Wall Street Journal Editorial
June 22, 2006
The Pentagon yesterday announced the names of seven Marines and a Navy
corpsman charged with the April 26 kidnapping and murder of a
52-year-old Iraqi man in the town of Hamdania. The accusations are
grave and, if proved, will almost certainly lead to severe sentences.
We suspect no parallel process is taking place among Iraqi insurgents
for the weekend murders near Yusufiya of U.S. soldiers Thomas L. Tucker
and Kristian Menchaca.
That's a distinction worth pondering the next time you hear Iraq war
critics carp at the U.S. refusal to apply Geneva Convention privileges
to enemy combatants. The Convention extends those privileges to
combatants who abide by the laws it sets for war, including the
treatment of prisoners.
Combatants who fail to obey those laws--by not wearing distinctive
military insignia or targeting civilians--are not entitled to its
privileges. If they were, the very purpose of the Convention would be
rendered a nonsense. And this is why the U.S. has refused Geneva
privileges to the enemy combatants at Guantanamo, which we hope is an
argument heeded by the Supreme Court as it decides the Hamdan case.
Especially so given the kinds of combatants the U.S. and the rest of
the civilized world now face in Iraq. Privates Tucker and Menchaca were
not simply ambushed, taken prisoner and killed. "The torture was
something unnatural," said Major General Abdul Azziz Mohammed Jassim of
Iraq's Defense Ministry, hinting at the state of the soldiers' remains.
The corpses were so mutilated that they could be positively identified
only through DNA testing.
Here, then, is the enemy we face in Iraq: not nationalists or
extremists or even fanatics, but something like a band of real-life
Hannibal Lecters for whom human slaughter is both business and
religious fulfillment. Following the killing, an Internet statement
said to be from the Mujahadeen Shura Council praised Abu Hamza
al-Muhajir--who is Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's successor as head of Al Qaeda
in Iraq--with "the implementation of the sentence." Note the legalistic
pretensions: This is the kind of "justice" Iraqis could expect should
the insurgents come to power. And it is the enemy that might well come
to power if the U.S. left Iraq prematurely, as many Senate Democrats
urged yesterday.
No wonder so many Iraqis are risking their lives by joining the
military and the police force to defend themselves against their
would-be masters, a point that's too often forgotten by critics of the
war. Thus, following the slaughter of Tucker and Menchaca,
Representative John Murtha issued a statement, notably short on grief,
insinuating that Iraqis are a nation of conniving killers.
"I continue to be concerned with the fact that our military men and
women fighting in Iraq often tell me they do not know who the enemy
is," said the Pennsylvania Democrat, who favors immediate U.S.
withdrawal from Iraq. "They do not know whom they can trust. . . . One
day the Iraqis are smiling and waving at them on the streets; the next
day the same people are throwing grenades at them."
Mr. Murtha might have checked his facts before issuing this generalized
slur. According to the Iraq Coalition Casualty Count Web site
(http://icasualties.org/oif/),
in 2005 there were 3,510 Iraqi military and police fatalities, almost
all at the hands of terrorists. That's four times the number of U.S.
servicemen killed that year, and it gives the lie to the notion that
Iraqis are doing little in their own defense while Coalition forces do
all the heavy lifting.
Meantime, the U.S. military continues to examine allegations that
Marines killed 24 civilians in the town of Haditha last November.
Pentagon investigators have also uncovered evidence of detainee abuse
by U.S. Special Forces in early 2004--just as the Army was the first to
disclose the prison abuses at Abu Ghraib.
For some, all this is just more evidence of inveterate U.S. barbarity
or the criminal abuses made possible by Dick Cheney and Alberto
Gonzales. In fact, it testifies to a U.S. military and executive branch
willing to investigate, disclose and prosecute errant military
behavior, whatever the military or political price. That's something
Mr. Murtha and his fellow-travelers in Congress and the media might not
recognize. But a majority of Iraqis do, which is why, in the battle
against the killers of Privates Tucker and Menchaca, they line up to
fight on our side.
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