From owner-imap@chumbly.math.missouri.edu Mon Feb 17 17:01:03 2003
Date: Sun, 16 Feb 2003 16:46:11 -0600 (CST)
From: veracare
<veracare@ahrp.org>
Subject: Fuzzy ethics of nonlethal chemical weapons_Christian Science
Article: 152111
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Alliance for Human Research Protection (AHRP)
Contact: Vera Hassner Sharav 212-595-8974 e-mail: veracare@ahrp.org
http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0214/p02s01-usmi.html
As the world waits to hear more from UN weapons inspectors about Iraq's potential for producing chemical weapons, the US itself is pondering the use of chemicals in any conflict there.
Defense officials would like to use so-called, nonlethal
chemicals
to take the fight out of Iraqi soldiers who may be holed
up in caves or buildings or mixed in with innocent civilians. But as
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld acknowledged in Congressional
testimony the other day, the use of riot-control agents and other
substances designed to incapacitate people without causing death or
lasting injury violates international law - specifically, the 1993
Chemical Weapons Convention.
In many instances, our forces are allowed to shoot somebody and
kill them, but they're not allowed to use a nonlethal riot-control
agent,
Mr. Rumsfeld complained to lawmakers. Some find it ironic,
if not incomprehensible, that under the Chemical Weapons Convention,
civilian police forces may use chemicals to put down riots but
military units may not fire them at enemy soldiers.
On its face, this would seem to be a problem that even
arms-controladvocates and those opposed to war would like to see
rectified. Especially, as President Bush told religious broadcasters
this week, because Saddam Hussein is positioning his military
forces within civilian populations in order to shield his military and
blame coalition forces for civilian casualties that he has caused.
In an audio broadcast Tuesday, chief terrorist Osama bin Laden seemed
to encourage Iraqi civilians to join the fight against a US-led
invasion. Bin Laden spoke of the importance of drawing the enemy
into long, close, and tiring fighting, taking advantage of camouflaged
positions in plains, farms, mountains, and cities.
Hussein
reportedly has armed one million Iraqi civilians with rifles and
grenade launchers.
Such combat - at close quarters and with civilians and perhaps
hostages part of the mix - could call for nonlethal chemical weapons
to sort out the real bad guys
from noncombatants, human
shields, and those forced to take up arms.
But others see big problems. For one thing, US allies in the fight -
and certainly many in the Arab world - would be opposed to anything
that smacks of chemical warfare. Special Forces no doubt have
knockout gas to neutralize bunkers,
says Stephen Baker, a retired
US Navy rear admiral and senior fellow at the Center for Defense
Information in Washington. But my feeling is that the sensitivities
are way too great to use [it].
Others fear that the use of chemicals to incapacitate enemy troops while saving nearby civilians could be the slippery slope toward the use of more lethal chemicals. They point out that the two major uses of chemical weapons in the 20th century - World War I and the Iran-Iraq War - started out with tear gas and escalated to deadly chemicals.
Also, nonlethal
weapons can kill people, as Russia found out
when it used a gaseous opiate to knock out Chechen hostage takers in
Moscow and killed more than 120 hostages in the process. Still, the US
military - bolstered by a recent report by the National Research
Council urging the military to give greater priority to such devices -
continues to push for the development of nonlethal weapons. Research
paid for by the Pentagon is under way.
Critics say this already violates international law, including the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention as well as the Chemical Weapons Convention.
They worry that in an age of dangerous peacekeeping missions plus unconventional warfare involving armed militias and terrorists, there may be greater pressure to use chemicals and other nonlethal weapons.
The US experience in Somalia in 1993, when a failed peacekeeping mission saw 29 American servicemen (and hundreds of Somalis) killed in violent urban combat, is a case in point.
After Mogadishu, the Pentagon decided that it was morally,
militarily, and legally acceptable to arm itself with supposedly
nonlethal biochemical weapons for the purpose of attacking civilians
that, in the Pentagon's view, pose a threat to US forces,
says
Edward Hammond of the Sunshine Project in Austin, Texas, a
nongovernmental organization that works on biological-weapons issues.
Mr. Rumsfeld sees the situation in less sinister terms. There are
times when the use of nonlethal riot agents is perfectly
appropriate,
he says, although legal constraints make for a
very awkward situation.
In order for US troops to use incapacitating chemicals, the president
would have to sign a waiver of longstanding restrictions. When US
troops pulled out of Vietnam in 1975, then-president Gerald Ford
issued an executive order renouncing
the use of herbicides like
the infamous Agent Orange as well as riot-control agents. Such agents
can be used in wartime to control prisoners, protect civilians, and
carry out rescue missions, but the president must preapprove such use.