| An Introduction
by Francis Anthony Boyle
With the Reagan administration's ascent to power in 1981, tens of thousands
of American citizens engaged in various forms of nonviolent civil resistance
activities in order to protest against distinct elements of a U.S. foreign
policy that violated basic principles of international law. These citizen
protests led to numerous arrests and prosecutions by federal, state, and
local governmental authorities all over the country. This author gave advice,
counsel and assistance to individuals and groups who had engaged in acts
of nonviolent civil resistance directed against several aspects of the
U.S. government's foreign policy: the Nuclear Freeze Movement, the Sanctuary
Movement, the Anti-Apartheid Movement, the Plowshares, and the Pledge of
Resistance, among others. I also participated in the defense of individuals
who were not part of formal movements but nevertheless resorted to nonviolent
civil resistance to protest against the U.S. government's policies on nuclear
weapons and nuclear deterrence, Central America, Southern Africa, and the
Middle East.
For example, in the criminal case of People v. Jarka, No. 002170 in
the Circuit Court of Lake County, Waukegan, Illinois, the twenty defendants
were protesting the Reagan administration's offensive strategic nuclear
weapons buildup and U.S. military intervention in Central America before
the Pentagon's Great Lakes Naval Training Center on November 14, 1984.
The defendants were over-charged with the fairly serious crimes of mob
action and resisting arrest despite the fact that they had merely linked
arms and sat down in the middle of the road in front of the military base.
After a three-and-one-half-day courtroom trial in which defense attorneys
produced eight expert witnesses (including this author) on nuclear weapons,
Central America, and international law, the defendants were acquitted of
all charges on April 15, 1985. The Jarka defendants were acquitted by invoking
the traditional common law defense known as "necessity," which was incorporated
into the Illinois Criminal Code. According to Chapter 38, § 7-13 of
the Illinois Revised Statutes (1983), conduct which would otherwise be
an offense is justifiable by reason of "necessity" if the accused was without
blame in occasioning or developing the situation and reasonably believed
such conduct was necessary to avoid a public or private injury greater
than the injury which might reasonably result from his or her own conduct.
In Jarka the greater public and private injury with respect to Central
America was successfully argued to be crimes against peace, crimes against
humanity, war crimes, grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions, as well
as violations of the U.N. Charter, of the O.A.S. Charter, and of the International
Court of Justice's 1984 interim Order of Protection on behalf of Nicaragua,
which the Reagan administration had perpetrated on a daily basis. To the
best of my knowledge, Jarka was only the second case in the United States
where civil resisters against the Reagan administration's contra terror
war in Nicaragua were acquitted. But the Jarka case constituted an even
more significant precedent for the defense of anti-nuclear protesters by
using international law. For the first time ever in the annals of American
jurisprudence, the judge in the Jarka case actually instructed the jury
that the threat and use of nuclear weapons violated international law and
thus were criminal. To quote the exact language of this pathbreaking instruction
that was given to the Jarka jury by Judge Alphonse F. Witt: "The use or
threat of use of nuclear weapons is a war crime or an attempted war crime
because such use would violate international law by causing unnecessary
suffering, failing to distinguish between combatants and noncombatants
and poisoning its targets by radiation."1 In other words, nuclear deterrence
itself (i.e., "threat of use of nuclear weapons") was criminal under basic
principles of international law.
