The U.S. War on Afghanistan: A Post-Mortem
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By
Azizuddin El-Kaissouni
Staff Writer – IslamOnline
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28/06/2002
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September
11 attacks |
The
American campaign on Afghanistan is drawing to a close; hundreds, if
not thousands of Afghans have lost their lives or livelihoods, a
puppet government is slowly consolidating its hold on the country,
contracts for oil pipelines are being drawn up, and the next phase
of the war is already being discussed.
In
that respect, perhaps now is the most inappropriate time to attempt
a superficial post-mortem dissection of the legality of the U.S.
attack on Afghanistan. Alternatively, in light of the disturbing
rumors of impending military action against Iraq, now is perhaps the
best time to question the legitimacy of the American assault on the
Taliban.
Let
us begin with the facts. On September 11, 2001, the largest and most
devastating terrorist strike in history was executed against the
United States, global superpower extraordinaire and victor of the
epic Cold War. Four commercial airliners, carrying full loads of
passengers, were hijacked and used as missiles in kamikaze attacks
on symbols of U.S. power. Two annihilated the World Trade Center
twin towers, killing thousands, costing billions in damages, and
raising a cloud of ash that obliterated the New York skyline. A
third slammed into the Pentagon, the hub of United States military
and defense might. The fourth crashed in Pennsylvania, presumably
due to the passengers’ struggle with the hijackers, averting
another possibly devastating strike.
Today,
the death toll from the attacks stands at slightly over 3,000, and
September 11 marked a significant paradigm shift in
international relations. A global war on terrorism was announced,
and nations realigned their policies accordingly to maximize their
benefit. In many countries, this meant that domestic opposition
would now be targeted for “having links with Al-Qaeda,” an
umbrella term used to cover any form of activity the government
opposed.
The
United States quickly pinpointed their chief suspect: Osama bin
Laden and his Al-Qaeda organization, known to be living in the
Taliban’s Afghanistan.
It
is here that the problem arises. Bin Laden is suspected by the
United States of being involved in the hijacking and destruction of
civilian aircraft. Now, it is highly irregular to claim that an act
of terrorism is, in fact, an act of war. The international community
has long sought to criminalize and prosecute the component parts of
terrorism, hence the existence of several multilateral conventions
that outlaw everything from hostage taking (International Convention
Against the Taking of Hostages of 1979) to the theft of nuclear
material (The Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear
Material of 1980). As such, these offenses are dealt with as
international crimes, and are appropriately criminalized by various
legal regimes.
To
return to the main issue, September 11 involved the hijacking and
destruction of civilian aircraft. That is a crime dealt with at
length by the Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts
Against the Safety of Civil Aviation, signed in 1971 and widely
referred to as the Montreal Convention, after its place of
signature. The Montreal Convention is not necessarily the only piece
of anti-terror legislation that could be invoked, but it is arguably
the most on-point. Article 1 of the Convention, clarifying the
nature of the crimes within the scope of the treaty, reads
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Any person commits an offence if he unlawfully and intentionally:
(a) performs an act of violence against a person on board an
aircraft in flight if that act is likely to endanger the safety
of that aircraft; or (b) destroys an aircraft in service or
causes damage to such an aircraft which renders it incapable of
flight or which is likely to endanger its safety in flight…
and,
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Any person also commits an offence if he: (a) attempts to commit
any of the offences mentioned in paragraph 1 of this Article; or
(b) is an accomplice of a person who commits or attempts to
commit any such offence. [Italics added]
It
is crucial to point out that both the United States of America and
Afghanistan are parties to the treaty. The United States ratified
the Convention on November 1, 1972, and Afghanistan ratified it on
September 26, 1984. This means that both states are bound by the
terms of the convention in matters pertaining to the destruction of
civilian airliners.
In
fact, the United States is not only a signatory to this treaty; it
is in fact afforded the status of “Depositary Government” in
article 15 of the Convention. That means that the United States is
designated as one of the recipient states of the instruments of
ratification and accession. Effectively, any state wishing to accede
to or ratify the Montreal Convention should deliver the necessary
documents to one of the Depositary Governments. The irony cannot be
overlooked.
The Convention is equally explicit in terms of
jurisdiction, stating that, with regard to the abovementioned
offenses, “this Convention shall also
apply if the offender or the alleged offender is found in the
territory of a State other than the State of registration of the
aircraft.”1
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Attacks
on Afghanistan |
Therefore,
substituting bin Laden for “the alleged offender” in the above,
it is apparent that the Convention was formulated to deal with
precisely the kind of situation the September 11 attacks were. On
the one hand, the immediate offenders in terms of the treaty died at
the same instant “the offense” was committed; i.e. the
destruction of the plane. On the other hand, we have allegations
that an accomplice to the offense, as covered in article 1,
paragraph 2, is alive and well, and currently in hiding in a country
that is a party to the treaty in question. Therefore, Mr. bin Laden,
as the alleged offender, falls under the jurisdiction, and the
protection, of the Montreal Convention.
The
question must then be asked: What should the United States have
done, in accordance with the Montreal Convention, to deal with the
situation?
To
respond to that most crucial of questions, it is necessary to make
reference to an article in the treaty that is arguably the crux of
the matter: Article 7, which reads
The Contracting
State in the territory of which the alleged offender is found shall,
if it does not extradite him, be obliged, without exception
whatsoever and whether or not the offence was committed in its
territory, to submit the case to its competent authorities for the
purpose of prosecution. Those authorities shall take their decision
in the same manner as in the case of any ordinary offence of a
serious nature under the law of that State.
