The United States Takes the Matter of Three-headed Babies Very Seriously.
By William Blum
April 06, 2010 "Information Clearing House" -- - When did it begin, all this 
"We take your [call/problem/question] very seriously"? With answering-machine 
hell? As you wait endlessly, the company or government agency assures you that 
they take seriously whatever reason you're calling. What a kind and thoughtful 
world we live in.
The BBC reported last month that doctors in the Iraqi city of Fallujah are 
reporting a high level of birth defects, with some blaming weapons used by the 
United States during its fierce onslaughts of 2004 and subsequently, which left 
much of the city in ruins. "It was like an earthquake," a local engineer who 
was running for a national assembly seat told the Washington Post in 2005. 
"After Hiroshima and Nagasaki, there was Fallujah." Now, the level of heart 
defects among newborn babies is said to be 13 times higher than in Europe. 
The BBC correspondent also saw children in the city who were suffering from 
paralysis or brain damage, and a photograph of one baby who was born with three 
heads. He added that he heard many times that officials in Fallujah had warned 
women that they should not have children. One doctor in the city had compared 
data about birth defects from before 2003 — when she saw about one case every 
two months — with the situation now, when she saw cases every day. "I've seen 
footage of babies born with an eye in the middle of the forehead, the nose on 
the forehead," she said. 
A spokesman for the US military, Michael Kilpatrick, said it always took public 
health concerns "very seriously", but that "No studies to date have indicated 
environmental issues resulting in specific health issues." 1
One could fill many large volumes with the details of the environmental and 
human horrors the United States has brought to Fallujah and other parts of Iraq 
during seven years of using white phosphorous shells, depleted uranium, napalm, 
cluster bombs, neutron bombs, laser weapons, weapons using directed energy, 
weapons using high-powered microwave technology, and other marvelous inventions 
in the Pentagon's science-fiction arsenal ... the list of abominations and 
grotesque ways of dying is long, the wanton cruelty of American policy 
shocking. In November 2004, the US military targeted a Fallujah hospital 
"because the American military believed that it was the source of rumors about 
heavy casualties." 2 That's on a par with the classic line from the equally 
glorious American war in Vietnam: "We had to destroy the city to save it."
How can the world deal with such inhumane behavior? (And the above of course 
scarcely scratches the surface of the US international record.) For this the 
International Criminal Court (ICC) was founded in Rome in 1998 (entering into 
force July 1, 2002) under the aegis of the United Nations. The Court was 
established in The Hague, Netherlands to investigate and indict individuals, 
not states, for "The crime of genocide; Crimes against humanity; War crimes; or 
The crime of aggression." (Article 5 of the Rome Statute) From the very 
beginning, the United States was opposed to joining the ICC, and has never 
ratified it, because of the alleged danger of the Court using its powers to 
"frivolously" indict Americans. 
So concerned about indictments were the American powers-that-be that the US 
went around the world using threats and bribes against countries to induce them 
to sign agreements pledging not to transfer to the Court US nationals accused 
of committing war crimes abroad. Just over 100 governments so far have 
succumbed to the pressure and signed an agreement. In 2002, Congress, under the 
Bush administration, passed the "American Service Members Protection Act", 
which called for "all means necessary and appropriate to bring about the 
release of any US or allied personnel being detained or imprisoned by ... the 
International Criminal Court." In the Netherlands it's widely and derisively 
known as the "Invasion of The Hague Act". 3 The law is still on the books.
Though American officials have often spoken of "frivolous" indictments — 
politically motivated prosecutions against US soldiers, civilian military 
contractors, and former officials — it's safe to say that what really worries 
them are "serious" indictments based on actual events. But they needn't worry. 
The mystique of "America the Virtuous" is apparently alive and well at the 
International Criminal Court, as it is, still, in most international 
organizations; indeed, amongst most people of the world. The ICC, in its first 
few years, under Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo, an Argentine, dismissed 
many hundreds of petitions accusing the United States of war crimes, including 
240 concerning the war in Iraq. The cases were turned down for lack of 
evidence, lack of jurisdiction, or because of the United States' ability to 
conduct its own investigations and trials. The fact that the US never actually 
used this ability was apparently not particularly
 significant to the Court. "Lack of jurisdiction" refers to the fact that the 
United States has not ratified the accord. On the face of it, this does seem 
rather odd. Can nations commit war crimes with impunity as long as they don't 
become part of a treaty banning war crimes? Hmmm. The possibilities are 
endless. A congressional study released in August, 2006 concluded that the 
ICC's chief prosecutor demonstrated "a reluctance to launch an investigation 
against the United States" based on allegations regarding its conduct in Iraq. 
4 Sic transit gloria International Criminal Court.
As to the crime of aggression, the Court's statute specifies that the Court 
"shall exercise jurisdiction over the crime of aggression once a provision is 
adopted ... defining the crime and setting out the conditions under which the 
Court shall exercise jurisdiction with respect to this crime." In short, the 
crime of aggression is exempted from the Court's jurisdiction until 
"aggression" is defined. Writer Diana Johnstone has observed: "This is a 
specious argument since aggression has been quite clearly defined by U.N. 
General Assembly Resolution 3314 in 1974, which declared that: 'Aggression is 
the use of armed force by a State against the sovereignty, territorial 
integrity or political independence of another State', and listed seven 
specific examples," including:

