
(Image: shriekingtree/flickr)
Unbelievably, in 2011 this question has not yet been settled in the courts of the United States. Human rights attorneys are headed back to court in the coming month to argue that, yes, victims of war crimes and torture by contractors should have a path to justice. Attorneys from my organization, the Center for Constitutional Rights, along with co-counsel, are representing Iraqi civilians who were horribly tortured in Abu Ghraib and other detention centers in Iraq in seeking to hold accountable two private contractors for their violations of international, federal and state law. By the military’s own internal investigations, private military contractors from the U.S.-based corporations L-3 Services and CACI International were involved in the war crimes and acts of torture that took place, which included rape, being forced to watch family members and others be raped, severe beatings, being hung in stress positions, being pulled across the floor by genitals, mock executions, and other incidents, many of which were documented by photographs. The cases, Al Shimari v. CACI and Al-Quraishi v. Nakhla and L-3 aim to secure a day in court for the plaintiffs, none of whom were ever charged with any crimes.
The Department of Justice has thus far failed to prosecute any of the contractors involved, so the only path currently available for any accountability is through these human rights lawsuits. However, after years of litigation, the allegations of torture by contractors in these cases have still never been seriously examined, much less ruled on, by the courts. None of the plaintiffs in any of these cases has yet to have his or her day in court to tell their account of what they suffered. The reason is because the private military contractors have raised numerous legal defenses– many of which the plaintiffs’ lawyers have argued are plainly inapplicable to private corporations–which have kept the cases from moving into the discovery phase, where the nature of the contractors obligations, actions and oversight, as well as what happened to the plaintiffs would be the examined in detail. So far, CACI and Titan/L-3 have focused the courts on any question but whether the plaintiffs were tortured. As CCR and co-counsel summarize the question in their brief in Al-Quraishi v. Nakhla and L-3:
Are corporate defendants entitled to categorical “law of war” immunity for their alleged torture and war crimes when such a proposed immunity runs counter to settled understandings of the law of war and centuries of Supreme Court precedent, and would give for-profit contractors more protection from suit than genuine members of the U.S. Armed Forces?
This week, CCR and co-counsel filed briefs that argue the cases must go forward. Additionally, yesterday a number of other human rights organizations along with a group of retired high-ranking military officers are filing supporting amicus briefs to add their voices to the chorus of concern over contractor impunity. The military officers’ brief argues that, “given that employees of civilian contractors indisputably are not subject to the military chain of command, and therefore cannot be disciplined or held accountable by the military, it makes little sense to extend to them such absolute tort law immunity for their misconduct.”
This legal battle is taking place as the United States is outsourcing war at a rate beyond anything ever seen in our history. During the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan the number of contractors has at times far exceeded the number of soldiers. Now, as the U.S. ends the war in Iraq, the State Department is reporting that it has been in the process of tripling the number of armed security contractors it will employ in Iraq to provide security for the thousands of State Department employees that will remain to work in what is now by far the largest U.S. embassy in the world.
It’s important for people to understand what is going on in the courts regarding this current litigation not only because the torture survivors need justice, but also because these cases have wide implications beyond this particular situation. The corporations involved argue that they should be exempt from any investigation into the allegations against them because, among other reasons, our federal government’s interests in executing wars would be at stake if corporate contractors can be sued. This is incredibly flawed logic; the lawsuits are for acts that are far outside the “laws of war” and these are crimes that are not in the government’s interest.
They are also invoking a new, sweeping defense that first appeared two years ago in a separate case CCR and co-counsel brought against these same corporations, Saleh v Titan. The new rule is termed “battlefield preemption” and aims to eliminate any civil lawsuits against contractors that take place on any “battlefield.” Among the numerous alarms this should set off is the fact that in the U.S.’ War on Terror it is argued that many places far from any actual warzone are now battlefields. Indeed, a detention center in Iraq filled with civilians who were never charged with any crimes, which is what we’re talking about in these current cases before the court, should not be considered a battlefield. And acts of torture, which is what is at issue in these cases, cannot be characterized as “combat,” which is what this defense allows.
Think about what it would mean for private military contractors to be immune from any type of civil liability, even for war crimes, as long as it takes place on a so-called battlefield during this time of unprecedented use of contracting and when the term “battlefield” is being stretched to meaninglessness in the ever-expanding U.S. War on Terror. Anyone and everywhere could be a target. That is what is at stake here. Everyone who cares about human rights should be paying attention.
In giving their reasoning for dismissing these cases, the Fourth Circuit panel that originally heard the case (over a strong dissenting opinion) expressed its fear that cases like these would “undermine the flexibility that military necessity requires in determining the methods for gathering intelligence.” But this is exactly the point. No one should ever have the “flexibility” to commit war crimes, rape and other forms of torture. There absolutely must be consequences for these violations. If there are not, courts will essentially be saying anything goes – even the most sadistic and brutal torture – if you are a private military contractor.
Laura Raymond is Advocacy Program Manager at the Center for Constitutional Rights.



