That’s because Khadr is charged with crimes that were only defined as war crimes by the Military Commissions Act, first enacted in 2006. Khadr is charged with conspiracy and material support for terrorism for helping his father’s friends make and plant improvised explosive devices, and for "murder in violation of the laws of war" for throwing a grenade that killed a U.S. soldier during a firefight started by U.S. forces. All of these acts allegedly occurred in the summer of 2002. Back then, making bombs, planting anti-tank mines and killing the other side’s soldiers who were trying to kill you first didn’t violate any rules of war. Because Khadr was not a "privileged" belligerent entitled to the protections of international law, he could be prosecuted in a criminal court in the United States or Afghanistan. He is not, however, a war criminal.
Congress and the defense department have tried to get around this fact. In 2006 and again in 2009, Congress unilaterally re-wrote international law by defining conspiracy and material support for terrorism — which encompasses pretty much anything an enemy force or its supporters might do — as war crimes. In commentary to the rules, the Department of Defense further defined "murder in violation of the laws of war" to include murder of a U.S. soldier by an "unprivileged belligerent" such as Khadr. But simply stating it doesn’t make it true.
Putting a suspect on trial for crimes that did not exist when the acts were committed is a violation of the U.S. Constitution’s prohibition on ex post facto laws. It also violates several international treaties, including article 75 of the Additional Geneva Protocol I of 1977, which says that "no one shall be accused or convicted of a criminal offense on account of any act or omission which did not constitute a criminal offense under the national or international law to which he was subject at the time when it was committed…" The U.S. has acknowledged that this accurately states customary international law. Putting Omar Khadr on trial in a military commission for the acts of which he’s accused, then, according to Professor Glazier, is itself a violation of the laws of war and a "grave breach" of the Third and Fourth Geneva Conventions. Such crimes can be prosecuted by other countries under the principle of universal jurisdiction. In the United States they’re also federal felonies under the War Crimes Act of 1996.
Setting aside the likelihood of any other countries prosecuting the U.S. for war crimes in this situation, it’s odd indeed that the Obama administration would choose to pursue this case — indeed, would make this its first war crimes trial — in the Guantanamo Bay military commissions.
There’s another reason the U.S. might not want to call attention to the circumstances of this case. In August, the government presented as a witness a member of U.S. Special Forces who described entering the compound where Khadr was found and ultimately seized in July 2002. The witness, identified as Sergeant Major D, was armed with an N-4 Rifle and a Glock-9mm pistol. The compound had just been shot up by U.S. Apache helicopters and bombarded by two 500-pound bombs. After sensing a grenade and small arms fire coming from an alleyway, he testified, Major D ran to the alley and shot dead a man he saw with an AK-47 and a grenade. Omar Khadr, meanwhile, was seated on the ground in a dusty light-blue tunic, his back to Major D. Khadr was not armed, he wasn’t holding or aiming any sort of weapon, nor was he threatening any U.S. servicemember in any way. Yet Sergeant Major D testified that he immediately shot him twice in the back. He then walked over and "thumped him in the eye" to see if he was still alive. He was.
Targeting a civilian not actively participating in hostilities is normally a war crime. Sergeant Major D testified that he shot Khadr because he viewed him as a "hostile" based on his being in the compound, which was permitted by the military’s rules of engagement.
The laws of war should doom the military commission prosecution of Omar Khadr. And ultimately, for the U.S. government, that’s not a bad thing. After all, if its interpretation of the laws of war were accurate, then the armed civilian CIA agent that accompanied Special Forces on their July 2002 raid could be equally guilty of murder in violation of the laws of war if he killed any of the al Qaeda members who died that day. So could CIA operatives operating remote-controlled drones targeting al Qaeda and Taliban leaders around the world.
Charlie Savage reported in the Times that the Obama administration doesn’t want to put a stop to the case, such as by pushing a plea bargain, because it would be seen as "improper interference." But if the case is itself "improper" or even illegal, then the choice is to stop it now or see a conviction reversed later by a court on appeal. The latter choice might save the administration some immediate embarrassment before the midterm elections; but it will leave Omar Khadr cooped up even longer in a military prison on fictitious crimes. And it will leave a far more embarrassing legacy for the United States to contend with in the long run.
This blog originally appeared at Human Rights First.



18 Comments







The US and Canada governments have a major problem with the Canadian Khadr brothers. Apparently, neither government learned anything from the Maher Arar rendition to Syria. Canada will likely someday pay restitution to the Khadr brothers, too. Both the Obama and Harper administrations are war criminals.
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“The federal government has decided to appeal a court ruling that stayed extradition proceedings against Abdullah Khadr on the grounds U.S. authorities had been complicit in his jailing and abuse in Pakistan.
“This is a government that has shown little respect for the judiciary by appealing every decision we have received, only to be later corrected by the Supreme Court,” Dennis Edney, one of Khadr’s Edmonton-based lawyers, said Tuesday.
In granting the rare stay on Aug. 4, Ontario Superior Court Justice Christopher Speyer found the U.S. had violated basic principles of justice.
He called the human-rights violations suffered by Khadr “both shocking and unjustifiable.” ”
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/canada/breakingnews/canadian-government-set-to-appeal-abdullah-khadr-extradition-stay-101923303.html
Daphne, you seem to have inadvertently dropped the first two paragraphs of this important post – as follows, copied from your original at Human Rights First:
[You should have about half an hour remaining in the diary editing window in which to add your omitted paragraphs to the diary.]