This is the internationally
recognized legal principle of aut judicare aut dedere,
literally “either adjudicate or extradite.” It holds that a
state in such circumstances is obliged to either domestically
prosecute the alleged offender in accordance with municipal law, or
if it is unwilling or incapable of doing so, to extradite the
alleged offender to another state party to the treaty where the
suspect will stand trial.
Zoom
back to reality. In the aftermath of September 11, the United States
names Osama bin Laden as its top suspect (if “suspect” can be
used in a case where the alleged criminal has already effectively
been served a pre-trial death sentence) and promptly demands that
the Taliban hand over bin Laden.
After
much rhetoric has been bandied back and forth between the U.S. and
the Taliban, the discussion finally sobers up and turns serious: On
October 5, the Taliban state their willingness to try bin Laden in
Afghanistan, and request that the U.S. provide them with any
evidence linking bin Laden to the September 11 attacks. The United
States refuses, and instead offers an ultimatum, which it acts upon
a mere two days after the Taliban’s attempts to deescalate the
situation: Hand over Bin Laden or face massive military retaliation.
It
is roughly at this point that the façade of legal legitimacy was
thrown aside, trampled and burned. From here on events took a
decidedly surrealistic bent. Predictably, the Taliban rejected the
U.S. ultimatum – as was their legal right, and arguably their
legal duty, to do – and the resulting apocalyptic fury
unleashed on Afghanistan will undoubtedly go down in history… just
as soon as all the real facts and figures are revealed. But we
digress.
Legally,
the Taliban had the full right under international law to demand to
see evidence of bin Laden’s complicity. We turn once more to the
much-scorned and needlessly shunned Montreal Convention, article 11,
paragraph 1, which tells us
Contracting
States shall afford one another the greatest measure of assistance
in connection with criminal proceedings brought in respect of the
offences. The law of the State requested shall apply in all cases.
“State
requested,” in this context, refers to what was Afghanistan before
a few hundred tons of high-explosive ordnance was dropped on it. In
an effort to facilitate and coordinate anti-terrorist efforts, the
drafters of the Convention included a clause that expected states to
cooperate and share information where offenses against the
Convention were involved. The United States, however, refused to
recognize, much less cooperate with the Taliban’s right to
prosecute bin Laden before an Afghan Islamic court, a right
explicitly granted in the final sentence of the above clause. The
Taliban’s desperate efforts to end the bombing through an offer to
negotiate handing bin Laden over on October 14 will doubtless become
a mere footnote in history as well (Bush’s response? Their offer
was “non-negotiable”).
What
we have then, in summary, in terms of legal rights afforded
Afghanistan under the Montreal Convention, is a right to
domestically prosecute the alleged offender (as opposed to
extraditing said offender) in accordance with municipal law (be it
Shari’ah or otherwise), and a right to expect that the state
requesting prosecution cooperate in facilitating said prosecution
(as opposed to making inflammatory and threatening statements).
Logically speaking, it is irrational to expect a state to initiate
legal proceedings against a suspect for crimes committed outside of
the state without providing the prosecution some form of legitimate
legal grounds to proceed with the trial.
It
would appear, however, that the United States understood that its
claims of a legal right of self-defense involving the use of force
against Afghanistan would not hold water without some weightier
legitimacy affixed to American action. As such, the United States
promptly sought Security Council authorization to use force against
Afghanistan – and failed to secure it. The Security Council merely
reiterated that the crimes were terrorist attacks – not, one
should note, acts of war.2
A
second step undertaken by the U.S. was citing article 5 of the NATO
Charter. The article is a relic of the Cold War’s suicidal mindset
that manifested in the appropriately acronymed Mutually Assured
Destruction (MAD) policies adopted by the belligerents. The article
allows the NATO council to deem an attack on one member of the
Alliance an attack on all and react accordingly. This measure was
apparently an additional effort to suffix “self-defense,” be it
individual or collective, to any subsequent American military
action, regardless of how questionable it is for a military alliance
to invoke a self-defense clause originally directed against the
Soviet Empire in response to a terrorist attack. Again, we must keep
in mind that there is no evidence that the Taliban knew of the
attack (none anyone has been allowed to see, at any rate). One could
go so far as to suggest that it is illogical that the Taliban were
aware of an attack, the repercussions of which would necessarily end
their regime, and allowed it to occur.
In
conclusion, the United State’s actions in the wake of September 11
have served only to further weaken international law, a critical
situation that could result in further chaos and fewer safeguards
for what little justice actually prevailed in the New World Order.
It is also important to note that the United States has committed
itself to a war it cannot win, and one that will cost it terribly. I
conclude with the following quote from a study by the Oxford
Research Group on the ramifications of the war and the actions of
the international community:
…
this will most probably lead to the development of more radical and
extreme social movements, leading to further events, possibly much
more devastating than the massacres of 11 September. These, in turn,
are likely to lead to a redoubling of efforts to maintain control, a
never-ending war indeed.
Such a state of conflict would be especially costly to
the United States, as it would experience the greatest future risk
of paramilitary action, including future mass casualty attacks
against its own citizens.3
The
author encourages your comments. Please e-mail him at azizuddin@islam-online.net
1-
The Convention
on the Suppression of Unlawful Acts Against the Safety of Civil
Aviation, Article 4, paragraph 3.
2-
Professor Francis Boyle, from a speech
at the Illinois Disciples Foundation.
3-
Paul Rogers and Scilla Elworthy, “A
Never-Ending War? Consequences of 11 September,” Oxford
Research Group Briefing Paper,
March 2002.
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