Coito ergo sum wrote:
That begs the question. One, when we initially went in there, we were not there at anyone's "invitation." We occupied areas of Afghanistan, and as such we are supposed to follow the Geneva Convention as an Occupying Power. You can't just leave the civilian population to starve or descend into civil war, and so that is what we've been fighting for - to get the country back up and running. If the country is back up and running and can stand on its own two feet, then we ought to leave. If it isn't able to stand on its own two feet, then arguably we have a Convention obligation to make it so.
We might have an obligation to keep the civilian populace from starving while we're there, but the civilian population is not starving. As for civil war, there's nothing about "peacekeeping" in the document that requires us to stay and set up a government
In the old days, pre-Convention, countries just slaughtered people and let them starve, but the idea of the Convention was to place more responsibilities on occupying powers for the protection of civilians.
Nobody's starving in Afghanistan who wasn't starving before we arrived. They have a functioning economy and government. We've far exceeded any requirements of the Convention you cited and are free to leave whenever we like.
Once a country is "occupied" there is generally not a government left to be "at war" with. Once you occupy a country you're by definition no longer at war with it. We WERE at war with Afghanistan when it was run by the Taliban. We are now fighting an insurgency. The insurgency is not what is protected by the Fourth Geneva Convention - civilians are.
And the civilians democratically voted in a new government, which is now in charge. We are no long at war nor are we occupying Afghanistan. We are assisting them in fighting an insurgency, which relieves us of any responsibility to further "rebuild" Afghanistan.
Seth wrote:
Article 2
In addition to the provisions which shall be implemented in peace-time, the present Convention shall apply to all cases of declared war or of any other armed conflict which may arise between two or more of the High Contracting Parties, even if the state of war is not recognized by one of them.
...
Although one of the Powers in conflict may not be a party to the present Convention, the Powers who are parties thereto shall remain bound by it in their mutual relations. They shall furthermore be bound by the Convention in relation to the said Power, if the latter accepts and applies the provisions thereof.
Neither the Taliban nor Al Quaeda are "powers" or "High Contracting Parties." We are not at war with or in armed conflict with the legitimate Power of Afghanistan, which is its legitimately elected government. We are assisting them in fighting terrorists.
Thanks for pointing that out.
The Taliban was the Government of Afghanistan in 2001.
No, it wasn't.
So, yes, Afghanistan was, and is a "High Contracting Party."
Yes, it is, but the Taliban was not the legitimate government, it was a terrorist insurgency that overthrew the legitimate government, which we restored.
We did occupy Afghanistan. When that occupation ended or will end depends on the facts. The point remains, we occupied Afghanistan and can't simply run out of there and leave the country to founder.
Yes, we can. Nothing in the Convention requires us to support the country after we cease to occupy it.
If, however, Afghanistan is reasonably safe and secure, then our obligations stopped.
Cite the provision that says that a Power which has ceased to occupy another Power is obligated to make that other Power "reasonably safe and secure." I see that an occupier is required ONLY to provide food, shelter and medical care to civilians, nothing more.
It doesn't have anything to do with some fiction about invitations. We weren't invited there.
Yes, we were, and we remain there by invitation.
Seth wrote:
That provision you quoted means, in the case of Afghanistan, Afghanis who are in land occupied by the United States. Afghanis are not nationals of a neutral state. Afghanistan was the country invaded.
Seth wrote:
Seth wrote:
Japan was not a signatory and engaged in egregious violations all during WWII, which was why it was perfectly fine for us to nuke them and walk away. Of course we didn't walk away, but that's beside the point.
Yes, but, the Geneva Convention didn't exist until 4 years after the Nagasaki and Hiroshima bombs were dropped, so it's really beside the point.
Wrong. The first treaties were signed in 1864, 1906, and 1929. The 1949 document is the Fourth Geneva Convention.
That's not what "Fourth" means - criminy, dude. There was no Convention that covered the same subject matter.
First Geneva Convention: Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded in Armies
Second Geneva Convention: Amelioration of the Condition of Wounded, Sick and Shipwrecked Members of Armed Forces at Sea
Third Geneva Convention: Treatment of Prisoners of War
Fourth Geneva Convention: Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War,
As I said - the Fourth Geneva Convention did not come about until 4 years after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, so it's really beside the point. The prior three Conventions don't deal with the Occupying Power and protection of civilians subject matter, as noted above.
So - in short - you're wrong - way fucking off base.
