[Peace-discuss] Condi Rice at Stanford / the Stanford anti-war movement's response to a war criminal on campus

Karen Medina kmedina67 at gmail.com
Mon Apr 27 11:39:04 CDT 2009


Ms. Condoleezza Rice should be tried for her crimes. Until then, I
fear that Stanford hired her.

But Stanford students can boycott her classes.

Or perhaps better yet make her work extra hard at her job by inviting
her to debates and panels with anti-war scholars. I don't know if
she'll ever regret what she has done, but it would be nice if there
were a way to invite her to constantly review what she has done and
listen to other people's points of view.

-karen medina

On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 11:22 AM, C. G. Estabrook <galliher at illinois.edu> wrote:
> Actually tenure has rarely if ever offered much protection.  Throughout the
> 20th century, from WWI through Vietnam, tenure did not protect political
> dissidents, who were just never given tenure.  (A dissident like Chomsky
> would not have been tenured in political science; he has tenured because
> he's a genius in another field.)
>
> For an attack on the tenure system, see Mark C. Taylor's piece in today's
> NYT. Old arguments, some rather quixotic, are brought together there.  --CGE
>
> Robert Naiman wrote:
>>
>> I'm 100% for people giving Condi a hard time and raising these issues.
>>
>> But people should think through whether they really want to go after
>> the tenure rules. What would be the new criteria? If it's alleged that
>> you've committed a heinous crime, even though you've never been
>> brought to court?
>>
>> During the red hunts of the 50s, progressive academics were purged
>> from American universities for refusing to cooperate with
>> Congressional witch hunt committees...
>>
>> Tenure protections are essential for preserving universities as places
>> of free inquiry. Any move to weaken these protections will hurt
>> progressives a thousand times more than they will hurt the Right.
>>
>> On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 10:43 AM, Karen Medina <kmedina67 at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hey Peace-discuss,
>>>
>>> Condoleezza Rice is back at Stanford University.
>>>
>>> Our friend who now attends Stanford asks: What does it mean for the
>>> Stanford community to accept an alleged war criminal on their campus?
>>> What does the pipeline of war criminals to universities mean for
>>> students everywhere? Please read about Rice's alleged crimes:
>>>
>>> http://www.stanford.edu/group/antiwar/cgi-bin/mediawiki/index.php?title=Condi_coalition_letter_draft
>>>  [i've included the text below].
>>>
>>> Condi coalition letter draft
>>> To the Stanford community,
>>> As you may have heard, Condoleezza Rice officially returns to the
>>> Hoover Institution March 2,[1] after working eight years as National
>>> Security Advisor and then Secretary of State under the Bush
>>> administration. We, the student group Stanford Says No to War, are
>>> concerned with her actions these past eight years—not academic
>>> beliefs, party affiliation, or scholarly pursuits. Specifically, we
>>> are concerned about serious allegations that Rice has violated our
>>> constitution, domestic laws, and international law and endangered the
>>> American people. We are initiating a coalition of Stanford community
>>> members to create a campus-wide movement to hold Condoleezza Rice
>>> accountable for her actions.
>>>
>>> Summary
>>> In this letter we will outline some specific evidence pointing to
>>> violations of international and domestic law by Condoleezza Rice. In
>>> particular, in organizing and executing the Iraq War, and in
>>> personally approving the use of torture. It has become clear that the
>>> invasion of Iraq, and continued violence there, as well as the United
>>> States’ use of torture, has increased violence against Americans and
>>> made the world less safe—while war and bombing diverts resources from
>>> programs of social uplift.
>>> Iraq War
>>>
>>> Aggressive Wars and International Law
>>> For one country to invade another without the authorization of the UN
>>> Security Council[2], or the justification of self-defense from
>>> imminent attack[3], is an act of aggressive war. As the Nuremberg
>>> tribunal declared, “To initiate a war of aggression... is not only an
>>> international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing
>>> only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the
>>> accumulated evil of the whole.” [4] It is also a breach of the UN
>>> Charter[5] and other international treaties to which the US is a
>>> party[6] and customary international law.[7]
>>> The US-led invasion of Iraq, therefore, is not to be regarded as a
>>> mistake, or a foreign policy blunder. It is to be regarded as a crime
>>> against humanity, of the worst possible sort. “War is essentially an
>>> evil thing. Its consequences are not confined to the belligerent
>>> states alone, but affect the whole world.” [8]
>>>
>>> Rice's warmongering
>>> “Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action, justified by
>>> the conjunction of terrorism and WMD [Weapons of Mass Destruction].
