For the powerful, crimes are those that others commit. – Noam Chomsky
From Charlie Sykes at The Bulwark
This is what a war crime looks like, but by now we are familiar with them, because Putin is committing them daily on an industrial scale.
Yesterday, President Biden merely stated the obvious when he called Putin a “war criminal.”
Which he is.
And has been for years, without consequence.
He was a war criminal in Chechnya, where Russia atrocities were documented in great detail. Here’s Human Rights Watch:
On February 5, 2000, Russian forces engaged in widespread killing, arson, rape and looting in Aldi. The victims included an eighty-two-year-old woman, and a one-year-old-boy with his twenty-nine-year-old mother, who was eight months pregnant.
The details are harrowing:
Russian forces began shelling Aldi in earnest on February 3, using cluster bombs against a civilian objects. Reconnaissance units of Russian conscript soldiers entered the village on February 4, warning the local residents to come out from their cellars and to have their documents ready for inspection the next day.
On February 5, 2000, Russian riot police and contract soldiers entered Aldi and went from house to house executing civilians. Some killings were accompanied by demands for money or jewelry, serving as a pretext for execution if the amount was insufficient. Others victims lacked identity papers. Several witnesses stated that the soldiers forcibly removed the victims’ gold teeth or stole jewelry from corpses.
Putin was also a war criminal in Syria:
In 2015, Mr. Putin sent Russian forces to help Mr. al-Assad’s beleaguered army, and soon Russian officers were advising Syrian forces and Russian jets were dropping bombs on Syrian cities — enjoying the same impunity that Mr. al-Assad seemed to have….
While no evidence has surfaced that Russian forces used chemical weapons in Syria, researchers believe that Mr. Putin enabled Mr. al-Assad to do so.
“It is absolutely certain that the Russian government at least knows and likely facilitated the use of chemical weapons by the Syrians, mostly chlorine attacks,” Mr. Schneider said…
There is, of course, a lot more. Putin has murdered journalists and political opponents. His agents used a military-grade nerve agent to attack a former Russian spy and his daughter in Salisbury England. He murdered liberal politician Boris Nemtsov, investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya, and exiled former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko.
And he violated international law by invading Ukraine in 2014.
Putin has never been held accountable for any of it. While Russia was dropped from the G-8 after his annexation of Crimea, until recently, Russia retained its Most Favored Nation Trading status. He has never been formally charged with war crimes.
To the contrary, he has been rewarded with summits with presidents of both parties.
Nota bene: This all took place afterthe murder of journalists. After Grozny. After Aleppo.
Trump still gushed over him and pushed for Russia to be restored to the G-7, claiming repeatedly that “his Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama, had wanted Russia out of what used to be the G8 ‘because Putin outsmarted him’.”
In 2017, Trump sided with the Russian autocrat over American intelligence agencies. Just days ago, the former president was describing him as a “savvy genius”.
But it wasn’t just Trump who looked the other way. The U.S. and Europe continued to do business with Putin; he retains a seat on the UN Security Council; and his long history of war crimes has been memory-holed.
This time, however, we are told, will be different. But why should Putin think so?
He understands that there are no war criminals if war crimes end up being ignored.
And he knows, better than any of us, what he has already gotten away with.