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By Meron Rappaport
"What we did was insane and monstrous, we covered entire towns in cluster bombs," the head of an IDF rocket unit in Lebanon said regarding the use of cluster bombs and phosphorous shells during the war.
Quoting his battalion commander, the rocket unit head stated that the IDF fired around 1,800 cluster bombs, containing over 1.2 million cluster bomblets.
In addition, soldiers in IDF artillery units testified that the army used phosphorous shells during the war, widely forbidden by international law. According to their claims, the vast majority of said explosive ordinance was fired in the final 10 days of the war.
Originally posted by iskander
Use of WP is legal only in illumination shells, but it is regularly used as a chemical incendiary agent.
US used WP on Faludja for example, burned a lot of people, and its the terror of "white death" that drove people out of the city.
A US Army handbook published in 1999 states clearly that the use of white phosphorus burster bombs against enemy personnel is "against the law of land warfare" and the US State Department clearly denied last year that any such weapons were being deployed in Iraq.
Originally posted by iskander
I just posted this one in another thread. Here we go again.
Originally posted by iskander
www.timesonline.co.uk...
A US Army handbook published in 1999 states clearly that the use of white phosphorus burster bombs against enemy personnel is "against the law of land warfare" and the US State Department clearly denied last year that any such weapons were being deployed in Iraq.
(4) Burster Type White phosphorus (WP M110A2) rounds burn with intense heat and emit dense white smoke. They may be used as the initial rounds in the smokescreen to rapidly create smoke or against material targets, such as Class V sites or logistic sites. It is against the law of land warfare to employ WP against personnel targets.”
Law of Land Warefare
34. Employment of Arms Causing Unnecessary Injury
a. Treaty Provision.
It is especially forbidden * * * to employ arms, projectiles, or material calculated to cause unnecessary suffering. (HR, art. 23, par. (e).)
b. Interpretation. What weapons cause "unnecessary injury" can only be determined in light of the practice of States in refraining from the use of a given weapon because it is believed to have that effect. The prohibition certainly does not extend to the use of explosives contained in artillery projectiles, mines, rockets, or hand grenades. Usage has, however, established the illegality of the use of lances with barbed heads, irregular-shaped bullets, and projectiles filled with glass, the use of any substance on bullets that would tend unnecessarily to inflame a wound inflicted by them, and the scoring of the surface or the filing off of the ends of the hard cases of bullets.
36. Weapons Employing Fire
The use of weapons which employ fire, such as tracer ammunition, flamethrowers, napalm and other incendiary agents, against targets requiring their use is not violative of international law. They should not, however, be employed in such a way as to cause unnecessary suffering to individuals.
38. Chemical and Bacteriological Warfare
...[snip]...
The use in war of smoke and incendiary materials is not prohibited or restricted by the Geneva Protocol of 1925.
Source: U.S.M.C. FM 27-10, MCRP 5-12.1A & Army FM 27-10 Chapter 2 Section III(includes 1976 changes and in constant operational use since 1956)
emphasis added
But America is a signatory to the Chemical Weapons Convention, which it ratified in 1997, and that agreement forbids the use of any substance to kill or harm either soldiers or civilians if it is being used mostly for its toxicity
The use of weapons which employ fire, such as tracer ammunition, flamethrowers, napalm and other incendiary agents, against targets requiring their use is not violative of international law. They should not, however, be employed in such a way as to cause unnecessary suffering to individuals.
(4) Burster Type White phosphorus (WP M110A2) rounds burn with intense heat and emit dense white smoke. They may be used as the initial rounds in the smokescreen to rapidly create smoke or against material targets, such as Class V sites or logistic sites. It is against the law of land warfare to employ WP against personnel targets.”
and emit dense white smoke. They may be used as the initial rounds in the smokescreen to rapidly create smoke or against material targets
Originally posted by iskander
The issue here lies in legal interpretations of the law, and while we can split the fine hairs of wording and loop hole definitions, the main aspect to focus on here is this;
Originally posted by iskander
I'm sure you are aware that after WWI very specific laws were implemented which specifically prohibit the use of toxic chemicals against personnel targets both in offensive, defensive AND in area denial form.
I left the previous post with somewhat of an ending which may equally serve as a caveat to this post…
“The real argument lies in exactly how to internationally classify WP as either chemical or incendiary.”
No “splitting hairs”… the US has operated within the bounds of current international law which was previously emphasized in the afore mentioned post…moral issues are another animal entirely…confusing morality and law cloud the issue.
