(Washington) – United States president Donald Trump’s public threat to attack Iranian
sites of cultural importance would be war crimes if carried out, Human
Rights Watch said today. The US government should immediately clarify
that the US will at all times comply with the laws of war.
Amid escalating US-Iran tensions following a January 3, 2020 US drone strike in Iraq that killed Qassem Soleimani, commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force, Trump tweeted
on January 4 that as a warning to Iran, the US has “targeted 52 Iranian
sites … some at a very high level & important to Iran & Iranian
culture, and those targets, and Iran itself, WILL BE HIT VERY FAST AND
VERY HARD.”
“President Trump should publicly reverse his threats against Iran’s
cultural property and make clear that he will not authorize nor order
war crimes,” said Andrea Prasow,
acting Washington director at Human Rights Watch. “The US Defense
Department should publicly reaffirm its commitment to abide by the laws
of war and comply only with lawful military orders.”
The laws of war prohibit deliberate attacks on civilian objects not
being used for military purposes. Objects of great importance to a
people’s cultural heritage must not be the object of attack. Article 53
of Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions specifically prohibits any acts
of hostility against cultural objects, including making such objects the
target of reprisals. The US Law of War Manual (2016), which has
extensive provisions relating to the protection of cultural property,
incorporates this provision into US law. The US is also a party to the
Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of
Armed Conflict (1954), which similarly prohibits such attacks.
Under customary laws of war, individuals who order or take part in
deliberate attacks on civilian objects are committing war crimes.
Article 85 of Protocol I specifically states that attacks on cultural
objects are grave breaches of the convention. The Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court, to which neither the US nor Iran is a
party, includes as a war crime intentionally directing attacks against
buildings dedicated to religion, education, art, science, or charitable
purposes or historic monuments that are not military objectives.
The US War Crimes statute holds criminally liable US nationals,
including officials and military personnel, who commit war crimes. Under
customary laws of war, every combatant has a duty to disobey a
manifestly unlawful order.
Trump’s threats against Iran’s cultural heritage reflect his
administration’s broader disregard for human rights in Iran and
elsewhere, Human Rights Watch said. The broad sanctions that the US
imposed following the rejection of the Iran nuclear deal, the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action, have contributed to ordinary Iranians’ inability to get essential medicines.
This latest threat to target Iran’s cultural treasures will likely
reinforce the view among Iranians that the US has little regard for
their health or welfare.
“Trump’s threat to attack Iran’s cultural heritage shows his callous
disregard for the global rule of law,” Prasow said. “Whether refusing to
condemn the brutal murder of Saudi dissident Jamal Khashoggi or
pardoning convicted war criminals, Trump has shown little respect for
human rights as part of US foreign policy.”
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