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United States war crimes

United States war crimes are violations of the law of war committed by members of the United States Armed Forces after the signing of the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 and the Geneva Conventions. The United States prosecutes offenders through the War Crimes Act of 1996 and articles from the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). The United States signed the 1998 Rome Statute but never ratified the treaty, taking the position that the International Criminal Court (ICC) lacks fundamental checks and balances.[1] The American Service-Members' Protection Act of 2002 further limited US involvement with the ICC. The ICC was conceived as a body to try war crimes when states do not have effective or reliable processes to investigate for themselves. The United States says that it has investigated many of the accusations alleged by the ICC prosecutors as having occurred in Afghanistan, and thus does not accept ICC jurisdiction over its nationals.[2][3]

This article contains a chronological list of incidents in which war crimes occurred or were alleged to have occurred that include the summary execution of captured enemy combatants, the mistreatment of prisoners during interrogation, the use of torture, the use of violence against civilians and non-combatants, and the unnecessary destruction of civilian property.

Definition

War crimes are defined as acts which violate the laws and customs of war established by the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907, or acts that are grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions and Additional Protocol I and Additional Protocol II.[4] The Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 extends the protection of civilians and prisoners of war during military occupation, even in the case where there is no armed resistance, for the period of one year after the end of hostilities, although the occupying power should be bound to several provisions of the convention as long as "such Power exercises the functions of government in such territory."[5][6]

List of war crimes in chronological order

Philippine–American War

 
General Jacob H. Smith's infamous order "Kill Everyone Over Ten" was the caption in the New York Journal cartoon on May 5, 1902. The Old Glory draped an American shield on which a vulture replaced the bald eagle. The caption at the bottom proclaimed, "Criminals Because They Were Born Ten Years Before We Took the Philippines".

Following the end of the Spanish–American War in 1898, Spain ceded the Captaincy General of the Philippines to the United States as part of the peace settlement. This triggered a conflict between the United States Armed Forces and revolutionary First Philippine Republic under President Emilio Aguinaldo, and the Moro fighters.

During the March across Samar, Brigadier General Jacob H. Smith ordered Major Littleton Waller, commanding officer of a battalion of 315 U.S. Marines assigned to Smith's forces in Samar, to kill all persons "who are capable of bearing arms in actual hostilities" over the age of ten years old.[7][8][9] The widespread massacre of Filipino civilians followed as American columns marched across the island. All food and trade to Samar were cut off, and the widespread destruction of homes, crops, and draft animals occurred, with the intention of starving the Filipino revolutionaries and the civilian populace into submission. Smith used his troops in sweeps of the interior to search for guerrilla bands and in attempts to capture Philippine General Vicente Lukbán, but he did nothing to prevent contact between the guerrillas and the population. Waller stated in a report that over an eleven-day period his men burned 255 dwellings, shot 13 carabaos, and killed 39 people.[10] An exhaustive research made by a British writer in the 1990s put the figure at about 2,500 dead; Filipino historians believe it to be around 50,000.[11] As a consequence of his order in Samar, Smith became known as "Howling Wilderness Smith".[12] In May 1902, Smith was convicted at his court-martial in the United States for the order he gave to Waller in Samar.[13]

 
The aftermath of the Moro Crater battle or massacre

On March 5, 1906, the First Battle of Bud Dajo, also known as the Moro Crater Massacre, began when an assault force consisting of soldiers from the 6th Infantry, the 19th Infantry, the 4th Cavalry, the 28th Artillery Battery, the U.S. naval gunboat Pampanga, and men from the Philippine Constabulary opened fire with mountain guns against Moro fortifications in the Bud Dajo crater which was populated by 800 to 1,000 Tausug villagers. Additionally, a machine gun was used to sweep the crest of the mountain.[14]: 406  At the battle's conclusion by March 8, only six Moros had survived, with 99% having been killed. Moro men in the crater possessed melee weapons, and while fighting was limited to ground action on Jolo, use of naval gunfire contributed significantly to the overwhelming firepower brought to bear against the Moros.[15][16][17] One account claims that the Moros, armed with knives and spears, refused to surrender and held their positions. Some of the defenders rushed the Americans and were cut down by artillery fire. The Americans charged the surviving Moros with fixed bayonets, and the Moros fought back with their kalis, barung, improvised grenades made with black powder and seashells.

Despite the inconsistencies among various accounts of the battle, one in which all occupants of Bud Dajo were gunned down, another in which defenders resisted in fierce hand-to-hand combat, all accounts agree that few, if any, Moros survived,[15] and the description of it being a "battle" became a matter of dispute. The author Vic Hurley wrote, "By no stretch of the imagination could Bud Dajo be termed a 'battle'".[15] Mark Twain strongly condemned the incident in several articles he published,[18][19] and commented: "In what way was it a battle? It has no resemblance to a battle. We cleaned up our four days' work and made it complete by butchering these helpless people."[20] Major Hugh Scott, the province's District Governor said that those who fled to the crater "declared they had no intention of fighting, ran up there only in fright, and had some crops planted and desired to cultivate them."[14]: 405 [21]

In response to criticism, Wood's explanation of the high number of women and children killed stated that the women of Bud Dajo dressed as men and joined in the combat, and that the men used children as living shields.[16][17] Hagedorn supports this explanation, by presenting an account of Lieutenant Gordon Johnston, who was allegedly severely wounded by a female warrior.[22] A second explanation was given by the Governor-General of the Philippines, Henry Clay Ide, who reported that the women and children were collateral damage, having been killed during the artillery barrages.[16] These conflicting explanations of the high number of women and child casualties brought accusations of a cover-up, further adding fire to the criticism.[16] According to Joshua Gedacht, Wood's and Ide's explanation is at odds with the use of the machine-gun that was placed to the edge of the crater to fire upon its occupants; Gedacht states that the high number of non-combatants killed can be explained as the result of indiscriminate machine-gun fire.[14]

Banana Wars

First and Second Caco Wars

 
An October 1921 article from the Merced Sun-Star discussing killings of Haitians by U.S. commanded Haitian gendarmerie

During the First (1915) and Second (1918-1920) Caco Wars which were both waged during the United States occupation of Haiti (1915–1934), human rights abuses were committed against the native Haitian population.[23][24] Overall, the United States Marine Corps and the Haitian gendarmerie killed several thousand Haitian civilians during the rebellions between 1915 and 1920, though the exact death toll is unknown.[24] During Senate hearings in 1921, the commandant of the Marine Corps reported that, in the 20 months of active unrest, 2,250 Haitians had been killed. However, in a report to the Secretary of the Navy, he reported the death toll as being 3,250.[25] Haitian historian Roger Gaillard, estimated that in total, including rebel combatants and civilians, at least 15,000 Haitians were killed during the occupation.[24] According to Paul Farmer, the higher estimates are not accepted by most historians outside Haiti.[26]

Mass killings of civilians were allegedly committed by United States Marines and their subordinates in the Haitian gendarmerie.[24] According to Haitian historian Roger Gaillard, such killings involved rape, lynchings, summary executions, burning villages and deaths by burning. Internal documents of the United States Army justified the killing of women and children, describing them as "auxiliaries" of rebels. A private memorandum of the Secretary of the Navy criticized “indiscriminate killings against natives”. American officers who were responsible for acts of violence were given Haitian Creole names such as "Linx" for Commandant Freeman Lang and "Ouiliyanm" for Lieutenant Lee Williams. According to American journalist H.J. Seligman, Marines would practice "bumping off Gooks", describing the shooting of civilians in a manner which was similar to killing for sport.[24]

During the Second Caco War of 1918–1919, many Caco prisoners were summarily executed by Marines and the gendarmerie on orders from their superiors.[24] On June 4, 1916, Marines executed caco General Mizrael Codio and ten others after they were captured in Fonds-Verrettes.[24] In Hinche in January 1919, Captain Ernest Lavoie of the gendarmerie, a former United States Marine, allegedly ordered the killing of nineteen caco rebels according to American officers, though no charges were ever filed against him due to the fact that no physical evidence of the killing was ever presented.[24]

The torture of Haitian rebels and the torture of Haitians who were suspected of rebelling against the United States was a common practice among the occupying Marines. Some of the methods of torture included the use of water cure, hanging prisoners by their genitals and ceps, which involved pushing both sides of the tibia with the butts of two guns.[24]

World War II

Pacific theater

On January 26, 1943, the submarine USS Wahoo fired on survivors in lifeboats from the Imperial Japanese Army transport ship Buyo Maru. Vice Admiral Charles A. Lockwood asserted that the survivors were Japanese soldiers who had turned machine-gun and rifle fire on the Wahoo after it surfaced, and that such resistance was common in submarine warfare.[27] According to the submarine's executive officer, the fire was intended to force the Japanese soldiers to abandon their boats and none of them were deliberately targeted.[28] Historian Clay Blair stated that the submarine's crew fired first and the shipwrecked survivors returned fire with handguns.[29] The survivors were later determined to have included Allied POWs of the British Indian Army's 2nd Battalion, 16th Punjab Regiment, who were guarded by Japanese Army Forces from the 26th Field Ordnance Depot.[30][31]: 287–288  Of 1,126 men originally aboard Buyo Maru, 195 Indians and 87 Japanese died, some killed during the torpedoing of the ship and some killed by the shootings afterwards.[30][31]: 77, 94 

During and after the Battle of the Bismarck Sea (March 3–5, 1943), U.S. PT boats and Allied aircraft attacked Japanese rescue vessels as well as approximately 1,000 survivors from eight sunken Japanese troop transport ships.[32] The stated justification was that the Japanese personnel were close to their military destination and would be promptly returned to service in the battle.[32] Many of the Allied aircrew accepted the attacks as necessary, while others were sickened.[33]

American servicemen in the Pacific War deliberately killed Japanese soldiers who had surrendered, according to Richard Aldrich, a professor of history at the University of Nottingham. Aldrich published a study of diaries kept by United States and Australian soldiers, wherein it was stated that they sometimes massacred prisoners of war.[34] According to John Dower, in "many instances ... Japanese who did become prisoners were killed on the spot or en route to prison compounds."[34] According to Professor Aldrich, it was common practice for U.S. troops not to take prisoners.[35] His analysis is supported by British historian Niall Ferguson,[36] who also says that, in 1943, "a secret [U.S.] intelligence report noted that only the promise of ice cream and three days leave would ... induce American troops not to kill surrendering Japanese."[36]: 150 

Ferguson states that such practices played a role in the ratio of Japanese prisoners to dead being 1:100 in late 1944. That same year, efforts were taken by Allied high commanders to suppress "take no prisoners" attitudes[36]: 150  among their personnel (because it hampered intelligence gathering), and to encourage Japanese soldiers to surrender. Ferguson adds that measures by Allied commanders to improve the ratio of Japanese prisoners to Japanese dead resulted in it reaching 1:7, by mid-1945. Nevertheless, "taking no prisoners" was still "standard practice" among U.S. troops at the Battle of Okinawa, in April–June 1945.[36]: 181  Ferguson also suggests that "it was not only the fear of disciplinary action or of dishonor that deterred German and Japanese soldiers from surrendering. More important for most soldiers was the perception that prisoners would be killed by the enemy anyway, and so one might as well fight on."[36]: 176 

Ulrich Straus, a U.S. Japanologist, suggests that Allied troops on the front line intensely hated Japanese military personnel and were "not easily persuaded" to take or protect prisoners, because they believed that Allied personnel who surrendered got "no mercy" from the Japanese.[37]: 116  Allied troops were told that Japanese soldiers were inclined to feign surrender in order to make surprise attacks,[37]: 116  a practice which was outlawed by the Hague Convention of 1907.[38] Therefore, according to Straus, "Senior officers opposed the taking of prisoners on the grounds that it needlessly exposed American troops to risks ..."[37]: 116  When prisoners were taken at the Guadalcanal campaign, Army interrogator Captain Burden noted that many times POWs were shot during transport because "it was too much bother to take [them] in".[37]: 117 

