The curious incident of the Afghanistan war crimes statutory inquiry being set up

7 thoughts on “The curious incident of the Afghanistan war crimes statutory inquiry being set up”

  1. Might it also be that the Govt will be forced to take a position on other nations’ similar actions and must take a proper one about our own.

  2. Presumably this is unrelated to the fact that the office of the prosecutor at the ICC is still running an investigation into the situation in Afghanistan?

  3. ‘Breaker’ Morant’s infamous, though mostly forgotten, Rule 303 of the latter part of the Second Boer War comes to mind.

    The Special Forces of their day, including some Australians as it happens, were not told formally to take Boer prisoners and then to dispose of them once useful information had been extracted.

    But such prisoners posed a risk to a mission out on the veldt, tied up scarce men and resources to look after them, and they could not reasonably be expected to give their parole to become non combatants in exchange for being released.

    We know of Rule 303 because the Establishment responded to accusations of murder of unarmed prisoners by setting up a military inquiry that discovered to its surprise, feigned or otherwise that there was such a practice, but that it was not, of course, officially sanctioned.

    Morant, a junior officer, contended at the tribunal that he had been given the sense he was not to keep prisoners alive whilst he and his men were in the field by word of mouth from his commanding officer, who had since died in action.

    Morant described the field order as Rule 303.

    A few other ranks, mostly Australians and an officer, Morant, were executed by a firing squad as a result of the inquiry’s findings.

    A firing squad armed with standard British Army issue Lee Enfield .303 rifles.

    As far as the British Establishment was concerned the matter had been settled to their satisfaction and that should surely be enough for any other interested party, but in Australia, it contributed to a growing sense that they were still regarded by the British as not quite pukka and on this occasion suitable for scapegoats.

    “What more does one expect from rough colonials, Carruthers?”

    Incidences of the killing of prisoners by Allied troops are to be found in serious military histories of the wars and police actions since the Second Boer War.

    Few were thoroughly investigated and even fewer resulted in formal charges being laid.

    It will be very interesting to learn how this inquiry plays out, particularly as when Morant was given his modus operandi by word of mouth, there were no, unlike today suitable devices in existence to record and save, however vaguely worded, Rule 303.

  4. Most interesting.

    Three points.

    1) It was reported that Mr Mercer MP (who served in Afghanistan) had various concerns – https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-66958305

    2) The International Criminal Court is investigating – https://www.icc-cpi.int/afghanistan

    ICC jurisdiction is complementary – i.e. comes into play if a signatory State does not take action itself.

    3) Government probably hates it but Panorama has been, and doubtless still is, on the case – https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-62083197

  5. Given this teaser, one can’t help speculating on who big enough needs a truth out for lack of sustainably plausible deniability about what they knew, and when.

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