There are those who die "unintentionally" and then there will be those who will starve because we have decapitated the capacity of the country. Where is the Geneva Convention when we need it?
Everything is predictable. The aerial sorties, the helicopter operations, the
Special Forces raids, the encouragement of a local ally (here the Northern
Alliance). What was also predictable was the inevitable "errant cluster
bomb" and the "collateral damage."
Reports came in almost immediately from sources that the US tends to consider
"unconfirmed" (such as Iranian television) that "errant
bombs" landed in civilian areas and took civilian lives.
| | | | To say that the civilian deaths from aerial bombardment are unintentional is tantamount to saying that a drunk driver who did not intend to kill someone in an 'accident' should be set free for good motives. | | | | |
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We heard of the
bombs on a UN mine-removal office in Kabul, we heard of the two strikes on
Herat, and we heard about the bombing of the CNN (Communist News Networks,
according to some Republicans!) offices in Kandahar as well as the Al-Jazeera
network office. The
New York Times reported (John F. Burns, "Errant
Cluster Bomb Leaves Danger Behind, UN Says," 25 October 2001) "the
Pentagon has said errors were unavoidable in a bombing campaign of the intensity
of that being conducted in Afghanistan." The United Nations, whose
credibility is stretched to the limit once again, reports that "residential
areas and some villages" have become targets of "errant cluster
bombs" because "Taliban troops have moved into those areas."
There is little concern that however smart we think the bombs can be,
"errors" in the world of aerial bombardment are inevitable.
To say that the civilian deaths from aerial bombardment are unintentional is
sophistry, because if there is a probability that the bombs will hit civilian
targets, then ipso facto the civilian deaths are not unintentional. This is
tantamount to saying that a drunk driver who did not intend to kill someone in
an "accident" should be set free for good motives. US law prosecutes
drunk drivers regardless of whether they have been in an accident, because it
recognizes that drunk driving is an inevitable accident.
| | | | Early laws on warfare recognized the question of 'intention' as sophistry, but even here there was a desire to accommodate flagrant acts of military violence. | | | | |
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The same must be said
of aerial bombardment. It always already intends to kill civilians, despite the
best intentions of the military planners.
Early laws on warfare recognized the question of "intention" as
sophistry, but even here there was a desire to accommodate flagrant acts of
military violence. It began well in 1899 and then went downhill by 1907. Hague
II (Laws and Customs of War on Land, 29 July 1899; and ratified by the US Senate
on 14 March 1902) was farsighted in its insistence (article XXIII) that military
combat should prohibit "arms, projectiles, or material of a nature to cause
superfluous injury." By Hague IV (18 October 1907, and ratified by the US
Senate the next year) the last phrase was amended to read, "to cause
unnecessary suffering." Necessary suffering, I suspect, was permissible.
But all this was before the present history of bombing, as recounted so
wonderfully by Sven Lindquist in his new book (New Press, 2001). For the first
act of aerial bombardment only took place on 26 October 1911 when the Italian
Air Force bombed Tripoli in their war against Turkish North Africa. As a
reaction to the violent turn of air warfare and the fear that it would be turned
against each other, the powers committed to end aerial bombardment, but the
treaty they penned did not come into effect. That rather farsighted treaty
(Draft Rules on Aerial Warfare, February 1923) pointedly noted (in article XXII)
that "aerial bombardment for the purpose of terrorizing the civilian
population, of destroying or damaging private property not of military
character, or of injuring non-combatants is prohibited," and furthermore
(according to article XXIV) any belligerent state that did bomb civilian targets
had to compensate them.
The very next year Squadron Leader Arthur "Bomber" Harris of the
Royal Air Force ruthlessly bombed the Kurds and Iraqis.
| | | | On the first day of World War II, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt wrote a note to France, Germany, Italy, Poland and the United Kingdom, begging them to desist from aerial bombardment. | | | | |
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In March of 1924, Harris
reported the following to his superiors (the text of which was added to the
RAF's August 1924 "Notes on the Method of Employment of Air Arm in
Iraq," a report to Parliament, thereafter expunged from the record):
"Where the Arab and Kurd had just begun to realise that if they could stand
a little noise they could stand bombings, they now know what real bombing means,
in casualties and damage; they now know that within forty-five minutes a
full-sized village (vide attached photos of Kushan-Al-Ajaza) can be practically
wiped out and a third of its inhabitants killed or injured by four or five
machines which offer them no real target, no opportunity for glory as warriors,
no effective means of escape."