U.S. historian James J. Weingartner attributes the very low number of Japanese in U.S. prisoner of war compounds to two important factors, namely (1) a Japanese reluctance to surrender, and (2) a widespread American "conviction that the Japanese were 'animals' or 'subhuman' and unworthy of the normal treatment accorded to prisoners of war."[39]: 55  The latter reason is supported by Ferguson, who says that "Allied troops often saw the Japanese in the same way that Germans regarded Russians—as Untermenschen (i.e., "subhuman")."[36]: 182 

Mutilation of Japanese war dead
 
American sailor with the skull of a Japanese soldier during World War II

In the Pacific theater, American servicemen engaged in human trophy collecting. The phenomenon of "trophy-taking" was widespread enough that discussion of it featured prominently in magazines and newspapers. Franklin Roosevelt himself was reportedly given a gift of a letter-opener made of a Japanese soldier's arm by U.S. Representative Francis E. Walter in 1944, which Roosevelt later ordered to be returned, calling for its proper burial.[40]: 65 [41]: 825  The news was also widely reported to the Japanese public, where the Americans were portrayed as "deranged, primitive, racist and inhuman". This, compounded by a previous Life magazine picture of a young woman with a skull trophy, was reprinted in the Japanese media and presented as a symbol of American barbarism, causing national shock and outrage.[42][41]: 833 

War rape

U.S. military personnel raped Okinawan women during the Battle of Okinawa in 1945.[43]

Based on several years of research, Okinawan historian Oshiro Masayasu (former director of the Okinawa Prefectural Historical Archives) writes:

Soon after the U.S. Marines landed, all the women of a village on Motobu Peninsula fell into the hands of American soldiers. At the time, there were only women, children, and old people in the village, as all the young men had been mobilized for the war. Soon after landing, the Marines "mopped up" the entire village, but found no signs of Japanese forces. Taking advantage of the situation, they started 'hunting for women' in broad daylight, and women who were hiding in the village or nearby air raid shelters were dragged out one after another.[44]

According to interviews carried out by The New York Times and published by them in 2000, several elderly people from an Okinawan village confessed that after the United States had won the Battle of Okinawa, three armed Marines kept coming to the village every week to force the villagers to gather all the local women, who were then carried off into the hills and raped. The article goes deeper into the matter and claims that the villagers' tale—true or not—is part of a "dark, long-kept secret" the unraveling of which "refocused attention on what historians say is one of the most widely ignored crimes of the war": "the widespread rape of Okinawan women by American servicemen."[45] Although Japanese reports of rape were largely ignored at the time, one academic estimated that as many as 10,000 Okinawan women may have been raped. It has been claimed that the rape was so prevalent that most Okinawans over age 65 around the year 2000 either knew or had heard of a woman who was raped in the aftermath of the war.[46]

Professor of East Asian Studies and expert on Okinawa, Steve Rabson, said: "I have read many accounts of such rapes in Okinawan newspapers and books, but few people know about them or are willing to talk about them."[46] He notes that plenty of old local books, diaries, articles and other documents refer to rapes by American soldiers of various races and backgrounds. An explanation given for why the US military has no record of any rapes is that few Okinawan women reported abuse, mostly out of fear and embarrassment. According to an Okinawan police spokesman: "Victimized women feel too ashamed to make it public."[46] Those who did report them are believed by historians to have been ignored by the U.S. military police. Many people wondered why it never came to light after the inevitable American-Japanese babies the many women must have given birth to. In interviews, historians and Okinawan elders said that some of those Okinawan women who were raped and did not commit suicide did give birth to biracial children, but that many of them were immediately killed or left behind out of shame, disgust or fearful trauma. More often, however, rape victims underwent crude abortions with the help of village midwives. A large scale effort to determine the possible extent of these crimes has never been conducted. Over five decades after the war had ended, in the late-1990s, the women who were believed to have been raped still overwhelmingly refused to give public statements, instead speaking through relatives and a number of historians and scholars.[46]

There is substantial evidence that the U.S. had at least some knowledge of what was going on. Samuel Saxton, a retired captain, explained that the American veterans and witnesses may have intentionally kept the rape a secret, largely out of shame: "It would be unfair for the public to get the impression that we were all a bunch of rapists after we worked so hard to serve our country."[46] Military officials formally denied the mass rapes, and all surviving related veterans refused request for interviews from The New York Times. Masaie Ishihara, a sociology professor, supports this: "There is a lot of historical amnesia out there, many people don't want to acknowledge what really happened."[46] Author George Feifer noted in his book Tennozan: The Battle of Okinawa and the Atomic Bomb, that by 1946 there had been fewer than 10 reported cases of rape in Okinawa. He explained it was "partly because of shame and disgrace, partly because Americans were victors and occupiers. In all there were probably thousands of incidents, but the victims' silence kept rape another dirty secret of the campaign."[47]

Some other authors have noted that Japanese civilians "were often surprised at the comparatively humane treatment they received from the American enemy."[48][49] According to Islands of Discontent: Okinawan Responses to Japanese and American Power by Mark Selden, the Americans "did not pursue a policy of torture, rape, and murder of civilians as Japanese military officials had warned."[50]

According to numerous academics, there were also 1,336 reported rapes during the first 10 days of the occupation of Kanagawa prefecture after the Japanese surrender, however, Brian Walsh states that this claim originated from a misreading of crime figures and that the Japanese Government had actually recorded 1,326 criminal incidents of all types involving American forces, of which an unspecified number were rapes.[43][51]

European theater

 
Soldiers of the U.S. Seventh Army guard SS prisoners in a coal yard at Dachau concentration camp during its liberation. April 29, 1945 (U.S. Army photograph)[Note 1]

In the Laconia incident, U.S. aircraft attacked Germans rescuing survivors from the sinking British troopship in the Atlantic Ocean. Pilots of a United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) B-24 Liberator bomber, despite knowing the U-boat's location, intentions, and the presence of British seamen, killed dozens of Laconia's survivors with bombs and strafing attacks, forcing U-156 to cast its remaining survivors into the sea and crash dive to avoid being destroyed.

During the Allied invasion of Sicily, some massacres of civilians by US troops were reported, including the Vittoria one, where 12 Italians died (including a 17-year-old boy),[52] and in Piano Stella, where a group of peasants was murdered.[53]

The "Canicattì massacre" involved the killing of Italian civilians by Lieutenant Colonel George Herbert McCaffrey; a confidential inquiry was made, but McCaffrey was never charged with any offense relating to the massacre. He died in 1954. This fact remained virtually unknown in the U.S. until 2005, when Joseph S. Salemi of New York University, whose father witnessed it, reported it.[54]

In the "Biscari massacre", which consisted of two instances of mass murder, U.S. troops of the 45th Infantry Division killed 73 prisoners of war, mostly Italian.[55][56]

According to an article in Der Spiegel by Klaus Wiegrefe, many personal memoirs of Allied soldiers have been wilfully ignored by historians until now because they were at odds with the "greatest generation" mythology surrounding World War II. However, this has recently started to change, with books such as The Day of Battle, by Rick Atkinson, in which he describes Allied war crimes in Italy, and D-Day: The Battle for Normandy, by Antony Beevor.[57] Beevor's latest work suggests that Allied war crimes in Normandy were much more extensive "than was previously realized".[57]

Historian Peter Lieb has found that many U.S. and Canadian units were ordered not to take enemy prisoners during the D-Day landings in Normandy. If this view is correct, it may explain the fate of 64 German prisoners (out of the 130 captured) who did not make it to the POW collecting point on Omaha Beach on the day of the landings.[57]

Near the French village of Audouville-la-Hubert, 30 Wehrmacht prisoners were massacred by U.S. paratroopers.[57]

 
George S. Patton's war diary entry from January 4, 1945. Regarding the Chenogne massacre on January 1, 1945 Patton noted: "Also murdered 50 odd German med [sic]. I hope we can conceal this."

In the aftermath of the 1944 Malmedy massacre, in which 80 American POWs were murdered by their German captors, a written order from the headquarters of the 328th U.S. Army Infantry Regiment, dated 21 December 1944, stated: "No SS troops or paratroopers will be taken prisoner but [rather they] will be shot on sight."[58]: 186  Major-General Raymond Hufft (U.S. Army) gave instructions to his troops not to take prisoners when they crossed the Rhine in 1945. "After the war, when he reflected on the war crimes he authorized, he admitted, 'if the Germans had won, I would have been on trial at Nuremberg instead of them.'"[58]: 189  Stephen Ambrose related: "I've interviewed well over 1000 combat veterans. Only one of them said he shot a prisoner ... Perhaps as many as one-third of the veterans...however, related incidents in which they saw other GIs shooting unarmed German prisoners who had their hands up."[58]: 190 

In the "Chenogne massacre" during the Battle of the Bulge on January 1, 1945, members of the 11th Armored Division killed an estimated 80 German prisoners of war, which were assembled in a field and shot with machine guns.[59] The events were covered up at the time, and none of the perpetrators were ever punished. Postwar historians believe the killings were carried out on verbal orders by senior commanders that "no prisoners were to be taken".[60] General George S. Patton confirmed in his diary that the Americans "...also murdered 50 odd German med [sic]. I hope we can conceal this".[61]

"Operation Teardrop" involved eight surviving captured crewmen from the sunken German submarine U-546 being tortured by U.S. military personnel. Historian Philip K. Lundeberg has written that the beating and torture of U-546's survivors was a singular atrocity motivated by the interrogators' need to quickly get information on what the U.S. believed were potential missile attacks on the contiguous United States by German submarines.[62]

Among American WWII veterans who admitted to having committed war crimes was former Mafia hitman Frank Sheeran. In interviews with his biographer Charles Brandt, Sheeran recalled his war service with the Thunderbird Division as the time when he first developed a callousness to the taking of human life. By his own admission, Sheeran participated in numerous massacres and summary executions of German POWs, acts which violated the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 and the 1929 Geneva Convention on POWs. In his interviews with Brandt, Sheeran divided such massacres into four different categories.

1. Revenge killings in the heat of battle. Sheeran told Brandt that, when a German Army soldier had just killed his close friends and then tried to surrender, he would often "send him to hell, too." He described often witnessing similar behavior by fellow GIs.[63]: 50 
2. Orders from unit commanders during a mission. When describing his first murder for organized crime, Sheeran recalled: "It was just like when an officer would tell you to take a couple of German prisoners back behind the line and for you to 'hurry back'. You did what you had to do."[63]: 84 
3. The Dachau massacre and other reprisal killings of concentration camp guards and trustee inmates.[63]: 52 
4. Calculated attempts to dehumanize and degrade German POWs. While Sheeran's unit was climbing the Harz Mountains, they came upon a Wehrmacht mule train carrying food and drink up the mountainside. The female cooks were first allowed to leave unmolested, then Sheeran and his fellow GIs "ate what we wanted and soiled the rest with our waste." Then the Wehrmacht mule drivers were given shovels and ordered to "dig their own shallow graves." Sheeran later joked that they did so without complaint, likely hoping that he and his buddies would change their minds. But the mule drivers were shot and buried in the holes they had dug. Sheeran explained that by then, "I had no hesitation in doing what I had to do."[63]: 51 
Rape

Secret wartime files made public only in 2006 reveal that American GIs committed 400 sexual offenses in Europe, including 126 rapes in England, between 1942 and 1945.[64] A study by Robert J. Lilly estimates that a total of 14,000 civilian women in England, France and Germany were raped by American GIs during World War II.[65][66] He estimates that there were around 3,500 rapes by American servicemen in France between June 1944 and the end of the war. Historian William Hitchcock states that sexual violence against women in liberated France was common.[67]

Korean War

No Gun Ri

The No Gun Ri massacre refers to an incident of mass killing of an undetermined number of South Korean refugees by U.S. soldiers of the 7th Cavalry Regiment (and in a U.S. air attack) between 26 and 29 July 1950 at a railroad bridge near the village of Nogeun-ri, 100 miles (160 km) southeast of Seoul. In 2005, the South Korean government certified the names of 163 dead or missing (mostly women, children, and old men) and 55 wounded. It said that many other victims' names were not reported.[68] The South Korean government-funded No Gun Ri Peace Foundation estimated in 2011 that 250–300 were killed.[69] Over the years survivors' estimates of the dead have ranged from 300 to 500. This episode early in the Korean War gained widespread attention when the Associated Press (AP) published a series of articles in 1999 that subsequently won a Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting.[70]

