[NYTr] Positive Changes in Military Justice in Iraq? (DSM)
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Wed Aug 8 12:13:30 EDT 2007
sent by Rick Kissell
Christian Science Monitor - Aug 7, 2007
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0807/p01s04-usmi.html
Is military justice in Iraq changing for the better?
High-profile cases reveal both new emphasis on laws of war and the
shortfalls of military justice.
By Brad Knickerbocker
The wheels of American military justice seem to be turning as they
should in Iraq, particularly given the extreme difficulties of urban
combat against tough and sometimes suicidal insurgents blending in with
the general population.
In a series of cases involving the unlawful killing and abuse of Iraqi
civilians, officers as well as enlisted soldiers and marines are being
prosecuted and punished. The need to follow the Uniformed Code of
Military Justice and the laws of war is being reemphasized in combat
training down to the individual platoon level.
But the improvements in military justice come with some worrisome
caveats as well, experts say: It took the highly publicized abuses at
the Abu Ghraib prison to get the military's attention. The severity of
punishment has been mixed, raising questions about the sympathy of
military juries made up of fellow Iraq combat vets. And the length of
the war, including multiple combat tours, plus the lowering of
recruiting standards to meet manpower shortages, is adding to the stress
and discipline problems that can lead to abuses.
"Based on a very incomplete picture of what's happening day to day in
Iraq, it appears that there's much more attention to human rights and to
the laws of war than, for example, in Vietnam or Korea," says military
analyst Loren Thompson of the Lexington Institute in Arlington, Va.
At Camp Pendleton, Calif., on Friday, Marine Corps Sgt. Lawrence
Hutchins III was sentenced to 15 years in prison and given a
dishonorable discharge for organizing the kidnapping and killing of an
Iraqi man in Hamdaniya last year. Six junior marines and a Navy petty
officer involved in the case received lesser punishments.
On Saturday, one of the soldiers convicted of rape and murder in an
attack on a 14-year-old Iraqi girl and her family in Mahmudiyah, about
20 miles south of Baghdad, was sentenced to 110 years in prison with
parole possible after 10 years.
The case of 24 Iraqi civilians killed at Haditha in 2005 is approaching
the court martial phase for a Marine staff sergeant and two lance
corporals charged with murder. In that case, four officers, including
the battalion commander, also are accused of failure to fully
investigate the killings. The military equivalent of a grand jury
proceeding this week will consider charges of dereliction of duty and
violation of a lawful order against Lt. Col Jeffrey Chessani.
Later in the month, Army Lt. Col. Steven Jordan faces a general
court-martial on charges that he failed to stop soldiers from abusing
prisoners at Abu Ghraib. Meanwhile, a retired US Army lieutenant general
has been censured in the friendly fire killing of Army Ranger Pat
Tillman, and he could be demoted to two-star rank.
"In a perverse way, these courts martials are a sign of the vitality of
the military justice system, the fact that it's working," says Gary
Solis, a Vietnam combat veteran who went on to spend 20 years as a judge
advocate and military judge in the Marine Corps before teaching laws of
war at the US Military Academy at West Point. Abu Ghraib, he says, was
an impetus to cracking down on the abuse of civilians. "All of the armed
services, it seems to me, are facing the music and saying, 'Hey, if
we're a nation of laws, if we're the good guys, we've got to take
action.' "
Especially important, says Mr. Solis, is the prosecution and punishment
of officers.
"Haditha for the Marine Corps is sending a ... message for battalion
commanders that they cannot turn a blind eye for what may be war
crimes," says Solis, who now teaches at Georgetown University. "You're
not going to get attention paid until you start trying officers."
"I only wish it went higher," he adds.
Do veterans make for lenient jurors?
The Hamdaniya case, in which marines killed an Iraqi man and then made
it look as if he had been an insurgent planting a roadside bomb, has
raised questions about the appropriateness of punishment. Four of the
seven men convicted were sentenced only to the time they had already
served in the brig.
Some observers wonder whether that was because the jurors in those cases
were made up largely (in some cases exclusively) of Iraq war veterans
who had experienced first-hand the same kind of hostile environment.
"One person's jury that understands what it's like in Iraq is another
person's jury that's too friendly," says Eugene Fidell, president of the
National Institute of Military Justice.
"There is a tension there," says Mr. Fidell, a former Coast Guard
lawyer. "No one seems to think that it makes no difference that the jury
has had something of the same experience. No one seems to think that
that's a neutral factor."
Just as the Vietnam war did a generation ago, the Iraq War is teaching a
new cohort of military men and women hard lessons about fighting an
enemy that doesn't hold to traditional means of combat in which soldiers
in uniform primarily attacked one another. In particular, commanders of
combat units are reexamining the "rules of engagement" -- what to expect
on a combat mission and what violent responses are permissible,
especially in an urban setting.
Here, retired Army Col. Dan Smith sees a common thread to most of the
abuse cases: the killing and wounding of US troops by roadside bombs,
the greatest single cause of American casualties in Iraq.
"There is pure frustration, pure anger, pure rage because there is no
one who is the obvious perpetrator," says Colonel Smith, a military
analyst with the Friends Committee on National Legislation who fought in
Vietnam and later taught philosophy at West Point.
"Soldiers soon decide they can trust no one except their comrades ...
and quickly the indigenous people -- all of them -- become inferiors,"
he says. "Being inferior, they are less than human and deserve less
respect, at which point one has entered the slippery slope that can end
with a war crime."
To reduce combat stress, the Army now gives combat soldiers a break
after 90 days. But that may not be enough, some experts say, especially
for those on their second, third, or fourth tour in Iraq.
Experts point to relaxed standards
While military units are reemphasizing the importance of the laws of war
and rules of engagement, some relaxed recruiting standards may cause
other problems.
"Waiving rules against recruiting men and women with criminal records is
leading to a substantial rise in the number of gang members wearing
uniforms and getting trained to use military weapons," says Smith. "Put
them in a war zone where death is common and life cheap -- that's a real
recipe for wanton killing."
Solis, the former Marine Corp judge advocate, agrees. "When enlistment
qualifications go down, that means discipline rates go up."
As the nature of modern war changes to become less "conventional," it
may be that the Uniform Code of Military Justice (passed by Congress in
1950) and the laws of war will need to be reexamined, some experts suggest.
"If what we're seeing in Afghanistan and Iraq is a harbinger of future
conflicts, then there's going to have to be some change in the rather
old-fashioned and conventional concepts of behavior in the battle
space," says Dr. Thompson, whose work puts him in close contact with
military officers and Pentagon officials.
"We are now deep into an era when combatants do everything they can to
seem like they're not combatants until the last moment when they kill
you," he says. "That's about as far as you can get from the [British]
red coats when the laws of war first began to be formulated."
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