Therefore arguments governing the overall rational (right or wrong) surrounding in the use of WP can be divided beyond simple composite legal use classifications to reflect ‘moral’ versus ‘legal’ obligations. These two simple classifications periodically cross shared boundaries; however one is binding, the other is not and seldom both are ever absolutely congruent.
Morally, I fully disagree with the direct use of WP against individuals…the legality of WP used as a weapon does not reflect my opinion and it remains ‘legal’.
It may be cruel, but it is not illegal.
Yes, however WP was used extensively in WWII and by almost every nation during conflict since in some form or fashion…many nations have filed reservations against the 1925 protocols…and nothing in the historical use of weaponized WP shows it to ever be used in “area denial”…”seeding” prevention against enemy personnel etc.
When rockets and phosphorous cluster
By Meron Rapoport
"In Lebanon, we covered entire villages with cluster bombs, what we did there was crazy and monstrous," testifies a commander in the Israel Defense Forces' MLRS (Multiple Launch Rocket System) unit. Quoting his battalion commander, he said the IDF fired some 1,800 cluster rockets on Lebanon during the war and they contained over 1.2 million cluster bombs. The IDF also used cluster shells fired by 155 mm artillery cannons, so the number of cluster bombs fired on Lebanon is even higher. At the same time, soldiers in the artillery corps testified that the IDF used phosphorous shells, which many experts say is prohibited by international law. According to the claims, the overwhelming majority of the weapons mentioned were fired during the last ten days of the war.
The commander asserted that there was massive use of MLRS rockets despite the fact that they are known to be very inaccurate - the rockets' deviation from the target reaches to around 1,200 meters - and that a substantial percentage do not explode and become mines. Due to these facts, most experts view cluster ammunitions as a "non-discerning" weapon that is prohibited for use in a civilian environment. The percentage of duds among the rockets fired by the U.S. army in Iraq reached 30 percent and the United Nations' land mine removal team in Lebanon claims that the percentage of duds among the rockets fired by the IDF reaches some 40 percent. In light of these figures, the number of duds left behind by the Israeli cluster rockets in Lebanon is likely to reach half a million.
According to the commander, in order to compensate for the rockets' imprecision, the order was to "flood" the area with them. "We have no option of striking an isolated target, and the commanders know this very well," he said. He also stated that the reserve soldiers were surprised by the use of MLRS rockets, because during their regular army service, they were told these are the IDF's "judgment day weapons" and intended for use in a full-scale war.
The commander also said that at least in one case, they were asked to fire cluster rockets toward "a village's outskirts" in the early morning: "They told us that this is a good time because people are coming out of the mosques and the rockets would deter them." In other cases, they fired the rockets at a range of less than 15 kilometers, even though the manufacturer's guidelines state that firing at this range considerably increases the number of duds. The commander further related that during IDF training exercises hardly any live rockets are fired, for fear that they would leave duds behind and fill the IDF's firing grounds with mines.
At the same time, soldiers are reporting that they fired phosphorous shells, which are supposed to be used by the IDF for marking or setting fire to areas, in order to start fires in Lebanon. The artillery commander says he saw trucks with phosphorous shells en route to artillery batteries in the North.
A direct hit from a phosphorous shell causes severe burns and a painful death. Around a year ago, there was an international scandal after a television crew presented harsh pictures of the charred bodies of Iraqis injured by phosphorous bombs during the course of the American attack on the city of Fallujah.
A hard-line member of the Israeli Knesset or parliament has criticised the ruling, saying it will hamper the military's anti-terrorism capabilities.
"Supreme court judges demonstrated today that their pity for the cruel will prove cruel to the merciful and will expose [Israeli] soldiers to more danger," said Effie Eitam of the National Religious Party.
Source
Originally posted by Mdv2
I fully concur with Pie.
The lame Zionist propaganda of Hezbollah ''hiding behind civilians'' has been fathomed since their much more advanced IDF uses similar strategies. Palestinian are often being used as human shields.
In addition, Israel's supreme court banned the use of Palestinian human shields.
Guess what happened.
I guess Israel can't defend itself from a illegal militia that is UN mandated to disband and is supported and supplied by Iran at the expense of the Lebonese people.
If Hezbollah wants to hide in the cities like little babies and not fight, then Israel hd to hit them in Lebanon where the Hezbollah UN ruled illegal militia was shooting missles into Israel.