Vietnam War

 
American soldiers surrounded by beheaded corpses of Vietcong fighters

RJ Rummel estimated that American forces killed around 5,500 people in democide between 1960 and 1972 in the Vietnam War, from a range of between 4,000 and 10,000.[71] Benjamin Valentino estimates 110,000–310,000 deaths as a "possible case" of "counter-guerrilla mass killings" by U.S. and South Vietnamese forces during the war.[72] During the war, 95 U.S. Army personnel and 27 U.S. Marine Corps personnel were convicted by court-martial of the murder or manslaughter of Vietnamese.[73]: 33 

U.S. forces also established numerous free-fire zones as a tactic to prevent Viet Cong fighters from sheltering in South Vietnamese villages.[74] Such practice, which involved the assumption that any individual appearing in the designated zones was an enemy combatant that could be freely targeted by weapons, is regarded by journalist Lewis M. Simons as "a severe violation of the laws of war".[75] Nick Turse, in his 2013 book, Kill Anything that Moves, argues that a relentless drive toward higher body counts, a widespread use of free-fire zones, rules of engagement where civilians who ran from soldiers or helicopters could be viewed as Viet Cong and a widespread disdain for Vietnamese civilians led to massive civilian casualties and endemic war crimes inflicted by U.S. troops.[76]: 251 

My Lai Massacre

 
Some victims of the My Lai massacre
 
Dead bodies outside a burning dwelling in My Lai

The My Lai massacre was the mass murder of 347 to 504 unarmed citizens in South Vietnam, almost entirely civilians, most of them women and children, conducted by U.S. soldiers from the Company C of the 1st Battalion, 20th Infantry Regiment, 11th Brigade of the 23rd (American) Infantry Division, on 16 March 1968. Some of the victims were raped, beaten, tortured, or maimed, and some of the bodies were found mutilated. The massacre took place in the hamlets of Mỹ Lai and My Khe of Sơn Mỹ village during the Vietnam War.[77][78] Of the 26 U.S. soldiers initially charged with criminal offenses or war crimes for actions at My Lai, only William Calley was convicted. Initially sentenced to life in prison, Calley had his sentence reduced to ten years, then was released after only three and a half years under house arrest. The incident prompted widespread outrage around the world, and reduced U.S. domestic support for the Vietnam War. Three American Servicemen (Hugh Thompson, Jr., Glenn Andreotta, and Lawrence Colburn), who made an effort to halt the massacre and protect the wounded, were sharply criticized by U.S. Congressmen, and received hate mail, death threats, and mutilated animals on their doorsteps.[79] Thirty years after the event their efforts were honored.[80]

Following the massacre a Pentagon task force called the Vietnam War Crimes Working Group (VWCWG) investigated alleged atrocities by U.S. troops against South Vietnamese civilians and created a formerly secret archive of some 9,000 pages (the Vietnam War Crimes Working Group Files housed by the National Archives and Records Administration) documenting 320 alleged incidents from 1967 to 1971 including 7 massacres (not including the My Lai Massacre) in which at least 137 civilians died; 78 additional attacks targeting noncombatants in which at least 57 were killed, 56 wounded and 15 sexually assaulted; and 141 incidents of U.S. soldiers torturing civilian detainees or prisoners of war. 203 U.S. personnel were charged with crimes, 57 were court-martialed and 23 were convicted. The VWCWG also investigated over 500 additional alleged atrocities but could not verify them.[81][82]

Operation Speedy Express

Operation Speedy Express was a controversial military operation aimed at pacifying large parts of the Mekong delta from December 1968 to May 1969. The U.S. Army claimed 10,899 PAVN/VC were killed in the operation, while the US Army Inspector General estimated that there were 5,000 to 7,000 civilian deaths from the operation.[83][84] Robert Kaylor of United Press International alleged that according to American pacification advisers in the Mekong Delta during the operation the division had indulged in the "wanton killing" of civilians through the "indiscriminate use of mass firepower."[85]

Phoenix Program

 
Two United States soldiers and one South Vietnamese soldier waterboard a captured North Vietnamese prisoner of war near Da Nang, 1968.

The Phoenix Program was coordinated by the CIA, involving South Vietnamese, US and other allied security forces, with the aim identifying and destroying the Viet Cong (VC) through infiltration, torture, capture, counter-terrorism, interrogation, and assassination.[86][87] The program was heavily criticized, with critics labeling it a "civilian assassination program" and criticizing the operation's use of torture.[88]: 341–343 

Tiger Force

Tiger Force was the name of a long-range reconnaissance patrol unit of the 1st Battalion (Airborne), 327th Infantry, 1st Brigade (Separate), 101st Airborne Division, which fought from November 1965 to November 1967.[89] The unit gained notoriety after investigations during the course of the war and decades afterwards revealed extensive war crimes against civilians, which numbered into the hundreds. They were accused of routine torture, execution of prisoners and the intentional killing of civilians. US army investigators concluded that many of the alleged war crimes took place.[88]: 235–238 

Other incidents

On 12 August 1965 Lcpl McGhee of Company M, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines, walked through Marine lines at Chu Lai Base Area toward a nearby village. In answer to a Marine sentry's shouted question, he responded that he was going after a VC. Two Marines were dispatched to retrieve McGhee and as they approached the village they heard a shot and a woman's scream and then saw McGhee walking toward them from the village. McGhee said he had just killed a VC and other VC were following him. At trial Vietnamese prosecution witnesses testified that McGhee had kicked through the wall of the hut where their family slept. He seized a 14-year-old girl and pulled her toward the door. When her father interceded, McGhee shot and killed him. Once outside the house the girl escaped McGhee with the help of her grandmother. McGhee was found guilty of unpremeditated murder and sentenced him to confinement at hard labor for ten years. On appeal this was reduced to 7 years and he actually served 6 years and 1 month.[73]: 33–4 

On 23 September 1966, a nine-man ambush patrol from the 1st Battalion, 5th Marines, left Hill 22, northwest of Chu Lai. Private First Class John D. Potter, Jr. took effective command of the patrol. They entered the hamlet of Xuan Ngoc (2) and seized Dao Quang Thinh, whom they accused of being a Viet Cong, and dragged him from his hut. While they beat him, other patrol members forced his wife, Bui Thi Huong, from their hut and four of them raped her. A few minutes later three other patrol members shot Dao Quang Thinh, Bui, their child, Bui's sister-in-law, and her sister in- law's child. Bui Thi Huong survived to testify at the courts-martial. The company commander suspicious of the reported "enemy contact" sent Second Lieutenant Stephen J. Talty, to return to the scene with the patrol. Once there, Talty realized what had happened and attempted to cover up the incident. A wounded child was discovered alive and Potter bludgeoned it to death with his rifle. Potter was convicted of premeditated murder and rape, and sentenced to confinement at hard labor for life, but was released in February 1978, having served 12 years and 1 month.[90] Hospitalman John R. Bretag testified against Potter and was sentenced to 6 month's confinement for rape. PFC James H. Boyd, Jr., pleaded guilty to murder and was sentenced to 4 years confinement at hard labor. Sergeant Ronald L. Vogel was convicted for murder of one of the children and rape and was sentenced to 50 years confinement at hard labor, which was reduced on appeal to 10 years, of which he served 9 years. Two patrol members were acquitted of major charges, but were convicted of assault with intent to commit rape and sentenced to 6 months' confinement. Lt Talty was found guilty of making a false report and dismissed from the Marine Corps, but this was overturned on appeal.[73]: 53–4 [91]

PFC Charles W. Keenan was convicted of murder by firing at point-blank range into an unarmed, elderly Vietnamese woman, and an unarmed Vietnamese man. His life sentence was reduced to 25 years confinement. Upon appeal, the conviction for the woman's murder was dismissed and confinement was reduced to five years. Later clemency action further reduced his confinement to 2 years and 9 months. Corporal Stanley J. Luczko, was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to confinement for three years[73]: 79–81 

From 31 January to 1 February 1967, 145 civilians were purported to have been killed by Company H, 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines, during the Thuy Bo incident. Marine accounts record 101 Viet Cong and 22 civilians killed during a 2-day battle.

On 5 May 1968, Lcpl Denzil R. Allen led a six-man ambush patrol from the 1st Battalion, 27th Marines near Huế. They stopped and interrogated two unarmed Vietnamese men who Allen and Private Martin R. Alvarez then executed. After an attack on their base that night the unit sent out a patrol who brought back three Vietnamese men. Allen, Alvarez, Lance Corporals John D. Belknap, James A. Maushart, PFC Robert J. Vickers, and two others then formed a firing squad and executed two of the Vietnamese. The third captive was taken into a building where Allen, Belknap, and Anthony Licciardo, Jr., hanged him, when the rope broke Allen cut the man's throat, killing him. Allen pleaded guilty to five counts of unpremeditated murder and was sentenced to confinement at hard labor for life reduced to 20 years in exchange for the guilty plea. Allen's confinement was reduced to 7 years and he was paroled after having served only 2 years and 11 months confinement. Maushart pleaded guilty to one count of unpremeditated murder and was sentenced to 2 years confinement of which he served 1 year and 8 months. Belknap and Licciardo each pleaded guilty to single murders and were sentenced to 2 years confinement. Belknap served 15 months while Licciardo served his full sentence. Alvarez was found to lack mental responsibility and found not guilty. Vickers was found guilty of two counts of unpremeditated murder, but his convictions were overturned on review[73]: 111–4 

On the morning of 1 March 1969 an eight-man Marine ambush was discovered by three Vietnamese girls, aged about 13, 17, and 19, and a Vietnamese boy, about 11. The four shouted their discovery to those being observed by the ambush. Seized by the Marines, the four were bound, gagged, and led away by Corporal Ronald J. Reese and Lance Corporal Stephen D. Crider. Minutes later, the 4 children were seen, apparently dead, in a small bunker. The Marines tossed a fragmentation grenade into the bunker, which then collapsed the damaged structure atop the bodies. Reese and Crider were each convicted of four counts of murder and sentenced to confinement at hard labor for life. On appeal both sentences were reduced to 3 years confinement.[73]: 140 

On February 19, 1970, during the Son Thang massacre, 16 unarmed women and children were killed in the Son Thang Hamlet by Company B, 1st Battalion, 7th Marines.[92] One person was sentenced to life in prison, another sentenced to 5 years, but both sentences were reduced to less than a year. with those killed reported as enemy combatant.[92]

On 2 June 1971, Brigadier General John W. Donaldson was charged with the murder of six Vietnamese civilians but was acquitted due to lack of evidence. In 13 separate incidents Donaldson was alleged to have flown over civilian areas shooting at civilians. He was the first U.S. general charged with war crimes since General Jacob H. Smith in 1902 and the highest ranking American to be accused of war crimes during the Vietnam War.[93] The charges were dropped due to lack of evidence.

War on Terror

In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks in 2001, the U.S. Government adopted several new measures in the classification and treatment of prisoners captured in the War on Terror, including applying the status of unlawful combatant to some prisoners, conducting extraordinary renditions and using torture ("enhanced interrogation techniques"). Human Rights Watch and others described the measures as being illegal under the Geneva Conventions.[94] The torture of detainees was extensively detailed in the Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA torture.

 
Picture of a prisoner subjected to torture and abuse by U.S. forces at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. The photo has become internationally famous, eventually making it onto the cover of The Economist.