The invasion or attack by the armed forces of a State of the territory of 
another State, or any military occupation, however temporary, resulting from 
such invasion or attack, or any annexation by the use of force of the territory 
of another State or part thereof; and
Bombardment by the armed forces of a State against the territory of another 
State or the use of any weapons by a State against the territory of another 
State.
The UN resolution also stated that: "No consideration of whatever nature, 
whether political, economic, military or otherwise, may serve as a 
justification for aggression."
The real reason that aggression remains outside the jurisdiction of the ICC is 
that the United States, which played a strong role in elaborating the Statute 
before refusing to ratify it, was adamantly opposed to its inclusion. It is not 
hard to see why. It may be noted that instances of "aggression", which are 
clearly factual, are much easier to identify than instances of "genocide", 
whose definition relies on assumptions of intention. 5
There will be a conference of the ICC in May, in Kampala, Uganda, in which the 
question of specifically defining "aggression" will be discussed. The United 
States is concerned about this discussion. Here is Stephen J. Rapp, US 
Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues, speaking to the ICC member nations 
(111 have ratified thus far) in The Hague last November 19:

I would be remiss not to share with you my country's concerns about an issue 
pending before this body to which we attach particular importance: the 
definition of the crime of aggression, which is to be addressed at the Review 
Conference in Kampala next year. The United States has well-known views on the 
crime of aggression, which reflect the specific role and responsibilities 
entrusted to the Security Council by the UN Charter in responding to aggression 
or its threat, as well as concerns about the way the draft definition itself 
has been framed. Our view has been and remains that, should the Rome Statute be 
amended to include a defined crime of aggression, jurisdiction should follow a 
Security Council determination that aggression has occurred.
Do you all understand what Mr. Rapp is saying? That the United Nations Security 
Council should be the body that determines whether aggression has occurred. The 
same body in which the United States has the power of veto. To prevent the 
adoption of a definition of aggression that might stigmatize American foreign 
policy is likely the key reason the US will be attending the upcoming 
conference.
Nonetheless, the fact that the United States will be attending the conference 
may well be pointed out by some as another example of how the Obama 
administration foreign policy is an improvement over that of the Bush 
administration. But as with almost all such examples, it's a propaganda 
illusion. Like the cover of Newsweek magazine of March 8, written in very large 
type: "Victory at last: The emergence of a democratic Iraq". Even before the 
current Iraqi electoral farce — with winning candidates arrested or fleeing 6— 
this headline should have made one think of the interminable jokes Americans 
made during the Cold War about Pravda and Izvestia.
Notes

BBC, March 4, 2010; Washington Post, December 3, 2005 ↩ 
New York Times, November 8, 2004 ↩ 
Christian Science Monitor, February 13, 2009 ↩ 
Washington Post, November 7, 2006 ↩ 
Diana Johnstone, Counterpunch, January 27/28, 2007 ↩ 
Washington Post, April 2, 2010 ↩ 



 

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