>>> But the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.” So
>>> reported the head of MI6, the British intelligence agency, in July
>>> 2002, according to a memo of his meeting with Bush. The same memo
>>> recorded Foreign Secretary Jack Straw: “it seemed clear that Bush had
>>> made up his mind to take military action, even if the timing was not
>>> yet decided. But the case was thin. Saddam was not threatening his
>>> neighbours, and his WMD capability was less than that of Libya, North
>>> Korea or Iran.”[9]
>>>
>>> Once the “intelligence and facts” were “fixed,” they were then sold to
>>> the American public, who were manipulated into believing that Iraq
>>> posed an imminent threat to American national security. Condoleezza
>>> Rice was a principal participant in this campaign of disinformation.
>>>
>>> As National Security Adviser, Condoleezza Rice was one of the “five
>>> Administration officials most responsible for providing public
>>> information and shaping public opinion on Iraq”[10] and “central to
>>> policy formulation and execution” [11]. She was among the top
>>> officials promoting, planning, and eventually perpetrating the war.
>>>
>>> “Condi’s enthusiasm for regime change is undimmed”—over a year before
>>> war officially started. So reported David Manning, foreign policy
>>> adviser to British Prime Minister Tony Blair, after a meeting with
>>> Rice.[12]
>>>
>>> The Bush administration's “intelligence” and “facts” claimed that
>>> Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq possessed nuclear, chemical, and
>>> biological weapons and had connections to al-Qaeda and the terrorist
>>> attacks of September 11, 2001.[13] Subsequent investigations have
>>> proven that this “fixed” intelligence was indeed false.[14]
>>>
>>> In the rush to war, Condoleezza Rice played a major role in
>>> manipulating the American public into believing that Iraq posed an
>>> imminent threat to American national security. According to the Center
>>> for Public Integrity, “Following 9/11, President Bush and seven top
>>> officials”—including Condoleezza Rice—“waged a carefully orchestrated
>>> campaign of misinformation about the threat posed by Saddam Hussein’s
>>> Iraq.” The Center for Public Integrity counted that, overall, the Bush
>>> administration made 935 false statements about the national security
>>> threat posed by Iraq. Of those 935, Condoleezza Rice made 56 false
>>> statements.[15] A congressional report in March 2004, based on a
>>> smaller sample, found that of all the top administration officials,
>>> between September 2002 and September 2003, Rice made the highest
>>> number of categorically false statements, including “that no one in
>>> the White House knew of the intelligence community’s doubts about the
>>> President’s assertion that Iraq sought to import uranium from
>>> Africa.”[16]
>>>
>>> It was Condoleezza Rice who made the infamous claim “We don't want the
>>> smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud.”[17]
>>>
>>> In the lead-up to voting in the UN Security Council on the issue of
>>> Iraq, Condoleezza Rice authorized the National Security Agency to
>>> wiretap the private communications of UN delegates in New York. Rice
>>> authorized spying on Security Council diplomats—including home and
>>> office phones and private emails—to provide information on their
>>> voting intentions, “policies” and “negotiating positions they may be
>>> considering” with regard to Iraq.[18]
>>>
>>> In April 2007, Rice was subpoenaed to the House Oversight and
>>> Government Reform Committee to testify about justification for the
>>> war,[19] but refused to comply.[20]
>>>
>>> The evidence is overwhelming that Condoleezza Rice was a principal
>>> participant in the planning and propaganda efforts of an aggressive
>>> war waged in supreme violation of international law.
>>>
>>> Blackwater
>>> Blackwater (now Xe), the notorious private military contractor
>>> involved in several alleged massacres[21], received multiple State
>>> Department contracts worth millions of dollars. As such, they were
>>> contractors—under Condoleezza Rice.
