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A
British soldier, shown in an image from video, guards an Iraqi
prisoner of war, Saturday, April 5, 2003, at a POW camp in Basra,
Iraq. (AP Photo/Pool via APTN) |
The
ongoing hostilities between the US-led coalition and Iraq are a
classic example of an international armed conflict, as defined in
Common Article 2 of the 1949 Geneva Conventions. Accordingly, the
military operations being conducted by all the warring parties in
the Iraqi conflict are governed by the Geneva Conventions, as well
as by the customary laws of war.
Because
neither the US nor Iraq are Parties to the First Additional Protocol
to the Geneva Conventions, applicable to international conflicts,
that instrument is not directly applicable as a matter of conventional
law to the hostilities in Iraq. However, since some of the Protocols
provisions essentially restate, clarify or otherwise codify pre-existing
customary legal restraints on methods and means of warfare, the
substance of these provisions constitute customary international
law. As such, they directly bind all nations and their armed forces
during interstate wars regardless of ratification.
Indeed,
despite its refusal to ratify Protocol I, the US has expressed its
support for many rules in that instrument and regards others to
be customary international law. However, the US opposes the new
rules in the Protocol concerning prisoner of war status (POW) for
irregular combatants. Thus, Article 4 of the 1949 Third Geneva Convention
(POW Convention) is the source of legal standards governing entitlement
to POW status in the Iraqi conflict as among the various warring
parties.
The
Right to be a Prisoner of War
It
is important to understand that under the customary laws of war
combatants have been historically classified in interstate hostilities
as either privileged or unprivileged combatants.
The privileged combatant is a person authorized by a party to such
an armed conflict to engage in hostilities and thus has the combatants
privilege. This privilege not only entitles him to directly
participate in hostilities, but also guarantees him prisoner of
war status upon capture and immunity from prosecution by his captor
for his lawful acts of war. Members of regular armed forces, including
militias or volunteer corps forming such forces, as provided for
under Article 4A(1) and (3) of the Third Geneva Convention, are
privileged combatants. Although members of regular armed forces
are expected to comply with the laws of war, they do not
forfeit their right to POW status upon capture even if they commit
war crimes. They can, however, be tried and punished for such crimes
by their captor.
An
unprivileged combatant refers to a person who does not
have the combatants privilege, but nevertheless directly participates
in hostilities. Such combatants would include, inter alia,
civilians who in violation of their protected status engage in fighting
or other hostile acts. However, the law does sanction a levee en
masse whereby civilians may spontaneously take up arms in order
to resist an invading force. Spontaneity means that there is no
time to organize into regular forces. Civilians participating in
a levee en masse may qualify for privileged combatant and POW status,
provided that they do not conceal their weapons and observe the
laws of war. This is the single, limited exception to the proscription
against civilians participating in hostilities.
The
notion of unprivileged combatants has also been used to describe
irregular or part-time combatants, such as guerrillas, partisans
and members of resistance groups, who either fail to distinguish
themselves from the civilian populations while on active duty or
do not otherwise fulfill the requirements for privileged combatant
status stated in Article 4A(2) of the Third Convention. This article
effectively holds members of independent irregular groups to higher
standards than those required of members of regular armed forces.
Specifically, in order to qualify as privileged combatants entitled
to POW status, members of irregular groups must comply with the
following stringent conditions set forth in sub-paragraph 2 of Article
4A: 1) they must belong to an organized group; 2) they must belong
to a party to the conflict; 3) they must be under responsible command;
4) they must have a fixed, distinctive sign recognizable at a distance;
5) they must carry their arms openly and 6) they must conduct their
operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war.
Most
authorities agree that the first three conditions are applicable
to the irregular group collectively, while the final three conditions
apply both to the group collectively and its individual members.
Thus, if a majority of the members of the group fail to meet,
for whatever reason, all or any of the last three
conditions at any time, then all members of the group will
not qualify for privileged combatant and POW status upon capture.
Unlike privileged combatants, therefore, unprivileged combatants
can be tried and punished for all their hostile acts, even if they
otherwise did not violate the laws of war. It should be understood,
however, that unprivileged combatants are not as such war criminals
although their specific acts might breach the laws of war.