The stunning victory in Jarka was immediately used as a precedent for
establishing the defendants' right to the necessity defense with respect
to international law in Chicago v. Streeter, No. 85-108644, Circuit Court
of Cook County, Chicago, Illinois, whose criminal trial was held approximately
one month later. In the Streeter case, the nine defendants attempted to
meet with the South African Consul at his office in Chicago to discuss
that country's criminal policy of apartheid. When he refused to do so,
the defendants refused to leave the corridors of a building outside the
Consulate offices, and were eventually arrested and prosecuted for violating
a provision of the City of Chicago Municipal Code prohibiting "unlawful
trespass." To substantiate their defense of necessity, the Streeter defense
attorney team presented at trial several expert witnesses who testified
to the effect that the government of South Africa had been committing international
crimes by pursuing its policies of apartheid and that the defendants acted
reasonably in their efforts to prevent the continuation of these crimes.2
Once again, in this case too, the jury acquitted the defendants of all
charges brought against them. To the best of my knowledge, Streeter was
the first outright acquittal for a pure anti-apartheid protest case in
the United States. We even made the New York Times! As a direct result
of the Jarka and Streeter acquittals with their attendant news media publicity,
numerous attempts were made around the entire country by defense attorneys
seeking to invoke these two cases as precedents for the defense of other
individuals who had engaged in acts of nonviolent civil resistance protesting
against the Reagan administration's illegal policies toward Nicaragua and
El Salvador, against South African apartheid, and of course against the
Reagan administration's offensive strategic nuclear weapons buildup as
well as against nuclear weapons and nuclear deterrence in general. There
then occurred many such nonviolent civil resistance cases in which criminal
charges were dismissed, or else the defendants acquitted, because of Jarka-type
defenses founded upon principles of international law.3 During the past
two decades of my defending these cases, there have transpired monumental
changes in world politics that are too complicated to analyze here. Most
notable, however, were the collapse of the Warsaw Pact and the disintegration
of the Soviet Union, leaving the United States as the only self-proclaimed
nuclear superpower in the world--the "hyper-power." Needless to say, however,
de jure apartheid has been dismantled in South Africa. The much vilified
African National Congress has come to power there. And Nelson Mandela became
the celebrated President of the Republic of South Africa. Fortunately,
there is no further need to defend people involved in peaceful nonviolent
protests against the criminal South African apartheid regime. The same
holds true for direct United States military intervention into Grenada,
Nicaragua, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Costa Rica, etc. At least
for the time being, the U.S. wars against the Peoples of Nicaragua, El
Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala have been wound down. The Sanctuary Movement
has basically disappeared. To be sure, in 1989 the Bush administration
invaded Panama in a last-ditch attempt to hold onto a U.S. presence in
the Panama Canal.4 Then in 1994 the Clinton administration invaded Haiti
in order to maintain U.S. hegemonic domination over the Caribbean Basin
and for domestic political reasons. And the United States government is
still engaged in various types of overt and covert interventions into the
domestic affairs of Latin American states under the pretext of waging its
fictitious and fatuous war against drugs5--especially now in Colombia.
At least for the time being, however, there are no longer large numbers
of people all over the United States protesting against direct U.S. military
intervention into Latin America. To be sure, quite recently many people
have been arrested, prosecuted and sent to jail for peaceful nonviolent
protests designed to shut down the U.S. Army's so-called School of the
Americas at Fort Benning, Georgia that has trained many of the military
dictators who have plagued our sister Latin American Republics for decades.6
And there is still the U.S. colony in Puerto Rico and the ongoing protests
against the U.S. Navy's bombing campaign at Vieques.
But nuclear weapons are still with us! Every year there are still thousands
of people in the United States and around the world who engage in peaceful
nonviolent protests against nuclear weapons and nuclear deterrence. As
documented in the seminal monthly newsletter Nuclear Resister, every year
hundreds of these anti-nuclear resisters are arrested and prosecuted for
their principled opposition to weapons of mass extermination whose destructive
power far exceeds even the wildest fantasies of Hitler. It is for this
reason, then, that I have decided to produce this book that will concentrate
exclusively on the principles of international law relevant to nuclear
weapons and nuclear deterrence. I have included several pieces that I have
written on various problems of nuclear deterrence and international law
that have arisen during the past five decades of humankind's nuclear era--from
the U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 through the
1996 World Court Advisory Opinion on the Legality of the Threat or Use
of Nuclear Weapons, to our stunning victory over the U.K. Trident 2 nuclear
weapons system at Greenock, Scotland in late 1999, and beyond. By collecting
these writings here, it is my hope to provide the reader with a fairly
comprehensive analysis of the numerous and complex legal issues related
to nuclear weapons and nuclear deterrence in one volume. Their basic argument
is that nuclear weapons and nuclear deterrence are criminal under well-recognized
principles of international law. First, I have included my study The Lessons
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, that was originally published in my book The
Future of International Law and American Foreign Policy, © Copyright
1989 by Transnational Publishers, Inc. I would like to thank Heike Fenton,
President of Transnational Publishers, Inc., for permission to reprint
this chapter here. As conclusively established therein, the atomic bombings
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were heinous war crimes in gross violation of
well-recognized principles of international law that had been fully subscribed
to by the United States government as of August 1945. In other words, the
nuclear age itself was conceived in the original sins of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki. Humankind still anxiously waits for an apology, repentance, and
atonement by the United States. For the sake of completeness, the historical
research set forth here should now be supplemented by Gar Alperovitz's
The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb (1995), which discussed my study at
pages 529-30. Next, I thought it would be important to include some materials
dealing with the historical development of the so-called nuclear arms control
process between the United States and the former Soviet Union, the successor-in-law
to which the United States now considers to be the Russian Federation.