>>> Rice herself admitted in testimony to the House Oversight and
>>> Government Reform Committee in October 2007 that Blackwater
>>> contractors operate in a legal “hole,” without accountability for
>>> their crimes. Nevertheless, she opposed bringing contractors under the
>>> military justice system, rather supporting “new laws that would apply
>>> to contractors”—laws which never materialized.[22]
>>>
>>> In December 2006, a Blackwater contractor, under the influence of
>>> alcohol, allegedly killed a guard of Iraqi Vice President Adil
>>> Abd-al-Mahdi. In response, Condoleezza Rice's State Department had
>>> allowed the killer to flee Iraq within 36 hours, and “hoped to keep
>>> the case quiet by helping Blackwater to take Mr. Moonen out of Iraq
>>> and by paying the slain guard’s family $20,000 in cash,” and weeks
>>> later, the alleged killer was again working as a war contractor in the
>>> Middle East.[23]
>>>
>>> Instead of ensuring the prosecution of Blackwater employees after the
>>> Nissour Square massacre in September 2007, Rice's State Department
>>> granted them immunity.[24] Rice then “quietly promoted two senior
>>> staffers who directly oversaw controversial Blackwater security
>>> operations.” [25]
>>>
>>> In April 2008, despite Iraqi government efforts,[26] Rice's State
>>> Department renewed Blackwater's contract.[27]
>>> Despite the efforts of the Iraqi government, even the 2008 Status of
>>> Forces Agreement was unclear on Blackwater's immunity.[28] Not until
>>> January 2009 did Iraq revoke Blackwater's license. [29]
>>>
>>> There appears to be little evidence of Condoleezza Rice's State
>>> Department acting to restrain Blackwater. Instead, the evidence
>>> suggests that the State Department—and hence Secretary of State
>>> Condoleezza Rice—is an accessory after the fact to Blackwater's
>>> alleged crimes, resulting in mass deaths.
>>>
>>> Tragedy of the War
>>> Hundreds of thousands of people—by some estimates, well over a
>>> million—have died as a result of the war in Iraq. The suffering in
>>> Iraq wrought by the US-led invasion and occupation has been
>>> catastrophic. Multiple independent estimates suggest over 1.2 million
>>> Iraqi people have died as a result of the war.[30] According to the
>>> United Nations High Commission for Refugees, over 4 million Iraqis
>>> have been internally or externally displaced from their homes.[31] On
>>> September 11, 2008, Al-Jazeera reported that “years of war have
>>> degraded water-treatment facilities in Iraq and deprived many Iraqis
>>> of clean drinking water,” which have contributed to an outbreak in
>>> cholera[32]
>>>
>>> The war in Iraq to date has resulted in the deaths of over 4,000
>>> American soldiers.[33]. In addition, according to a 2006 National
>>> Intelligence Estimate, “The Iraq conflict has become the ‘cause
>>> celebre’ for jihadists, breeding a deep resentment of US involvement
>>> in the Muslim world and cultivating supporters for the global jihadist
>>> movement.”[34]
>>>
>>> The war has devastated families across America, both those whose loved
>>> ones were killed in the war and all those who suffer the consequences
>>> of budget cuts necessitated by massive military spending in Iraq. And
>>> it has made America less safe in its inspiration worldwide of hatred
>>> for America and its actions.
>>>
>>> Torture
>>> Definition
>>> Torture, in Article 1(1) of the United Nations Convention Against
>>> Torture, is defined as,
>>> “any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or
>>> mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as
>>> obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession,
>>> punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is
>>> suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a
>>> third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind,
>>> when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of
>>> or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other
>>> person acting in an official capacity. It does not include pain or
>>> suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful
>>> sanctions.”[35]
>>> Principals meetings
>>>
>>> As National Security Advisor, Condoleezza Rice chaired meetings of the
>>> National Security Council’s Principals Committee. As ABC news reported
>>> in April 2008:[36]
>>>
>>> The committee authorized water-boarding of three people in U.S.
>>> custody, and the discussions were so detailed they were “almost
>>> choreographed—down to the number of times CIA agents could use a
>>> specific tactic.”
>>> The role of Condoleezza Rice “was decisive”. Amidst concerns that the
>>> program was harming US image abroad, Rice reportedly told the CIA:
>>> “This is your baby. Go do it.”
>>>
>>> Ashcroft is reported to have asked after one meeting: “Why are we
>>> talking about this in the White House? History will not judge this
>>> kindly.”
