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PROTECTION OF CULTURAL HERITAGE IN
TIME OF WAR AND ITS AFTERMATH
by JAMES A. R. NAFZIGER
James Nafziger is the Thomas B. Stoel Professor of Law and
Director of International Programs, Willamette University College
of Law. He chairs the Committee on Cultural Heritage Law of the
International Law Association (ILA) and serves as President of the
ILA's American Branch. He is also a member of IFAR's Law Advisory
Council.
In April 2003, as the dust appeared
to be settling on the Battle of Baghdad in the cradle of
civilization, the world witnessed the horror of what appeared to
be extensive looting of museums, libraries and other institutions
in Iraq. At first, the decimation of the world's finest collection
of ancient Mesopotamian artifacts and a wealth of later material
appeared to be of an unprecedented scale. Fortunately, the extent
of the looting turned out to be considerably less than originally
thought. Much of the lost material had been safely hidden away
before the fighting began, and some looted items were soon
recovered. Even so, the occurrence of substantial plunder in the
face of inadequate military safeguards and apparently organized
plunder urges anyone concerned about protecting cultural heritage
to review the applicable regime in time of war and in its
aftermath.1
The looting sparked controversy
about the adequacy of international law to protect cultural
property during and after military conflict, the extent of United
States obligations, and compliance by the United States with those
obligations. The media highlighted such technical legal issues as
the extent to which United States obligations were limited by its
status as a non-party to several pertinent treaties, particularly
the 1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property
in the Event of Armed Conflict,2 which has been
ratified by over 100 states. These issues are properly considered
in light of recent developments.
The Cold War's end introduced
halcyon prospects of a new world order. Once again, as happened
every twenty years or so in the last century, the global community
foresaw a world ruled by right rather than might.3
International law and institutions would protect persons and
property around the world.
This latest bubble of optimism soon
burst in the heat of renewed warfare, ethnic cleansing, and
collective terrorism. Iraq invaded Kuwait, removing some 20,000
artifacts and objets d'art, and, in the ensuing Gulf War,
used cultural property to shield military objectives from attack.
For many readers of this Journal, the destruction of Dubrovnik and
the Mostar Bridge during the bloody implosion of Yugoslavia
heightened skepticism about the capacity of the new world order to
protect the cultural heritage.
A decade later, in a new millennium,
the public has only limited confidence in the efficacy of either
the jus ad bellum to avoid international terrorism and
armed intervention or the jus in bello 4 to
protect persons and property.5 Simultaneous acts of
mass terrorism and sabotage, the preventive use of force, and
selective avoidance of the Security Council by its Permanent
Members pose new challenges. Skepticism about the efficacy of the
laws of war should not obscure two important facts, however: the
unprecedented growth of international law and institutions during
the Cold War, and the impressive record of compliance with the jus
in bello by coalition forces in the thick of battle during the
Iraqi campaign. Generally, the problems in protecting cultural
heritage do not reflect an inadequacy of the law of war itself,
but rather a lack of civic responsibility and inadequate
commitment and training of military personnel, particularly in
paramilitary operations and in time of civil war. 6
Three sets of treaties 7
form the framework for protecting cultural heritage in time of war
and its aftermath. 8 These are the Hague Conventions of
1899 and 1907; the Geneva Convention of 1949 and its two Protocols;
and the Hague Convention of 1954 and its two Protocols. Together,
they respond to four threats to cultural heritage: deliberate
attack, incidental damage, pillage, and outright theft.
THE HAGUE CONVENTIONS OF 1899 AND
1907
The Hague Conventions of 1899 9
and 1907 10 with Respect to the Laws and Customs of War
on Land, together with Annexed Regulations, generally prohibit
pillage and destruction or seizure of enemy property unless
imperatively demanded by the necessity of war. Private property
cannot be confiscated. Attack or bombardment of undefended
buildings, including cultural targets, is also prohibited. Three
provisions of the two Conventions deal specifically with the
protection of cultural property. Signatory states must take steps
to spare buildings dedicated to art, science, and religion from
attack, and, with respect to their own cultural objects, give
notice to the enemy by marking such objects. An occupying power
must act responsibly in administering all public institutions,
including museums. All seizure or destruction with an intention to
damage institutions and historic monuments of art, religion,
science and charity, or works of art or science is forbidden and
subject to legal proceedings. The Convention of 1907 Concerning
Bombardment by Naval Forces in Time of War (Hague Convention IX)
requires that all necessary precautions be taken to spare historic
monuments and edifices devoted to worship, art, science, and
charity. Although never formally adopted, the Hague Rules of Air
Warfare reiterate that historic monuments and cultural
institutions be spared from aerial bombing during hostilities.