In this regard I have reprinted a paper I delivered on Nuclear Weapons
and International Law: The Arms Control Dimension before the 21st Senior
Conference convened at the United States Military Academy at West Point
in 1983 on the general subject of Nuclear Deterrence. This Senior Conference
was precipitated by the Reagan Administration's promulgation of a new "protracted
nuclear war-fighting" doctrine that was implemented by means of a massive
build-up of U.S. offensive first-strike strategic nuclear weapons systems,
against which the Jarka defendants would soon protest. My West Point presentation
was originally intended to serve as a lawyer's response to this criminal
folly. Nevertheless, this paper was indeed published by the United States
Military Academy in The Nuclear Debate: 21st Senior Conference Proceedings
(West Point: 1983), and later in Volume 4 of the New York Law School Journal
of International and Comparative Law, No. 2 (1983). At this 21st Senior
Conference my co-panelists for the afternoon session on "Nuclear Weapons
and International Law" were Professor Alfred P. Rubin of the Fletcher School
of Law and Diplomacy and Professor Harry Almond of the Pentagon's National
War College. Our paper presentations were followed by a lengthy and vigorous
debate with the conference participants, who consisted of about 200 current
and former high-level U.S. military officers and civilian government officials
actually involved in supervising American nuclear weapons and nuclear deterrence
policies, including the three-star General in charge of war-operations
at the Pentagon, the Director of the Defense Nuclear Agency, the U.S. Air
Force's Special Assistant for Nuclear Targeting, Brent Scowcroft, George
Ball, Richard Garwin, etc. During this extended debate, I energetically
argued with all the participants about why and how international law was
indeed relevant to U.S. nuclear deterrence policies.
This West Point Senior Conference debate is where I first formally articulated
my basic proposition that nuclear weapons and nuclear deterrence are criminal
under well-recognized principles of international law. My remarks during
this debate drew heavily upon my then ongoing study The Relevance of International
Law to the Paradox of Nuclear Deterrence, which is reprinted here from
my Defending Civil Resistance Under International Law (1987). This article
analyzes the entire history of U.S. nuclear deterrence theories and practices
in order to reach that conclusion. This analysis still holds up today.
Despite the end of the Cold War, nothing has changed about U.S. nuclear
"deterrence" strategy: It still calls for launching an offensive first-strike
with strategic and tactical nuclear weapons systems against any adversary.
Both at the time and in retrospect, my West Point Senior Conference appearance,
paper, presentation, and debate on Nuclear Deterrence made me feel like
the biblical Daniel going into the proverbial lion's den at Babylon.7 But
at a cocktail party reception that evening, a one-star General on the U.S.
