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Marc Garlasco

Marc Garlasco (born September 4, 1970) is an American former Pentagon mid-level intelligence analyst, now senior civilian protection officer for the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) and senior military advisor for the Human Rights Council (HRC). Having served for seven years at the Pentagon, becoming chief of high-value targeting,[1] Garlasco left in 2003 and joined Human Rights Watch (HRW) as a senior military expert, specializing in battle damage assessment, military operations, and interrogations for the Emergencies Division, where he investigated human rights issues in a number of different conflicts zones. The author of a World War II German anti-aircraft medals reference book, Garlasco was suspended by HRW with pay, "pending an investigation", on September 14, 2009, after it was alleged that he had collected Nazi memorabilia.[2][3] Garlasco downplayed the controversy, indicating he collected German and US World War II memorabilia because of family history and his interest in military history.[4][5] He resigned from HRW in February 2010.[6] He served as senior civilian protection officer for UNAMA in 2011,[7] heading the UN's Protection of Civilians office.[8] In early 2012, as the U.N. senior military advisor for the HRC's Independent Commission of Inquiry on Libya, he investigated civilian casualties while leading a survey of NATO's activities in Libya.[8]

Career Edit

Garlasco has a B.A. in government from St. John's University 1988–1992 and an M.A. in international relations from the Elliott School of International Affairs at the George Washington University(1992–1995)[9] He lives in Pleasantville, New York.[1] Garlasco was the senior military analyst in Human Rights Watch's (HRW) Emergencies Division. He specialized in battle damage assessment, military operations, and interrogations.[10]

The Pentagon Edit

He worked with a defense contractor[11] before being hired as an intelligence professional at the Defense Intelligence Agency working in the Pentagon; he survived the 9/11 attack on the building.[12] He claims he was Chief of High-value targeting in The Pentagon during the Second Gulf War[10] where he claimed to lead the effort to track and target Saddam Hussein. The initial targets and attack, known as the "DECAP strike", was identified by the CIA and the actual attacks were planned by TLAM and F-117 (see:Dora Farms). Garlasco was a member of the Operation Desert Fox (Iraq) Battle Damage Assessment team in 1998, led a Pentagon Battle Damage Assessment team to Kosovo in 1999 and recommended several thousand aimpoints on targets during military operations in Iraq and Serbia.[10] Later that year Garlasco debriefed Iraqi nationals to gather intelligence about Saddam Hussein. He described it as "contingency planning for a war that was probably never going to be fought."[11] He also participated in over 50 interrogations as a subject matter expert.[10] In total, Garlasco served for seven years in the Pentagon.[10]

In 2003, Garlasco was responsible for dropping two, laser-guided, 500-kilogram bombs on a house in the Tuwaisi, neighborhood of Basra, Iraq, that he believed to contain Saddam Hussein's cousin Ali Hassan al-Majid, also known as Chemical Ali, the man responsible for launching poison gas attacks on Kurds in Iraq beginning in 1988.[1] Watching the attack via satellite form a room in the Pentagon, Garlasco threw his arms in the air and shouted: "I just blew up Chemical Ali!" However, Chemical Ali was not in the house; 17 other people were killed instead.[1] Garlasco left his Pentagon job in 2003 two weeks after the failed attack[11] to take a position as senior military analyst at Human Rights Watch.[13]

Garlasco explained the calculus of civilian deaths in high-value targeting to the television news program 60 Minutes this way, "Our number was 30. So, for example, Saddam Hussein. If you're gonna kill up to 29 people in a strike against Saddam Hussein, that's not a problem. But once you hit that number 30, we actually had to go to either President Bush, or Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld." Garlasco told the interviewer that prior to the invasion of Iraq, he personally recommended 50 high-value targets for air strikes, but, according to Garlasco, none of the targets on his list was actually killed. Rather, "a couple of hundred civilians at least" were killed in strikes he recommended.[13] Garlasco defended the efforts made by the American military to minimize civilian casualties, "I don't think people really appreciate the gymnastics that the U.S. military goes through in order to make sure that they're not killing civilians".[13] He responded to the question "If so much care is being taken why are so many civilians getting killed?" by stating "Because the Taliban are violating international law, and because the U.S. just doesn't have enough troops on the ground. You have the Taliban shielding in people's homes. And you have this small number of troops on the ground. And sometimes the only thing they can do is drop bombs."[13]

Human Rights Watch Edit

After leaving the Pentagon, Garlasco joined Human Rights Watch as a senior military analyst; his task was to document laws-of-war violations and other atrocities committed during significant conflicts around the world. In an interview he gave for The Washington Post Garlasco described the transition from targeter to human rights advocate: "I had been a part of it, so it was a lot harder than I thought it would be. It really dawned on me that these aren't just nameless, faceless targets. This is a place where people are going to feel ramifications for a long time."[11]

In December 2003, Garlasco co-authored the report Off Target – The Conduct of the War and Civilian Casualties in Iraq after carrying out field work with two other HRW staff to investigate the effect of the air war, ground war, and the immediate post-combat environment on civilians after the fall of Baghdad to U.S. led Coalition forces in the Iraq War.[14][15] Garlasco and colleagues focused on the main fighting areas in the Tigris and Euphrates river valleys where civilian deaths had been reported, visiting ten cities in total.[15] The report focused on the identification and investigation of potential violations of international humanitarian law by both Coalition and Iraqi forces together with the identification of patterns of conflict which may have resulted in avoidable civilian casualties. [15] Garlasco and his co-author stated that Iraqi forces had committed various violations of international humanitarian law which may have resulted in significant civilian casualties and claimed that the widespread use of cluster munitions in populated areas by Coalition forces killed or wounded more than 1,000 civilians.[16]