Unfortunately, the Hague
Conventions of 1899 and 1907 failed to prevent widespread damage
and destruction to cultural property during World War I, including
the bombing of the Rheims Cathedral and the burning of the library
at Louvain. There were no prosecutions for destruction of cultural
property. Similarly, World War II witnessed the plunder by the
Nazis of cultural property throughout Europe. In the ensuing
Nuremberg Trials, however, the prosecutions of major Nazi war
criminals firmly established confiscation, destruction, and damage
to cultural property as a war crime subject to prosecution and
punishment, and provided the first true international enforcement
of cultural property law. In particular, Alfred Rosenberg,
Director of the notorious Einstatzsab Rosenberg, was found
guilty of war crimes based on his responsibility for the plunder
of art treasures throughout Europe.
In an attempt to control looted
articles after World War II, the United States, Great Britain, and
France signed a statement of policy on control of looted articles
that presaged the international response to the looting in Iraq.
The three nations agreed to take measures:
- to seek out looted articles and
prevent their exportation;
- to encourage liberated states to
provide lists of looted articles not yet recovered;
- to disseminate the lists to art
dealers and museums; and
- to alert the general public to
encourage the return of looted articles to their rightful
owners.
THE GENEVA CONVENTION IV OF 1949
AND PROTOCOL I
The Geneva Convention Relative to
the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, 11
one of four agreements that still define thejus in bello,
prohibits destruction of personal property, whether publicly or
privately owned. In itself, the 1949 Convention therefore does
little to strengthen the protective regime. But a 1977 protocol,
that is, amendment to it (Protocol I to the Geneva Convention),
prohibits acts of hostility against historic monuments, works of
art, or places of worship that constitute the cultural or
spiritual heritage of people and the use of such property for
military efforts and prohibits direct reprisals against such
property. Further, Geneva Convention IV and its Protocol I make it
a "grave breach" to destroy clearly recognized and
specially protected historic monuments, works of art, or places of
worship. As a "grave breach" the offense constitutes a
war crime, and thus an international crime subject to universal
jurisdiction.
THE 1954 HAGUE CONVENTION
Increasing international pressure
for an agreement that would specifically address the protection of
cultural property during armed conflict resulted in negotiations
that led to the 1954 Hague Convention. It attempts to broaden the
scope of the 1899 and 1907 Hague Conventions by taking into
account the events of World Wars I and II, by premising the law in
the "cultural heritage of mankind," and by incorporating
certain provisions of Geneva Convention IV to create a truly
effective and comprehensive agreement on the protection of
cultural property during hostilities, whether international or
non-international (civil war). The Convention covers both movable
and immovable property, which may bear a distinctive emblem.
Parties must undertake preparations in time of peace against the
foreseeable effects of armed conflict and prohibit:
- any use of the cultural property
in a manner that will likely expose it to destruction or
damage in the event of an armed conflict;
- the commission of any acts of
hostility or reprisal against cultural property except for rea
sons of military necessity; and
- any form of theft, pillage, or
misappropriation of cultural property.
To help enforce these provisions,
parties agree to take steps to prosecute and impose sanctions upon
offenders. The Convention also requires occupying states to help
in safeguarding and preserving cultural property and provides for
return of property seized during a conflict.
In addition, the 1954 Hague
Convention outlines procedures for the special protection of
specific items of cultural property. To qualify for special
protection, cultural property must be either immovable property of
"very great importance" or a refuge to shelter
movable property, it must be situated at an "adequate
distance" from an industrial center or important military
objective, and it may not be used for a military purpose, such as
stationing military personnel or storing weapons. Once cultural
property is placed under special protection, state parties must
ensure the immunity of the property by refraining from directing
any hostilities against it. Special protection is ensured through
the use of distinctive markings and the property's subsequent
entry into an international registry at UNESCO. To date, however,
only a handful of states have registered property for special
protection, and such property is limited to just a few works.
Protocol I 12 to the
1954 Hague Convention imposes additional obligations on a state
party that is occupying the territory of another state. It
requires an occupying state to: (1) prevent the export of cultural
property from the occupied territory; (2) seize all cultural
property imported into its territory from any occupied territory;
(3) return the seized property to the formerly occupied territory
at the close of hostilities; and (4) pay an indemnity to the
holders in good faith of any cultural property which has to be
returned.