>>> We agree.
>>>
>>> Law against torture
>>> The prohibition on torture in international law is unequivocal. The US
>>> is a party to the UN Convention Against Torture, as well as other
>>> treaties prohibiting torture, which are incorporated into US law as
>>> the “supreme Law of the Land.”[37] Torture is also prohibited under
>>> several US laws.[38]
>>>
>>> “No exceptional circumstances whatsoever, whether a state of war or a
>>> threat of war, internal political instability or any other public
>>> emergency, may be invoked as a justification of torture”: Article 2(2)
>>> of the Convention.
>>> Rice's main defense would presumably be the “torture memos,” written
>>> by Justice Department lawyers to justify brutal interrogation
>>> techniques.
>>>
>>> The memos were regarded as a “Golden Shield” for officials who feared
>>> prosecution.[39] They were written to get torturers out of jail.
>>> Producing fallacious legal documents, reinterpreting the law to
>>> justify conduct that was previously clearly torture, and doing so
>>> knowing that such conduct was likely to be carried out, has another
>>> name: aiding and abetting torture.[40]
>>>
>>> >From this perspective, the memos will get nobody out of jail, but
>>> might get some lawyers into jail.
>>>
>>> International law not only prohibits torture: States are obliged to
>>> investigate allegations of torture.[41]
>>>
>>> States must “proceed to a prompt and impartial investigation, wherever
>>> there is reasonable ground to believe that an act of torture has been
>>> committed in any territory under its jurisdiction”: Article 12.
>>>
>>> States must also “take effective legislative, administrative,
>>> judicial, or other measures to prevent acts of torture in any
>>> territory under its jurisdiction”: Article 2(1).
>>>
>>> There are clear reasonable grounds to believe that acts of torture
>>> have been authorized by Condoleezza Rice. The State is therefore
>>> obliged to investigate.
>>>
>>> What do we do if it does not?
>>>
>>> Conclusions
>>> This is why it falls to us here in the United States, and at Stanford,
>>> to hold our leaders accountable. That begins now, and it should start
>>> at Stanford, a renowned university that will soon be the home of one
>>> of the major perpetrators of the horrendous acts that have defined the
>>> past 8 years and tainted the reputation of the United States around
>>> the world.
>>>
>>> Stanford faculty rules protect tenure and security of appointment,
>>> which is “the right not to be dismissed” or otherwise punished except
>>> for, among other things, “a finding... of substantial and manifest
>>> incompetence” or a “determination pursuant to the Statement on Faculty
>>> Discipline.”[42]
>>>
>>> However, the Statement on Faculty Discipline allows faculty to be
>>> charged with misconduct “only for actions taken in association with
>>> the faculty member’s academic duties and responsibilities,” such as
>>> “dishonest or unethical behavior in the faculty member’s own teaching
>>> or research,” “sexual harassment” and the “neglect of
>>> University-related duties and responsibilities.”[43]
>>>
>>> Taken literally, these Stanford rules would allow serial killers, mass
>>> murderers and war criminals to remain in tenured positions, provided
>>> they did not harass students, falsify research, or engage in
>>> misconduct “in association with... academic duties and
>>> responsibilities.”
>>>
>>> If Condoleezza Rice were a student, she would be subject to the
>>> Fundamental Standard: “Students at Stanford are expected to show both
>>> within and without the University such respect for order, morality,
>>> personal honor and the rights of others as is demanded of good
>>> citizens. Failure to do this will be sufficient cause for removal from
>>> the University.”[44]
>>>
>>> How can we hold our students to this standard if we do not hold faculty
>>> to it?
>>>
>>> We must ask ourselves if the rules laid out for faculty in the
>>> handbook are adequate.
>>>
>>> By increasing awareness and in generating discussion about Condoleezza
>>> Rice's actions, we want to encourage everyone to ask themselves:
>>>
>>> IS STANFORD A SAFE PLACE FOR WAR CRIMINALS?
>>> Stanford Says No to War is committed to acting on this issue. But we
>>> need your help, opinions, and ideas in approaching Rice’s return.
>>> Stanford Says No to War invites every member of the Stanford community
>>> to join us in a campaign to HOLD CONDOLEEZZA RICE ACCOUNTABLE.
