22.12.2019 Author: Valery Kulikov
Column: Politics
Region: Middle East
Country: Iraq
The bloody wounds UK has
inflicted around the world through its all too often vile foreign policy are
still raw. This can not only be said of colonial-era foreign policy, but also
of Britain’s contemporary foreign policy.
British troops have remained
committed to the principles of colonial occupation. It was after the turn of
the millennium, not so long ago, when they last committed war crimes, and they
have been continuing to commit war crimes with impunity during military
campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan. Various British media outlets reported on
this in 2004, accusing British soldiers of murder, torture, sexual abuse and
other crimes.
British troops have a long
history of getting involved in military conflicts being waged by the United
States. Their operations are sometimes limited to airstrikes and the military
operations conducted by small groups of special forces, while others involve
imposing occupying contingents on the territory of certain countries. The wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan were the largest conflicts where the United States and
UK heavily deployed their ground forces.
The UK invaded Iraq as an
ally of the United States to take part in Operation Iraqi Freedom, which began
in March 2003. The evidence and photographs of war crimes committed by soldiers
from the United Kingdom published in 2004 by the British media shocked the Arab
world and the British public. British Army General Sir Mike Jackson, who headed
the British Army as Chief of the General Staff (CGS) at the time, and Adam
Ingram who was serving as the Armed Forces Minister at the Ministry of Defense
even came out with an official announcement that they were launching an
investigation, but its results were never made public. Observers watching the
United Kingdom at the time noted: “The liberating army transformed into an
occupying army within a few hours.”
In 2006, the International
Criminal Court (ICC) concluded there was a reasonable basis to believe that
crimes had been committed by British troops, however under pressure from
London, the Court decided not prosecute as there were allegedly “fewer than 20
allegations”.
In 2008, a British court martial
sentenced only one soldier to a year in prison, while the public inquiry
acquitted six British soldiers of the murder of Iraqi citizen Baha Mousa, who
died in one of the British Army’s temporary detention centers in the city of
Basra after suffering a lengthy beating.
In 2010, a body to
investigate complaints called the Iraq Historic Allegations Team (IHAT) was set up by the British Ministry of Defense, and
in 2014, Operation Northmoor began working to investigate war crimes in
Afghanistan. However, the inquiries were wound up after three years of work,
and the IHAT team came under fire from the public, although the body had
investigated 3,500 (!) allegations of crimes committed by British military
personnel in Iraq.
Against a backdrop of
blatant inaction in the British judicial system, with war crimes continuing to
be committed by British servicemen, a Berlin-based human rights organization,
the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR), joined forces
with a British law firm specializing in human rights court cases, Public
Interest Lawyers, and they submitted a dossier to the ICC in January 2014,
documenting alleged war crimes committed by British military personnel,
systematic human rights violations and torture during their 2003-2009 campaign
in Iraq. According to reports in the British media, the dossier cited more than
1 thousand alleged cases of torture and 200 cases of murder committed in
violation of the laws of warfare. These include beatings, death threats,
electric shocks, burns, rapes, sleep deprivation, and deprivation of food and
water.
As noted in the British
media, the same methods were used by the British Army to “interrogate”
prisoners during the Troubles in Northern Ireland, and were officially banned
by the British government in 1972.
The dossier sent to the ICC
mentions the names of the British Army’s former Chief of the General Staff
General Sir Peter Anthony Wall, former Defense Secretary Geoff Hoon and former
Armed Forces Minister at the Ministry of Defense Adam Ingram. According to
human rights activists, they “knew or should have known” about the war crimes
being committed by British troops, but they did not take proper measures to
stop the crimes.
It is worth recalling that
back in 2018, The Guardian wrote that after the IHAT was closed, many
people in the UK feared that the truth about the United Kingdom’s war crimes
would never be uncovered, and doubted London would ever investigate the
crimes committed by its own British Army and soldiers.
This year however, there has
already been another investigation into war crimes committed by British
servicemen, first reported in February by the Middle East
Eye, and then in
November by the BBC and The Sunday
Times. The suspicions
were confirmed, although these crimes are kept carefully concealed in London.
There were 11 detectives hired by journalists, who found evidence of war
crimes, who said that the armed forces falsified their documents to cover up
the murders that were committed by soldiers from the Special Air Service (SAS)
special forces unit. There has also been news about sexual abuse committed by
the Black Watch infantry battalion of the Royal Regiment of Scotland. Apart
from this, one of the crimes referred to in the documents was the special
forces shooting Afghan civilians in their own homes. No one was sentenced for
murdering these people….
According to the BBC and the
Sunday Times, lawyer Phil Shiner had taken over a thousand case documents to
the Iraq Historic Allegations Team (IHAT), with evidence of the war crimes
committed by the British troops. After that, the UK government decided to close
IHAT, but some former IHAT members held onto investigation material from number
of cases and leaked them to the media.
This time around however,
the attempts made by individual British journalists who still believe in
democracy and justice were thwarted, who wanted to bring the investigation into
British war crimes to its logical end. The instruction from the current political
elite in the United Kingdom was clearly to have this issue withdrawn from
public debate, and they are trying hard to have people forget about it and
consign it to oblivion. Not only is the United States trying to consolidate
this position with the British elite, a number of Western countries are also
helping to solidify it, who now prefer to pretend that international laws have
ceased to exist, or that the wording of the existing international laws is
subject to a “broad interpretation”. After all, the United States troops have
also got blood on their hands from committing similar war crimes in Syria
(especially in Raqqa), Afghanistan, and many other countries that now using
American weapons to try and force out and replace the undesirable governments
and leaders put there by Washington. They are also trying to push out their
allies in military ventures, and not just in Yemen.
These are the Western
political elites who impose their position on international institutions, which
then withdraw from their functions as independent prosecutors under various
pretexts, which is exactly what happened when the ICC refused to take action in
2006 to continue the investigation into British war crimes in Iraq.
However, does this behavior
absolve the UK, the US, their “partners” and the leaders of these countries of
responsibility for the war crimes they commit? Will the UK & Co answer for
their war crimes? Will the ICC finally reach an objective verdict, or will this
international body continue to just carry out political orders from the Western
elite?
Valeriy Kulikov,
expert politologist, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.