Perhaps the most successful
implementation of the 1954 Hague Convention occurred during the
Gulf War (1991) in which many members of the coalition forces were
either parties to the convention or, in the instance of
non-parties such as the U.S., accepted its rules, most notably by
creating a "no-fire target list" of places where
cultural property was known to exist. 13 The 1954 Hague
Convention was not, however, effective in Yugoslavia, as the
Dubrovnik and Mostar bombings illustrate. Such wanton attacks on
cultural property prompted efforts to amend the 1954 Hague
Convention to prevent similar destruction and insure greater
individual and state accountability.
These efforts culminated in 1999 on
completion of a second protocol to the 1954 Hague Convention.
Protocol II contains a greater number of penal elements than any
previous cultural property instrument, with specific articles on
criminal jurisdiction, a duty to prosecute and extradite, and
mutual legal assistance. In addition, going beyond the idea of special
protection annunciated in the underlying 1954 Hague Convention,
Protocol II includes a provision to define property under enhanced
protection. This narrowing of the scope of protection represented
frustration with the failure of the registration regime under the
1954 Convention to attract much interest. To qualify for enhanced
protection, cultural property must meet three conditions: (1) it
is of the greatest importance to humanity, such as
designated World Heritage sites; (2) it is protected by adequate
domestic legal and administrative measures, including existing
UNESCO protections, recognizing its exceptional cultural and
historic value; and (3) it is not used for military purposes to
shield military sites, and a declaration has been made by the
state that has control over the property that it will not be so
used.
Protocol II 14 to the
1954 Hague Convention expands upon the provisions in the 1954
Hague Convention for preparatory actions in time of peace to
safeguard cultural property against the "foreseeable effects"
of an armed conflict. States parties must therefore (1) prepare a
national inventory; (2) plan emergency measures for protection
against fire and structural collapse; (3) remove all movable
cultural property from areas that are likely to be damaged during
military action or prepare adequate in situ protections of
such property; and (4) designate competent authorities responsible
for the safeguarding of cultural property. The instrument also
includes precautionary measures that must be taken by states
parties to prepare for and conduct military operations. All
feasible measures must be taken to verify that the objects likely
to be used for military purposes or likely to be attacked are not
protected cultural property. Also, all feasible precautions must
be made in the choice of targets and methods of attack with a view
to protect and avoid losses and damage to cultural property.
Furthermore, a state must refrain from attack when either the
objective is the destruction of protected cultural property or the
attack might create incidental damage to cultural property that is
excessive in relation to the anticipated military advantage. The
underlying principle, again, is one of military necessity.
Protocol II to the 1954 Hague Convention also establishes
individual criminal responsibility for violations. A state party
therefore must either prosecute or extradite any person found in
its territory who is deemed to have committed serious violations
of the Hague/Protocol II rules. In addition, the instrument
contains provisions for mutual legal assistance and the
establishment of a committee to help implement the protocol and
protect the specifically identified cultural property.
United States treaty
obligations to protect cultural heritage during and after conflict
are broad but lacking in detail. The U.S. ratified and therefore
is a party to the general provisions of the Hague Conventions of
1899 and 1907 and the Geneva Convention IV of 1949, but is not
bound by the two Protocols to the 1949 Geneva Convention or to the
1954 Hague Convention or either of its Protocols. The explanation
for this aloofness from detailed rules for protecting cultural
heritage lies in Cold War anxieties, particularly about the
implications of expected nuclear conflict, and, more recently,
bureaucratic delays in ratifying the instruments. 15
Even though the U.S. is not yet a party to the 1954 Convention,
however, it has taken steps to comply with the Convention's
conduct-regulating provisions under general principles of
international law and custom. These steps have included signing
the Convention, educating military personnel in it, and conforming
military operations to its requirements.
