|





What Retirement
is for......

Flying space-A

Writing

Working on Veterans
projects


|
 |
Email
editor@wesupportthevets.com
Today from the Editor's desk
Tuesday, October 02, 2007
William A. Gast Editor--Wesupportthevets.com
Warning; This one will
really frost your cookies--standby for attitude adjustment
and control.
The Los Angeles times printed the following
article by Dave Savage. As you read this, it will become clear to most
of you --I'm quite confident, why we joined Billy Kidwell and other
veteran web editors in establishing February 12th as VETERANS BETRAYAL
DAY. We recently celebrated the third anniversary with a great headline
three hour radio show on 1360 AM Air America.
The article;
White House Turns
Tables on Former American POWs
Gulf War pilots
tortured by Iraqis fight the Bush administration in
trying to collect compensation.
By David G. Savage
Times Staff Writer
February 15, 2005
WASHINGTON - The latest chapter in the legal history of
torture is being written by American pilots who were
beaten and abused by Iraqis during the 1991 Persian Gulf
War. And it has taken a strange twist.
The Bush administration is fighting the former prisoners
of war in court, trying to prevent them from collecting
nearly $1 billion from Iraq that a federal judge awarded
them as compensation for their torture at the hands of
Saddam Hussein's regime.
The rationale: Today's Iraqis are good guys, and they
need the money.
The case abounds with ironies. It pits the U.S.
government squarely against its own war heroes and the
Geneva Convention.
Many of the pilots were tortured in the same Iraqi
prison, Abu Ghraib, where American soldiers abused
Iraqis 15 months ago. Those Iraqi victims, Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has said, deserve
compensation from the United States.
But the American victims of Iraqi torturers are not
entitled to similar payments from Iraq, the U.S.
government says.
"It seems so strange to have our own country fighting us
on this," said retired Air Force Col. David W. Eberly,
the senior officer among the former POWs.
The case, now being appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court,
tests whether "state sponsors of terrorism" can be sued
in the U.S. courts for torture, murder or
hostage-taking. The court is expected to decide in the
next two months whether to hear the appeal.
Congress opened the door to such claims in 1996, when it
lifted the shield of sovereign immunity - which
basically prohibits lawsuits against foreign governments
- for any nation that supports terrorism. At that time,
Iraq was one of seven nations identified by the State
Department as sponsoring terrorist activity. The 17 Gulf
War POWs looked to have a very strong case when they
first filed suit in 2002. They had been undeniably
tortured by a tyrannical regime, one that had $1.7
billion of its assets frozen by the U.S. government.
The picture changed, however, when the United States
invaded Iraq and toppled Hussein from power nearly two
years ago. On July 21, 2003, two weeks after the Gulf
War POWs won their court case in U.S. District Court,
the Bush administration intervened to argue that their
claims should be dismissed.
"No amount of money can truly compensate these brave men
and women for the suffering that they went through at
the hands of this very brutal regime and at the hands of
Saddam Hussein," White House Press Secretary Scott
McClellan told reporters when asked about the case in
November 2003.
Government lawyers have insisted, literally, on "no
amount of money" going to the Gulf War POWs. "These
resources are required for the urgent national security
needs of rebuilding Iraq," McClellan said.
The case also tests a key provision of the Geneva
Convention, the international law that governs the
treatment of prisoners of war. The United States and
other signers pledged never to "absolve" a state of "any
liability" for the torture of POWs.
Former military lawyers and a bipartisan group of
lawmakers have been among those who have urged the
Supreme Court to take up the case and to strengthen the
law against torturers and tyrannical regimes.
"Our government is on the wrong side of this issue,"
said Jeffrey F. Addicott, a former Army lawyer and
director of the Center for Terrorism Law at St. Mary's
University in San Antonio. "A lot of Americans would
scratch their heads and ask why is our government taking
the side of Iraq against our POWs."
The POWs' journey through the court system began with
the events of Jan. 17, 1991 - the first day of the Gulf
War. In response to Hussein's invasion of Kuwait five
months earlier, the United States, as head of a United
Nations coalition, launched an air attack on Iraq,
determined to drive Iraqi forces from the oil-rich Gulf
state. On the first day of the fighting, a jet piloted
by Marine Corps Lt. Col. Clifford Acree was downed over
Iraq by a surface-to-air missile. He suffered a neck
injury ejecting from the plane and was soon taken
prisoner by the Iraqis. Blindfolded and handcuffed, he
was beaten until he lost consciousness. His nose was
broken, his skull was fractured, and he was threatened
with having his fingers cut off. He lost 30 pounds
during his 47 days of captivity.
Eberly was shot down two days later and lost 45 pounds
during his ordeal. He and several other U.S. service
members were near starvation when they were freed. Other
POWs had their eardrums ruptured and were urinated on
during their captivity at Abu Ghraib.
All the while, their families thought they were dead