>>>
>>> Keep your eye out for petitions, discussions, debates, films, and
>>> other events both educational and action-oriented in calling for her
>>> resignation and in demonstrating to the world that we, the people of
>>> Stanford University, do not accept war crimes.
>>>
>>> References
>>> ↑ “Rice returns,” Stanford Daily, February 23, 2009.
>>> ↑ See Chapter VII of the UN Charter
>>> ↑ See article 51 of the UN Charter, which preserves the right of
>>> self-defense. International law only permits attacks in “anticipatory
>>> self-defense” in extremely narrow circumstances: the agreed position,
>>> since the Caroline affair of 1837-38, is that force is only
>>> permissible the “necessity of self-defence” is “instant, overwhelming,
>>> leaving no choice of means and no moment for deliberation.” See the
>>> original letter from Daniel Webster, Secretary of State, to Lord
>>> Ashburton, August 6, 1842, which is the basis for modern opinio juris.
>>> See, e.g., the discussion in Oppenheim’s International Law: Ninth
>>> Edition, 1991, p. 412; also discussed in the Lawyers' Statement on the
>>> U.N. Charter and the Use of Force Against Iraq by the Lawyers'
>>> Committee on Nuclear Policy and the Western States Legal Foundation.
>>> ↑ Judgment of the International Military Tribunal, “The Common Plan or
>>> Conspiracy and Aggressive War” (emphasis added).
>>> ↑ See UN Charter, Article 1, which calls for “the suppression of acts
>>> of aggression or other breaches of the peace,” and Article 2(4): “All
>>> members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat
>>> or use of force against the territorial integrity or political
>>> independence of any state, or in any other manner inconsistent with
>>> the Purposes of the United Nations”.
>>> ↑ See e.g. the Briand-Kellogg Pact, also known as the Pact of Paris,
>>> dating from 1928.
>>> ↑ See, e.g., the judgment, its summary and other documents in the
>>> International Court of Justice in the Case Concerning the Military and
>>> Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v. United
>>> States of America (1986).
>>> ↑ Judgment of the International Military Tribunal, “The Common Plan or
>>> Conspiracy and Aggressive War.” See also, e.g., Iraq war illegal, says
>>> Annan, BBC News, 16 September, 2004.
>>> ↑ “The Secret Downing Street Memo”, reported in the Sunday Times, May 1,
>>> 2005.
>>> ↑ “Iraq On the Record: The Bush Administration's Public Statements on
>>> Iraq,” House of Representatives Committee on Government Reform,
>>> Special Investigations Division, March 16, 2004. The other four are
>>> Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Powell.
>>> ↑ See, e.g. the New York Times Editorial Board, “Condoleezza Rice
>>> Teflon No More,” April 23, 2008
>>> ↑ The “Manning Memo,” 14 March 2002: original document (PDF) or
>>> transcript.
>>> ↑ See, e.g., the searchable database of statements at The Center for
>>> Public Integrity's War Card site. The most touted of these statements
>>> was Colin Powell's address to the UN on February 5, 2003: transcript
>>> and video, subsequently regarded by Powell as the “lowest point” in
>>> his life, as reported by CNN in August 2005. See also Iraq On the
>>> Record: The Bush Administration's Public Statements on Iraq,” House of
>>> Representatives Committee on Government Reform, Special Investigations
>>> Division, March 16, 2004.
>>> ↑ See, e.g., Report on the U.S. Intelligence Community's Prewar
>>> Intelligence Assessments on Iraq, Senate Committee on Intelligence,
>>> July 7, 2004; especially its conclusions.
>>> ↑ The Center for Public Integrity's War Card site has a fully
>>> searchable database of false statements.
>>> ↑ Iraq On the Record: The Bush Administration's Public Statements on
>>> Iraq,” House of Representatives Committee on Government Reform,
>>> Special Investigations Division, March 16, 2004. It also found that
>>> between “September 8, 2002, and September 28, 2003, National Security
>>> Advisor Rice made 29 misleading statements about the threat posed by
>>> Iraq.”
>>> ↑ “Top Bush officials push case against Saddam, CNN, September 8, 2002.