START I Delegation for the Reagan administration specifically came over
to tell me somewhat apologetically: "Professor Boyle, I want to assure
you that we here in the military take the Geneva Conventions and the Hague
Regulations quite seriously!" And well the Pentagon should since the laws
of war and international humanitarian law were originally designed to protect
soldiers and sailors in combat. In order to continue the nuclear arms control
saga up to these START I negotiations that were initiated by the Reagan
administration, I have included my study Star Wars vs. International Law:
The Force Will be Against Us!, that was originally published in The Future
of International Law and American Foreign Policy, ©Copyright 1989
by Transnational Publishers, Inc. Once again, I would like to thank Heike
Fenton, President of Transnational Publishers, Inc. for permission to reprint
this chapter here. I include these two chapters on nuclear arms control
negotiations in order to substantiate my basic thesis that nuclear arms
control and reduction agreements are essentially a fraud that has been
perpetrated upon the Peoples of the world by all the nuclear weapons states:
Lulling people into a false sense of security, and thus deflecting and
dissipating substantial public pressure for real nuclear disarmament. Generally
speaking, these agreements have permitted their respective nuclear weapons
states parties to phase out their obsolete nuclear weapons systems while
at the same time replacing them with more advanced, sophisticated, threatening,
destabilizing, dangerous, and destructive nuclear weapons systems. The
1996 Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) is no exception to this
general rule. Thereunder, the then five acknowledged nuclear weapons states
(U.S., U.K., Britain, France, China) locked in their nuclear monopoly and
nuclear superiority over the rest of the non-nuclear signatory states in
the world. While at the same time, these Nuclear Five Great Powers were
enabled to continue the research, design, virtual testing, production and
deployment of the next generation of nuclear weapons and their related
delivery systems by means of their preponderant control over high technology:
advanced nuclear accelerators, high-energy lasers, super-computers, hydrodynamics,
nuclear fusion, etc. In the United States this next stage of the strategic
nuclear arms race is currently being conducted under the euphemism of the
so-called Stockpile Stewardship and Management Program.8 And there are
national equivalents in these other nuclear weapons states as well. This
gross hypocrisy on the CTBT by the Nuclear Five Great Powers contributed
directly to the nuclear weapons explosions by India and Pakistan in the
spring of 1998. Despite these self-styled nuclear arms control and reduction
agreements, the United States, Russia, Britain, France and China have all
violated and today still stand in gross violation of their solemn commitments
made in article VI of the 1968 Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons (NPT):
Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations
in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear
arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty
on general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international
control. Since 1968 not one of these nuclear weapons states has taken seriously
its treaty obligations to negotiate in good faith toward the goal of achieving
nuclear disarmament, let alone general and complete disarmament.9 The only
exception might conceivably have been the denuclearization proposal tendered
by then Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to then American President Ronald
Reagan at their summit meeting in Reykjavik, Iceland in November of 1986.10
Gorbachev's stunning proposal ultimately came to naught because of Reagan's
myopic fixation on his so-called Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), publicly
identified with the moniker "Star Wars." In any event, today all of these
Nuclear Five Great Powers stand in material breach of the NPT.11 Their
longstanding, collective, and illegal recalcitrance on these solemn NPT
requirements directly contributed to the nuclear weapons explosions by
India and Pakistan in the spring of 1998. Even worse yet, in November of
1997 the Clinton administration promulgated a new nuclear war-fighting
doctrine that was specifically targeted against so-called "rogue states"
in the Third World by means of adopting Presidential Decision Directive
(PDD) 60.12 The primary legal problem with this new doctrine is that it
blatantly violates the self-styled "negative security assurances" given
by the United States, inter alia, as an express condition for the renewal
and indefinite extension of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
by all of its non-nuclear weapons states parties in 1995. According to
the relevant part of this U.S. Declaration that was approved in U.N. Security
Council Resolution 984 (11 April 1995):13 The United States reaffirms that
it will not use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear-weapon States Parties
to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons except in the
case of an invasion or any other attack on the United States, its territories,
its armed forces or other troops, its allies, or on a State towards which
it has a security commitment, carried out or sustained by such a non-nuclear-weapon
State in association or alliance with a nuclear-weapon State. Not surprisingly,
PDD 60 has been implemented by means of a large-scale and expensive "improvement"
of offensive U.S. nuclear weapons systems.14 This new Clinton nuclear war-fighting
doctrine and its related nuclear weapons systems contradict and severely
undermine the entire NPT Regime as well as the CTBT Regime. To be sure,
there very well might be some relatively tiny "rogue states" lurking out
there somewhere in the Third World.15 But today the United States government
has become the sole "rogue elephant" of contemporary international law
and politics. In this regard, U.N. Security Council Resolution 984 (11
April 1995) explicitly referred to the U.S. Declaration as "security assurances,"
and the U.S. government officially both referred to and entitled its Declaration
as "security assurances." Therefore, because the Clinton administration
violated its own solemn "security assurances," PDD60 constitutes an ongoing
Nuremberg Crime against Peace. Article 6 of the Nuremberg Charter states
in relevant part as follows:16 .... The following acts, or any of them,
are crimes coming within the jurisdiction of the Tribunal for which there
shall be individual responsibility: (a) Crimes against peace: namely, planning,
preparation, initiation or waging of a war of aggression, or a war in violation
of international treaties, agreements or assurances, or participation in
a common plan or conspiracy for the accomplishment of any of the foregoing;
... Leaders, organizers, instigators and accomplices participating in the
formulation or execution of a common plan or conspiracy to commit any of
the foregoing crimes are responsible for all acts performed by any persons
in execution of such plan. [Emphasis added.]