because the Iraqis did not notify the U.S. government of
their capture.
In April 2002, the Washington law firm of Steptoe &
Johnson filed suit on behalf of the 17 former POWs and
37 of their family members. The suit, Acree vs. Republic
of Iraq, sought monetary damages for the "acts of
torture committed against them and for pain, suffering
and severe mental distress of their families."
Usually, foreign states have a sovereign immunity that
shields them from being sued. But in the Anti-Terrorism
Act of 1996, Congress authorized U.S. courts to award
"money damages ... against a foreign state for personal
injury or death that was caused by an act of torture,
extrajudicial killing, aircraft sabotage [or] hostage
taking."
This provision was "designed to hold terrorist nations
accountable for the torture of Americans and to deter
rogue nations from engaging in such actions in the
future," Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and George Allen
(R-Va.) said last year in a letter to Atty. Gen. John
Ashcroft that urged him to support the POWs' claim.
The case came before U.S. District Judge Richard W.
Roberts. There was no trial; Hussein's regime ignored
the suit, and the U.S. State Department chose to take no
part in the case.
On July 7, 2003, the judge handed down a long opinion
that described the abuse suffered by the Gulf War POWs,
and he awarded them $653 million in compensatory
damages. He also assessed $306 million in punitive
damages against Iraq. Lawyers for the POWs asked him to
put a hold on some of Iraq's frozen assets.
No sooner had the POWs celebrated their victory than
they came up against a new roadblock: Bush
administration lawyers argued that the case should be
thrown out of court on the grounds that Bush had voided
any such claims against Iraq, which was now under U.S.
occupation. The administration lawyers based their
argument on language in an emergency bill, passed
shortly after the U.S. invasion of Iraq, approving the
expenditure of $80 billion for military operations and
reconstruction efforts. One clause in the legislation
authorized the president to suspend the sanctions
against Iraq that had been imposed as punishment for the
invasion of Kuwait more than a decade earlier.
The president's lawyers said this clause also
allowed Bush to remove Iraq from the State Department's
list of state sponsors of terrorism and to set aside
pending monetary judgments against Iraq.
When the POWs' case went before the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit,, the
three-judge panel ruled unanimously for the Bush
administration and threw out the lawsuit.
"The United States possesses weighty foreign policy
interests that are clearly threatened by the entry of
judgment for [the POWs] in this case," the appeals court
said.
The administration also succeeding in killing a
congressional resolution supporting the POWs' suit.
"U.S. courts no longer have jurisdiction to hear cases
such as those filed by the Gulf War POWs," then-Deputy
Secretary of State Richard L. Armitage said in a letter
to lawmakers. "Moreover, the president has ordered the
vesting of blocked Iraqi assets for use by the Iraqi
people and for reconstruction."
Already frustrated by the turn of events, the former
POWs were startled when Rumsfeld said he
favored awarding compensation to the Iraqi prisoners who
were abused by the U.S. military at Abu Ghraib.
"I am seeking a way to provide
appropriate compensation to those detainees who suffered
grievous and brutal abuse and cruelty at the hands of a
few members of the U.S. military. It is the right thing
to do," Rumsfeld told a Senate committee last year.
By contrast, the government's lawyers have refused to
even discuss a settlement in the POWs' case, say lawyers
for the Gulf War veterans. "They were willing to settle
this for pennies on the dollar," said Addicott, the
former Army lawyer.
The last hope for the POWs rests with the Supreme Court.
Their lawyers petitioned the high court last month to
hear the case. Significantly, it has been renamed Acree
vs. Iraq and the United States.
The POWs say the justices should decide the "important
and recurring question [of] whether U.S. citizens who
are victims of state-sponsored terrorism [may] seek
redress against terrorist states in federal court."
This week, Justice Department lawyers are expected to
file a brief urging the court to turn away the appeal.
30
|
We predict this issue is
going to receive the strongest response yet from Veterans to
Rumsfeld and his deputy Doctor David Chu. Veterans are tired of
hearing our own elected officials and appointed Cabinet
members belittle the military family, the intelligence of
the individuals in uniform and Veterans who served this country. We
need to remind Secretary Rumsfeld that this is OUR country
and OUR citizens he is admonishing. How can an
individual in his (appointed) position completely ignore not only
the Veterans and active military of this country but the mandate of
every American that respects our military? This response to these
brave men that suffered torture ON BEHALF OF THESE UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA is nothing less than arrogant ingratitude.
We will continue to follow this story and see that every media
source available
reads Secretary Rumsfeld's remarks. Is it possible that Secretary
Rumsfeld in his aged mental capacity can not tell the difference
between an Iraqi war
prisoner( i.e., bad guy) and an
Iraqi war
Veteran (American
Patriot)??
Bill Gast
USN
(RET) DAV
Editor, We support the Vets
|