In light of the growing scandal surrounding Blackwater private security forces in Iraq, and efforts on the part of the Maliki government to expel the contractors from the country, Bush administration attorneys are apparently contemplating an awkward legal question: are Blackwater guards who’ve killed Iraqi civilians our own “unlawful combatants”?
As a rule, it’s a label given to terrorists caught in war zones without uniforms. It may be provocative, but there are U.S. officials who believe the name may apply to Blackwater. (thanks to reader DOK for the tip)
The issues surrounding the private security contractors are being examined by lawyers at the departments of State, Defense and Justice. Disagreements about the contractors’ status exist between agencies and within the Pentagon itself.
“I think it is an unresolved issue that needs to be addressed,” said a senior Defense Department official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the subject. “But if that is in fact the case, what the heck are we doing?” […]
If the contractors were the aggressors in an incident, they could be deemed to be unlawfully using offensive force, said Scott Silliman, a retired Air Force lawyer and now a professor at Duke University. He said they could claim self-defense only if they had been fired on.
“The only force they can use is defensive force,” Silliman said. “But we may be seeing some instances where contractors are using offensive force, which in my judgment would be unlawful.”
It’s a debate wrought with implications.
If Blackwater security forces have used offensive force, and I think there’s abundant evidence that they have, the U.S. may conclude that using private security in war zones is necessarily wrong.
And if so, the strain on an already-overtaxed U.S. military to provide security for diplomats and others is going to make a bad situation even worse.
As for Blackwater, Michael Schmitt, a professor of international law at the Naval War College and a former Air Force lawyer, told the LAT that killing civilians violates the law of war. “It is a war crime to kill civilians unlawfully in an armed conflict,” he said.
I was curious why the administration’s attorneys would even raise the question in the first place. It’s not like them to be pro-active, particularly when dealing with an issue like this one. Apparently, some officials have come to believe the Bush administration has to worry about exceeding the limits of treaties of which we are a part.
The question is an outgrowth of federal reviews of the shootings, in part because the U.S. officials want to determine whether the administration could be accused of treaty violations that could fuel an international outcry. […]
The designation of lawful and unlawful combatants is set out in the Geneva Convention. Lawful combatants are nonmilitary personnel who operate under their military’s chain of command. Others may carry weapons in a war zone but may not use offensive force. Under the international agreements, they may only defend themselves.
When dealing with foreign detainees at Guantanamo Bay, the Bush White House has taken an expansive definition of “unlawful combatants,” pushing the label to its logical extreme (and then some).
Something tells me the White House will prefer a much narrower definition in this context.