In October 2004, Garlasco co-authored the report 'Razing Rafah: Mass Home Demolitions in the Gaza Strip' after carrying out research with two other HRW staff in the Gaza Strip, Israel, and Egypt.[17][18] The report documented what it described as a "pattern of illegal demolitions" by the IDF in Rafah, a refugee camp and city at the southern end of the Gaza Strip on the border with Egypt where sixteen thousand people lost their homes after the Israeli government approved a plan to expand the de facto "buffer zone" in May 2004.[18][19] Garlasco and colleagues examined the background to and effects of the demolitions, the security situation in Rafah, the IDF's main stated rationales for the demolitions, responding to and preventing attacks on its forces and the suppression of weapons smuggling through tunnels from Egypt,[20] and concluded that in most cases the demolitions were "carried out in the absence of military necessity" in violation of international law.[18]

Garlasco has made it a personal objective to prevent the use of cluster munitions.[21] He co-authored the 2006 Human Rights Watch report condemning Israel's use of such weapons in Lebanon and a report in 2008 documenting how civilians living in South Ossetia suffered the use of cluster munitions by both the Russian and Georgian armies.[22][23] Colin Kahl, a professor of security studies at Georgetown University, said that Garlasco "knows more about airstrikes than anyone in the world who isn't in the military currently", adding that "when Marc says stuff is messed up, the military has to take it seriously. It's not some wing nut in a human rights group out to get the military".[11]

According to Haaretz, Garlasco worked in the Pentagon for seven years and "was known over the last years of his career for his harsh condemnation of Israel".[24]

John H. Richardson, a writer at Esquire, writes that Garlasco's work on torture scandals in Iraq resulted in testimony from American soldiers that led directly to John McCain's anti-torture amendment. Richardson also writes that Garlasco was one of the first foreigners to cross the border into Georgia during its war with Russia, and that during the Gaza War Garlasco lived in an apartment in the middle of the war zone and spent weeks visiting hospitals and bomb sites.[25]

Garlasco has attracted some criticism for his reporting, with the Ottawa Citizen, for example, suggesting in an editorial that he "has made a career of painting Israel as a criminal state".[26]

Garlasco appeared as an expert in the documentary film No End in Sight, which examined in detail some of the key decisions made by the US military and the Pentagon in the early days after the invasion of Iraq.[27] He was also featured in a 60 Minutes story on US military targeting practices that aired October 28, 2007.[13]

Exit from HRW over Nazi memorabilia Edit

On September 14, 2009, Garlasco was suspended with pay after a controversy arose when it was publicized that he collects Nazi memorabilia.[2][3] Criticism that had started to appear, posted by what The Guardian called pro-Israeli bloggers, had questioned the appropriateness of Garlasco's hobby.[28] Garlasco has stated his hobby of collecting German and American World War memorabilia from the Second World War is because of his family history and his interest in military history.

Initial controversy Edit

On September 9, 2009 The Jerusalem Post quoted blogger Omri Ceren saying that Garlasco is "obsessed with the color and pageantry of Nazism, has published a detailed 430-page book on Nazi war paraphernalia, and participates in forums for Nazi souvenir collectors".[29] Other newspapers such as The Guardian and Haaretz covered the controversy in the following days.[24][28]

The Guardian reported on what it described as "mounting internet attacks on Garlasco". Pro-Israeli bloggers had questioned the appropriateness of Garlasco's hobby and discovered one blogpost in which Garlasco wrote, "The leather SS jacket makes my blood go cold it is so COOL!"[28]

Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu's policy director commented that Human Rights Watch's employment of "a man who trades and collects Nazi memorabilia" as its senior military expert is a "new low".[29]

HRW response Edit

Though Garlasco initially responded to the allegations under the pen name Flak88,[30] writing: "I would reply, but I don't want to encourage them... Anyway, I doubt if they read my book. More than anything else, it is related to my work." [30] He subsequently apologized, writing on Huffington Post, "I deeply regret causing pain and offense with a handful of juvenile and tasteless postings I made on two websites that study Second World War artifacts". Garlasco added, "I've never hidden my hobby, because there's nothing shameful in it, however weird it might seem to those who aren't fascinated by military history". He also wrote that the allegations of Nazi sympathies were "defamatory nonsense, spread maliciously by people with an interest in trying to undermine Human Rights Watch's reporting," and that "I work to expose war crimes and the Nazis were the worst war criminals of all time". He added, "[p]recisely because it's so obvious that the Nazis were evil, I never realized that other people, including friends and colleagues, might wonder why I care about these things". He went on to say that "I told my daughters, as I wrote in my book, that "the war was horrible and cruel, that Germany lost and for that we should be thankful".[4]