To the same effect is the sixth principle of the Principles of International
Law Recognized in the Charter of the Nuremberg Tribunal and in the Judgment
of the Tribunal, which were adopted by the International Law Commission
of the United Nations in 1950:17 PRINCIPLE VI The crimes hereinafter set
out are punishable as crimes under international law: (a) Crimes against
peace: (i) Planning, preparation, initiation or waging of a war of aggression
or a war in violation of international treaties, agreements or assurances;
(ii) Participation in a common plan or conspiracy for the accomplishment
of any of the acts mentioned under (i). ... [Emphasis added.] Notice that
both of these elemental sources of public international law clearly provide
that the "planning" or "preparation" of a war in violation of international
"assurances" such as the aforementioned U.S. negative security assurance
constitutes a Nuremberg Crime against Peace. Such is PDD60! Despite rumors
to the contrary, the sons and daughters of Reagan's Star Wars are still
alive and well today. The "leadership" of the Republican party in the U.S.
Congress are still pushing for the development, testing, and deployment
of high-tech anti-ballistic missile systems that would clearly violate
the terms of the 1972 U.S.-U.S.S.R. Anti-Ballistic Missiles Systems (ABM)
Treaty. It is the opinion of this author that the Pentagon has already
been developing a prohibited nation-wide ABM System under the guise of
deploying an extensive network of so-called "Theater Wide" anti-missile
interceptors, some of which are based upon Star Wars technology.18 Then
in January of 1999, the Clinton administration publicly importuned Russia
to amend the ABM Treaty out of significant existence upon pain of its outright
abrogation by the United States. It appeared that then Russian President
Boris Yeltsin might go along with this insidious and retrograde overture.
Hence, the analysis of the ABM Treaty set forth in this study shall remain
relevant to the public debate over its continued utility for quite some
time.19 With the collapse of the Soviet Union and the impoverishment of
Russia leaving the United States as the world's "only superpower" or "hyperpower,"
we are getting to the point, if we are not there already, where only the
United States has the capability to launch an offensive first-strike strategic
nuclear weapons attack upon any adversary. For that precise reason, deploying
the so-called "national missile defense" (NMD) has become a critical objective
of the United States government. NMD is not really needed to shoot down
a stray missile from some so-called "rogue state." Rather U.S. NMD is essential
for mopping up any residual Russian or Chinese strategic nuclear weapons
that might survive a U.S. offensive first-strike with strategic and tactical
nuclear weapons systems. Hence, both the Clinton administration and now
the Bush administration have been moving to circumvent, undermine, or abrogate
the ABM Treaty in order to deploy NMD. The successful deployment of NMD
will finally provide the United States with what it has always sought:
the capacity to launch a successful offensive first strike strategic nuclear
attack coupled with the capability to neutralize a Russian and/or Chinese
retaliatory attack. At that point, the United States will proceed to use
this capability to enforce its Will upon the rest of the world. Strategic
nuclear thinkers such as Harvard's Thomas Schelling call this doctrine
"compellance" as opposed to "deterrence." With NMD the world will be dominated
by a U.S. "compellance" strategy. From that demented perspective of global
hegemony, it came as no surprise that the then Republican-controlled U.S.