How
The Law Applies in Iraq
In
the present hostilities in Iraq, US-led Coalition forces are fighting
against a mix of Iraqi regular armed forces and irregular groups,
and quite possibly against individuals, both Iraqi and foreigners,
who, whether motivated by patriotism or the call to jihad, have
joined the fight. Under the legal standards discussed above, it
is clear that members of Iraqs regular armed forces, including
Republican Guard units, are privileged combatants entitled to POW
status upon capture. The legal situation of the Saddam Husseins
Fedayeen fighters is quite different. They are apparently irregular
combatants and, as explained above, in order to qualify for POW
status, the group collectively and its individual members must comply
with the strict conditions specified in Article 4A(2) of the Third
Geneva Convention.
Since
these irregulars must continuously comply with these requirements,
it is difficult to imagine how any members of this group could qualify
for that status if, as has been widely reported, some of their members
commit war crimes or disguise themselves as civilians in the course
of the hostilities. Unlike Iraqi civilians who spontaneously take
up arms to fight invading Coalition forces, foreigners who, for
whatever reason, join the fight against Coalition forces without
being members of Iraqi regular or irregular forces can be considered
as waging private hostilities and treated as unprivileged
combatants and prosecuted as such.
Coalition spokespersons have charged, and independent media have
reported, that Iraqi combatants have disguised themselves as civilians,
faked surrenders in order to attack Coalition forces, used civilians
as human shields, fired on Coalition troops from within crowds of
civilians, and launched suicide attacks against Coalition troops.
Official statements from Baghdad confirm many of these charges.
It should be understood, however, that while some of these tactics
clearly violate the laws of war, the legality of others may depend
on the particular circumstances or the legal status of the perpetrator.
For example, customary law permits ruses of war, such as the use
of camouflage, decoys, and misinformation to mislead and confuse
the adversary. However, it prohibits the killing or injuring of
the enemy by treacherous or perfidious means, such as by feigning
civilian status, incapacitation by wound or an intention to surrender.
In
my opinion, therefore, the mere use of civilian disguise by a combatant
is not a war crime, but, as previously noted, could deprive irregular
combatants of POW status. Similarly, the use of the enemys
uniform to penetrate the enemys lines is permissible, but
fighting in that uniform would be illegal. An enemy combatant, clearly
identifiable as such, who undertakes a suicide mission against the
adversary does not violate the law. However, a combatant disguised
as a civilian would be engaging in an illegal attack. While the
intentional use of civilians to shield military objectives and operations
would be a war crime, responding to enemy fire in self-defense from
within crowds of civilians could be lawful.
As
previously indicated, regular combatants who commit these and other
war crimes can be tried, but will retain their POW status. Moreover,
liability may extend up the chain of command to reach those who
ordered these illicit acts. In sharp contrast is the extremely precarious
legal position of Iraqi irregular forces. If even some members of
Saddams Fedayeen feign civilian status, conceal their weapon
and/or commit war crimes, then they and most likely all other members
of this irregular group could be denied POW status and tried as
unprivileged combatants, as well as for any war crimes they
may have committed.
In
light of the array of tactics employed by combatants on the Iraqi
side, confusion will inevitably surround the precise legal status
of many Iraqi and foreign combatants captured by US and other Coalition
forces. Because denial of POW status entails potentially serious
consequences for combatants, such determinations must strictly comply
with the dictates of the Third Convention. In this regard, Article
5 of that treaty creates a presumption that a captured combatant
is a POW unless a competent tribunal determines otherwise on an
individual basis. During the 1992 Gulf War and the Vietnam conflict
the US convened such tribunals to verify the status of detainees,
something that the US did not do and for which it was justifiably
criticized both at home and abroad in denying POW status
to all Taliban and al Qaeda fighters in the Afghan conflict. Recent
statements by US military briefers suggest that the Bush Administration
is now listening to its law of war experts in the Pentagon and the
State Department and plans to convene Article 5 tribunals to make
proper status determinations, most likely at the conclusion of the
hostilities.
Robert
Kogod Goldman is Professor of Law and Louis C. James Scholar at
the Washington College of Law, American University, where he teaches
the law of war. He is also Co-Director of the Law Schools
Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Law.
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