30 Comments

I guess I don’t understand. If the contractors are liable only under the laws of war, then the laws of war prohibit torture under any circumstances, no matter what form of war is in effect, for any prisoner in detention, under common Article 3, which is supposed to be the bottom line for everything, no ifs, ands or buts. Laws of war crimes apply to everyone, so where do contractors feel they get a break by appealing to them? “…the following acts are and shall remain prohibited at any time and in any place whatsoever…violence to life and person, in particular murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture…”
It doesn’t say, “except for L3/Titan and CACI.”
Shame on the United States of America for allowing this.
they serve the rich, so “yes, they can”
This is painful to contemplate. Maybe I’m just having trouble finding words that adequately express how wrong… how evil this is. I do have some questions.
1) wtf can the possible justification be for the huge embassy, thousands of State Department employees and 16,000 private security to protect them? We have already failed at all attempts at major infrastructure projects. What are we doing with a mid-size US town in the middle of Iraq?
2) Does anyone really think that armed, uniform wearing foreign warriors, employed by the US State Department will not be thought of as American troops? Does anyone believe that being tortured by an employee of a private company contracted by the US government is somehow less awful. Everything these out of control sadists do will hurt just as much, be just as vile, and will cause just as much (justified) enmity toward the US.
3) NDAA that almost certainly will become the law, states the entire world is the battlefield in the “war on terror,” including the US. What does this bode for us?
Everything we have done in Iraq has been based on lies. Beginning with the reason to invade, the staggering unreported civilian deaths, torture, allowing private corps to buy most of the Iraqi resources, the bs about why we left, and the most recent: that we had no ulterior motive other than the wellbeing of the Iraqi people. Mind boggling.
If it wasn’t for Bradley Manning and Julian Assange, we’d be totally oblivious to the shame our government has brought on our country. No wonder he’s being treated so harshly.
Laura, thanks for bringing this to our attention, I needed to know. What can I do to help? Can I cross post at my site: Our World Report.
Thanks for the comments. In terms of the laws of war question, you are hitting the nail on the head that there is a huge gap in accountability to international human rights law, and even more so if these cases are dismissed. As the military officers’ brief linked to here lays out, contractors aren’t subject to the military chain of command. The Department of Justice should be taking action to prosecute human rights violations by contractors that occur but they have failed so far (which is one area where public pressure could help). Human rights organizations like CCR cannot prosecute for criminal acts, but we can bring civil lawsuits, which is exactly what these two cases are. In response to the lawsuits, the contractors are saying they have immunities, while CCR and co-counsel as well as all the groups that filed amicus briefs are arguing they don’t. We’ve laid out some of the arguments contractors are using for immunity in this factsheet which might explain this more: http://www.ccrjustice.org/learn-more/faqs/accountability-torture-private-military-contractors
@FeettoDaFire, please feel free to cross post.
I think you mean immunity?
you beat me to it. when I saw the headline, my first thought was: Sure! Why the heck not??
Sickening as that is, this is our not so new reality.
Are corporate defendants entitled to categorical “law of war” immunity for their alleged torture and war crimes when such a proposed immunity runs counter to settled understandings of the law of war and centuries of Supreme Court precedent, and would give for-profit contractors more protection from suit than genuine members of the U.S. Armed Forces?
Is that a serious question is that what they are trying to argue in court?
“Think about what it would mean for private military contractors to be immune from any type of civil liability, even for war crimes, as long as it takes place on a so-called battlefield during this time of unprecedented use of contracting and when the term “battlefield” is being stretched to meaninglessness in the ever-expanding U.S. War on Terror. Anyone and everywhere could be a target. That is what is at stake here.”
Yes. Sadly, I think it’s a done-deal, and that’s why Team USA, initially during the Cheney-Bush Admin & now during Obamaco, pushed to *privatize* the military on one level. It removed ever-so-much from the public eye, from the military chain of command, etc. And presto! No oversight and all kinds of stuff can go on, and who’s gonna stop it? Most USA citizens are propogandized to believe that it’s “for our own *safety*” so this is what it “takes.”
Sigh.
Thank you for the post to bring this to our attention. Best to you.
The military officers’ brief argues that, “given that employees of civilian contractors indisputably are not subject to the military chain of command, and therefore cannot be disciplined or held accountable by the military, it makes little sense to extend to them such absolute tort law immunity for their misconduct.”
On its face I think such immunity would be illegal under war crimes laws absolute tort law immunity for their misconduct sounds like crack pot Bushie Jon Yoo’s legal defense of torture theories.
Unitary executive theory
Yoo suggested that since the primary task of the President during a time of war is protecting US citizens, the President has inherent authority to subordinate independent government agencies, and plenary power to use force abroad.[50] Yoo contends that the Congressional check on Presidential war making power comes from its power of the purse, and that the President, and not the Congress or courts, has sole authority to interpret international treaties such as the Geneva Conventions “because treaty interpretation is a key feature of the conduct of foreign affairs”.[51] His positions on executive power are controversial because the theory can be interpreted as holding that the President’s war powers place him above any law.[51][52][53][54]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Yoo#War_crimes_accusations
The private Mercs defense sounds straight from Jon Yoo.