Senate rejected the ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty on
October 13, 1999. In addition to the ABM Treaty, current United States
military activities in outer space also contravene the core commitments
set forth in articles I and III of the 1967 Treaty on Principles Governing
the Activities of States in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space, Including
the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies, the so-called Outer Space Treaty,
to which the United States is a contracting party:
Article I The exploration and use of outer space, including the
moon and other celestial bodies, shall be carried out for the benefit and
the interests of all countries, irrespective of their degree of economic
or scientific development, and shall be the province of all mankind. ...
Article III States Parties to the Treaty shall carry on activities in the
exploration and use of outer space, including the moon and other celestial
bodies, in accordance with international law, including the Charter of
the United Nations, in the interest of maintaining international peace
and security and promoting international co-operation and understanding.
Despite these provisions of the Outer Space Treaty, inter alia, the United
States Air Force has proclaimed its intention to become the "Master of
Space" and has established a special U.S. Space Command headquartered at
Colorado Springs for the express purpose of obtaining U.S. military domination
of outer space.20 So much for outer space becoming the common heritage
of humankind! The United States is currently striving mightily to defeat
the very Object and Purpose of the Outer Space Treaty. The basic thrust
of my analysis set forth in The Relevance of International Law to the Paradox
of Nuclear Deterrence was further developed, elaborated and refined in
a paper entitled The Criminality of Nuclear Weapons, which is included
here.21 This paper was originally delivered as the invited Keynote Address
before an International Colloquium sponsored by the International Association
of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms (IALANA) that was held in Berlin in November
of 1990. This paper was later published by the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
in 1991 as Booklet No. 27 in its Waging Peace Series, with a gracious Introduction
by its President, Mr. David Krieger. This IALANA conference took place
in Berlin shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the reunification
of Germany. Yet, most remarkably, in a public speech given in immediate
reaction to my Keynote Address before the IALANA conference, a German Brigadier
General working for the German Ministry of Defense on nuclear issues informed
all the participants that the Nuremberg Charter, Judgment and Principles
were nothing more than "soft law". Apparently, the good German General
had forgotten all about the German Nazi war criminals who had been executed
on the basis of the Nuremberg Charter and Judgment. When I attempted to
discuss these matters with him that evening at a reception, the good German
General curtly informed me that when it comes to nuclear weapons and nuclear
deterrence policies, the German government must "trust" the American government
to do the right thing. The blind shall lead the blind! One generation ago
the peoples of the world asked themselves: Where were the "good" Germans?
Well, there were some good Germans. The Lutheran theologian and pastor
Dietrich Bonhoeffer was the foremost example of someone who led a life
of principled opposition to the Nazi/terror state even unto death.22 Today,
the peoples of the world are likewise asking themselves: Where are the
"good" Americans? Well, there are some good Americans. They are getting
arrested and going to jail for protesting against United States nuclear
weapons facilities and nuclear deterrence policies. Today, the anti-nuclear
resisters of the Plowshares Movement follow in the hallowed footsteps of
Dietrich Bonhoeffer in their principled opposition to the U.S. nuclear/terror
state.23 As a tribute to these anti-nuclear Plowshares resisters, I have
decided to include in this book actual testimony I gave in the prosecution
for two counts of sabotage of Mr. George Ostensen by the State of Wisconsin
for a Plowshares Action directed against the ELF/Trident 2 Nuclear Weapons
Facility near Ashland, Wisconsin. At the beginning of this chapter, entitled
Putting Trident 2 on Trial, you will find a brief introduction by Mr. Ostensen's
Attorney-of-Record, Ms. Susan Hedman, explaining the facts of the case.
The transcript itself has been edited for style, length, typographical
errors, etc. Nevertheless, it should provide the reader with a pretty good
blow-by-blow account of what actually happened in the courtroom when we
put on trial the Trident 2 Nuclear Weapons System as criminal under well-recognized
principles of international law.