Command responsibility

A presidential memorandum of February 7, 2002, authorized U.S. interrogators of prisoners captured during the War in Afghanistan to deny the prisoners basic protections required by the Geneva Conventions, and thus according to Jordan J. Paust, professor of law and formerly a member of the faculty of the Judge Advocate General's School, "necessarily authorized and ordered violations of the Geneva Conventions, which are war crimes."[95]: 828  Based on the president's memorandum, U.S. personnel carried out cruel and inhumane treatment on captured enemy fighters,[95]: 845  which necessarily means that the president's memorandum was a plan to violate the Geneva Convention, and such a plan constitutes a war crime under the Geneva Conventions, according to Professor Paust.[95]: 861 

U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and others have argued that detainees should be considered "unlawful combatants" and as such not be protected by the Geneva Conventions in multiple memoranda regarding these perceived legal gray areas.[96]

Gonzales' statement that denying coverage under the Geneva Conventions "substantially reduces the threat of domestic criminal prosecution under the War Crimes Act" suggests, to some authors, an awareness by those involved in crafting policies in this area that U.S. officials are involved in acts that could be seen to be war crimes.[97] The U.S. Supreme Court challenged the premise on which this argument is based in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, in which it ruled that Common Article Three of the Geneva Conventions applies to detainees in Guantanamo Bay and that the military tribunals used to try these suspects were in violation of U.S. and international law.[98]

Human Rights Watch claimed in 2005 that the principle of "command responsibility" could make high-ranking officials within the Bush administration guilty of the numerous war crimes committed during the War on Terror, either with their knowledge or by persons under their control.[99] On April 14, 2006, Human Rights Watch said that Secretary Donald Rumsfeld could be criminally liable for his alleged involvement in the abuse of Mohammed al-Qahtani.[100] On November 14, 2006, invoking universal jurisdiction, legal proceedings were started in Germany—for their alleged involvement of prisoner abuse—against Donald Rumsfeld, Alberto Gonzales, John Yoo, George Tenet and others.[101][102][103]

The Military Commissions Act of 2006 is seen by some as an amnesty law for crimes committed in the War on Terror by retroactively rewriting the War Crimes Act[104] and by abolishing habeas corpus, effectively making it impossible for detainees to challenge crimes committed against them.[105]

Luis Moreno-Ocampo told The Sunday Telegraph in 2007 that he was willing to start an inquiry by the International Criminal Court (ICC), and possibly a trial, for war crimes committed in Iraq involving British Prime Minister Tony Blair and American President George W. Bush.[106] Though under the Rome Statute, the ICC has no jurisdiction over Bush, since the U.S. is not a State Party to the relevant treaty—unless Bush were accused of crimes inside a State Party, or the UN Security Council (where the U.S. has a veto) requested an investigation. However, Blair does fall under ICC jurisdiction as Britain is a State Party.[107]

Shortly before the end of President Bush's second term in 2009, news media in countries other than the U.S. began publishing the views of those who believe that under the United Nations Convention Against Torture, the U.S. is obligated to hold those responsible for prisoner abuse to account under criminal law.[108][109] One proponent of this view was the United Nations Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment (Professor Manfred Nowak) who, on January 20, 2009, remarked on German television that former president George W. Bush had lost his head of state immunity and under international law the U.S. would now be mandated to start criminal proceedings against all those involved in these violations of the UN Convention Against Torture.[110] Law professor Dietmar Herz explained Nowak's comments by opining that under U.S. and international law former President Bush is criminally responsible for adopting torture as an interrogation tool.[110]

War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)

In 2005, The New York Times obtained a 2,000-page United States Army investigatory report concerning the homicides of two unarmed civilian Afghan prisoners by U.S. military personnel in December 2002 at the Bagram Theater Internment Facility (also Bagram Collection Point or B.C.P.) in Bagram, Afghanistan and general treatment of prisoners. The two prisoners, Habibullah and Dilawar, were repeatedly chained to the ceiling and beaten, resulting in their deaths. Military coroners ruled that both the prisoners' deaths were homicides. Autopsies revealed severe trauma to both prisoners' legs, describing the trauma as comparable to being run over by a bus. Seven soldiers were charged in 2005.

 
Afghan boy killed on 15 January 2010 by US Army soldiers during the Maywand District murders

The Maywand District murders involved the killing of three Afghan civilians by a group of soldiers during the period June 2009 to June 2010. The soldiers referred to their group as "Kill Team"[111][112] and were members the 2nd Battalion, 1st Infantry Regiment, and 5th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division. They were based at FOB Ramrod in Maiwand, from Kandahar Province of Afghanistan.[113][114] During the summer of 2010, the military charged five members of the platoon with the murders of three Afghan civilians in Kandahar Province and collecting their body parts as trophies.

The Kandahar massacre was a mass murder that occurred in the early hours of 11 March 2012, when Staff Sergeant Robert Bales killed 16 Afghan civilians and wounded six others in the Panjwayi District of Kandahar Province, Afghanistan. Nine of the victims were children, and eleven of the dead were from the same family. Bales was taken into custody later that morning when he confessed to authorities that he had committed the murders.

First Lieutenant Clint Lorance was an infantry platoon leader in the 4th Brigade Combat Team of the 82nd Airborne Division. In 2012, Lorance was charged with two counts of unpremeditated murder after he ordered his soldiers to open fire on three Afghan men who were on a motorcycle. He was found guilty by a court-martial in 2013 and sentenced to 20 years in prison (later reduced to 19 years by the reviewing commanding general).[115][116][117] He was confined in the United States Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas for six years. Lorance was eventually pardoned by President Donald Trump on November 15, 2019.

Iraq War

 
Sabrina Harman and Charles Graner with naked and hooded prisoners forced to form a human pyramid, during the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse

During the early stages of the Iraq War, a group of soldiers committed a series of human rights violations including physical and sexual abuse against detainees in the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.[118][119][120][121] The abuses came to public attention with the publication of photographs of the abuse by CBS News in April 2004. The incidents caused shock and outrage, receiving widespread condemnation within the United States and internationally.[122] The Department of Defense charged eleven soldiers with dereliction of duty, maltreatment, aggravated assault and battery. Between May 2004 and April 2006, these soldiers were court-martialed, convicted, sentenced to military prison, and dishonorably discharged from service. Two soldiers, found to have perpetrated many of the worst offenses at the prison, Charles Graner and Lynndie England, were subject to more severe charges and received harsher sentences. Graner was convicted of assault, battery, conspiracy, maltreatment of detainees, committing indecent acts and dereliction of duty; he was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment and loss of rank, pay and benefits.[123] England was convicted of conspiracy, maltreating detainees and committing an indecent act and sentenced to three years in prison.[124] Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, the commanding officer of all detention facilities in Iraq, was reprimanded and demoted to the rank of colonel.. Several more military personnel who were accused of perpetrating or authorizing the measures, including many of higher rank, were not prosecuted. In 2004, President George W. Bush and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld apologized for the Abu Ghraib abuses.

On March 12, 2006, a 14-year-old Iraqi girl named Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi was raped and subsequently murdered along with her 34-year-old mother Fakhriyah Taha Muhasen, 45-year-old father Qassim Hamza Raheem, and 6-year-old sister Hadeel Qassim Hamza al-Janabi. The killings took place in the family home in Yusufiyah, a village to the west of the town of Al-Mahmudiyah, Iraq.[125] Five soldiers from the 502nd Infantry Regiment were charged with rape and murder: Paul E. Cortez, James P. Barker, Jesse V. Spielman, Bryan L. Howard, and Steven Dale Green.[14] Green was discharged from the U.S. Army for mental instability before the crimes were known by his command, whereas Cortez, Barker, Spielman and Howard were tried by a military court martial, convicted, and sentenced to decades in prison.[14] Green was tried and convicted in a United States civilian court and was sentenced to life in prison,[126] but committed suicide in prison in 2014.

John E. Hatley was a first sergeant who was prosecuted by the Army in 2008 for murdering four Iraqi detainees near Baghdad, Iraq in 2006. He was convicted in 2009 and sentenced to life in prison at the Fort Leavenworth Disciplinary Barracks.[127] He was released on parole in October 2020.[128]

The Hamdania incident involved the alleged kidnapping and subsequent murder of an Iraqi man by United States Marines on April 26, 2006, in Al Hamdania, a small village west of Baghdad near Abu Ghraib. An investigation by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service resulted in charges of murder, kidnapping, housebreaking, larceny, Obstruction of Justice and conspiracy associated with the alleged coverup of the incident.

The Haditha massacre occurred on November 19, 2005, in Haditha, Iraq. After Lance Cpl. Miguel Terrazas (20 years old) was killed by a roadside improvised explosive device, Staff Sergeant Frank Wuterich led Marines from the 3rd battalion into Haditha.[129] 24 Iraqi women and children were fatally shot. Wuterich acknowledged in military court that he gave his men the order to "shoot first, ask questions later"[130] after the roadside bomb explosion. Wuterich told military judge Lt. Col. David Jones "I never fired my weapon at any women or children that day." On January 24, 2012, Frank Wuterich was given a sentence of 90 days in prison along with a reduction in rank and pay. The day prior, Wuterich pled guilty to one count of negligent dereliction of duty.[129] No other marine that was involved that day was sentenced to any jail time. For the massacre, the Marine Corps paid $38,000 total to the families of 15 of the dead civilians.[131]

Notes

  1. ^ The caption for the photograph in the U.S. National Archives reads, "SC208765, Soldiers of the 42nd Infantry Division, U.S. Seventh Army, order SS men to come forward when one of their number tried to escape from the Dachau, Germany, concentration camp after it was captured by U.S. forces. Men on the ground in background feign death by falling as the guards fired a volley at the fleeing SS men. (157th Regt. 4/29/45)."

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Further reading

General

  • Jeremy Brecher; Jill Cutler; Brendan Smith, eds. (2005). In the name of democracy: American war crimes in Iraq and beyond. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-8050-7969-2.
  • Vincent Bugliosi (2008). The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder. Vanguard. ISBN 978-1-59315-481-3.
  • Frederick Henry Gareau (2004). State terrorism and the United States: from counterinsurgency to the war on terrorism. Zed Books. ISBN 978-1-84277-535-6.
  • Michael Haas (2008). George W. Bush, war criminal?: the Bush administration's liability for 269 war crimes. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-36499-0.
  • Jordan J. Paust (2007). Beyond the law: the Bush Administration's unlawful responses in the "War" on Terror. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-71120-3.
  • Physicians for Human Rights; Human Rights First (August 2007). (PDF). Washington, DC. ISBN 978-1-879707-53-5. OCLC 19187545. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 August 2010. Retrieved 17 August 2010.
  • Mark Selden; Alvin Y. So, eds. (2004). War and state terrorism: the United States, Japan, and the Asia-Pacific in the long twentieth century. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-2391-3.

