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Our
forces are allowed to shoot somebody and kill them but they are
not allowed to use a non-lethal riot control agent: Rumsfeld
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WASHINGTON,
February 6 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – The Pentagon is
writing “rules” that will supposedly govern the behavior of the
U.S. soldiers in their handling of the Iraqi popular resistance during
expected confrontations between the U.S. forces invading Iraq and the
Iraqi civilians defending their soil.
The
Pentagon is writing rules of engagement to allow U.S. forces to use
“non-lethal” riot control agents, U.S. Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld said, claiming that the goal is to minimize civilian
casualties if the United States goes to war in Iraq.
But
Rumsfeld said that Geneva convention
treaty restrictions and other laws that bar the use of
riot control agents in warfare without a presidential waiver have made
the process “very complex,” Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
“Absent
a presidential waiver, in many cases our forces are allowed “to
shoot somebody and kill them” but they are not allowed to use a
non-lethal riot control agent under the law,” Rumsfeld said
Wednesday, February 5.
“It
is a very awkward situation,” he added.
“Straitjacket”
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If
they take up arms, they are combatants. They will be treated as
such: Myers
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“We
are doing our best to live within the straitjacket that has been
imposed on us on this subject,” he said at a hearing of the House
Armed Services Committee.
U.S.
military planners fear that U.S. forces may have to contend with
massive movements of panic-stricken civilians if Iraq uses of chemical
or biological weapons, or hostile crowds if an invading force meets
popular resistance, AFP reported.
Army
General Tommy Franks, the commander of U.S. forces in the region, has
drawn up a plan that seeks to achieve U.S. military objectives with
the least interference with civilians, Rumsfeld said.
The
plan deals with “a host of very unpleasant contingencies,” he
said.
The
1997 Chemical Weapons Convention bars the use of riot control agents
as a method of warfare, and the Geneva Conventions place other
restrictions on the military’s treatment of civilians.
A
1975 U.S. executive order, however, says the use of riot control
agents would be permissible in certain situations, for instance when
civilians are used to mask or screen attacks and civilian casualties
can be avoided.
Although
intended to save civilian lives, the use of non-lethal agents is
controversial.
Russian
authorities discovered that in November 2002 when they tried to end a
Chechen hostage-taking at a Moscow theater by pumping in opiate gas to
put the hostage takers to sleep. The gas killed 129 captives. U.S.
President George W. Bush, however, defended the Russian action.
Rumsfeld
said the use of non-lethal agents was “perfectly appropriate” in
some situations encountered by U.S. forces in Afghanistan:
transporting dangerous prisoners on airplanes, or flushing out caves
where fighters were hiding with women and children.
But
he said writing simple rules for what were often complex and stressful
situations has proven difficult.
“We
have tangled ourselves up so badly on this issue,” he said.
“If
They Take Up Arms, They Are Combatants”
He
and General Richard Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
wrestled for more than hour last week trying to fashion rules that
were clear enough that a soldier on the front line could “in a
second or two make a decision about what they can do, what they can't
do.”
Myers
said military commanders also were working out ways of dealing with
the potential use of civilians as human shields at Iraqi targets, or
Iraqi civilians taking up arms against U.S. forces.
“If
the regime were to use civilians as human shields and so forth it's a
different matter and you would have to address that differently. If
they take up arms, they are combatants. They will be treated as
such,” he said.