By the time the next major convention against aerial bombing was drafted, all
the major powers joined in the immorality of bombardment. The Spanish in
Morocco, over the city of Chechaouen; the French in Syria (the bombardment of
Damascus' neighborhoods on 18 October 1925); the United States in Central
America (the bombardment of revolutionary Nicaraguan farmers in the 1920s); and
finally, those who started it, the Italians in Ethiopia in 1935-36.
| | | | The League did not go over the philosophical conundrums posed by the word 'intentional', as they perhaps should have to prevent the sophistry of 'collateral damage' and 'errant cluster bombs'. | | | | |
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But race is
at the heart of "international" revulsion at aerial bombing. As
Lindquist puts it, "the truth about Chechaouen required no cover-up.
Bombing natives was considered quite natural. The Italians did it in Libya, the
French did it in Morocco, and the British did it throughout the Middle East, in
India, and East Africa, while the South Africans did it in Southwest Africa.
Will any ambassador ever ask for forgiveness for that? Of all these bombed
cities and villages, only Guernica [in Spain, bombed by the Fascists in 1937]
went down in history. Because Guernica lies in Europe. In Guernica, we were the
ones who died."
On the eve of World War II, on 30 September 1938, the League of Nations
produced a unanimous resolution entitled "Protection of Civilian
Populations Against Bombing from the Air in Case of War." The League
declared, "intentional bombing of civilian populations is illegal"
mainly because "on numerous occasions public opinion has expressed through
the most authoritative channels its horror of the bombing of civilian
populations." The key word here is "intentional" and the League
did not go over the philosophical conundrums posed by the word, as they perhaps
should have to prevent the sophistry of "collateral damage" and
"errant cluster bombs." On the first day of World War II (1 September
1939), US President Franklin D.
| | | | The Royal Air Force began the bombardment of Germany and declared that industrial centers and the workers' homes beside them are legitimate targets. | | | | |
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Roosevelt wrote a note to the governments of
France, Germany, Italy, Poland and the United Kingdom, begging them to desist
from aerial bombardment.
The note bears quotation in full: "The ruthless bombing from the air of
civilians in unfortified centers of population during the course of the
hostilities which have raged in various quarters of the earth during the past
few years, which has resulted in the maiming and in the death of thousands of
defenseless men, women, and children, has sickened the hearts of every civilized
man and woman, and has profoundly shocked the conscience of humanity. If resort
is had to this form of inhuman barbarism during the period of the tragic
conflagration with which the world is now confronted, hundreds of thousands of
innocent human beings who have no responsibility for, and who are not even
remotely participating in, the hostilities which have now broken out, will lose
their lives. I am therefore addressing this urgent appeal to every government
which may be engaged in hostilities publicly to affirm its determination that
its armed forces shall in no event, and under no circumstances, undertake the
bombardment from the air of civilian populations or of unfortified cities, upon
the understanding that these same rules of warfare will be scrupulously observed
by all of their opponents.
| | | | The signing of the Nuremberg principles was an act of utter hypocrisy. No action was taken against the signatories, now the guardians of the new world order. | | | | |
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I request an immediate reply."
The immediate reply was on 20 June 1940 when the Royal Air Force began the
bombardment of Germany (and declared that industrial centers and the workers'
homes beside them are legitimate targets), and when the Nazi regime began the
Blitz against the British on 6 September. Munich, Coventry, London, Hamburg, and
then finally Dresden - this was the barbarism of aerial bombardment within
Europe. On 27 July 1943, the RAF killed 50,000 people in Hamburg. Reflecting on
this barbarity, nuclear physicist Freeman Dyson who was then a clerk for Arthur
"Bomber" Harris wrote that the Nazis "had sat in their offices,
writing memoranda and calculating how to murder people efficiently, just like
me. The main difference was that they were sent to jail or hanged as war
criminals, while I went free."
Eighty per cent of all the bombs in World War II fell in the last ten months
of the war during which the British, for instance, decided to bomb residential
areas with the argument that this would foreshorten the war. The US borrowed
this logic at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but only after the USAF firebombed Tokyo
on 8 May (General Curtis LeMay who directed the operations, said "we knew
we were going to kill a lot of women and kids when we burned that town. Had to
be done"). On 13 February 1945, the RAF killed 100,000 in Dresden; on 6
August 1945, the USAF killed 100,000 instantly in Hiroshima (another 100,000
died over the course of the next year).
| | | | The US dropped four times the amount of firepower on Vietnam than was used in the entire Second World War, a tonnage equivalent to six hundred and forty Hiroshimas. | | | | |
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Two days later, the Soviets, the
British, the French and the US signed the Nuremberg principles - an act of utter
hypocrisy. A "war crime" (article VI) is specifically defined by these
principles as the "wanton destruction of cities, towns or villages, or
devastation not justified by military necessity." No action was taken
against the signatories, now the guardians of the new world order.