HRW Communications Director Emma Daly at first responded to the charge by saying, "Marc Garlasco is not pro-Nazi. These allegations are monstrous. He does not delve into Nazi memorabilia. Garlasco is a student of military history and he has an interest in military history". HRW later issued an official statement that the accusation against Garlasco "is demonstrably false and fits into a campaign to deflect attention from Human Rights Watch's rigorous and detailed reporting on violations of international human rights and humanitarian law by the Israeli government," adding that Garlasco "has never held or expressed Nazi or anti-Semitic views".[31] HRW associate director Carroll Bogert accused The Guardian of "repeat[ing] defamatory nonsense unworthy of [the] newspaper," adding that "[t]he allegations of pro-Nazi sympathies are part of a larger campaign to smear non-governmental organisations which criticise the Israel Defense Forces' conduct of the Gaza offensive".[32] Iain Levine, the watchdog's programme director responded by saying that "The Israeli government is trying to eliminate the space for legitimate criticism of the conduct of the IDF, and this is the latest salvo in that campaign".[33]

In what has been described by Ed Pilkington of The Guardian as an "abrupt change of tact" (sic) for Human Rights Watch,[33] Garlasco was "suspended with pay" from HRW pending an investigation.[2] According to Bogert, "[W]e have questions as to whether we've learned everything we need to know".[34] Regarding the suspension, HRW has indicated "This is not a disciplinary measure. Human Rights Watch stands behind Garlasco's research and analysis".[5]

Other responses Edit

Critics of Human Rights Watch have suggested that Garlasco's enthusiasm for Nazi-era badges and uniforms goes beyond historical interest and raises questions Nazi sympathy or anti-Semitism.[35]

NGO Monitor, an Israeli NGO that monitors human rights organisations for perceived political bias, described Garlasco's hobby as "problematic" and "insensitive".[29] John Richardson of Esquire magazine wrote that because Garlasco has criticized Israel for alleged human-rights violations, "NGO Monitor has decided to try to destroy Marc Garlasco — not to argue with him or dispute his statistics, but to destroy him personally."[25]

Antony Lerman, former director of the Institute for Jewish Policy Research, wrote that Human Rights Watch failed to see Garlasco's hobby "could be used to discredit his role as author of highly critical reports of Israel's military conduct in Gaza". Lerman further wrote that Garlasco working "on reports critical of Hamas and Hezbollah was ignored", concluding that "as another excuse to attack HRW, and deflect attention from its reports' findings, the Garlasco affair was a gift".[36]

Yaron Ezrahi, a professor of Political Science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said he did not believe that Mr. Garlasco's interest in memorabilia could support allegations of "premeditated bias," though he indicated it may hurt Human Rights Watch's credibility, and that the revelations had "armed the right-wing fanatics" who try to "demonize" anybody who questions the effects of Israeli military operations.[2] A group of ten Israeli rights groups also protested that the Israeli government has been attempting to "instill fear and silence or alarm vital organizations" that were engaging in free public discourse.[3]

In The Christian Science Monitor, Robert Marquand claimed Garlasco's critics were using him "to distract from or obfuscate findings that war crimes and crimes against humanity may have taken place in Gaza" and that a U.N. report by Richard Goldstone showed illegal white phosphorus use consistent with Garlasco's first hand testimony.[37]

In Nazi scandal hits human rights group, Katie Engelhart in Maclean's magazine reported that "For HRW, the timing of the exposé could not be worse. The group has thrown its weight behind the UN-sponsored Goldstone report, which accuses both Israel and the Palestinians of committing war crimes in the Gaza strip earlier this year. Garlasco's actions will surely lead many to question the group's credibility".[38]

According to The New York Times, HRW Middle East advisory committee member Helena Cobban questioned on her blog whether Garlasco's military collecting activities were "something an employer like Human Rights Watch ought to be worried about? After consideration, I say Yes".[2] NGO Monitor head Gerald M. Steinberg, a professor of Political Science at Bar Ilan University, argued that Human Rights Watch's response to the matter was "too little, too late".[39] Cobban says in suspending Garlasco Human Rights Watch is now "in a better position to take part in the public discussion in this country on what our government should be doing with regard to the Goldstone report".[3]

Aftermath Edit

Emma Daly confirmed in March 2010 that Garlasco resigned from Human Rights Watch in February 2010, and offered no elaboration.[6] A reporter from The Sunday Times (London) attempted to contact Garlasco, who wouldn't comment. A friend of Garlasco's indicated he had "in effect" been fired, but had entered into a confidentiality agreement with HRW in which he would be paid for the remainder of his contract if he kept silent. In early March 2010, Garlasco's name was removed from the website.[40]

United Nations Edit

Beginning in 2011, Garlasco served as senior civilian protection officer for United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA).[7] Heading the UN's Protection of Civilians office, Garlasco monitored civilian casualty rates, and admonished Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar to refrain from using mines.[7] In early 2012, as the U.N. senior military advisor for the Human Rights Council's (HRC) Independent Commission of Inquiry on Libya, he investigated civilian casualties while leading a survey of NATO's activities in Libya.[8]

Bibliography Edit

Book Edit

  • The Flak Badges of the Luftwaffe and Heer, 2008, B&D Publishing LLC.[28] 462 pages

Human Rights Watch reports co-authored by Marc Garlasco Edit

  • A Dying Practice: Use of Cluster Munitions by Russian and Georgia in August 2008
  • Rain of Fire: Israel's Unlawful Use of White Phosphorus in Gaza
  • Troops in Contact: Airstrikes and Civilian Deaths in Afghanistan Human Rights Watch, 2008, ISBN 1564323625
  • Flooding South Lebanon: Israel's Use of Cluster Munitions in Lebanon in July and August 2006
  • No Blood No Foul": Soldier's Accounts of Detainee Abuse in Iraq
  • Leadership Failure: First Hand Accounts of Torture of Iraqi Detainees by the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne Division
  • Razing Rafah: Mass Home Demolitions in the Gaza Strip
  • Off Target: The Conduct of the War and Civilian Casualties in Iraq