By nation

Iraq
  • Richard A. Falk; Irene L. Gendzier; Robert Jay Lifton, eds. (2006). Crimes of war: Iraq. Nation Books. ISBN 978-1-56025-803-2.
  • Ramsey Clark (1992). War crimes: a report on United States war crimes against Iraq. Maisonneuve Press. ISBN 978-0-944624-15-9.
  • Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed (2003). Behind the war on terror: western secret strategy and the struggle for Iraq. New Society Publishers. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-86571-506-6.
  • Marjorie Cohn (9 November 2006). "Donald Rumsfeld: The War Crimes Case". The Jurist.
  • Ulrike Demmer (26 March 2007). "Wanted For War Crimes: Rumsfeld Lawsuit Embarrasses German Authorities". Der Spiegel.
  • Patrick Donahue (27 April 2007). "German Prosecutor Won't Set Rumsfeld Probe Following Complaint". Bloomberg L.P.
Vietnam
  • Greiner, Bernd; Anne Wyburd (2009). War Without Fronts: The USA in Vietnam. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-15451-1.
  • Deborah Nelson (2008). The war behind me: Vietnam veterans confront the truth about U.S. war crimes. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-00527-7.
  • Nick Turse (2013). Kill Anything That Moves: The Real American War in Vietnam. New York: Metropolitan Books. ISBN 978-0-8050-8691-1.