Thank you so much for highlighting Professor Glazier’s new article – I look forward to reading it.
Do bears sh*t in the woods?
Seriously, if American leadership ever faces the equivalent of the Nuremberg trials, even the presidents, Bush/Obama will claim to have been “Just following orders”.
Whose orders?
That’s a secret.
The Abstract of Professor Glazier’s paper (or analysis, but, at any rate, more than a newspaper “article” or op-ed, as I referred to it) reads:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1669946##
Isn’t this called shooting yourself in the foot? Look, world, we have perfect aim! Must be all our smart bullets.
Nice time to be publicizing this important piece, right before the mid-terms.
And good news from Canada- eh?
No. The Obama Administration is guilty of multiple war crimes. Aim higher.
While the Democrats are in charge, maybe they’ll try to institute honest Governance. Dont you think? The following musical satire is about the Obama Administration’s War Crimes. It was released on the 4th of July, 2010:
Video Link
[Edited by Moderator. Do not embed videos into comments. Just put in link]
I apologize for the mis-step.
The war crimes charge is ludicrous.
Trying Khadr under domestic law wouldn’t make any sense either, in the case of somebody fighting against the foreign invasion of the country in which he had been living for some time and, because he was 15, it would also contradict the point of, and undermine, the Optional Protcol to the CRC on children in armed conflict of which Canada and US are both signatories. This is why groups like Amensty are so outraged.
Prosecution under domestic law is more appropriate when a person takes up arms against an established state authority. In the summer of 2002, Khadr was fighting on the side of the unrecognized defacto government, the Taliban. The recognized government no longer existed. Karsai was just being nominated to head an interim government to replace the Taliban which was largely defeated but still fighting. I don’t know if the US officially declared itself an Occupying Power, but I still don’t think it would make sense to charge Khadr under domestic law at the time in those circumstances. The war then could rightly be considered an international conflict and Khadr could have been given POW status under Geneva as an inhabitant taking up arms against an invasion. I don’t know if he ever even had a proper hearing on his status as required by Geneva.
Like every other remaining detainee at Guantanamo, diane, Omar Khadr has not been assigned either de facto POW status since capture, nor been allowed a fair hearing that weighed evidence from both sides before denying him such status, via a Third Geneva Convention-mandated Article 5 hearing (a mandate that Army Regulation 190-8 implements). Which Khadr’s lawyers elaborated upon in this 2010 pleading in his years-long Commission prosecution – a pleading which was evidently not ruled on, at least in writing, by the Commission judge before Khadr’s Commission trial commenced last month, even though POWs may not be prosecuted by military commission, per the Military Commissions Act itself. [And even though the Commission judge may himself conduct an Article 5 hearing, pre-trial, as the new Court of Military Commission Review decided in 2007 in an appeal in Khadr's own case (such a hearing was belatedly and apparently uniquely held in 2007 for Salim Hamdan, by a different military judge, before Hamdan's Commission trial).]
Thanks for excerpting the recent interview with Ethan McCord and his fellow soldiers, thatvisionthing @ 11. I admire and salute McCord’s principles and guts in speaking out the way he has. McCord’s original account of that 2007 Baghdad firefight and its aftermath, including its traumatic effect on the minds of American soldiers long after the fact, is a must read:
We’re looking in the same place — you just linked to Michael Moore, and that was one of three front-page links to McCord. The other two stories have to do with a Wichita TV report of McCord talking to community members as they watch Collateral Murder at the library with him. “It’s estimated more than seven million people have viewed the video documenting the incident,” says the newscaster at the end. A bit of video I wish she had inserted there would be this at Democracy Now, the bumper video between segments, at 23:30, Iraqis in Baghdad gathered round a laptop watching Collateral Murder. A nice counterpoint of shared humanity.
And speaking of war crimes, as in us, the soldier in the Collateral Murder video who rescued the kids from the van, him and two other soldiers in that group have recently given interviews where they say their battalion’s commanding officer had given a “360-degree rotational fire” standing order as a rule of engagement whereby if an IED went off all soldiers were to shoot everyone around, 360 degrees, whether civilian, innocent, man, woman or child. Ralph Lopez at afterdowningstreet says that’s a war crime we prosecuted German soldiers for after WW2. Can I get a prosecutor to look at that?
- snip –
- snip –
Gee, we invade a country, illegally, everybody hates us — what’s a soldier to do?
Professor Glazier has very clearly, and very helpfully, dissected the five charges lodged against Omar Khadr by the Guantanamo Military Commissions’s “Convening Authority” [the person in this play-acting Commission system who acts the part of the Commanding Officer in a legitimate, battlefield, of-necessity commission setting].
Glazier’s careful analysis will be an excellent baseline against which to compare the pending Court of Military Commission Review decisions (on the appeals of the two non-plea-bargain Commission convictions) about these same matters, which are not unique to Omar Khadr’s Commission case:
What about the war itself? I see it as a war crime. The country of Afghanistan never attacked us.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Omar_Khadr_getting_battlefield_first_aid.jpg
Bombing civilians is a War Crime. Trying Prisoners of War is a War Crime. Bombing cities is a War Crime.
Torture is a War Crime. Trying someone as an adult for a crime committed as a child is a Crime Against Humanity. Killing people on the basis of accusation without proof is an atrocity.
I keep thinking of McCord and what he went through and what other kids are going through every day, ours and theirs. I’ve been back from Vietnam almost forty years and there are times when it’s right there. The ones who come home from these illegal wars of choice we started are going to have a hell of a life in front of them.