March
6, 2003
In
Americas Sights: Targeting Decisions in a War With Iraq
Has
there ever been a war in which the country launching it has been
so happy to spell out its plan of attack in advance? Even while
much of the world still hopes that a U.S. invasion of Iraq can be
prevented, Pentagon officials have been busy leaking the operational
details of how they intend to destroy the enemys will to fight.
At the heart of the plans is the so-called concept of shock
and awe. The military operation against Saddam Hussein will
begin with a devastating display of high-tech firepower designed
to sow confusion and panic among Iraqs leadership elite.
One
group who wont be directly targeted if the leaks are
correct are Iraqs foot soldiers. War planners in Washington
dont see them as the enemy: this is a war against a regime
and its security apparatus, not the grunts in the field. (Instead,
the hope is that they will defect en masse.) So the targets that
are chosen for early, massive strikes in the administrations
rapid dominance war plan in addition to the usual
air defences will be objects like command-and-control centres,
electricity grids, special security forces, government ministries,
and other infrastructure and communications systems. The aim is
to shut down everything that Saddam and his inner circle rely on
to stay in control and operate the levers of power.
This
is Americas new military model. It is based on overwhelming
technical superiority and designed for use against a dictator who
cant count on the support of his own people. But it is also
highly controversial. The charge made by some human rights groups
and international lawyers is that it represents a violation of international
humanitarian law, and in particular the principle of distinguishing
between military and civilian targets.
Defining
a Military Target
The
ban on attacking civilian targets has been part of the laws of war
since their beginning. According to the St. Petersburg Declaration
of 1868, the only legitimate object which states should endeavour
to accomplish during war is to weaken the military forces of the
enemy. In the years following World War II, to prevent a recurrence
of the indiscriminate bombing attacks of cities in Britain, Germany
and Japan, the language was tightened. The law now says that you
can only attack sites or objects that make an effective contribution
to military action and whose destruction offers a definite
military advantage in the circumstances ruling at the time.
But
what counts as a military target? As with the rest of the laws of
war, this formula represents a hard-fought trade-off between military
requirements and humanitarian concerns and the result is
a kind of calculated ambiguity. One grey area concerns political
sites (like government ministries) that arent a direct part
of the military chain of command, or the personal assets of the
leadership. Another involves the many possible targets electrical
and water supplies, oil refineries, transport networks, industry,
computer systems, communications that can be used for both
civilian and military purposes.
Its
generally accepted that these dual-use targets can be
attacked if necessary, as long as the harm to civilians is not disproportionate
to the military advantage that you expect to gain. But judgements
about proportionality are notoriously slippery. And in modern industrial
societies, just about any aspect of the economic or social infrastructure
could conceivably contribute to the war effort. Pentagon officials
in common with British and some other European armed forces
take a fairly permissive attitude in this area. According
to Sarah Sewall, who directs a programme on national security and
human rights at Harvard University, the U.S. military can
make a strong case within its interpretation of international humanitarian
law that you attack pretty much anything.
A
Question of Intent
In
such cases, the suspicion often lingers that the targets are in
fact being attacked not to disrupt military operations as traditionally
understood, but to undermine the morale of enemy civilians or turn
the population against the regime. These questions came up with
a vengeance during NATOs war with Serbia over Kosovo. This
was a classic case of what the experts call a coercive war
where the aim was not to defeat the Serbian army in the field,
but to make Slobodan Milosevic decide that his military campaign
in Kosovo was simply not worth the trouble. In other words, the
objectives of the NATO campaign were political and psychological
ones, as much as military.
On
2 May, 1999 NATO forces disabled the electricity grid in Belgrade.
A legitimate military target, you might argue except that
some NATO officials incautiously admitted that a principal aim was
to disrupt life in the city and make Milosevic unpopular. Another
disputed bombing attack was directed against a cigarette factory
owned by a crony of Milosevic. But far and away the most controversial
strike was against the studio of the state-owned broadcasting organization,
RTS, in which sixteen technicians were killed.