united, states, crimes, violations, committed, members, united, states, armed, forces, after, signing, hague, conventions, 1899, 1907, geneva, conventions, united, states, prosecutes, offenders, through, crimes, 1996, articles, from, uniform, code, military, j. United States war crimes are violations of the law of war committed by members of the United States Armed Forces after the signing of the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 and the Geneva Conventions The United States prosecutes offenders through the War Crimes Act of 1996 and articles from the Uniform Code of Military Justice UCMJ The United States signed the 1998 Rome Statute but never ratified the treaty taking the position that the International Criminal Court ICC lacks fundamental checks and balances 1 The American Service Members Protection Act of 2002 further limited US involvement with the ICC The ICC was conceived as a body to try war crimes when states do not have effective or reliable processes to investigate for themselves The United States says that it has investigated many of the accusations alleged by the ICC prosecutors as having occurred in Afghanistan and thus does not accept ICC jurisdiction over its nationals 2 3 This article contains a chronological list of incidents in which war crimes occurred or were alleged to have occurred that include the summary execution of captured enemy combatants the mistreatment of prisoners during interrogation the use of torture the use of violence against civilians and non combatants and the unnecessary destruction of civilian property Contents 1 Definition 2 List of war crimes in chronological order 2 1 Philippine American War 2 2 Banana Wars 2 2 1 First and Second Caco Wars 2 3 World War II 2 3 1 Pacific theater 2 3 1 1 Mutilation of Japanese war dead 2 3 1 2 War rape 2 3 2 European theater 2 3 2 1 Rape 2 4 Korean War 2 4 1 No Gun Ri 2 5 Vietnam War 2 5 1 My Lai Massacre 2 5 2 Operation Speedy Express 2 5 3 Phoenix Program 2 5 4 Tiger Force 2 5 5 Other incidents 2 6 War on Terror 2 6 1 Command responsibility 2 6 2 War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 2 6 3 Iraq War 3 Notes 4 References 5 Further reading 5 1 General 5 2 By nationDefinition EditWar crimes are defined as acts which violate the laws and customs of war established by the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 or acts that are grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions and Additional Protocol I and Additional Protocol II 4 The Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 extends the protection of civilians and prisoners of war during military occupation even in the case where there is no armed resistance for the period of one year after the end of hostilities although the occupying power should be bound to several provisions of the convention as long as such Power exercises the functions of government in such territory 5 6 List of war crimes in chronological order EditPhilippine American War Edit General Jacob H Smith s infamous order Kill Everyone Over Ten was the caption in the New York Journal cartoon on May 5 1902 The Old Glory draped an American shield on which a vulture replaced the bald eagle The caption at the bottom proclaimed Criminals Because They Were Born Ten Years Before We Took the Philippines Following the end of the Spanish American War in 1898 Spain ceded the Captaincy General of the Philippines to the United States as part of the peace settlement This triggered a conflict between the United States Armed Forces and revolutionary First Philippine Republic under President Emilio Aguinaldo and the Moro fighters During the March across Samar Brigadier General Jacob H Smith ordered Major Littleton Waller commanding officer of a battalion of 315 U S Marines assigned to Smith s forces in Samar to kill all persons who are capable of bearing arms in actual hostilities over the age of ten years old 7 8 9 The widespread massacre of Filipino civilians followed as American columns marched across the island All food and trade to Samar were cut off and the widespread destruction of homes crops and draft animals occurred with the intention of starving the Filipino revolutionaries and the civilian populace into submission Smith used his troops in sweeps of the interior to search for guerrilla bands and in attempts to capture Philippine General Vicente Lukban but he did nothing to prevent contact between the guerrillas and the population Waller stated in a report that over an eleven day period his men burned 255 dwellings shot 13 carabaos and killed 39 people 10 An exhaustive research made by a British writer in the 1990s put the figure at about 2 500 dead Filipino historians believe it to be around 50 000 11 As a consequence of his order in Samar Smith became known as Howling Wilderness Smith 12 In May 1902 Smith was convicted at his court martial in the United States for the order he gave to Waller in Samar 13 The aftermath of the Moro Crater battle or massacre On March 5 1906 the First Battle of Bud Dajo also known as the Moro Crater Massacre began when an assault force consisting of soldiers from the 6th Infantry the 19th Infantry the 4th Cavalry the 28th Artillery Battery the U S naval gunboat Pampanga and men from the Philippine Constabulary opened fire with mountain guns against Moro fortifications in the Bud Dajo crater which was populated by 800 to 1 000 Tausug villagers Additionally a machine gun was used to sweep the crest of the mountain 14 406 At the battle s conclusion by March 8 only six Moros had survived with 99 having been killed Moro men in the crater possessed melee weapons and while fighting was limited to ground action on Jolo use of naval gunfire contributed significantly to the overwhelming firepower brought to bear against the Moros 15 16 17 One account claims that the Moros armed with knives and spears refused to surrender and held their positions Some of the defenders rushed the Americans and were cut down by artillery fire The Americans charged the surviving Moros with fixed bayonets and the Moros fought back with their kalis barung improvised grenades made with black powder and seashells Despite the inconsistencies among various accounts of the battle one in which all occupants of Bud Dajo were gunned down another in which defenders resisted in fierce hand to hand combat all accounts agree that few if any Moros survived 15 and the description of it being a battle became a matter of dispute The author Vic Hurley wrote By no stretch of the imagination could Bud Dajo be termed a battle 15 Mark Twain strongly condemned the incident in several articles he published 18 19 and commented In what way was it a battle It has no resemblance to a battle We cleaned up our four days work and made it complete by butchering these helpless people 20 Major Hugh Scott the province s District Governor said that those who fled to the crater declared they had no intention of fighting ran up there only in fright and had some crops planted and desired to cultivate them 14 405 21 In response to criticism Wood s explanation of the high number of women and children killed stated that the women of Bud Dajo dressed as men and joined in the combat and that the men used children as living shields 16 17 Hagedorn supports this explanation by presenting an account of Lieutenant Gordon Johnston who was allegedly severely wounded by a female warrior 22 A second explanation was given by the Governor General of the Philippines Henry Clay Ide who reported that the women and children were collateral damage having been killed during the artillery barrages 16 These conflicting explanations of the high number of women and child casualties brought accusations of a cover up further adding fire to the criticism 16 According to Joshua Gedacht Wood s and Ide s explanation is at odds with the use of the machine gun that was placed to the edge of the crater to fire upon its occupants Gedacht states that the high number of non combatants killed can be explained as the result of indiscriminate machine gun fire 14 Banana Wars Edit First and Second Caco Wars Edit See also United States occupation of Haiti Human rights abuses An October 1921 article from the Merced Sun Star discussing killings of Haitians by U S commanded Haitian gendarmerie During the First 1915 and Second 1918 1920 Caco Wars which were both waged during the United States occupation of Haiti 1915 1934 human rights abuses were committed against the native Haitian population 23 24 Overall the United States Marine Corps and the Haitian gendarmerie killed several thousand Haitian civilians during the rebellions between 1915 and 1920 though the exact death toll is unknown 24 During Senate hearings in 1921 the commandant of the Marine Corps reported that in the 20 months of active unrest 2 250 Haitians had been killed However in a report to the Secretary of the Navy he reported the death toll as being 3 250 25 Haitian historian Roger Gaillard estimated that in total including rebel combatants and civilians at least 15 000 Haitians were killed during the occupation 24 According to Paul Farmer the higher estimates are not accepted by most historians outside Haiti 26 Mass killings of civilians were allegedly committed by United States Marines and their subordinates in the Haitian gendarmerie 24 According to Haitian historian Roger Gaillard such killings involved rape lynchings summary executions burning villages and deaths by burning Internal documents of the United States Army justified the killing of women and children describing them as auxiliaries of rebels A private memorandum of the Secretary of the Navy criticized indiscriminate killings against natives American officers who were responsible for acts of violence were given Haitian Creole names such as Linx for Commandant Freeman Lang and Ouiliyanm for Lieutenant Lee Williams According to American journalist H J Seligman Marines would practice bumping off Gooks describing the shooting of civilians in a manner which was similar to killing for sport 24 During the Second Caco War of 1918 1919 many Caco prisoners were summarily executed by Marines and the gendarmerie on orders from their superiors 24 On June 4 1916 Marines executed caco General Mizrael Codio and ten others after they were captured in Fonds Verrettes 24 In Hinche in January 1919 Captain Ernest Lavoie of the gendarmerie a former United States Marine allegedly ordered the killing of nineteen caco rebels according to American officers though no charges were ever filed against him due to the fact that no physical evidence of the killing was ever presented 24 The torture of Haitian rebels and the torture of Haitians who were suspected of rebelling against the United States was a common practice among the occupying Marines Some of the methods of torture included the use of water cure hanging prisoners by their genitals and ceps which involved pushing both sides of the tibia with the butts of two guns 24 World War II Edit Main article United States war crimes during World War II Pacific theater Edit On January 26 1943 the submarine USS Wahoo fired on survivors in lifeboats from the Imperial Japanese Army transport ship Buyo Maru Vice Admiral Charles A Lockwood asserted that the survivors were Japanese soldiers who had turned machine gun and rifle fire on the Wahoo after it surfaced and that such resistance was common in submarine warfare 27 According to the submarine s executive officer the fire was intended to force the Japanese soldiers to abandon their boats and none of them were deliberately targeted 28 Historian Clay Blair stated that the submarine s crew fired first and the shipwrecked survivors returned fire with handguns 29 The survivors were later determined to have included Allied POWs of the British Indian Army s 2nd Battalion 16th Punjab Regiment who were guarded by Japanese Army Forces from the 26th Field Ordnance Depot 30 31 287 288 Of 1 126 men originally aboard Buyo Maru 195 Indians and 87 Japanese died some killed during the torpedoing of the ship and some killed by the shootings afterwards 30 31 77 94 During and after the Battle of the Bismarck Sea March 3 5 1943 U S PT boats and Allied aircraft attacked Japanese rescue vessels as well as approximately 1 000 survivors from eight sunken Japanese troop transport ships 32 The stated justification was that the Japanese personnel were close to their military destination and would be promptly returned to service in the battle 32 Many of the Allied aircrew accepted the attacks as necessary while others were sickened 33 American servicemen in the Pacific War deliberately killed Japanese soldiers who had surrendered according to Richard Aldrich a professor of history at the University of Nottingham Aldrich published a study of diaries kept by United States and Australian soldiers wherein it was stated that they sometimes massacred prisoners of war 34 According to John Dower in many instances Japanese who did become prisoners were killed on the spot or en route to prison compounds 34 According to Professor Aldrich it was common practice for U S troops not to take prisoners 35 His analysis is supported by British historian Niall Ferguson 36 who also says that in 1943 a secret U S intelligence report noted that only the promise of ice cream and three days leave would induce American troops not to kill surrendering Japanese 36 150 Ferguson states that such practices played a role in the ratio of Japanese prisoners to dead being 1 100 in late 1944 That same year efforts were taken by Allied high commanders to suppress take no prisoners attitudes 36 150 among their personnel because it hampered intelligence gathering and to encourage Japanese soldiers to surrender Ferguson adds that measures by Allied commanders to improve the ratio of Japanese prisoners to Japanese dead resulted in it reaching 1 7 by mid 1945 Nevertheless taking no prisoners was still standard practice among U S troops at the Battle of Okinawa in April June 1945 36 181 Ferguson also suggests that it was not only the fear of disciplinary action or of dishonor that deterred German and Japanese soldiers from surrendering More important for most soldiers was the perception that prisoners would be killed by the enemy anyway and so one might as well fight on 36 176 Ulrich Straus a U S Japanologist suggests that Allied troops on the front line intensely hated Japanese military personnel and were not easily persuaded to take or protect prisoners because they believed that Allied personnel who surrendered got no mercy from the Japanese 37 116 Allied troops were told that Japanese soldiers were inclined to feign surrender in order to make surprise attacks 37 116 a practice which was outlawed by the Hague Convention of 1907 38 Therefore according to Straus Senior officers opposed the taking of prisoners on the grounds that it needlessly exposed American troops to risks 37 116 When prisoners were taken at the Guadalcanal campaign Army interrogator Captain Burden noted that many times POWs were shot during transport because it was too much bother to take them in 37 117 U S historian James J Weingartner attributes the very low number of Japanese in U S prisoner of war compounds to two important factors namely 1 a Japanese reluctance to surrender and 2 a widespread American conviction that the Japanese were animals or subhuman and unworthy of the normal treatment accorded to prisoners of war 39 55 The latter reason is supported by Ferguson who says that Allied troops often saw the Japanese in the same way that Germans regarded Russians as Untermenschen i e subhuman 36 182 Mutilation of Japanese war dead Edit Main article American mutilation of Japanese war dead American sailor with the skull of a Japanese soldier during World War II In the Pacific theater American servicemen engaged in human trophy collecting The phenomenon of trophy taking was widespread enough that discussion of it featured prominently in magazines and newspapers Franklin Roosevelt himself was reportedly given a gift of a letter opener made of a Japanese soldier s arm by U S Representative Francis E Walter in 1944 which Roosevelt later ordered to be returned calling for its proper burial 40 65 41 825 The news was also widely reported to the Japanese public where the Americans were portrayed as deranged primitive racist and inhuman This compounded by a previous Life magazine picture of a young woman with a skull trophy was reprinted in the Japanese media and presented as a symbol of American barbarism causing national shock and outrage 42 41 833 War rape Edit Main article Rape during the occupation of Japan U S military personnel raped Okinawan women during the Battle of Okinawa in 1945 43 Based on several years of research Okinawan historian Oshiro Masayasu former director of the Okinawa Prefectural Historical Archives writes Soon after the U S Marines landed all the women of a village on Motobu Peninsula fell into the hands of American soldiers At the time there were only women children and old people in the village as all the young men had been mobilized for the war Soon after landing the Marines mopped up the entire village but found no signs of Japanese forces Taking advantage of the situation they started hunting for women in broad daylight and women who were hiding in the village or nearby air raid shelters were dragged out one after another 44 According to interviews carried out by The New York Times and published by them in 2000 several elderly people from an Okinawan village confessed that after the United States had won the Battle of Okinawa three armed Marines kept coming to the village every week to force the villagers to gather all the local women who were then carried off into the hills and raped The article goes deeper into the matter and claims that the villagers tale true or not is part of a dark long kept secret the unraveling of which refocused attention on what historians say is one of the most widely ignored crimes of the war the widespread rape of Okinawan women by American servicemen 45 Although Japanese reports of rape were largely ignored at the time one academic estimated that as many as 10 000 Okinawan women may have been raped It has been claimed that the rape was so prevalent that most Okinawans over age 65 around the year 2000 either knew or had heard of a woman who was raped in the aftermath of the war 46 Professor of East Asian Studies and expert on Okinawa Steve Rabson said I have read many accounts of such rapes in Okinawan newspapers and books but few people know about them or are willing to talk about them 46 He notes that plenty of old local books diaries articles and other documents refer to rapes by American soldiers of various races and backgrounds An explanation given for why the US military has no record of any rapes is that few Okinawan women reported abuse mostly out of fear and embarrassment According to an Okinawan police spokesman Victimized women feel too ashamed to make it public 46 Those who did report them are believed by historians to have been ignored by the U S military police Many people wondered why it never came to light after the inevitable American Japanese babies the many women must have given birth to In interviews historians and Okinawan elders said that some of those Okinawan women who were raped and did not commit suicide did give birth to biracial children but that many of them were immediately killed or left behind out of shame disgust or fearful trauma More often however rape victims underwent crude abortions with the help of village midwives A large scale effort to determine the possible extent of these crimes has never been conducted Over five