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Koelbl, Susanne (2009-04-03). "The Pentagon Official Who Came in From the Cold". Spiegel Online. Retrieved 2009-10-01.
  2. ^ a b c d e Rights Group Assailed for Analyst’s Nazi Collection, New York Times, John Schwartz, September 14, 2009
  3. ^ a b c d "Rights Analyst Suspended Over Nazi-Era Collection". NPR.org. Retrieved 2019-07-29.
  4. ^ a b Garlasco, Marc (2009-09-11). "Responding to Accusations". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
  5. ^ a b AFP, "Rights group suspends analyst over Nazi collection"
  6. ^ a b Selig, Abe (March 5, 2010). "After 'Post' query, HRW says top military analyst quit". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved February 19, 2021.
  7. ^ a b c . UNAMA. Archived from the original on 2012-03-25. Retrieved 13 June 2012.
  8. ^ a b c "NATO's lost lessons from Libya". The Washington Post. 11 June 2012. Retrieved 13 June 2012.
  9. ^ "People". Human Rights Watch. 10 October 2013. Retrieved 2016-08-26.
  10. ^ a b c d e "Comment, opinion and discussion from the Guardian US | The Guardian". the Guardian. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
  11. ^ a b c d e White, Josh (2008-02-13). The Man on Both Sides of Air War Debate. The Washington Post. Retrieved 2009-09-09.
  12. ^ "The Pentagon on Sept. 11: One Survivor's Account". NPR. Retrieved 2016-08-26.
  13. ^ a b c d e Bombing Afghanistan, Afghan President Tells 60 Minutes That Too Many Civilians Are Being Killed, Aug. 31, 2008, CBS News, 60 Minutes
  14. ^ "Off Target – Acknowledgements". Human Rights Watch. 2003-12-11. Retrieved 2009-09-16.
  15. ^ a b c "Off Target – I. Summary and Recommendations". Human Rights Watch. 2003-12-11. Retrieved 2009-09-16.
  16. ^ "Off Target – The Conduct of the War and Civilian Casualties in Iraq". Human Rights Watch. 2003-12-11. Retrieved 2009-09-16.
  17. ^ "Razing Rafah – Acknowledgements". Human Rights Watch. 2004-10-17. Retrieved 2009-09-28.
  18. ^ a b c "Razing Rafah – I. SUMMARY". Human Rights Watch. 2004-10-17. Retrieved 2009-09-28.
  19. ^ "Razing Rafah". Human Rights Watch. 2004-10-17. Retrieved 2009-09-29.
  20. ^ "Razing Rafah – Iv. The Security Situation in Rafah". Human Rights Watch. 2004-10-17. Retrieved 2009-09-28.
  21. ^ White, Josh (2008-02-13). "The Man on Both Sides of Air War Debate". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-05-12.
  22. ^ Flooding South Lebanon: Israel's Use of Cluster Munitions in Lebanon in July and August 2006. Human Rights Watch, 2/16/08
  23. ^ A Dying Practice: Use of Cluster Munitions by Russian and Georgia in August 2008. Human Rights Watch, 4/14/09
  24. ^ a b Former HRW analyst said to be avid collector of Nazi souvenirs, Haaretz, Sept. 10, 2009
  25. ^ a b Richardson, John."Why Is This Good Man Getting Hung Out to Dry? 2009-10-15 at the Wayback Machine" Esquire (Oct 2009). Accessed October 14, 2009.
  26. ^ Not-so-secret motives, Ottawa Citizen, September 16, 2009 (retrieved September 22, 2009)
  27. ^ Ferguson, Charles (2008). No end in sight: Iraq's descent into chaos. PublicAffairs. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-58648-608-2.
  28. ^ a b c d Pilkington, Ed (2009-09-10). "Human Rights Watch investigator accused of collecting Nazi memorabilia; Watchdog organisation has had tension with Israeli government over criticism of military actions in Gaza". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2009-09-12.
  29. ^ a b c 'HRW expert collects Nazi memorabilia', JPost, September 09 2009
  30. ^ a b Maariv, Sept. 9, 2009, English translation available here [1]
  31. ^ . Human Rights Watch. 2009-09-10. Archived from the original on 2009-09-14. Retrieved 2009-09-11.
  32. ^ Bogert, Carroll (2009-09-12). "Unfair attack on Marc Garlasco (Letter)". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2009-09-12.
  33. ^ a b Pilkington, Ed (2009-09-15). "Human Rights Watch investigator suspended over Nazi memorabilia". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
  34. ^ "Analyst suspended over Nazi hobby". 2009-09-15. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
  35. ^ "Not Found". www.wbur.org. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
  36. ^ Lerman, Antony (2009-09-15). "Judge Goldstone and the pollution of argument". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
  37. ^ "Gaza war analyst: Does his Nazi-era collection indicate bias?". The Christian Science Monitor. 2009-09-17. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
  38. ^ Engelhart, K. Nazi scandal hits human rights group, Maclean's, October 1, 2009 (retrieved October 15, 2009)
  39. ^ Blomfield, Adrian (2009-09-15). "Human Rights Watch suspends researcher who collected Nazi memorabilia". Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
  40. ^ Foreman, Jonathan (March 28, 2010). "Explosive claims engulf Human Rights Watch". The SundayTimes. London. Retrieved February 19, 2021. (subscription required)

