The Ben Roberts Smith defamation trial, high level command responsibility and the International Criminal Court - a thread🧵
Following 'national security' vetting by #auspol government officials over the weekend, Justice Besanko's written ruling on the BRS vs Nine defamation… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Command responsibility in war is poorly understood in the community and has received scant if any serious or sustained media attention in Australia.
The law of command responsibility is laid down in Article 28 of the International Criminal Court (ICC) Statute, aka 'Rome Statute… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Commentary on the SOTG Afghanistan war crimes saga has focused largely on the findings of the November 2020 Brereton Report.
Soon after the release of the Brereton Report, then Chief of Army Lieutenand General Rick Burr's highly orchestrated interview with Nick McKenzie for @60Minutes on 23 November 2020 epitomises the ridiculous "we didnt know" defence against command responsibility maintained by the… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Earlier this year, a PhD paper by military lawyer Glenn Kolomeitz on the applicability of Rome Statute Article 28 under Australian law was published by the University of Adelaide. Komoleitz in fact served as a legal advisor at SOTG in 2009 and 2010. One of the key findings of his… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Now we turn to some of the publicly available evidence supporting command responsibility charges against senior ADF officers at HQ JTF 633 level and higher, focusing on the sequence of events including the Darwan raid in 2012 ...
The process of authorising and initiating coalition special forces (including Australian SOTG) 'kill or capture' missions in Afghanistan focused largely on what was known as the Joint Prioritised Effects List (JPEL) or target list. Under this process, an authorised senior… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
One of the first (if not the first) SOTG cordon and search operations in the hunt for Hekmatullah took place at Sola village near the Uruzgan provincial capital Tarin Kowt on 31 August 2012, two days after the murders at Patrol Base Wahab. Although full details of this raid are… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Within days of this raid, then Afghan President Hamid Karzai complained to the Australian government about the killing of two civilians at Sola, identifying them by name - Haji Raz Mohammad and Abdul Jalil.
Some of the events at Sola village, including the killings of Haji Raz Mohammad and Abdul Jalil, were reported by @markwillacy for @4corners in 'Killing Field' on 16 March 2020.
SOTG cordon and search operations in the hunt for Hekmatullah continued in various locations. The next one to have received significant public scrutiny took place at Darwan village on 11 September 2012, two weeks after the raid at Sola.
RAAF P-3 Orions were used extensively in the overland ISR (intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance) role in Afghanistan and elsewhere in the Middle East in support of operations like this one since 2006.
The story by Nick McKenzie and Chris Masters on the Darwan raid published in @theage & @smh on 8 June 2018 alleges that Afghan civilian Ali Jan was detained, kicked off a cliff by BRS, then executed in the creek bed below on the orders of BRS.
The day after The Age story on the alleged murder of Ali Jan was published, Dan Oakes also reported on the Darwan raid for @abcnews. This story included eye witness accounts from interviews conducted by renowned Afghan journalist @bsarwary. Witnesses described the alleged murder… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
The ABC was subsequently raided by the Australian Federal Police (AFP) in June 2019, under a warrant naming Dan Oakes, fellow reporter Sam Clark and military whistleblower David McBride.
An intriguing aspect of this story is why the ABC was raided by the AFP but The Age was not, given both media outlets were by that stage in posession of classified Defence documents relating to SOTG operations in Afghanistan, including the raid at Darwan and alleged murders.
Should Australian higher commanders have known that their forces were committing or about to commit war crimes? Absolutely, unequivocally, yes.
Did those commanders fail to take all necessary and reasonable measures to prevent or repress their commission? Absolutely,… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
"At least two of the former SAS officers named in the National Anti-Corruption Commission referral were awarded the DSC - one of Australia's highest military decorations - for command & leadership in Afghanistan"
"Omni's four values are respect, trust, agility and humility."
Omni Executive CEO Jon Hawkins
"An investigation by the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) found that Haji Sardar had been taken into the village mosque and beaten to death." abc.net.au/news/2020-11-2…
Crucial testimony from @DVASecretary Liz Cosson at Thursday's Veteran Suicide Royal Commission @roycommDVSRC hearing.
Unnecessary #auspol govt delays to URGENT LEGISLATIVE REFORM (ID'd in previous reviews) are contributing to the the HIGH #VETERAN SUICIDE RATE.
Thread ⬇️ 1/25
Background. Numerous media reports on the RC (& previously) have highlighted lengthy delays in @DVAAus claims processing times as a significant factor contributing to veteran suicides. Seriously injured/disabled veterans too oftem wait years for help. 2/25 abc.net.au/news/2022-02-1…
Chronic @DVAAus staff shortages have also for years been highlighted as a contributing factor, coupled with the federal govternment's over-reliance on expensive, inefficient, outsourced temporary labour hire. 3/25 thewest.com.au/politics/labou…
“This exemplifies a clusterf*ck of Shakespearean proportions on the part of the #auspol govt. We’ve got the wrong people in the wrong places making the wrong decisions.”
There are countless examples of people like Sameer, who have waited years to hear about their visa applications. There’s the bureaucratic triangulation between various Canberra-based departments that delays things and puts lives in the hands of distant decision-makers.
Then there’s the incredibly precarious security situation in Afghanistan. Getting a visa involves a medical and police check. There are fears the police are being infiltrated with Taliban sympathisers. People like Sameer struggle to travel for fear of being surveiled.
"The farcical, in-country visa paper-shuffling exercise inflicted upon these [Afghans at risk of reprisals] by our diplomats & Defence chiefs must end today."
As the first country to suspend it's diplomatic presence in Afghanistan, this decision not only precipitated an undignified rush to the exits but paved the way for the continued slaughter of Afghan civilians who we are obliged to protect under IHL, at the hands of the Taliban.
During a Senate hearing early this month, @CDF_Aust downplayed the significance of the Taliban's military resurgence and subscribed to their implausible political assurances that Afghanistan's fate is "very much going to be a negotiated settlement."
@TheRedT@MarisePayne@dfat@AusAID Actually at least 9 from this project have been killed by the Taliban. I won't put dates here publicly. I just forwarded you a voice recording from this man. Seems likely he will be killed now so you will have a voice from the dead.
"Good evening Sir. These are those people who were killed by the Taliban. They were my employees, and we were working together. I was acting as site manager." 1/-
@TheRedT@MarisePayne@dfat@AusAID "Then I was promoted to operations manager position, and they were my colleagues. [Name] was supervisor. He was killed in front of his door by an IED (improvised explosive device). And [name] was security guard commander for [the project]. He was shot by the Taliban ..." 2/-
In this tweet, @RSLNSW President @captainbrown & the RSL shred their little remaining integrity in relation to Australia's mefloquine & tafenoquine veterans. He has blocked most of us but you are welcome to read & RT this thread as to why & how. #TafenoquineRC#OzVeteransVote
Mefloquine & tafenoquine have been given to around 5,000 ADF personnel, mainly during a series of unethical drug trials involving 2,850 ADF troops in Bougainville & East Timor from 1999 to 2002. vimeo.com/239093288
Officials from @USArmy@wrair, developer of both drugs, admit 1000s of ADF troops were needed as guinea pigs for commercial purposes, i.e. to get tafenoquine registered by @US_FDA & @TGAgovau.
"We were completely naive, because we were desperate."