decades after the war had ended in the late 1990s the women who were believed to have been raped still overwhelmingly refused to give public statements instead speaking through relatives and a number of historians and scholars 46 There is substantial evidence that the U S had at least some knowledge of what was going on Samuel Saxton a retired captain explained that the American veterans and witnesses may have intentionally kept the rape a secret largely out of shame It would be unfair for the public to get the impression that we were all a bunch of rapists after we worked so hard to serve our country 46 Military officials formally denied the mass rapes and all surviving related veterans refused request for interviews from The New York Times Masaie Ishihara a sociology professor supports this There is a lot of historical amnesia out there many people don t want to acknowledge what really happened 46 Author George Feifer noted in his book Tennozan The Battle of Okinawa and the Atomic Bomb that by 1946 there had been fewer than 10 reported cases of rape in Okinawa He explained it was partly because of shame and disgrace partly because Americans were victors and occupiers In all there were probably thousands of incidents but the victims silence kept rape another dirty secret of the campaign 47 Some other authors have noted that Japanese civilians were often surprised at the comparatively humane treatment they received from the American enemy 48 49 According to Islands of Discontent Okinawan Responses to Japanese and American Power by Mark Selden the Americans did not pursue a policy of torture rape and murder of civilians as Japanese military officials had warned 50 According to numerous academics there were also 1 336 reported rapes during the first 10 days of the occupation of Kanagawa prefecture after the Japanese surrender however Brian Walsh states that this claim originated from a misreading of crime figures and that the Japanese Government had actually recorded 1 326 criminal incidents of all types involving American forces of which an unspecified number were rapes 43 51 European theater Edit Soldiers of the U S Seventh Army guard SS prisoners in a coal yard at Dachau concentration camp during its liberation April 29 1945 U S Army photograph Note 1 In the Laconia incident U S aircraft attacked Germans rescuing survivors from the sinking British troopship in the Atlantic Ocean Pilots of a United States Army Air Forces USAAF B 24 Liberator bomber despite knowing the U boat s location intentions and the presence of British seamen killed dozens of Laconia s survivors with bombs and strafing attacks forcing U 156 to cast its remaining survivors into the sea and crash dive to avoid being destroyed During the Allied invasion of Sicily some massacres of civilians by US troops were reported including the Vittoria one where 12 Italians died including a 17 year old boy 52 and in Piano Stella where a group of peasants was murdered 53 The Canicatti massacre involved the killing of Italian civilians by Lieutenant Colonel George Herbert McCaffrey a confidential inquiry was made but McCaffrey was never charged with any offense relating to the massacre He died in 1954 This fact remained virtually unknown in the U S until 2005 when Joseph S Salemi of New York University whose father witnessed it reported it 54 In the Biscari massacre which consisted of two instances of mass murder U S troops of the 45th Infantry Division killed 73 prisoners of war mostly Italian 55 56 According to an article in Der Spiegel by Klaus Wiegrefe many personal memoirs of Allied soldiers have been wilfully ignored by historians until now because they were at odds with the greatest generation mythology surrounding World War II However this has recently started to change with books such as The Day of Battle by Rick Atkinson in which he describes Allied war crimes in Italy and D Day The Battle for Normandy by Antony Beevor 57 Beevor s latest work suggests that Allied war crimes in Normandy were much more extensive than was previously realized 57 Historian Peter Lieb has found that many U S and Canadian units were ordered not to take enemy prisoners during the D Day landings in Normandy If this view is correct it may explain the fate of 64 German prisoners out of the 130 captured who did not make it to the POW collecting point on Omaha Beach on the day of the landings 57 Near the French village of Audouville la Hubert 30 Wehrmacht prisoners were massacred by U S paratroopers 57 George S Patton s war diary entry from January 4 1945 Regarding the Chenogne massacre on January 1 1945 Patton noted Also murdered 50 odd German med sic I hope we can conceal this In the aftermath of the 1944 Malmedy massacre in which 80 American POWs were murdered by their German captors a written order from the headquarters of the 328th U S Army Infantry Regiment dated 21 December 1944 stated No SS troops or paratroopers will be taken prisoner but rather they will be shot on sight 58 186 Major General Raymond Hufft U S Army gave instructions to his troops not to take prisoners when they crossed the Rhine in 1945 After the war when he reflected on the war crimes he authorized he admitted if the Germans had won I would have been on trial at Nuremberg instead of them 58 189 Stephen Ambrose related I ve interviewed well over 1000 combat veterans Only one of them said he shot a prisoner Perhaps as many as one third of the veterans however related incidents in which they saw other GIs shooting unarmed German prisoners who had their hands up 58 190 In the Chenogne massacre during the Battle of the Bulge on January 1 1945 members of the 11th Armored Division killed an estimated 80 German prisoners of war which were assembled in a field and shot with machine guns 59 The events were covered up at the time and none of the perpetrators were ever punished Postwar historians believe the killings were carried out on verbal orders by senior commanders that no prisoners were to be taken 60 General George S Patton confirmed in his diary that the Americans also murdered 50 odd German med sic I hope we can conceal this 61 Operation Teardrop involved eight surviving captured crewmen from the sunken German submarine U 546 being tortured by U S military personnel Historian Philip K Lundeberg has written that the beating and torture of U 546 s survivors was a singular atrocity motivated by the interrogators need to quickly get information on what the U S believed were potential missile attacks on the contiguous United States by German submarines 62 Among American WWII veterans who admitted to having committed war crimes was former Mafia hitman Frank Sheeran In interviews with his biographer Charles Brandt Sheeran recalled his war service with the Thunderbird Division as the time when he first developed a callousness to the taking of human life By his own admission Sheeran participated in numerous massacres and summary executions of German POWs acts which violated the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 and the 1929 Geneva Convention on POWs In his interviews with Brandt Sheeran divided such massacres into four different categories 1 Revenge killings in the heat of battle Sheeran told Brandt that when a German Army soldier had just killed his close friends and then tried to surrender he would often send him to hell too He described often witnessing similar behavior by fellow GIs 63 50 2 Orders from unit commanders during a mission When describing his first murder for organized crime Sheeran recalled It was just like when an officer would tell you to take a couple of German prisoners back behind the line and for you to hurry back You did what you had to do 63 84 3 The Dachau massacre and other reprisal killings of concentration camp guards and trustee inmates 63 52 4 Calculated attempts to dehumanize and degrade German POWs While Sheeran s unit was climbing the Harz Mountains they came upon a Wehrmacht mule train carrying food and drink up the mountainside The female cooks were first allowed to leave unmolested then Sheeran and his fellow GIs ate what we wanted and soiled the rest with our waste Then the Wehrmacht mule drivers were given shovels and ordered to dig their own shallow graves Sheeran later joked that they did so without complaint likely hoping that he and his buddies would change their minds But the mule drivers were shot and buried in the holes they had dug Sheeran explained that by then I had no hesitation in doing what I had to do 63 51 Rape Edit Main articles Rape during the liberation of France and Rape during the occupation of Germany Secret wartime files made public only in 2006 reveal that American GIs committed 400 sexual offenses in Europe including 126 rapes in England between 1942 and 1945 64 A study by Robert J Lilly estimates that a total of 14 000 civilian women in England France and Germany were raped by American GIs during World War II 65 66 He estimates that there were around 3 500 rapes by American servicemen in France between June 1944 and the end of the war Historian William Hitchcock states that sexual violence against women in liberated France was common 67 Korean War Edit No Gun Ri Edit Main article No Gun Ri massacre The No Gun Ri massacre refers to an incident of mass killing of an undetermined number of South Korean refugees by U S soldiers of the 7th Cavalry Regiment and in a U S air attack between 26 and 29 July 1950 at a railroad bridge near the village of Nogeun ri 100 miles 160 km southeast of Seoul In 2005 the South Korean government certified the names of 163 dead or missing mostly women children and old men and 55 wounded It said that many other victims names were not reported 68 The South Korean government funded No Gun Ri Peace Foundation estimated in 2011 that 250 300 were killed 69 Over the years survivors estimates of the dead have ranged from 300 to 500 This episode early in the Korean War gained widespread attention when the Associated Press AP published a series of articles in 1999 that subsequently won a Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting 70 Vietnam War Edit See also Vietnam War Crimes Working Group Russell Tribunal War crimes during the Vietnam War and Rape during the Vietnam War American soldiers surrounded by beheaded corpses of Vietcong fighters RJ Rummel estimated that American forces killed around 5 500 people in democide between 1960 and 1972 in the Vietnam War from a range of between 4 000 and 10 000 71 Benjamin Valentino estimates 110 000 310 000 deaths as a possible case of counter guerrilla mass killings by U S and South Vietnamese forces during the war 72 During the war 95 U S Army personnel and 27 U S Marine Corps personnel were convicted by court martial of the murder or manslaughter of Vietnamese 73 33 U S forces also established numerous free fire zones as a tactic to prevent Viet Cong fighters from sheltering in South Vietnamese villages 74 Such practice which involved the assumption that any individual appearing in the designated zones was an enemy combatant that could be freely targeted by weapons is regarded by journalist Lewis M Simons as a severe violation of the laws of war 75 Nick Turse in his 2013 book Kill Anything that Moves argues that a relentless drive toward higher body counts a widespread use of free fire zones rules of engagement where civilians who ran from soldiers or helicopters could be viewed as Viet Cong and a widespread disdain for Vietnamese civilians led to massive civilian casualties and endemic war crimes inflicted by U S troops 76 251 My Lai Massacre Edit Main article My Lai massacre Some victims of the My Lai massacre Dead bodies outside a burning dwelling in My Lai The My Lai massacre was the mass murder of 347 to 504 unarmed citizens in South Vietnam almost entirely civilians most of them women and children conducted by U S soldiers from the Company C of the 1st Battalion 20th Infantry Regiment 11th Brigade of the 23rd American Infantry Division on 16 March 1968 Some of the victims were raped beaten tortured or maimed and some of the bodies were found mutilated The massacre took place in the hamlets of Mỹ Lai and My Khe of Sơn Mỹ village during the Vietnam War 77 78 Of the 26 U S soldiers initially charged with criminal offenses or war crimes for actions at My Lai only William Calley was convicted Initially sentenced to life in prison Calley had his sentence reduced to ten years then was released after only three and a half years under house arrest The incident prompted widespread outrage around the world and reduced U S domestic support for the Vietnam War Three American Servicemen Hugh Thompson Jr Glenn Andreotta and Lawrence Colburn who made an effort to halt the massacre and protect the wounded were sharply criticized by U S Congressmen and received hate mail death threats and mutilated animals on their doorsteps 79 Thirty years after the event their efforts were honored 80 Following the massacre a Pentagon task force called the Vietnam War Crimes Working Group VWCWG investigated alleged atrocities by U S troops against South Vietnamese civilians and created a formerly secret archive of some 9 000 pages the Vietnam War Crimes Working Group Files housed by the National Archives and Records Administration documenting 320 alleged incidents from 1967 to 1971 including 7 massacres not including the My Lai Massacre in which at least 137 civilians died 78 additional attacks targeting noncombatants in which at least 57 were killed 56 wounded and 15 sexually assaulted and 141 incidents of U S soldiers torturing civilian detainees or prisoners of war 203 U S personnel were charged with crimes 57 were court martialed and 23 were convicted The VWCWG also investigated over 500 additional alleged atrocities but could not verify them 81 82 Operation Speedy Express Edit Main article Operation Speedy Express Operation Speedy Express was a controversial military operation aimed at pacifying large parts of the Mekong delta from December 1968 to May 1969 The U S Army claimed 10 899 PAVN VC were killed in the operation while the US Army Inspector General estimated that there were 5 000 to 7 000 civilian deaths from the operation 83 84 Robert Kaylor of United Press International alleged that according to American pacification advisers in the Mekong Delta during the operation the division had indulged in the wanton killing of civilians through the indiscriminate use of mass firepower 85 Phoenix Program Edit Main article Phoenix Program Two United States soldiers and one South Vietnamese soldier waterboard a captured North Vietnamese prisoner of war near Da Nang 1968 The Phoenix Program was coordinated by the CIA involving South Vietnamese US and other allied security forces with the aim identifying and destroying the Viet Cong VC through infiltration torture capture counter terrorism interrogation and assassination 86 87 The program was heavily criticized with critics labeling it a civilian assassination program and criticizing the operation s use of torture 88 341 343 Tiger Force Edit Main article Tiger Force Tiger Force was the name of a long range reconnaissance patrol unit of the 1st Battalion Airborne 327th Infantry 1st Brigade Separate 101st Airborne Division which fought from November 1965 to November 1967 89 The unit gained notoriety after investigations during the course of the war and decades afterwards revealed extensive war crimes against civilians which numbered into the hundreds They were accused of routine torture execution of prisoners and the intentional killing of civilians US army investigators concluded that many of the alleged war crimes took place 88 235 238 Other incidents Edit On 12 August 1965 Lcpl McGhee of Company M 3rd Battalion 3rd Marines walked through Marine lines at Chu Lai Base Area toward a nearby village In answer to a Marine sentry s shouted question he responded that he was going after a VC Two Marines were dispatched to retrieve McGhee and as they approached the village they heard a shot and a woman s scream and then saw McGhee walking toward them from the village McGhee said he had just killed a VC and other VC were following him At trial Vietnamese prosecution witnesses testified that McGhee had kicked through the wall of the hut where their family slept He seized a 14 year old girl and pulled her toward the door When her father interceded McGhee shot and killed him Once outside the house the girl escaped McGhee with the help of her grandmother McGhee was found guilty of unpremeditated murder and sentenced him to confinement at hard labor for ten years On appeal this was reduced to 7 years and he actually served 6 years and 1 month 73 33 4 On 23 September 1966 a nine man ambush patrol from the 1st Battalion 5th Marines left Hill 22 northwest of Chu Lai Private First Class John D Potter Jr took effective command of the patrol They entered the hamlet of Xuan Ngoc 2 and seized Dao Quang Thinh whom they accused of being a Viet Cong and dragged him from his hut While they beat him other patrol members forced his wife Bui Thi Huong from their hut and four of them raped her A few minutes later three other patrol members shot Dao Quang Thinh Bui their child Bui s sister in law and her sister in law s child Bui Thi Huong survived to testify at the courts martial The company commander suspicious of the reported enemy contact sent Second Lieutenant Stephen J Talty to return to the scene with the patrol Once there Talty realized what had happened and attempted to cover up the incident A wounded child was discovered alive and Potter bludgeoned it to death with his rifle Potter was convicted of premeditated murder and rape and sentenced to confinement at hard labor for life but was released in February 1978 having served 12 years and 1 month 90 Hospitalman John R Bretag testified against Potter and was sentenced to 6 month s confinement for rape PFC James H Boyd Jr pleaded guilty to murder and was sentenced to 4 years confinement at hard labor Sergeant Ronald L Vogel was convicted for murder of one of the children and rape and was sentenced to 50 years confinement at hard labor which was reduced on appeal to 10 years of which he served 9 years Two patrol members were acquitted of major charges but were convicted of assault with intent to commit rape and sentenced to 6 months confinement Lt Talty was found guilty of making a false report and dismissed from the Marine Corps but this was overturned on appeal 73 53 4 91 PFC Charles W Keenan was convicted of murder by firing at point blank range into an unarmed elderly Vietnamese woman and an unarmed Vietnamese man His life sentence was reduced to 25 years confinement Upon appeal the conviction for the woman s murder was dismissed and confinement was reduced to five years Later clemency action further reduced his confinement to 2 years and 9 months Corporal Stanley J Luczko was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to confinement for three years 73 79 81 From 31 January to 1 February 1967 145 civilians were purported to have been killed by Company H 2nd Battalion 1st Marines during the Thuy Bo incident Marine accounts record 101 Viet Cong and 22 civilians killed during a 2 day battle On 5 May 1968 Lcpl Denzil R Allen led a six man ambush patrol from the 1st Battalion 27th Marines near Huế They stopped and interrogated two unarmed Vietnamese men who Allen and Private Martin R Alvarez then executed After an attack on their base that night the unit sent out a patrol who brought back three Vietnamese men Allen Alvarez Lance Corporals John D Belknap James A Maushart PFC Robert J Vickers and two others then formed a firing squad and executed two of the Vietnamese