|
www.hopedance.org
|
| <back | home Why Indict Bush? by Code Pink The numerous war crimes, including torture and other grave breaches of the 4th Geneva Conventions, are not the product of the fog of war but instead are the result of deliberate and well-thought out policies formulated by the Bush Administration and signed off on by President Bush himself. The President and his senior officials must be held legally accountable for the systematic commission of war crimes in the name of the American people. Impeachment is a political process, and one that has no chance of succeeding in the current Congress. Indictment is a criminal legal process that is less dependent on which party is in political power. The Bush Administration is directly responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan, a large number of them through deliberate military actions that could only have resulted in their death and was therefore deliberate, and as such illegal. Torture continues to be practiced in US detention facilities, and according to Federal torture laws, once senior Administration officials (civilian and military) were made aware of its existence and did not put a stop to it, they became criminally responsible for subsequent acts of torture committed by US personnel lower down the chain of command. As Commander-in-Chief, President Bush is responsible, according both to US law and US military regulations (Army Field Manual 27-10) for the systematic commission of war crimes by forces under his control. As the violence, chaos and corruption associated with the US occupation of Iraq, and larger war on terror, take an ever increasing toll on Iraqis, Americans, and people around the world, Americans are increasingly realizing that the core policies of the Bush Administration against which Code Pink and its sister organizations has been struggling for the last two years are a direct cause of the deepening quagmire we as a country as facing. During this period, some progressives began calling for the impeachment of President George W. Bush on the grounds that his misleading (or even outright lying) of the American public to win approval for the invasion and occupation of Iraq and his conduct surrounding both constitute a far graver High Crimes and Misdemeanors (as the Constitution defines them) than the actions that led to the impeachment of former President Bill Clinton. We agree that President Bush deserves to be impeached, but the results of the November elections, along with the solid Republican majorities in the House and Senate, demonstrate the practical impossibility of his being removed from office by these means. Yet the extent of the criminal violations of international and US by the Bush Administration continues and has even increased with each passing month. And it is this very fact the massive and incontrovertible evidence that the Bush Administration at the highest military and political levels has long been aware of, countenanced, and perhaps even directly authorized the systematic violation of international humanitarian law, including innumerable war crimes that has led a group of leading lawyers, scholars and activists to call not for his removal from office, but instead for the Federal investigation, indictment and trial of the senior military and political planners of the Iraq war, up to and including President Bush himself. In recent weeks leading organizations around the world have initiated criminal proceedings against President Bush and/or senior US officials. In a Germany, the Center for Constitutional Rights has asked a German Court to open a criminal investigation into the culpability of US officials for the torture which continues as you read this at Abu Ghraib prison. These accusations are supported by recently released memos from FBI agents who witnessed such practices (to their surprise and horror) at Guantanimo, and warned of dire consequences should they be allowed to continue (which they were). In Canada, Osgoode Law School Professor Michael Mandel and an international team of legal scholars have filed torture charges against President Bush and other senior US officials On the grass roots level, several peoples international courts or tribunals have provided the public with clear evidence of the crimes associated with the occupation of Iraq. We believe that there is significant, even overwhelming evidence to support the charge that the President and his immediate subordinates are politically, morally, and most important, legally, responsible for the systematic commission of war crimes and other violations of international law. Yet we are equally convinced that attempts to bring them to justice through international legal mechanisms will prove fruitless, precisely because most Americans have been taught to be suspicious of and even openly hostile to the institutions of international law that the United States once helped to shape. Because of these, we believe that President Bush and other senior Administration officials should face justice right here in the United States, in the US federal court system which has direct jurisdiction over the crimes with which we are accusing them, and where their fate would be judged by a jury of their peers. As former Congresswoman Liz Holtzman (who wrote the articles of impeachment for Richard Nixon during Watergate) argues, the principles of democracy and accountability, and the sacred nature of our Constitution, demand no less at this moment of grave peril to our democracy. Moreover, the overwhelming evidence available to the public suggests that President Bush, Vice President Cheney and their senior military and political advisors were informed when such violations occurred and did nothing to stop them from continuing. Indeed, senior advisors went so far as to suggest changing American law or changing our interpretation of international treaties which because they have been ratified by the Congress and signed by the President are constitutionally considered equally American laws. In such an environment, we feel that the only hope the peace and justice movement in the United States has to stop the horrific violence, corruption and erosion of civil liberties at home that characterize Bush Administrations record in office is to use our criminal justice system to force the judicial branch of our Government to open criminal investigations into senior members of the Bush Administration for the commission of war crimes, including but not limited to torture. But to do this we need your help! Thanks to generous donations from Code Pink supporters we have been able to hire a leading international lawyer to begin drawing up a memo that will be presented to the Justice Department in which we will detail the case against President Bush and his senior aides for the commission of torture and other war crimes. Together we can make sure that President Bush and his Administration spend the next four years fighting to stay out of jail rather than staying in Iraq and continuing with an increasingly brutal and fruitless war on terror that is only stoking the flames of hatred and violence across the world. The perpetrators and sponsors of such crimes should also face justice at the national and international levels. While as Americans we are specifically focusing on trying our own leaders, in US courts, because of the grave and immanent threat to our democracy their actions have caused, we urge the international community to come together to ensure that all systematic acts of war crimes be fully investigated and prosecuted in whatever venue is most assured of fairly and expeditiously judging those accused of such crimes. m To see the entire article, click here. To support codepink in this courageous and vitally necessary work, please go to the Code Pink donations page. Or visit http://www.codepink4peace.org. <back | top^ |