Not even against the French army in Madagascar, where the French massacred by
bombardment 89,000 to 100,000 people in 1948 in the anti-colonial wars. Nor was
there to be any action against the US air force for its acts in Korea (1950-53):
A senior officer in General MacArthur's command hoped that a harsh US attack
would "give these yellow b astards what is coming to them." The racist
hatred of the Asians took the form of ruthless destruction, such as aerial raids
on the northern part of the peninsula to destroy irrigation dams that provided
water for three-quarters of the north's food production.
"The subsequent flash flood waters wiped out [supply routes, etc],"
the US air force noted in an official report. "The Westerner can little
conceive the awesome meaning which the loss of [rice] has for the Asian -
starvation and slow death." From Korea to Vietnam, to the carpet
bombardment of Cambodia, the list is endless from here on, and Lindquist covers
some of the ground for us.
| | | | The US bombs Afghanistan "with precision" from the air to shift rubble from one valley to the next, to devastate its productive capacity and leave it as easy pickings for the next marauder who wants a strategic post on the Great Silk Road. | | | | |
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The US dropped four times the amount of firepower on
Vietnam than was used in the entire Second World War, a tonnage equivalent to
six hundred and forty Hiroshimas - some of this includes the 373,000 tons of
napalm that seared the Vietnamese landscape and made the construction of
socialism in that land so much harder.
In 1964, US President Lyndon Johnson built on the fabricated Tonkin Gulf
incident to demand that the military be allowed to employ "all necessary
measures" in the war. Since then we have moved to depleted uranium, to talk
of tactical nuclear missiles, and the routine use of napalm and cruise missiles.
On 19 December 1968, the UN's "Resolution on Human Rights" affirmed
the International Red Cross's 1965 Vienna statement that combatants cannot adopt
"unlimited" means to injure the enemy, that "it is prohibited to
launch attacks against the civilian populations" and (here we are on weak
territory that dilutes the problem of the "intentional") "that
the distinction must be made at all times between persons taking part in the
hostilities and members of the civilian population to the effect that the latter
be spared as much as possible."
As much as possible - not entirely, not totally. There will be casualties -
this is the realism, the pragmatism of the racist contemporary - where we accept
as given that a few of the dehumanized other will succumb to the pedagogy of the
bomb despite our best, most civilized intentions.
In 1996 the International Court of Justice, bombarded with three million
signatures on an anti-nuclear petition, among other incentives, voted
"unanimously, that threat or use of nuclear weapons is illegal" when
it violates various UN statutes, but three justices (from Sierra Leone, Guyana
and Sri Lanka) wanted to go further and ban nuclear weapons under any
circumstances. They knew that bombs such as these are used basically against
those of color, those who are already subhuman to Europe-US, seen to require the
rod for discipline, seen to be a civilization apart.
Lindquist documents the genocidal fantasies of Europe-US against the colored
Other, from Charles Dilke's 1869 Greater Britain (which calls for the
"gradual extinction of the inferior races" as a "blessing of
mankind" and does so as airplanes drop "a rain of awful death to every
breathing thing [in China], a rain that exterminates the hopeless race") to
Jack London's 1910 The Unparalled Invasion (which calls for an aerial
bombardment of the Chinese by fragile glass tubes that carry every possible
biological weapon - and those that flee are felled by the powers at their
borders, the land is disinfected and then whites move into a cleansed China).
"The dream of solving all the problems of the world through mass
destruction from the air was already in place," Lindquist writes,
"before the first bomb was dropped. "
There is talk of tactical nuclear devices, and the US has probably already
used depleted uranium shells. The Pakistani government sealed its borders and
refugees are being sent back to desolation. The UN High Commissioner on
Refugees, Mary Robinson, calls for an end to the bombardment so that food can be
sent into Afghanistan, real food not the measly food drops orchestrated for
propaganda by the US State Department. None of this is to be heeded, as the
campaign continues, as bombs fall, as "errant cluster bombs" land on
civilian targets who are now "collateral damage."
The Taliban bomb without concern for human life, Hikmatyar (a great CIA
asset) once killed 25,000 people by indiscriminate rocket fire into Kabul, and
now the US bombs "with precision" from the air to shift rubble from
one valley to the next, to devastate the productive capacity of Afghanistan and
leave it as easy pickings for the next marauder who wants a strategic post on
the Great Silk Road. There are those who die "unintentionally" and
then there will be those who will starve because we have decapitated the
capacity of the country. Where is the Geneva Convention when we need it? Our
grief is not a cry for war.
(Vijay Prashad is Associate Professor and Director, International Studies
Program, Trinity College, Hartford, CT, USA)