External links Edit

  • Human Rights Watch
  • In the Field with Marc Garlasco, Human Rights Watch (2008)
  • Assessing the Human Cost of Air Strikes in Iraq, NPR (April 8, 2008)

marc, garlasco, born, september, 1970, american, former, pentagon, level, intelligence, analyst, senior, civilian, protection, officer, united, nations, assistance, mission, afghanistan, unama, senior, military, advisor, human, rights, council, having, served,. Marc Garlasco born September 4 1970 is an American former Pentagon mid level intelligence analyst now senior civilian protection officer for the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan UNAMA and senior military advisor for the Human Rights Council HRC Having served for seven years at the Pentagon becoming chief of high value targeting 1 Garlasco left in 2003 and joined Human Rights Watch HRW as a senior military expert specializing in battle damage assessment military operations and interrogations for the Emergencies Division where he investigated human rights issues in a number of different conflicts zones The author of a World War II German anti aircraft medals reference book Garlasco was suspended by HRW with pay pending an investigation on September 14 2009 after it was alleged that he had collected Nazi memorabilia 2 3 Garlasco downplayed the controversy indicating he collected German and US World War II memorabilia because of family history and his interest in military history 4 5 He resigned from HRW in February 2010 6 He served as senior civilian protection officer for UNAMA in 2011 7 heading the UN s Protection of Civilians office 8 In early 2012 as the U N senior military advisor for the HRC s Independent Commission of Inquiry on Libya he investigated civilian casualties while leading a survey of NATO s activities in Libya 8 Contents 1 Career 1 1 The Pentagon 1 2 Human Rights Watch 1 3 Exit from HRW over Nazi memorabilia 1 3 1 Initial controversy 1 3 2 HRW response 1 3 3 Other responses 1 3 4 Aftermath 1 4 United Nations 2 Bibliography 2 1 Book 2 2 Human Rights Watch reports co authored by Marc Garlasco 3 References 4 External linksCareer EditGarlasco has a B A in government from St John s University 1988 1992 and an M A in international relations from the Elliott School of International Affairs at the George Washington University 1992 1995 9 He lives in Pleasantville New York 1 Garlasco was the senior military analyst in Human Rights Watch s HRW Emergencies Division He specialized in battle damage assessment military operations and interrogations 10 The Pentagon Edit He worked with a defense contractor 11 before being hired as an intelligence professional at the Defense Intelligence Agency working in the Pentagon he survived the 9 11 attack on the building 12 He claims he was Chief of High value targeting in The Pentagon during the Second Gulf War 10 where he claimed to lead the effort to track and target Saddam Hussein The initial targets and attack known as the DECAP strike was identified by the CIA and the actual attacks were planned by TLAM and F 117 see Dora Farms Garlasco was a member of the Operation Desert Fox Iraq Battle Damage Assessment team in 1998 led a Pentagon Battle Damage Assessment team to Kosovo in 1999 and recommended several thousand aimpoints on targets during military operations in Iraq and Serbia 10 Later that year Garlasco debriefed Iraqi nationals to gather intelligence about Saddam Hussein He described it as contingency planning for a war that was probably never going to be fought 11 He also participated in over 50 interrogations as a subject matter expert 10 In total Garlasco served for seven years in the Pentagon 10 In 2003 Garlasco was responsible for dropping two laser guided 500 kilogram bombs on a house in the Tuwaisi neighborhood of Basra Iraq that he believed to contain Saddam Hussein s cousin Ali Hassan al Majid also known as Chemical Ali the man responsible for launching poison gas attacks on Kurds in Iraq beginning in 1988 1 Watching the attack via satellite form a room in the Pentagon Garlasco threw his arms in the air and shouted I just blew up Chemical Ali However Chemical Ali was not in the house 17 other people were killed instead 1 Garlasco left his Pentagon job in 2003 two weeks after the failed attack 11 to take a position as senior military analyst at Human Rights Watch 13 Garlasco explained the calculus of civilian deaths in high value targeting to the television news program 60 Minutes this way Our number was 30 So for example Saddam Hussein If you re gonna kill up to 29 people in a strike against Saddam Hussein that s not a problem But once you hit that number 30 we actually had to go to either President Bush or Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld Garlasco told the interviewer that prior to the invasion of Iraq he personally recommended 50 high value targets for air strikes but according to Garlasco none of the targets on his list was actually killed Rather a couple of hundred civilians at least were killed in strikes he recommended 13 Garlasco defended the efforts made by the American military to minimize civilian casualties I don t think people really appreciate the gymnastics that the U S military goes through in order to make sure that they re not killing civilians 13 He responded to the question If so much care is being taken why are so many civilians getting killed by stating Because the Taliban are violating international law and because the U S just doesn t have enough troops on the ground You have the Taliban shielding in people s homes And you have this small number of troops on the ground And sometimes the only thing they can do is drop bombs 13 Human Rights Watch Edit After leaving the Pentagon Garlasco joined Human Rights Watch as a senior military analyst his task was to document laws of war violations and other atrocities committed during significant conflicts around the world In an interview he gave for The Washington Post Garlasco described the