Tue

18

Nov

2008

Vigilante Man: Crime Without End, Amen
Written by Chris Floyd   
The Iraq War? Illegal. Who says so? The former top law lord of America's main ally in the invasion and occupation. What does it mean?  It means that the whole mass-murdering operation was, has been, and remains a damnable crime against humanity by any and all legal standards, even those of the invading countries themselves.  (To say nothing of the moral abomination involved).

And from this, what follows? Nothing. No prosecutions. No justice for the victims, no punishment for the murder bosses -- some of whom are already slithering across the bloodsoaked corridors of the imperial courts to join the circles of power again. The rest are leisurely packing their bags for a cozy, coddled, easy retirement -- while their corporate cronies continue to feast on the blood money of the soon-to-be-augmented war machine.

But who cares about all that! Wonder what kind of puppy the Obamas are gonna get? Wonder what they're gonna name it? And do ya think Obama really will get the NCAA to bring in a football playoff? Glorioski, ain't it a grand time to be alive?

From the Guardian:
One of Britain's most authoritative judicial figures last night delivered a blistering attack on the invasion of Iraq, describing it as a serious violation of international law, and accusing Britain and the US of acting like a "world vigilante".  Lord Bingham, in his first major speech since retiring as the senior law lord, rejected the then attorney general's defence of the 2003 invasion as fundamentally flawed.

Contradicting head-on Lord Goldsmith's advice that the invasion was lawful, Bingham stated: "It was not plain that Iraq had failed to comply in a manner justifying resort to force and there were no strong factual grounds or hard evidence to show that it had." Adding his weight to the body of international legal opinion opposed to the invasion, Bingham said that to argue, as the British government had done, that Britain and the US could unilaterally decide that Iraq had broken UN resolutions "passes belief".

Governments were bound by international law as much as by their domestic laws, he said. "The current ministerial code," he added "binding on British ministers, requires them as an overarching duty to 'comply with the law, including international law and treaty obligations'."

...Addressing the British Institute of International and Comparative Law last night, Bingham said: "If I am right that the invasion of Iraq by the US, the UK, and some other states was unauthorised by the security council there was, of course, a serious violation of international law and the rule of law.

"For the effect of acting unilaterally was to undermine the foundation on which the post-1945 consensus had been constructed: the prohibition of force (save in self-defence, or perhaps, to avert an impending humanitarian catastrophe) unless formally authorised by the nations of the world empowered to make collective decisions in the security council..."

The moment a state treated the rules of international law as binding on others but not on itself, the compact on which the law rested was broken, Bingham argued. Quoting a comment made by a leading academic lawyer, he added: "It is, as has been said, 'the difference between the role of world policeman and world vigilante'."


PLUS: Ry Cooder contributes this comment
:

 

Comments (2)add comment

Debbie(aussie) said:

960
...
Sometimes I really hate this world we live in! It is so frustrating! Words fail me at the moment(most of the time really). Thank you Chris for the articulate and meaningful way you express my own feelings and frustrations.
 
November 18, 2008
Votes: +2

scott douglas said:

1740
...
Noting the growing list of power-elite appointments to high posts being perpetrated by the Obamanator, and the increasingly perplexed look on the faces of the Barackacites -- an icy starlight-dawning that I like to imagine might have crossed the visage of one or more of the less cogent party-people on the Titanic as the band finally tuned down, a sour off-key violin-bow backstroke on the mental soundtrack, perhaps -- I think that the unsinkable HMS Anglo-American Hegemony may be in for something less 'hopeful' than a good dry dock repair...


And, to occasion his departure, Bush may issue myriad absurdist blanket pardons, thick as the plague of flies come fresh from the corpse-strewn world he will leave behind, swarming through the torn and tattered screen-door we used to call a Constitution...


Man the lifeboats! Women and children and investment bankers and war criminals first!


Many people - some of us posting here - will remember all of this. Many more will come to 'remember' something they did not understand at the time, but will begin to comprehend as the ramifications multiply over the coming years. Time will pass. The world will change. Ask Augusto Jose Ramon Pinochet Ugarte about that -- crimes committed: 1973. Indictments commenced: 1998...

 
November 18, 2008 | url
Votes: +4

Write comment
smaller | bigger

security image
Write the displayed characters


busy Quote this article on your site

To create link towards this article on your website,
copy and paste the text below in your page.




Preview :


Powered by QuoteThis © 2008
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 18 November 2008 22:53 )