Yoo’s legal opinions were not shared by some within the Bush Administration. Secretary of State Colin Powell strongly opposed what he saw as an invalidation of the Geneva Conventions,[13] while U.S. Navy general counsel Alberto Mora campaigned internally against what he saw as the “catastrophically poor legal reasoning” and dangerous extremism of Yoo’s opinions.[14] In December 2003, Yoo’s memo on permissible interrogation techniques, also known as the Bybee memo, was repudiated as legally unsound by the OLC, then under the direction of Jack Goldsmith.[14] In June 2004, another of Yoo’s memos on interrogation techniques was leaked to the press, after which it was repudiated by Goldsmith and the OLC.[15]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Yoo#War_crimes_accusations
” In December 2003, Yoo’s memo on permissible interrogation techniques, also known as the Bybee memo, was repudiated as legally unsound by the OLC, then under the direction of Jack Goldsmith.”
Has Obama ever had a legal justification to excuse torture or is he still using Yoo’s justification? How can corporations claim rights that as far as I know were repudiated for our army?
Yes. Sadly, I think it’s a done-deal, and that’s why Team USA, initially during the Cheney-Bush Admin & now during Obamaco, pushed to *privatize* the military on one level. It removed ever-so-much from the public eye, from the military chain of command, etc. And presto! No oversight and all kinds of stuff can go on, and who’s gonna stop it?
Our government pays the corporations if our government fails to prosecute then Obama is on the hook for war crimes.
Legal justifications for torture being all right for corporations but not the army read like a bad joke just how did these guys get through law school?
If this is an example of Conservative thought one wonders how long they have been brain dead?
Murder / Torture / Treason
Imagine my torture knowing on 4/24/12 GW Bush is going to address Plumstead Christian Academy at Calvery Church on rt. 113 in Souderton Pa unless the school board uninvites him. He intends to lecture them on ” decision points” as he was the Decider
For two weeks after he was invited I stood in silence at the entrance as the buses arrived w/ students in an orange jump suit with a hood worded “Shame”
Sign say it all ” Traitors Torture” or “This War is a Damn Lie” though one person was offended by the word damn.
which included rape, being forced to watch family members and others be raped,
This is not some solders getting drunk and being stupid they meant to use rape as a means of extracting information and to scare people as a tool of terror. This was planned, this was ok’ed by higher ups the higher ups are the ones who paid them and thats the civilian government not the military unless the military gave them orders.
Either way the Bush WH and now Obama’s WH for covering up for them are in trouble.
“Attorneys from my organization, the Center for Constitutional Rights”
What are these consitutional rights you speak of???
There is no such thing. People have NO rights when habeas corpus is dead, as it is now in the U.S. What good is freedom of speech if you can be detained forever without charge?
You can go ahead and save folks some money and close down your organization because there is no such thing as Constitutional Rights in the USA today.
And that bottom line is why you have issues like torture, warrentless wiretapping, declaring wars by the executive instead of the legislative, etc.
Our forefathers weren’t perfect, but they’ve got to spinning in their graves these days.
Thank you, Laura Raymond.
Please stay in touch and keep us aware of what is going on.
Free the oppressed Americans!
No one should get a free pass on torture/war crimes.
Arrest them all. Start with Barack.
Maybe they should be handed over to the government of the country they are in if they don’t wear the uniform of the occupier.
They hate us for our torture (I mean freedom).
The private contractors who tortured have the option of blaming the U.S. military for “setting the standard” or for actually “ordering” them to use “enhanced techniques”. The U.S. military cannot take the chance that this will occur; thus, this investigation will be quashed via some legislative or legal maneuver so that neither the contractors nor the military will ever see a courtroom. Any bets?
Laura, Thanks. It is important and I am going to cross post. I will be sure to give proper credit and provide you with a link to it.
impunity |imˈpyoōnitē|
noun
exemption from punishment or freedom from the injurious consequences of an action
OF COURSE mercenaries are above the law!
Duh! Why else would the GOP want to replace low-cost soldiers with obscenely expensive mercenaries! So they can murder and torture on behalf of the American Taxpayer! There is no other plausible explanation.
The Republicans figured out how to make even higher profits from their intentional and avoidable ‘wars’: Mercenary armies!
And now that the US has made private mercenary armies legitimate to the world, every body wants them. America has created entire armies of mercenary armies whose duties are to empty the treasuries of the nations they are sold to and to torture and murder the innocent for fun and profit.
Why are you even asking such an obvious question?
Coming soon to a neighborhood near you.
Obviously the fix is getting rid of those freedoms they supposedly hated us for.
CCR rules! I encourage Firepups to join me in contributing to them.
I cross posted at http://www.ourworldreport.com/do-private-military-contractors-have-impunity-to-torture. I also created an account under your name so if you want to post articles yourself in the future you can. If you think you’ll use it email me at info@OurWorldReport.com and I’ll send you the password for access. If not, I’ll just delete the account. In any case, thanks for letting me cross post.