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A Butcher, Indeed
From the April 7, 2003 issue: Saddam's war crimes.
by David Skinner
04/07/2003, Volume 008, Issue 29

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ANYONE STILL DOUBTING the criminal essence of Saddam's regime need only survey the methods employed so far by Iraqi fighters to see that laws, humanitarian conventions, and elementary standards of decency hold no sway with the dictator or the men who carry out his will. Already, there are too many reports of actions amounting to war crimes to keep track of, though certain categories of offense stand out.

Perhaps first on the list is the treatment of prisoners of war. The Geneva Conventions, to which Iraq is a signatory, require the "humane treatment" of POWs, who must at all times be "protected, particularly against acts of violence or intimidation and against insults and public curiosity." In this regard, what happened to the Army maintenance unit captured on Sunday, March 23, constituted at least two separate war crimes.

After the 507th Ordnance Maintenance unit made a wrong turn near Nasiriya, several troops were taken into Iraqi custody. Later that day, both Iraqi state television and Al-Jazeera broadcast video of some of these soldiers being interrogated, along with footage of several corpses. Twelve soldiers are missing in connection with these events.

Asked to comment, former POW and Republican senator from Arizona John McCain says, "We are committed to the return of these prisoners. If they are harmed or mistreated, we will go after them. We will pursue them, no matter what it takes, and [the Iraqi forces] will pay the ultimate penalty, if necessary, if they do not observe the Geneva Conventions for the treatment of
prisoners of war."

But it is in regard to civilians that Iraq may be making its darkest contribution to military history. To say that Saddam's forces do not put a premium on human life hardly does justice to the use of men, women, and children as shields, decoys, and crowds to hide among. And it bears noting that even, or rather especially, in wartime, no Iraqi is safe from torture and execution.

Consider some of the stories reported in the first week of the war: a woman in Basra hanged for waving hello to Allied troops, an American officer told reporters; families in Najaf threatened with execution, according to General Vincent Brooks, unless the male family members (children included) joined the fight; Iraqis in Basra firing at their own people, say the British troops fighting there. It would appear that agents of the Iraqi state view human beings as simply disposable.

Along with hiding among and behind civilians, Iraqi fighters are dressing as civilians--and not just the irregulars. Revolutionary Guard soldiers, too, have been found to don man-on-the-street costumes over their uniforms. Feigning civilian or non-combatant status violates the Geneva Conventions, yet instances of this appear to be widespread. Whether Fedayeen, Baath party irregulars, or actual military, Iraqi fighters are disguising themselves not as shrubs (a perfectly legal ruse) but as innocent pedestrians, in Najaf, in Nasiriya, outside Baghdad, in Umm Qasr, and elsewhere.

Indeed, the exploitation of civilians may turn out to be Saddam's principal strategy and the key to his fighters' perseverance. While drawing fire into densely populated areas violates every kind of law, the Iraqis, especially in Basra and Baghdad, appear to be pinning their entire war plan on the coalition's scruples about inflicting civilian casualties. Cities occupied by Iraqi forces remain legitimate targets, although the humanitarian provisions of the Geneva Convention require that potential civilian suffering be taken into account.


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