The third captive was taken into a building where Allen Belknap and Anthony Licciardo Jr hanged him when the rope broke Allen cut the man s throat killing him Allen pleaded guilty to five counts of unpremeditated murder and was sentenced to confinement at hard labor for life reduced to 20 years in exchange for the guilty plea Allen s confinement was reduced to 7 years and he was paroled after having served only 2 years and 11 months confinement Maushart pleaded guilty to one count of unpremeditated murder and was sentenced to 2 years confinement of which he served 1 year and 8 months Belknap and Licciardo each pleaded guilty to single murders and were sentenced to 2 years confinement Belknap served 15 months while Licciardo served his full sentence Alvarez was found to lack mental responsibility and found not guilty Vickers was found guilty of two counts of unpremeditated murder but his convictions were overturned on review 73 111 4 On the morning of 1 March 1969 an eight man Marine ambush was discovered by three Vietnamese girls aged about 13 17 and 19 and a Vietnamese boy about 11 The four shouted their discovery to those being observed by the ambush Seized by the Marines the four were bound gagged and led away by Corporal Ronald J Reese and Lance Corporal Stephen D Crider Minutes later the 4 children were seen apparently dead in a small bunker The Marines tossed a fragmentation grenade into the bunker which then collapsed the damaged structure atop the bodies Reese and Crider were each convicted of four counts of murder and sentenced to confinement at hard labor for life On appeal both sentences were reduced to 3 years confinement 73 140 On February 19 1970 during the Son Thang massacre 16 unarmed women and children were killed in the Son Thang Hamlet by Company B 1st Battalion 7th Marines 92 One person was sentenced to life in prison another sentenced to 5 years but both sentences were reduced to less than a year with those killed reported as enemy combatant 92 On 2 June 1971 Brigadier General John W Donaldson was charged with the murder of six Vietnamese civilians but was acquitted due to lack of evidence In 13 separate incidents Donaldson was alleged to have flown over civilian areas shooting at civilians He was the first U S general charged with war crimes since General Jacob H Smith in 1902 and the highest ranking American to be accused of war crimes during the Vietnam War 93 The charges were dropped due to lack of evidence War on Terror Edit Main article War on Terror In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks in 2001 the U S Government adopted several new measures in the classification and treatment of prisoners captured in the War on Terror including applying the status of unlawful combatant to some prisoners conducting extraordinary renditions and using torture enhanced interrogation techniques Human Rights Watch and others described the measures as being illegal under the Geneva Conventions 94 The torture of detainees was extensively detailed in the Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA torture Picture of a prisoner subjected to torture and abuse by U S forces at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq The photo has become internationally famous eventually making it onto the cover of The Economist Command responsibility Edit A presidential memorandum of February 7 2002 authorized U S interrogators of prisoners captured during the War in Afghanistan to deny the prisoners basic protections required by the Geneva Conventions and thus according to Jordan J Paust professor of law and formerly a member of the faculty of the Judge Advocate General s School necessarily authorized and ordered violations of the Geneva Conventions which are war crimes 95 828 Based on the president s memorandum U S personnel carried out cruel and inhumane treatment on captured enemy fighters 95 845 which necessarily means that the president s memorandum was a plan to violate the Geneva Convention and such a plan constitutes a war crime under the Geneva Conventions according to Professor Paust 95 861 U S Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and others have argued that detainees should be considered unlawful combatants and as such not be protected by the Geneva Conventions in multiple memoranda regarding these perceived legal gray areas 96 Gonzales statement that denying coverage under the Geneva Conventions substantially reduces the threat of domestic criminal prosecution under the War Crimes Act suggests to some authors an awareness by those involved in crafting policies in this area that U S officials are involved in acts that could be seen to be war crimes 97 The U S Supreme Court challenged the premise on which this argument is based in Hamdan v Rumsfeld in which it ruled that Common Article Three of the Geneva Conventions applies to detainees in Guantanamo Bay and that the military tribunals used to try these suspects were in violation of U S and international law 98 Human Rights Watch claimed in 2005 that the principle of command responsibility could make high ranking officials within the Bush administration guilty of the numerous war crimes committed during the War on Terror either with their knowledge or by persons under their control 99 On April 14 2006 Human Rights Watch said that Secretary Donald Rumsfeld could be criminally liable for his alleged involvement in the abuse of Mohammed al Qahtani 100 On November 14 2006 invoking universal jurisdiction legal proceedings were started in Germany for their alleged involvement of prisoner abuse against Donald Rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales John Yoo George Tenet and others 101 102 103 The Military Commissions Act of 2006 is seen by some as an amnesty law for crimes committed in the War on Terror by retroactively rewriting the War Crimes Act 104 and by abolishing habeas corpus effectively making it impossible for detainees to challenge crimes committed against them 105 Luis Moreno Ocampo told The Sunday Telegraph in 2007 that he was willing to start an inquiry by the International Criminal Court ICC and possibly a trial for war crimes committed in Iraq involving British Prime Minister Tony Blair and American President George W Bush 106 Though under the Rome Statute the ICC has no jurisdiction over Bush since the U S is not a State Party to the relevant treaty unless Bush were accused of crimes inside a State Party or the UN Security Council where the U S has a veto requested an investigation However Blair does fall under ICC jurisdiction as Britain is a State Party 107 Shortly before the end of President Bush s second term in 2009 news media in countries other than the U S began publishing the views of those who believe that under the United Nations Convention Against Torture the U S is obligated to hold those responsible for prisoner abuse to account under criminal law 108 109 One proponent of this view was the United Nations Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment Professor Manfred Nowak who on January 20 2009 remarked on German television that former president George W Bush had lost his head of state immunity and under international law the U S would now be mandated to start criminal proceedings against all those involved in these violations of the UN Convention Against Torture 110 Law professor Dietmar Herz explained Nowak s comments by opining that under U S and international law former President Bush is criminally responsible for adopting torture as an interrogation tool 110 War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Edit Main article War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 In 2005 The New York Times obtained a 2 000 page United States Army investigatory report concerning the homicides of two unarmed civilian Afghan prisoners by U S military personnel in December 2002 at the Bagram Theater Internment Facility also Bagram Collection Point or B C P in Bagram Afghanistan and general treatment of prisoners The two prisoners Habibullah and Dilawar were repeatedly chained to the ceiling and beaten resulting in their deaths Military coroners ruled that both the prisoners deaths were homicides Autopsies revealed severe trauma to both prisoners legs describing the trauma as comparable to being run over by a bus Seven soldiers were charged in 2005 Afghan boy killed on 15 January 2010 by US Army soldiers during the Maywand District murders The Maywand District murders involved the killing of three Afghan civilians by a group of soldiers during the period June 2009 to June 2010 The soldiers referred to their group as Kill Team 111 112 and were members the 2nd Battalion 1st Infantry Regiment and 5th Brigade 2nd Infantry Division They were based at FOB Ramrod in Maiwand from Kandahar Province of Afghanistan 113 114 During the summer of 2010 the military charged five members of the platoon with the murders of three Afghan civilians in Kandahar Province and collecting their body parts as trophies The Kandahar massacre was a mass murder that occurred in the early hours of 11 March 2012 when Staff Sergeant Robert Bales killed 16 Afghan civilians and wounded six others in the Panjwayi District of Kandahar Province Afghanistan Nine of the victims were children and eleven of the dead were from the same family Bales was taken into custody later that morning when he confessed to authorities that he had committed the murders First Lieutenant Clint Lorance was an infantry platoon leader in the 4th Brigade Combat Team of the 82nd Airborne Division In 2012 Lorance was charged with two counts of unpremeditated murder after he ordered his soldiers to open fire on three Afghan men who were on a motorcycle He was found guilty by a court martial in 2013 and sentenced to 20 years in prison later reduced to 19 years by the reviewing commanding general 115 116 117 He was confined in the United States Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth Kansas for six years Lorance was eventually pardoned by President Donald Trump on November 15 2019 Iraq War Edit Main article Iraq War Sabrina Harman and Charles Graner with naked and hooded prisoners forced to form a human pyramid during the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse During the early stages of the Iraq War a group of soldiers committed a series of human rights violations including physical and sexual abuse against detainees in the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq 118 119 120 121 The abuses came to public attention with the publication of photographs of the abuse by CBS News in April 2004 The incidents caused shock and outrage receiving widespread condemnation within the United States and internationally 122 The Department of Defense charged eleven soldiers with dereliction of duty maltreatment aggravated assault and battery Between May 2004 and April 2006 these soldiers were court martialed convicted sentenced to military prison and dishonorably discharged from service Two soldiers found to have perpetrated many of the worst offenses at the prison Charles Graner and Lynndie England were subject to more severe charges and received harsher sentences Graner was convicted of assault battery conspiracy maltreatment of detainees committing indecent acts and dereliction of duty he was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment and loss of rank pay and benefits 123 England was convicted of conspiracy maltreating detainees and committing an indecent act and sentenced to three years in prison 124 Brigadier General Janis Karpinski the commanding officer of all detention facilities in Iraq was reprimanded and demoted to the rank of colonel Several more military personnel who were accused of perpetrating or authorizing the measures including many of higher rank were not prosecuted In 2004 President George W Bush and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld apologized for the Abu Ghraib abuses On March 12 2006 a 14 year old Iraqi girl named Abeer Qassim Hamza al Janabi was raped and subsequently murdered along with her 34 year old mother Fakhriyah Taha Muhasen 45 year old father Qassim Hamza Raheem and 6 year old sister Hadeel Qassim Hamza al Janabi The killings took place in the family home in Yusufiyah a village to the west of the town of Al Mahmudiyah Iraq 125 Five soldiers from the 502nd Infantry Regiment were charged with rape and murder Paul E Cortez James P Barker Jesse V Spielman Bryan L Howard and Steven Dale Green 14 Green was discharged from the U S Army for mental instability before the crimes were known by his command whereas Cortez Barker Spielman and Howard were tried by a military court martial convicted and sentenced to decades in prison 14 Green was tried and convicted in a United States civilian court and was sentenced to life in prison 126 but committed suicide in prison in 2014 John E Hatley was a first sergeant who was prosecuted by the Army in 2008 for murdering four Iraqi detainees near Baghdad Iraq in 2006 He was convicted in 2009 and sentenced to life in prison at the Fort Leavenworth Disciplinary Barracks 127 He was released on parole in October 2020 128 The Hamdania incident involved the alleged kidnapping and subsequent murder of an Iraqi man by United States Marines on April 26 2006 in Al Hamdania a small village west of Baghdad near Abu Ghraib An investigation by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service resulted in charges of murder kidnapping housebreaking larceny Obstruction of Justice and conspiracy associated with the alleged coverup of the incident The Haditha massacre The Haditha massacre occurred on November 19 2005 in Haditha Iraq After Lance Cpl Miguel Terrazas 20 years old was killed by a roadside improvised explosive device Staff Sergeant Frank Wuterich led Marines from the 3rd battalion into Haditha 129 24 Iraqi women and children were fatally shot Wuterich acknowledged in military court that he gave his men the order to shoot first ask questions later 130 after the roadside bomb explosion Wuterich told military judge Lt Col David Jones I never fired my weapon at any women or children that day On January 24 2012 Frank Wuterich was given a sentence of 90 days in prison along with a reduction in rank and pay The day prior Wuterich pled guilty to one count of negligent dereliction of duty 129 No other marine that was involved that day was sentenced to any jail time For the massacre the Marine Corps paid 38 000 total to the families of 15 of the dead civilians 131 Notes Edit The caption for the photograph in the U S National Archives reads SC208765 Soldiers of the 42nd Infantry Division U S Seventh Army order SS men to come forward when one of their number tried to escape from the Dachau Germany concentration camp after it was captured by U S forces Men on the ground in background feign death by falling as the guards fired a volley at the fleeing SS men 157th Regt 4 29 45 References Edit FACT SHEET United States Policy on the International Criminal Court PDF 29 November 2003 Archived from the original PDF on 29 November 2003 148 Cong Rec S3946 The Bush Administration Decision to Unsign the Rome Statute www govinfo gov The U S does not recognize the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court NPR Solis Gary 2010 The Law of Armed Conflict International Humanitarian Law in War 1st ed Cambridge University Press pp 301 302 ISBN 978 052187 088 7 Fourth Geneva Convention Article 2 Fourth Geneva Convention Article 6 President Retires Gen Jacob H Smith PDF The New York Times 17 July 1902 Retrieved 30 March 2008 Melshen Paul November 1979 He Served on Samar Hero or Butcher of Samar Proceedings Archived from the original on 21 April 2008 Retrieved 30 March 2008 via arlingtoncemetery net Miller Stuart Creighton 1982 Benevolent Assimilation The American Conquest of the Philippines 1899 1903 p 220 ISBN 9780300161939 Retrieved 17 November 2022 But Waller seemed unprepared for the orders he received from General Smith I want no prisoners I wish you to kill and burn the more you kill and burn the better it will please me I want all persons killed who are capable of bearing arms in actual hostilities against the United States Waller demanded to know the limit of age to respect He was told ten years of age Nebrida Victor The Balangiga Massacre Getting Even Archived from the original on 2 April 2008 Retrieved 29 March 2008 Dumindin Arnaldo 2006 Philippine American War 1899 1902 Retrieved 30 March 2008 Karnow Stanley n d Two Nations PBS Retrieved 31 March 2008 Bruno Thomas A 2011 The Violent End of Insurgency on Samar 1901 1902 Army History 79 30 46 JSTOR 26296824 a b c d e Gedacht Joshua 2009 Mohammedan Religion Made It Necessary to Fire Massacres on the American Imperial Frontier from South Dakota to the Southern Philippines In McCoy Alfred W Scarano Francisco A eds Colonial Crucible Empire in the Making of the Modern American State Madison WI University of Wisconsin Press p 397 409 ISBN 9780299231040 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Schmitt Eric 8 July 2006 General finds senior Marines lax in Haditha killings probe Chicago Tribune Further reading EditGeneral Edit Jeremy Brecher Jill Cutler Brendan Smith eds 2005 In the name of democracy American war crimes in Iraq and beyond Macmillan ISBN 978 0 8050 7969 2 Vincent Bugliosi 2008 The Prosecution of George W Bush for Murder Vanguard ISBN 978 1 59315 481 3 Frederick Henry Gareau 2004 State terrorism and the United States from counterinsurgency to the war on terrorism Zed Books ISBN 978 1 84277 535 6 Michael Haas 2008 George W Bush war criminal the Bush administration s liability for 269 war crimes ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 36499 0 Jordan J Paust 2007 Beyond the law the Bush Administration s unlawful responses in the War on Terror Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 71120 3 Physicians for Human Rights Human Rights First August 2007 Leave No Marks Enhanced Interrogation Techniques and the Risk of Criminality PDF Washington DC ISBN 978 1 879707 53 5 OCLC 19187545 Archived from the original PDF on 9 August 2010 Retrieved 17 August 2010 Mark Selden Alvin Y So eds 2004 War and state terrorism the United States Japan and the Asia Pacific in the long twentieth century Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 2391 3 By nation Edit IraqRichard A Falk Irene L Gendzier Robert Jay Lifton eds 2006 Crimes of war Iraq Nation Books ISBN 978 1 56025 803 2 Ramsey Clark 1992 War crimes a report on United States war crimes against Iraq Maisonneuve Press ISBN 978 0 944624 15 9 Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed 2003 Behind the war on terror western secret strategy and the struggle for Iraq New Society Publishers p 86 ISBN 978 0 86571 506 6 Marjorie Cohn 9 November 2006 Donald Rumsfeld The War Crimes Case The Jurist Ulrike Demmer 26 March 2007 Wanted For War Crimes Rumsfeld Lawsuit Embarrasses German Authorities Der Spiegel Patrick Donahue 27 April 2007 German Prosecutor Won t Set Rumsfeld Probe Following Complaint Bloomberg L P VietnamGreiner Bernd Anne Wyburd 2009 War Without Fronts The USA in Vietnam New Haven Conn Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 15451 1 Deborah Nelson 2008 The war behind me Vietnam veterans confront the truth about U S war crimes Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 00527 7 Nick Turse 2013 Kill Anything That Moves The Real American War in Vietnam New York Metropolitan Books ISBN 978 0 8050 8691 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States war crimes amp oldid 1134927637, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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