Goal post shifting. You said "The Geneva Convention didn't exist till 1949." You were wrong. You might have said "The Fourth Geneva Convention pertaining to the protection of civilian persons in time of war didn't exist until 1949, but you didn't. I called you on that error.
Seth wrote:
You think we're going to "fix" Libya? We fucking well better not.
It's Britain and France's baby. We're just providing "support."
The same is true of Afghanistan. We are providing "support" to the legitimate government in it's war with insurgents and terrorists, nothing more. [/quote]
We're supporting the invading countries, not Libya. Libya is being invaded. If the Brits and the Frogs occupy the place then they will have to honor their obligations under the Fourth Geneva Convention.
And if the newly-elected Libyan government invites them in to help secure it against the insurgency and illegitimate despotism of Kadaffy, there are no such obligations because those obligations fall on the Libyan government.
Seth wrote:
Oh, and we are only obligated under those provisions if we are "occupying" Afghanistan, which we're not. We are there AT THE INVITATION of the legitimate, democratically-constituted government.
We occupied many parts of Afghanistan, and therefore became an occupying power under the Convention.
Nope. We've provided troops and logistics at the request and with the permission of the government. That is different from "occupying" a country under the Convention.[/quote]
That's a bunch of bullshit. In 2001, the government of Afghanistan told us to fuck right off, and so we invaded Afghanistan, and we occupied it (or parts of it). We weren't invited, and we didn't "provide logistics." When did the government of Afghanistan, 2001, ask us for anything?
The Taliban were never the legitimate government of Afghanistan. They were insurgents and oppressors who overthrew the legitimate government, which remained in exile, and which granted us permission to assist in retaking the country from terrorists.
Seth wrote:
Once we've put them back together again, we can leave.
We can leave tomorrow with no obligations because it was a primitive shithole when we arrived, and it's still a primitive shithole, but a slightly better one since we arrived because we've been engaged in spending billions of American dollars to build infrastructure and improve their lives.
You may be right, because we may have fulfilled our obligations as an occupying power. There is a reason we're staying there, though, and basically that's because we know that there are folks who would re-Talibanize Afghanistan and there would be a civil war, probably costing hundreds of thousands of lives. That's part of what the Convention is designed to protect.
That's a political decision on our part, not a requirement of the Geneva Convention. We can withdraw tomorrow and have no more obligations towards Afghanistan.
Seth wrote:
However, if we leave before the new government is able to stay up, well, then arguably we are violating the convention.
Cite the provision.
You can't just walk in, appoint some titular head of government, have him invite you, and then claim there is no more occupation.
Sure we can, and did. Which means we can leave any time. Or be asked to leave at any time.
Well, you "can" do whatever you want, but that wouldn't be in compliance with the Convention. It would be creating a fiction to avoid the obligations.
Show me in the document where it says that we are required to support the returning government once a terrorist insurgency has been defeated and the legitimate democratically elected government has been restored.
Seth wrote:
The facts dictate what the reality is, not the form.
And the fact is that we have never occupied Afghanistan against the legitimate government. We entered Afghanistan in hot pursuit of terrorists and terrorist supporters and we RESTORED the legitimate government which had been taken over by the Taliban against the wishes of the Afghan people, which did indeed then ask us to stay and help. At that moment, any "occupation" ceased and we became invited guests of the legitimate government.
Of course we did, and the government doesn't have to be "legitimate."
Sure it does. The Taliban were not signatories to the Convention, nor did they honor the Convention, neither does Al Quaeda. "Afghanistan" is not "The Taliban." The Taliban never held legitimate power in Afghanistan, so we were justified in assisting the legitimate government-in-exile to be restored.
Of course we always label the government that we're invading "illegitimate."
That's because we don't invade legitimate governments, we invade terrorists and despots. Nice little loophole, that.
Was Hitler's Germany "legitimate?" Was Iraq under Hussein "legitimate?" No, but it's still a State Party to the Convention, so once we occupied iraq, we had obligations under the Fourth Geneva Convention. End of story.
Big difference: Both Germany and Iraq were recognized by our State Department and we had diplomatic relations with them. We never had diplomatic relations with, or recognized as legitimate, the Taliban. They were always and at all times considered to be despotic terrorists and not the legitimate Afghan government.
Nor have you demonstrated how, under the Convention, even if it does apply to Afghanistan, we are obligated to provide more than emergency relief to civilians by way of food, shelter and medical supplies. There's nothing in the document about "nation rebuilding" at all.
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