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Press
Releases
11/27/2007
U.S.
wants Geneva Conventions clarified to deal with terrorism,
top legal adviser says
By FRANK JORDANS
Associated Press Writer
GENEVA (AP) -- The United States is
"absolutely committed" to the Geneva Conventions
but wants them clarified to answer questions arising from
the fight against terrorism, a senior U.S. State Department
official said Tuesday.
John Bellinger III, the State Department's legal adviser,
said the laws of war only apply to conflicts between nations
-- not to insurgents or international terrorist groups.
"The United States remains absolutely committed to the
Geneva Conventions," he told reporters on the sidelines
of a conference hosted by the International Committee of the
Red Cross, the guardian of the rules drawn up after World
War II.
But, he added, "one does have to read what they say,
and they do not apply to every situation."
"The Geneva Conventions do not give you answers about
who can be held in a conflict with a non-state actor,"
such as insurgent groups, Bellinger said. "They do not
tell you how long you can hold someone in a conflict with
a non-state actor."
He said the conventions "were designed in 1949 for different
sorts of circumstances, and they don't provide easy answers
in all cases to how to deal with international terrorists."
Greater clarity is needed about which practices are permitted
and which are prohibited, he said.
Asked about the case of an Associated Press photographer held
by the U.S. military in Iraq for 19 months, Bellinger said
his understanding was that American forces were operating
under an international mandate that allows for the detention
of people who might pose a security threat.
The Geneva Conventions contain specific references to the
protection of journalists operating in war zones, including
that they be treated as civilians unless they take part in
hostilities.
U.S. military officials have alleged that Bilal Hussein, detained
in Ramadi on April 12, 2006, had links to terrorist groups.
The officials have refused to disclose the evidence against
him.
An AP investigation of the case shows no support for allegations
that Hussein, 36, took part in insurgent activities or bomb-making
as alleged.
Bellinger said he understood the U.S.-led multinational force
in Iraq had conducted multiple reviews of Hussein's case and
decided to refer it to an Iraqi tribunal.
"If we picked up a photographer in the United States,
then he could be held only for a limited time unless he were
tried," Bellinger said, adding that international law
does not stipulate how long a detainee can be held and whether
the person needs to be charged.
"That's the difference in international law," he
said.
Dorothea Krimitsas, a Red Cross spokeswoman, said the neutral
agency has visited Hussein and other U.S. detainees in Iraq,
the last time over the summer, to check on his detention conditions
and speak privately with him.
But she said the Red Cross never makes its observations public,
and she couldn't say whether the group will have access to
Hussein when he is in Iraqi custody.
Bellinger said the lack of legal clarity when it comes to
dealing with non-state actors has posed a challenge to the
United States, which has always regarded itself as a leader
in the field of international law.
"What we need to do is work with other governments to
first identify where there are gaps or lack of answers, and
then to start developing some principles about how one would
respond, at least as a matter of policy," Bellinger said.
Once a framework has been developed to address outstanding
questions about the treatment of non-state actors, "one
can begin to think later on whether one would try to turn
it into something that might be binding," he said.
New U.S. legislation to prohibit intelligence-gathering techniques
that could amount to torture _ banned under international
law -- showed that the U.S. approach to dealing with the threat
of terrorism was evolving, he said.
Bellinger also noted that the U.S. Army's new field manual
forbids waterboarding, an interrogation technique that simulates
drowning.
He also welcomed a bill being examined by U.S. lawmakers that
would allow for prosecution of private contractors if they
commit crimes in war zones.
___
Associated Press writer Alexander G. Higgins contributed to
this report.
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