In the Ostensen trial, we argued the basic working proposition of the
Plowshares Movement that nuclear weapons as well as their related components
and delivery systems are not really "property." In a typical first year
course on Property taught at an American law school, property would be
defined as "a bundle of rights protected by law." By contrast, nuclear
weapons, their components, and delivery systems are nothing more than instruments
of international criminal activity that are condemned, repudiated, and
prohibited by international law, including and especially by the Nuremberg
Charter, the Nuremberg Judgment, and the Nuremberg Principles. Today we
would not recognize a property right to a gas chamber at Auschwitz! Surely,
if during the Nazi era any German citizen had possessed the courage and
audacity to disable a gas chamber at Auschwitz, today we would all agree
that person was a hero and blameless even if he or she had been found guilty
of the crime of "sabotage" or "destruction of government property" under
Nazi law administered by a Nazi judge in a Nazi courtroom. During the past
two decades of defending these anti-nuclear cases, I have been continually
reminded of this analogy every time I defended an anti-nuclear resister
from prosecution under U.S. Federal law administered by a U.S. Federal
judge in a U.S. Federal district court. What is the difference? Well, in
Nazi Germany the anti-Holocaust resister undoubtedly would have been executed.
Whereas here in the United States of America--"...the land of the free,
and the home of the brave"--the anti-nuclear-Holocaust resister would probably
be sentenced to spend about five years in a U.S. Federal penitentiary.
To the best of my knowledge, Ostensen was only the second U.S. case in
which anyone has been able to obtain an outright acquittal on one count
of sabotage for a Plowshares Action directed against an American nuclear
weapons facility. It was a unique achievement for everyone involved in
this case, and a tribute to the courage and fortitude of George Ostensen.
Therefore, I have included the transcript of my testimony here in order
to provide the reader with the basic idea of how we obtained this remarkable
result by exposing the criminality of Trident 2 to the judge and the jury.
Over the years, I have used this Ostensen transcript to help defend many
Plowshares anti-nuclear resisters from some pretty serious criminal charges
(e.g., felonious depredation of government property, felonious destruction
of government property, sabotage). This track record includes obtaining
two more outright acquittals on charges of "sabotage" for another Plowshares
Action directed against the exact same ELF/Trident 2 facility in Wisconsin
a decade later by Tom and Donna Howard-Hastings.24 In this case, despite
gross interference by the judge--who had been Ostensen's prosecutor--we
were able to convince the jury that the ELF/Trident 2 System was an offensive
first-strike strategic nuclear weapons system that was criminal under well-recognized
principles of international law. The arguments and transcript originally
developed in the Ostensen case were later used as the blueprint for obtaining
the October 21, 1999 directed verdict of acquittal by a Scottish Sheriff
(i.e., judge) in favor of three Trident Plowshares 2000 anti-nuclear resisters
at Greenock, Scotland on four charges each for criminal damage to Britain's
Trident 2 nuclear weapons facility.25 This spectacular victory over Trident
2 was a much-needed fillip to the worldwide anti-nuclear movement coming
almost right after the U.S. Senate had rejected ratification of the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty on October 13, 1999. But despite these and other anti-nuclear
victories in U.S. and U.K. courts, most unfortunately, the Trident 2 Nuclear
Weapons System deployed by the United States, and proliferated to and deployed
by Britain, will bedevil all of humankind well into the 21st century. Next,
comes my so far unpublished study entitled The Criminality of Nuclear Deterrence
that sets forth my current reflections on the dilemma of nuclear extermination
that confronts humankind today as we enter upon the next millennium of
our parlous existence.26 Here, I have analyzed in detail the 1996 Advisory
Opinion by the International Court of Justice on the Legality of the Threat
or Use of Nuclear Weapons.27 I have also offered some suggestions about
how this World Court Advisory Opinion can be used to defend anti-nuclear
resisters by using international law.
This analysis has already been put to good use in the defense of the
Gods of Metal (GOM) Plowshares. Here five Plowshares resisters disarmed
a nuclear capable B-52 bomber at a Pentagon "open-house" held at Andrews
Air Force Base on May 17, 1998. They were charged by the United States
government with petty "depredation of government property." Their bench
trial took place on September 21-23, 1998 at the Federal District Court
in Greenbelt, Maryland. The fact that the United States government did
not seek to indict the GOM Plowshares for felonious depredation of government
property was a victory for the defendants and international law from the
very outset of the prosecution. Usually, the U.S. government indicts Plowshares
anti-nuclear resisters for a variety of felonies where the punishment could
be anywhere from 2 to about 20 years in prison. However, when the U.S.
government has charged Plowshares anti-nuclear resisters with petty offenses
instead of felonies, it is because it fears that the international law
arguments will get to a jury and produce an outright acquittal. Although
charging for a petty offense can shorten the potential prison sentence
to six months, it also deprives the defendants of a jury trial in a U.S.