transition from targeter to human rights advocate I had been a part of it so it was a lot harder than I thought it would be It really dawned on me that these aren t just nameless faceless targets This is a place where people are going to feel ramifications for a long time 11 In December 2003 Garlasco co authored the report Off Target The Conduct of the War and Civilian Casualties in Iraq after carrying out field work with two other HRW staff to investigate the effect of the air war ground war and the immediate post combat environment on civilians after the fall of Baghdad to U S led Coalition forces in the Iraq War 14 15 Garlasco and colleagues focused on the main fighting areas in the Tigris and Euphrates river valleys where civilian deaths had been reported visiting ten cities in total 15 The report focused on the identification and investigation of potential violations of international humanitarian law by both Coalition and Iraqi forces together with the identification of patterns of conflict which may have resulted in avoidable civilian casualties 15 Garlasco and his co author stated that Iraqi forces had committed various violations of international humanitarian law which may have resulted in significant civilian casualties and claimed that the widespread use of cluster munitions in populated areas by Coalition forces killed or wounded more than 1 000 civilians 16 In October 2004 Garlasco co authored the report Razing Rafah Mass Home Demolitions in the Gaza Strip after carrying out research with two other HRW staff in the Gaza Strip Israel and Egypt 17 18 The report documented what it described as a pattern of illegal demolitions by the IDF in Rafah a refugee camp and city at the southern end of the Gaza Strip on the border with Egypt where sixteen thousand people lost their homes after the Israeli government approved a plan to expand the de facto buffer zone in May 2004 18 19 Garlasco and colleagues examined the background to and effects of the demolitions the security situation in Rafah the IDF s main stated rationales for the demolitions responding to and preventing attacks on its forces and the suppression of weapons smuggling through tunnels from Egypt 20 and concluded that in most cases the demolitions were carried out in the absence of military necessity in violation of international law 18 Garlasco has made it a personal objective to prevent the use of cluster munitions 21 He co authored the 2006 Human Rights Watch report condemning Israel s use of such weapons in Lebanon and a report in 2008 documenting how civilians living in South Ossetia suffered the use of cluster munitions by both the Russian and Georgian armies 22 23 Colin Kahl a professor of security studies at Georgetown University said that Garlasco knows more about airstrikes than anyone in the world who isn t in the military currently adding that when Marc says stuff is messed up the military has to take it seriously It s not some wing nut in a human rights group out to get the military 11 According to Haaretz Garlasco worked in the Pentagon for seven years and was known over the last years of his career for his harsh condemnation of Israel 24 John H Richardson a writer at Esquire writes that Garlasco s work on torture scandals in Iraq resulted in testimony from American soldiers that led directly to John McCain s anti torture amendment Richardson also writes that Garlasco was one of the first foreigners to cross the border into Georgia during its war with Russia and that during the Gaza War Garlasco lived in an apartment in the middle of the war zone and spent weeks visiting hospitals and bomb sites 25 Garlasco has attracted some criticism for his reporting with the Ottawa Citizen for example suggesting in an editorial that he has made a career of painting Israel as a criminal state 26 Garlasco appeared as an expert in the documentary film No End in Sight which examined in detail some of the key decisions made by the US military and the Pentagon in the early days after the invasion of Iraq 27 He was also featured in a 60 Minutes story on US military targeting practices that aired October 28 2007 13 Exit from HRW over Nazi memorabilia Edit On September 14 2009 Garlasco was suspended with pay after a controversy arose when it was publicized that he collects Nazi memorabilia 2 3 Criticism that had started to appear posted by what The Guardian called pro Israeli bloggers had questioned the appropriateness of Garlasco s hobby 28 Garlasco has stated his hobby of collecting German and American World War memorabilia from the Second World War is because of his family history and his interest in military history Initial controversy Edit On September 9 2009 The Jerusalem Post quoted blogger Omri Ceren saying that Garlasco is obsessed with the color and pageantry of Nazism has published a detailed 430 page book on Nazi war paraphernalia and participates in forums for Nazi souvenir collectors 29 Other newspapers such as The Guardian and Haaretz covered the controversy in the following days 24 28 The Guardian reported on what it described as mounting internet attacks on Garlasco Pro Israeli bloggers had questioned the appropriateness of Garlasco s hobby and discovered one blogpost in which Garlasco wrote The leather SS jacket makes my blood go cold it is so COOL 28 Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu s policy director commented that Human Rights Watch s employment of a man who trades and collects Nazi memorabilia as its senior military expert is a new low 29 HRW response Edit Though Garlasco initially responded to the allegations under the pen name Flak88 30 writing I would reply but I don t want to encourage them Anyway I doubt if they read my book More than anything else it is related to my work 30 He subsequently apologized writing on Huffington Post I deeply regret causing pain and offense with a handful of juvenile and tasteless postings I made on two websites that study Second World War artifacts Garlasco