After
the war, the Prosecutor of the War Crimes Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia (which has jurisdiction over all actions committed within
the old boundaries of the country) asked a committee of experts
to advise whether this attack should be investigated as a war crime.
No, said the committee, the military and civilian communications
systems could be routed through each others facilities: the
studio was a fair target. But many people felt that a NATO spokesman
let the cat out of the bag when he said at the time of the attack
that an additional incentive had been to dismantle the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia propaganda machinery which is a vital part
of President Milosevics control mechanism.
What
Will Happen in Iraq?
Its
easy to imagine similar issues coming up over the next few months
in Iraq. Since invading troops will want to turn the Iraqi population
against Saddam Hussein, theyre likely to see the takeover
or elimination of state broadcasting as a priority. Attacking the
assets of Saddam and his associates, or the apparatus of internal
control, might have a greater impact on the course of the conflict
than attacking Iraqs military machine per se. Harlan
Ullman, an influential American defence theorist, told CBS News
that within a few days of the war starting, the Iraqi leadership
would be physically, emotionally and psychologically exhausted.
Will this extend to Saddams clique of friends and supporters,
or indeed to Baghdad as a whole?
Robert
Kogod Goldman, Professor of Law at American University in Washington
DC, says the United States and its allies may be tempted to attack
some sites in Iraq where it is difficult to see how they would
fit into a traditional definition of military targets. He
mentions particularly the possibility of attacks on the city of
Tikrit, Saddam Husseins tribal base, which still remains a
stronghold of his regime.
But
not everyone believes that American tactics present a legal problem.
Christopher Greenwood, Professor of International Law at the LSE,
says claims that U.S. war fighting practice is outside the law are
grossly exaggerated. There are no grounds for thinking
that U.S. tactics in Iraq will depart in any major way from generally
accepted interpretations of the law, he argues.
An
Argument Against Change
Others
again take a different view that we should embrace the aim
of politically targeted warfare explicitly, and perhaps change the
laws of war to reflect it. If our quarrel is only with a countrys
leadership, the argument runs, whats so bad about trying to
undermine their hold on power or their level of popular support?
In many cases, its said, this approach could be more
humane, directing the impact of your firepower at those who are
really culpable, and probably bringing a swifter end to the war.
But once you blur the boundary between military and civilian targets,
it is hard to see another clear-cut standard that could be used
to minimize the barbarity of warfare. Sooner or later the result
seems likely to be more civilian deaths.
In
the meantime, there are some reasons to hope that a war in Iraq,
if it happens, might not affect civilians so badly. Firstly, according
to the law of proportionality, a country must cause no more civilian
deaths than can absolutely be helped. Americas sophisticated
high-tech weapons thus put a greater requirement on it to make sure
that its precision-guided strikes dont kill innocent people
whose deaths could have been avoided.
Secondly,
as Sarah Sewall of Harvard observes, the United States has a vested
interest in minimizing damage to Iraq because it anticipates that
it will face the job of picking up the pieces after the war is over.
Adminstration officials are aware that they will own the destruction
after what they hope will be a short conflict, she says, and
that the eyes of the world will be on them, holding them responsible
for repairing the damage theyve done. In many cases
the aim will be to suspend electrical service or communications,
not destroy them something that a new e-bomb
may make possible.
More
generally, Bush and his officials are already talking of how they
will provide humanitarian assistance to Iraqs civilians even
while the war continues. In areas of the country that they occupy,
this is in fact a legal requirement, spelled out in the fourth Geneva
Convention.
An
edited version of this article was first published in The Guardian.
Related
chapters from Crimes of War: What the Public Should Know:
Carpet
or Area Bombing
Collateral Damage
Gray Areas in International Humanitarian Law
Legitimate Military Targets
Military Objectives
Proportionality, Principle of
Related
Links
International
Humanitarian Law Issues in a Potential War with Iraq
Human Rights Watch Briefing Paper, February 20, 2003
Humanitarian
Responses to a War in Iraq
United States Institute of Peace
War
Plan for Iraq Largely in Place
By Thomas E. Ricks
The Washington Post, March 1, 2003
The
Faces of Collateral Damage
By Charlie Clements
Friends Journal
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