Federal court. Generally speaking, in the United States a criminal defendant
has a constitutional right to trial by jury if she or he faces imprisonment
for more than six months.28 Several years before the GOM Plowshares case,
we beat out Federal counts of felonious depredation of U.S. government
property for a Plowshares Action directed against a Minuteman III nuclear
weapons facility for precisely these reasons. After reviewing the documents
we filed in court, apparently the U.S. government feared that the presentation
of the international law arguments before the jury would convince the jurors
to acquit these Minuteman III Plowshares resisters. So it dropped the felony
counts and fell back on simple trespass, thus subjecting the defendants
to a bench trial before a U.S. Federal Magistrate without the benefit of
a jury. Despite our best efforts, these Minuteman III Plowshares resisters
were summarily "convicted" of trespass by the U.S. Federal Magistrate.
But six months in a U.S. Federal prison is a lot better than two years!
As is typical in these Plowshares cases, the Federal District Judge in
Maryland illegally stripped the Gods of Metal Plowshares defendants of
all witnesses willing to testify on their behalf except this author. I
was then qualified as an expert on international law, criminal law, and
nuclear weapons. I spent 2 ½ hours testifying on the witness stand
under oath and subject to cross-examination to the effect that the B-52
bomber is an offensive first-strike strategic nuclear weapons system that
is criminal under international law and, in particular, under the World
Court's Advisory Opinion on the threat and use of nuclear weapons. A condensed
version of this chapter was formally offered into evidence by the Gods
of Metal Plowshares (who courageously and quite competently defended themselves
in court), and accepted into evidence by the Federal District Judge.29
I was then subjected to a cross-examination on my analysis of the World
Court's Advisory Opinion by the Assistant U.S. Attorney prosecuting the
case. Not surprisingly under these circumstances, the Federal District
Judge convicted the Gods of Metal Plowshares. Nevertheless, the GOM Plowshares
Action became the very first case where the World Court Advisory Opinion
was fully argued in any United States court.30 As documented by the Nuclear
Resister, the 1996 World Court Advisory Opinion has already ushered in
a new era of highly intensified struggle against nuclear weapons and nuclear
deterrence by the peoples of the world, and especially by those citizens
living in the nuclear weapons states. Furthermore, in its 1996 Advisory
Opinion the International Court of Justice elucidated the basic principles
of international environmental law applicable to nuclear weapons. Today,
there are large numbers of people all over the world who are protesting
against nuclear weapons, nuclear experiments, nuclear energy, nuclear power
plants, nuclear powered satellites, and nuclear waste, etc. because of
nuclearism's devastating impact upon humanity's global environment. These
are critical concerns shared by anti-nuclear resisters who protest on grounds
of international law with anti-nuclear resisters who protest on grounds
of damage to the environment. I have worked on both types of cases over
the years, and occasionally both groups of anti-nuclear resisters do intersect
and mutually support each other.
For example, in the Fall of 1997 we built an international coalition
of both types of anti-nuclear resisters--spearheaded by the worldwide Green
Party--in an unsuccessful effort to stop N.A.S.A.'s launch of the plutonium-powered
Cassini spacecraft on the grounds that this threatened a Crime against
All Humanity. But it seems to me that a lot more work needs to be done
on building a broad-based coalition between these two groups of anti-nuclear
resisters around the world. It is toward fostering this objective that
I have deemed it worthwhile to contribute this book at this distressing
moment in time.31 The concluding chapter deals with the Bush administration's
suicidal embrace of nuclear nihilism. F.A.B. 13 July 2001
Notes: Those interested in the footnoted documentation should contact:
Francis A. Boyle
Law Building
504 E. Pennsylvania Ave.
Champaign, IL 61820 USA 217-333-7954
(voice) 217-244-1478
fboyle@law.uiuc.edu
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