added I ve never hidden my hobby because there s nothing shameful in it however weird it might seem to those who aren t fascinated by military history He also wrote that the allegations of Nazi sympathies were defamatory nonsense spread maliciously by people with an interest in trying to undermine Human Rights Watch s reporting and that I work to expose war crimes and the Nazis were the worst war criminals of all time He added p recisely because it s so obvious that the Nazis were evil I never realized that other people including friends and colleagues might wonder why I care about these things He went on to say that I told my daughters as I wrote in my book that the war was horrible and cruel that Germany lost and for that we should be thankful 4 HRW Communications Director Emma Daly at first responded to the charge by saying Marc Garlasco is not pro Nazi These allegations are monstrous He does not delve into Nazi memorabilia Garlasco is a student of military history and he has an interest in military history HRW later issued an official statement that the accusation against Garlasco is demonstrably false and fits into a campaign to deflect attention from Human Rights Watch s rigorous and detailed reporting on violations of international human rights and humanitarian law by the Israeli government adding that Garlasco has never held or expressed Nazi or anti Semitic views 31 HRW associate director Carroll Bogert accused The Guardian of repeat ing defamatory nonsense unworthy of the newspaper adding that t he allegations of pro Nazi sympathies are part of a larger campaign to smear non governmental organisations which criticise the Israel Defense Forces conduct of the Gaza offensive 32 Iain Levine the watchdog s programme director responded by saying that The Israeli government is trying to eliminate the space for legitimate criticism of the conduct of the IDF and this is the latest salvo in that campaign 33 In what has been described by Ed Pilkington of The Guardian as an abrupt change of tact sic for Human Rights Watch 33 Garlasco was suspended with pay from HRW pending an investigation 2 According to Bogert W e have questions as to whether we ve learned everything we need to know 34 Regarding the suspension HRW has indicated This is not a disciplinary measure Human Rights Watch stands behind Garlasco s research and analysis 5 Other responses Edit Critics of Human Rights Watch have suggested that Garlasco s enthusiasm for Nazi era badges and uniforms goes beyond historical interest and raises questions Nazi sympathy or anti Semitism 35 NGO Monitor an Israeli NGO that monitors human rights organisations for perceived political bias described Garlasco s hobby as problematic and insensitive 29 John Richardson of Esquire magazine wrote that because Garlasco has criticized Israel for alleged human rights violations NGO Monitor has decided to try to destroy Marc Garlasco not to argue with him or dispute his statistics but to destroy him personally 25 Antony Lerman former director of the Institute for Jewish Policy Research wrote that Human Rights Watch failed to see Garlasco s hobby could be used to discredit his role as author of highly critical reports of Israel s military conduct in Gaza Lerman further wrote that Garlasco working on reports critical of Hamas and Hezbollah was ignored concluding that as another excuse to attack HRW and deflect attention from its reports findings the Garlasco affair was a gift 36 Yaron Ezrahi a professor of Political Science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem said he did not believe that Mr Garlasco s interest in memorabilia could support allegations of premeditated bias though he indicated it may hurt Human Rights Watch s credibility and that the revelations had armed the right wing fanatics who try to demonize anybody who questions the effects of Israeli military operations 2 A group of ten Israeli rights groups also protested that the Israeli government has been attempting to instill fear and silence or alarm vital organizations that were engaging in free public discourse 3 In The Christian Science Monitor Robert Marquand claimed Garlasco s critics were using him to distract from or obfuscate findings that war crimes and crimes against humanity may have taken place in Gaza and that a U N report by Richard Goldstone showed illegal white phosphorus use consistent with Garlasco s first hand testimony 37 In Nazi scandal hits human rights group Katie Engelhart in Maclean s magazine reported that For HRW the timing of the expose could not be worse The group has thrown its weight behind the UN sponsored Goldstone report which accuses both Israel and the Palestinians of committing war crimes in the Gaza strip earlier this year Garlasco s actions will surely lead many to question the group s credibility 38 According to The New York Times HRW Middle East advisory committee member Helena Cobban questioned on her blog whether Garlasco s military collecting activities were something an employer like Human Rights Watch ought to be worried about After consideration I say Yes 2 NGO Monitor head Gerald M Steinberg a professor of Political Science at Bar Ilan University argued that Human Rights Watch s response to the matter was too little too late 39 Cobban says in suspending Garlasco Human Rights Watch is now in a better position to take part in the public discussion in this country on what our government should be doing with regard to the Goldstone report 3 Aftermath Edit Emma Daly confirmed in March 2010 that Garlasco resigned from Human Rights Watch in February 2010 and offered no elaboration 6 A reporter from The Sunday Times London attempted to contact Garlasco who wouldn t comment A friend of Garlasco s indicated he had in effect been fired but had entered into a confidentiality agreement with HRW in which he would be paid for the remainder of his contract if he kept silent In early March 2010 Garlasco s name was removed from the website 40 United