World Tribunal on Iraq
World
Tribunal on Iraq www.worldtribunal.org See Statement 1.session Bruxelles
April 14.-17. 2004 
www.brusselstribunal.org The
BRussells Tribunal Saturday April 17 2004. People vs Total
War Incorporated Questioning the
New Imperial World Order A Hearing on the Project for the New American Century
( PNAC) COMMISSION MEMBERS
François
Houtart (Chairman) - Jean Bricmont (co-chairman) - Pierre Klein (secretary)
- Samir Amin - Denis Halliday - Sabah Al Mukhtar - Nawal El Saadawi PROSECUTION
TEAM
Felicity Arbuthnot - Karen Parker DEFENSE
Jim
Lobe - Tom Barry WITNESSES Ramsey Clark - Armand Clesse -
Michel Collon - Sara Flounders - Geoffrey Geuens - Amal Al-Khedairy - Saul
Landau - Michael Parenti - John Saxe Fernandez - Hans Von Sponeck - Immanuel Wallerstein
- Wamidh Nadhmi - Haïfa Zangana Biographies
here Written testimonies by :
Neil MacKay - Emman
Khammas - Jacques Pauwels - Scott Ritter - Michel Chossudovsky - Glen Rangwala
Honorary
guests : Kutsuzawa Daizo - Ayca Cubukcu - Ayse Berktay - Akira Maeda
-Abdul Ilah Al Bayaty- Jayan Nayar - Susanne Thorbek - Paola Manduca - Jean Visconti
- Amy Bartholomew- Heike Haensel - Asai Kenji - Tony Sympson
The
BRussells Tribunal: Conclusions of the commission Consistent
with the tradition of the 1967 Russell Tribunal on the Vietnam War and the work
of the People's permanent tribunal and other similar tribunals such as the one
held in Brussels in 1991, the BRussells Tribunal met on 14-17 April 2004. This
Tribunal is the opening session of the World Tribunal on Iraq, a series of hearings
scheduled to conclude in Istanbul in 2005. The BRussells Tribunal focused
on the programs and policies proposed by "The Project for the New American
Century" (PNAC), a predominantly neo-conservative "think-tank"
that has advocated global US hegemony, primarily through the threat or use of
military power. The objective of the Tribunal, working as a commission
of inquiry, was to establish whether there was a link between PNAC's proposals
and the foreign and military strategy of the current US government, and the subsequent
invasion and occupation of Iraq. The Commission also examined the impact of policies
and programs advocated by PNAC on the stability and security of international
relations. To establish its findings and shape its report the Commission
heard testimony from specialists on international affairs and witnesses knowledgeable
about the current conditions in Iraq. The Commission also relied on PNAC's reports
and official US government documents, as well as written analyses (1). The
Commission came to the following conclusions: The PNAC program consists
of three main components: to establish US hegemony in the new century, relying
primarily on military and technological superiority; to prevent the emergence
of any competing global or regional powers by imposing what is sometimes termed
a "Pax Americana"; to exercise pre-emptive action against all perceived
threats to American "interests" and security. A significant number
of signatories to PNAC's 1997 founding Statement of Principles" became senior
members of the current US administration, including Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld
and Paul Wolfowitz. The adoption of those principles by this administration is
evidenced by official White House documents such as "The National Security
Strategy" of September 2002. These principles have been put into action through
the 2003 invasion of Iraq. According to a clear majority of States and
a large consensus of legal experts, the invasion of Iraq constitutes an act of
aggression, a breach of one of the most fundamental norms of the international
legal order. This demonstrates that the implementation of policies emanating from
PNAC and endorsed by the current administration runs counter to the principles
of the UN Charter and undermines the United Nations itself, which bears the primary
responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security. The
invasion of Iraq has resulted in more than 10.000 civilian deaths. With each passing
day of occupation, the number of victims grows, as do the gross violations of
humanitarian law and human rights, such as arbitrary detention, ill-treatment
and deprivation in regard to basic needs. The situation of the Iraqi people has
clearly deteriorated and the promises of democracy and freedom have proved to
be illusory. The constant use of the words "democracy", "freedom"
and "human rights" in such a context amounts to a complete perversion
of those terms. Far from bringing stability and peace in Iraq and the region,
the invasion and occupation have created instability and chaos. Moreover, the
deliberate destruction of Iraq has effectively promoted the Israeli government's
policies of further unlawful expansion and de facto annexation of territories
as well as further annihilation of the rights of the Palestinian people. The Tribunal
noted that PNAC itself called explicitly in 2002 for the US administration to
align itself with the views of the Israeli government. These developments increase
hostility between the peoples of the region and the West, contrary to the proclaimed
objectives of making the world a safer place. There is evidence of
a consistent US strategy, as envisioned by the PNAC report entitled "Rebuilding
America's Defences", to establish global domination by military means. Contrary
to claims that this domination would be a "benevolent hegemony", it
is more likely to lead to a state of permanent war. PNAC policies are based on
brutal unilateralism and disregard for legality. As such, the ideas of PNAC constitute
an intellectual crime. The war in Iraq is only one element of a global agenda
which is linked with logics of the dominant economic system, inspired by neo-conservative
ideology and supported by religious fundamentalism. Due to the growing resistance
encountered by the occupying powers in Iraq and other unanticipated difficulties,
the United States and United Kingdom have made cynical requests for the involvement
of the United Nations in Iraq, thereby pre-empting the sovereign rights of the
Iraqi people to determine their future. The United Nations should avoid complicity
with -- let alone legitimise in any way -- the illegal invasion and occupation
of Iraq. Any such action would further discredit this world body. The UN should
restore its legitimacy through ensuring the complete withdrawal of all occupying
forces and assisting the Iraqi people in recovering their full sovereignty. Any
involvement of the European Union or of NATO to help the occupying powers should
be refused. Finally, the Tribunal calls upon the peoples of the world to
demand that their governments · deny military, political, financial
or any other support to the occupying powers; and · oppose the illegal
implementation by occupation forces or their surrogates of any plans for the wholesale
privatization of the Iraqi economy. The Tribunal also expresses its solidarity
with the Iraqi people and its support for their attempts at recovering their full
sovereignty. ____________ [1] The oral and written testimonies as well
as official documents are reproduced in a preparatory dossier entitled "Questioning
the New Imperial World Order". - End -
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