>>> ↑ Revealed: US dirty tricks to win vote on Iraq war, Martin Bright, Ed
>>> Vulliamy, Peter Beaumont, The Observer, March 2, 2003. The report was
>>> based on an email leaked from the NSA by Katharine Gun email: the text
>>> of the NSA email is available online. See also Rice authorized
>>> National Security Agency to spy on UN Security Council in run-up to
>>> war, former officials say, Jason Leopold, Raw Story, December 27,
>>> 2005; and Bugging Kofi Annan: UN Spying and the Evasions of US
>>> Journalism, Norman Solomon, Counterpunch, February 26, 2004.
>>> ↑ House committee subpoenas Rice on Iraq, Thomas Ferraro, Reuters, Apr
>>> 25, 2007; Hill Subpoenas Approved for Rice, Other Bush Officials, Dan
>>> Eggen and Paul Kane, Washington Post, April 26, 2007.
>>> ↑ Rice signals rejection of U.S. House subpoena in Iraq weapons of
>>> mass destruction inquiry, AP, April 26, 2007; Secret to Forcing
>>> Compliance With Subpoenas, David Swanson, August 31, 2007.
>>> ↑ Recounted by Jeremy Scahill on Democracy now, Can Iraq (or Anyone)
>>> Hold Blackwater Accountable for Killing Iraqi Civilians? A Debate on
>>> the Role of Private Contractors in Iraq, September 18, 2007; and also
>>> Contract Justice, Jeremy Scahill, The Nation, April 6, 2008.
>>> ↑ “I certainly regret that we did not have the kind of oversight that
>>> I would have insisted upon,” she said.Rice Says ‘Hole’ in U.S. Law
>>> Shields Contractors in Iraq, New York Times, October 25, 2007; On
>>> Hill, Rice Talks About Blackwater, Washington Post, October 26, 2007.
>>> There was a proposed law in 2007 to extend the jurisdiction of US
>>> Courts under the Military Extraterritorial Jursidcition Act to all
>>> contractors working for the US government abroad, but the Bush
>>> administration opposed it: White House: Contractor bill would have
>>> 'intolerable' effects, CNN, October 3, 2007. Regardless, charges have
>>> been brought against some Blackwater contractors over the Nissour
>>> square massacre in US federal court. On February 18, 2009, a federal
>>> US judge held that the contractors' arguments that the court had no
>>> jurisdiction over them were “rather strong,” but refused to throw out
>>> the case: Judge Refuses to Dismiss Charges Against Blackwater Guards,
>>> Del Quentin Wilber, Washington Post, February 18, 2009.
>>> ↑ Ex-Paratrooper Is Suspect in a Blackwater Killing, John M. Broder,
>>> New York Times, October 4, 2007; Contract Justice, Jeremy Scahill, The
>>> Nation, April 6, 2008; Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
>>> Memorandum Re: Additional Information about Blackwater USA, October 1,
>>> 2007; Contractor involved in Iraq shooting got job in Kuwait, CNN,
>>> October 4, 2007.
>>> ↑ See, e.g., State Department under fire over reported Blackwater
>>> immunity, AFP, October 30, 2007; State Department Grants Immunity to
>>> Guards Investigated for Shooting Iraqi Civilians, Jonathan Karl and
>>> Kirit Radia, ABC News, October 30, 2007; House Probes Blackwater
>>> Immunity, Adam Zagorin and Brian Bennett, Time, October 30, 2007.
>>> ↑ Despite Blackwater, State Officials Get Promotions, ABC News,
>>> October 25, 2007.
>>> ↑ See, e.g. Iraq Limits Blackwater's Operations, Time, September 17, 2007
>>> ↑ Blackwater Iraq contract to be renewed, Elise Labott, CNN, April 4,
>>> 2008; U.S. to renew Blackwater contract, UPI, April 5, 2008.
>>> ↑ Some reports suggested the agreement revoked immunity: see, e.g.
>>> Iraq withdrawal -- not so fast, Kal Raustiala, LA Times, January 3,
>>> 2009. However, the word “immunity” does not appear in the text of the
>>> SOFA; article 12 only provides Iraq “the primary right to exercise
>>> jurisdiction over United States contractors and United States
>>> contractor employees.” The details of immunity are unclear: see, e.g.,
>>> Iraq pact fuzzy on Blackwater immunity, Mike Baker, AP, December 24,
>>> 2008.