Nations Edit Beginning in 2011 Garlasco served as senior civilian protection officer for United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan UNAMA 7 Heading the UN s Protection of Civilians office Garlasco monitored civilian casualty rates and admonished Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar to refrain from using mines 7 In early 2012 as the U N senior military advisor for the Human Rights Council s HRC Independent Commission of Inquiry on Libya he investigated civilian casualties while leading a survey of NATO s activities in Libya 8 Bibliography EditBook Edit The Flak Badges of the Luftwaffe and Heer 2008 B amp D Publishing LLC 28 462 pagesHuman Rights Watch reports co authored by Marc Garlasco Edit A Dying Practice Use of Cluster Munitions by Russian and Georgia in August 2008 Rain of Fire Israel s Unlawful Use of White Phosphorus in Gaza Troops in Contact Airstrikes and Civilian Deaths in Afghanistan Human Rights Watch 2008 ISBN 1564323625 Flooding South Lebanon Israel s Use of Cluster Munitions in Lebanon in July and August 2006 No Blood No Foul Soldier s Accounts of Detainee Abuse in Iraq Leadership Failure First Hand Accounts of Torture of Iraqi Detainees by the U S Army s 82nd Airborne Division Razing Rafah Mass Home Demolitions in the Gaza Strip Off Target The Conduct of the War and Civilian Casualties in IraqReferences Edit a b c d Koelbl Susanne 2009 04 03 The Pentagon Official Who Came in From the Cold Spiegel Online Retrieved 2009 10 01 a b c d e Rights Group Assailed for Analyst s Nazi Collection New York Times John Schwartz September 14 2009 a b c d Rights Analyst Suspended Over Nazi Era Collection NPR org Retrieved 2019 07 29 a b Garlasco Marc 2009 09 11 Responding to Accusations The Huffington Post Retrieved 2009 09 13 a b AFP Rights group suspends analyst over Nazi collection a b Selig Abe March 5 2010 After Post query HRW says top military analyst quit The Jerusalem Post Retrieved February 19 2021 a b c Today s Afghan Headlines UNAMA Archived from the original on 2012 03 25 Retrieved 13 June 2012 a b c NATO s lost lessons from Libya The Washington Post 11 June 2012 Retrieved 13 June 2012 People Human Rights Watch 10 October 2013 Retrieved 2016 08 26 a b c d e Comment opinion and discussion from the Guardian US The Guardian the Guardian Retrieved 2019 05 29 a b c d e White Josh 2008 02 13 The Man on Both Sides of Air War Debate The Washington Post Retrieved 2009 09 09 The Pentagon on Sept 11 One Survivor s Account NPR Retrieved 2016 08 26 a b c d e Bombing Afghanistan Afghan President Tells 60 Minutes That Too Many Civilians Are Being Killed Aug 31 2008 CBS News 60 Minutes Off Target Acknowledgements Human Rights Watch 2003 12 11 Retrieved 2009 09 16 a b c Off Target I Summary and Recommendations Human Rights Watch 2003 12 11 Retrieved 2009 09 16 Off Target The Conduct of the War and Civilian Casualties in Iraq Human Rights Watch 2003 12 11 Retrieved 2009 09 16 Razing Rafah Acknowledgements Human Rights Watch 2004 10 17 Retrieved 2009 09 28 a b c Razing Rafah I SUMMARY Human Rights Watch 2004 10 17 Retrieved 2009 09 28 Razing Rafah Human Rights Watch 2004 10 17 Retrieved 2009 09 29 Razing Rafah Iv The Security Situation in Rafah Human Rights Watch 2004 10 17 Retrieved 2009 09 28 White Josh 2008 02 13 The Man on Both Sides of Air War Debate The Washington Post Retrieved 2010 05 12 Flooding South Lebanon Israel s Use of Cluster Munitions in Lebanon in July and August 2006 Human Rights Watch 2 16 08 A Dying Practice Use of Cluster Munitions by Russian and Georgia in August 2008 Human Rights Watch 4 14 09 a b Former HRW analyst said to be avid collector of Nazi souvenirs Haaretz Sept 10 2009 a b Richardson John Why Is This Good Man Getting Hung Out to Dry Archived 2009 10 15 at the Wayback Machine Esquire Oct 2009 Accessed October 14 2009 Not so secret motives Ottawa Citizen September 16 2009 retrieved September 22 2009 Ferguson Charles 2008 No end in sight Iraq s descent into chaos PublicAffairs p 9 ISBN 978 1 58648 608 2 a b c d Pilkington Ed 2009 09 10 Human Rights Watch investigator accused of collecting Nazi memorabilia Watchdog organisation has had tension with Israeli government over criticism of military actions in Gaza The Guardian London Retrieved 2009 09 12 a b c HRW expert collects Nazi memorabilia JPost September 09 2009 a b Maariv Sept 9 2009 English translation available here 1 Protecting Civilians Military Expert Marc Garlasco Human Rights Watch 2009 09 10 Archived from the original on 2009 09 14 Retrieved 2009 09 11 Bogert Carroll 2009 09 12 Unfair attack on Marc Garlasco Letter The Guardian London Retrieved 2009 09 12 a b Pilkington Ed 2009 09 15 Human Rights Watch investigator suspended over Nazi memorabilia The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2019 05 29 Analyst suspended over Nazi hobby 2009 09 15 Retrieved 2019 05 29 Not Found www wbur org Retrieved 2019 05 29 Lerman Antony 2009 09 15 Judge Goldstone and the pollution of argument The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2019 05 29 Gaza war analyst Does his Nazi era collection indicate bias The Christian Science Monitor 2009 09 17 ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved 2019 05 29 Engelhart K Nazi scandal hits human rights group Maclean s October 1 2009 retrieved October 15 2009 Blomfield Adrian 2009 09 15 Human Rights Watch suspends researcher who collected Nazi memorabilia Daily Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 2019 05 29 Foreman Jonathan March 28 2010 Explosive claims engulf Human Rights Watch The SundayTimes London Retrieved February 19 2021 subscription required External links EditHuman Rights Watch In the Field with Marc Garlasco Human Rights Watch 2008 Assessing the Human Cost of Air Strikes in Iraq NPR April 8 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marc Garlasco amp oldid 1175667487, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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