After the Jewish
Holocaust and the collapse of Germany in 1945, article 6 (C) of
the Nuremberg Charter and the Preamble of the UN Convention on
genocide referred to "crimes against humanity". Each
new post-1945 war produced a raft of legislation and the creation
of evermore human rights groups to lobby the world on liberal,
humanistic Western values.
Over the past 50 years, we sat on our moral pedestal and lectured
the Chinese and the Soviets, the Arabs and the Africans, about
human rights. We pronounced on the human-rights crimes of Bosnians
and Croatians and Serbs. We put many of them in the dock, just
as we did the Nazis at Nuremberg. Thousands of dossiers were produced,
describing in nauseous detail the secret courts and
death squads and torture and extra judicial executions carried
out by rogue states and pathological dictators. Quite right too.
Yet suddenly, after 11 September, we went mad. We bombed Afghan
villages into rubble, along with their inhabitants blaming
the insane Taliban and Osama bin Laden for our slaughter
and now we have allowed our gruesome militia allies to execute
their prisoners. President George Bush has signed into law a set
of secret military courts to try and then liquidate anyone believed
to be a "terrorist murderer" in the eyes of America's
awesomely inefficient intelligence services. And make no mistake
about it, we are talking here about legally sanctioned American
government death squads. They have been created, of course, so
that Osama bin Laden and his men should they be caught rather
than killed, will have no public defence; just a pseudo trial
and a firing squad.
It's quite clear what has happened. When people with yellow
or black or brownish skin, with Communist or Islamic or Nationalist
credentials, murder their prisoners or carpet bomb villages to
kill their enemies or set up death squad courts, they must be
condemned by the United States, the European Union, the United
Nations and the "civilised" world. We are the masters
of human rights, the Liberals, the great and good who can preach
to the impoverished masses. But when our people are murdered
when our glittering buildings are destroyed then we tear
up every piece of human rights legislation, send off the B-52s
in the direction of the impoverished masses and set out to murder
our enemies.
Winston Churchill took the Bush view of his enemies. In 1945,
he preferred the straightforward execution of the Nazi leadership.
Yet despite the fact that Hitler's monsters were responsible for
at least 50 million deaths 10,000 times greater than the
victims of 11 September the Nazi murderers were given a
trial at Nuremberg because US President Truman made a remarkable
decision. "Undiscriminating executions or punishments,"
he said, "without definite findings of guilt fairly arrived
at, would not fit easily on the American conscience or be remembered
by our children with pride."
No one should be surprised that Mr Bush a small-time
Texas Governor-Executioner should fail to understand the
morality of a statesman in the Whitehouse. What is so shocking
is that the Blairs, Schröders, Chiracs and all the television
boys should have remained so gutlessly silent in the face of the
Afghan executions and East European-style legislation sanctified
since 11 September.
There are ghostly shadows around to remind us of the consequences
of state murder. In France, a general goes on trial after admitting
to torture and murder in the 1954-62 Algerian war, because he
referred to his deeds as "justifiable acts of duty performed
without pleasure or remorse". And in Brussels, a judge will
decide if the Israeli Prime Minister, Arial Sharon, can be prosecuted
for his "personal responsibility" for the 1982 massacre
in Sabra and Chatila.
Yes, I know the Taliban were a cruel bunch of bastards. They
committed most of their massacres outside Mazar-i-Sharif in the
late 1990s. They executed women in the Kabul football stadium.
And yes, lets remember that 11 September was a crime against humanity.
But I have a problem with all this. George Bush says that
"you are either for us or against us" in the war for
civilisation against evil. Well, I'm sure not for bin Laden. But
I'm not for Bush. I'm actively against the brutal, cynical, lying
"war of civilisation" that he has begun so mendaciously
in our name and which has now cost as many lives as the World
Trade Centre mass murder.
At this moment, I can't help remembering my dad. He was old
enough to have fought in the First World War. In the third Battle
of Arras. And as great age overwhelmed him near the end of the
century, he raged against the waste and murder of the 1914-1918
war. When he died in 1992, I inherited the campaign medal of which
he was once so proud, proof that he had survived a war he had
come to hate and loathe and despise. On the back, it says: "The
Great War for Civilisation." Maybe I should send it to George
Bush.
Robert
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