>>> ↑ Iraq to Deny New License To Blackwater Security Firm, Ernesto
>>> Londoño and Qais Mizher, Washington Post, January 29, 2009.
>>> ↑ See Opinion Research Business and Just Foreign Policy for these
>>> estiamtes. This far exceeds the Iraq Body Count number of around
>>> 90,000, which only counts deaths reported by multiple crosschecked
>>> media reports: see their information page. The US government has not
>>> made any serious study of deaths in Iraq during the war and
>>> occupation. Perhaps the closest is Measuring Stability and Security in
>>> Iraq, Report to Congress by Department of Defense, September 2008, at
>>> p.22. However, as noted in the December 2007 version of this report,
>>> there are many deaths for which “the Coalition does not have
>>> visibility, in particular, murders and deaths in locations where
>>> Coalition forces are not present”: at p.18. See the Congressional
>>> Research Service report Iraqi Civilian Casualties Estimates, Hannah
>>> Fischer, January 12, 2009, for some further discussion. The Just
>>> Foreign Policy figure is an extrapolation of an epidemiological-style
>>> cluster study study published in the prestigious British medial
>>> journal The Lancet, which obtained a figure of 426,000-794,000 for the
>>> period March 2003 - July 2006: Gilbert Burnham, Riyadh Lafta, Shannon
>>> Doocy et al., “Mortality After the 2003 Invasion of Iraq: A
>>> Cross-Sectional Cluster Sample Survey,” The Lancet, October 21, 2006,
>>> 368 (9545), pp. 1421-1429. The UK Ministry of Defence's chief
>>> scientific advisor called the survey “close to best practice” and
>>> “robust”: High Death Toll Backed, Newsday, March 27, 2007.
>>> ↑ See, e.g., Iraq situation, UNHCR Global Appeal 2008-2009.
>>> ↑ Cholera outbreak spreads in Iraq, Al-Jazeera, September 11, 2008.
>>> ↑ See the Iraq Coalition Casualty Count, which maintains an online count.
>>> ↑ See selected Declassified Key Judgments of the National Intelligence
>>> Estimate “Trends in Global Terrorism: Implications for the United
>>> States,” April 2006.
>>> ↑ See the full text of the UN Convention Against Torture and list of
>>> ratifications.
>>> ↑ Sources: Top Bush Advisors Approved 'Enhanced Interrogation', Jan
>>> Crawford Greenburg, Howard L. Rosenberg, Ariane de Vogue, ABC News,
>>> April 9, 2008.
>>> ↑ Article 6 of the US Constitution. See also the Geneva Conventions:
>>> for instance, article 17 of the Third Geneva Convention requires that
>>> “no physical or mental torture, nor by other form of coercion, may be
>>> inflicted on prisoners of war to secure from them information of any
>>> kind whatever”. Also the Universal Declaration of Human rights,
>>> article 5.
>>> ↑ See, e.g., the US War Crimes Act and the Eighth Amendment to the US
>>> Constitution.
>>> ↑ See the ABC News report for instance.
>>> ↑ For further discussion of this question see Michael Ratner, The
>>> Trial of Donald Rumsfeld (2008).
>>> ↑ In addition to Articles 12 and 2(1), see: article 4, which requires
>>> States to ensure that torture is a crime in their domestic law,
>>> including complicity or participation in torture; article 11, which
>>> requires States to keep interrogation rules under review “with a view
>>> to preventing any cases of torture.”
>>> ↑ Chapter 4, Stanford University Faculty Handbook, section 4.4.B(1)
>>> contains core policy statements on Faulty Appeal Procedures (4.1),
>>> Academic Freedom (4.2), Faculty Discipline (4.3), and Appointment and
>>> Tenure(4.4).
>>> ↑ Chapter 4, Stanford University Faculty Handbook, section 4.3.A(3).
>>> ↑ Fundamental standard, Stanford University Office of Judicial
>>> Affairs. This argument is also made by Steven Jewell on his website,
>>> No Stanford torture.
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Peace-discuss mailing list
>>> Peace-discuss at lists.chambana.net
>>> http://lists.chambana.net/cgi-bin/listinfo/peace-discuss
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>


More information about the Peace-discuss mailing list