A concluding summary of United
States obligations in the aftermath of its intervention in Iraq
will illustrate the significance of both binding and nonbinding
rules of warfare. The Hague Convention of 1907 requires military
authorities to restore and ensure public order, including adequate
measures to enforce a specific prohibition of pillage. The 1954
Hague Convention on Protection of Cultural Property in the Event
of Armed Conflict and its two Protocols impose additional
obligations to safeguard and preserve property under military
control, to prevent exportation of looted material, and to
facilitate its return to countries of origin. Although the U.S.
has not ratified and is therefore not fully bound by the 1954
Convention, it is nevertheless obligated as a signatory to
act responsibly so as not to defeat the treaty's object and
purpose of protecting cultural material. 16 It is
arguable, therefore, that if the U.S. acted irresponsibly in
failing to take necessary steps to avoid the looting in Iraq, as
many allege, it thereby breeched its essential obligation, even as
just a signatory to the 1954 Convention, to protect
cultural property. Moreover, the 1970 UNESCO Convention on illegal
trafficking in cultural property, 17 to which the
United States is a party, prohibits importation and
acquisition of stolen material. This treaty obligation is a
reminder that the protection of cultural heritage in the event of
war and its aftermath depends on implementation in time of peace,
especially efforts to increase public awareness and ensure
education of military personnel. 18
| 1In
the end, of course, public understanding of the protective
regime, and appreciation of its significance, are far more
important than professional wrangling about the details.
Neither a sense of common history or legal necessity is
served by "the dry deadness of documents; the boring
obscurity of academic vocabulary; the unaccessible
abstraction of disembodied ideas removed from the rich
natural and cultural landscapes that are their true homes."
William Cronon, "Why the Past Matters," Wis.
Mag. Hist., Autumn 2000, pp. 2, 11. Public support
nourishes the living law. Forgetting the law endangers
civilization just as forgetting the past endangers the
civic culture. |
| 2Convention
for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of
Armed Conflict, signed May 14, 1954, 249 U.N.T.S.
240 [hereinafter 1954 Hague Convention]. |
| 3The
first decade of the twentieth century witnessed the
international codification of the modern laws of war and
the establishment of the Permanent Court of International
Arbitration. In the 1920s the League of Nations opened its
doors as the first worldwide mechanism for peaceful
settlement of disputes and the Kellogg-Briand Pact boldly
outlawed all recourse to war. The 1940s introduced the
United Nations and the Geneva Conventions of humanitarian
law in time of armed conflict. The 1960s inaugurated major
United Nations peacekeeping operations, and the late
1980s, the end of the Cold War. |
| 4jus
ad bellum is the branch of law that defines the
legitimate reasons when a state may engage in war, while jus
in bello refers to the laws that come into effect once
a war has begun. |
| 5 On
the general problem of looting in time of war or its
aftermath, see Neil Brodie, "Spoils of War," Archaeology,
July/August 2003, p. 16. Of course, destruction of
cultural heritage is not limited to armed conflict, as the
Taliban's obliteration of the Buddhist statues near
Bamiyan, Afghanistan attests, but such acts ordinarily lie
within the reserved domain of domestic jurisdiction and
thus beyond the competence of international law. |
| 6
"Adequate law of war protection for cultural property
exists." Hays Parks (Special Assistant to the Judge
Advocate General of the Army for Law of War Matters),
"Protection of Cultural Property from the Effects of
War," in The Law of Cultural Property and Natural
Heritage: Protection, Transfer and Access, 3-1, 3-26
(Marilyn Phelan ed. 1998). |
| 7Under
the United States Constitution, the Senate must give its
advice and consent to treaties by a two-thirds vote before
the President may give notice of ratification on behalf of
the United States. U.S. Const. art II, § 2. See
generally James A.R. Nafziger, "Treaties,"
in The Oxford Companion to American Law, pp. 809-11
(Kermit L. Hall ed. 2002). Most agreements binding on the
United States, however, are executive agreements, which by
constitutional practice do not require the Senate's advice
and consent. See James A.R. Nafziger, "Executive
Agreements," id. pp. 282-83 |
| 8
This summary of the international legal framework draws on
more extensive discussion in M. Cherif Bassiouni &
James A.R. Nafziger, "Protection of Cultural
Property," I International Criminal Law, pp.
949, 950-62 (with full citations of authority). See
also, Parks, supra note 6. |
| 9
Convention with Respect to the Laws and Customs of War on
Land, July 29, 1899, 32 Stat. 1803, T.S. No. 403, 26 Martens
Nouveau Recueil (ser. 2) 949, reprinted in 1 Am.
Journal Int'l Law 129 (1907) [hereinafter 1899 Hague
Convention II]. |
| 10
Convention Respecting the Laws and Customs of War on Land,
Oct. 18, 1907, 36 Stat. 2277 (1907), T.S. No. 539, 3 Martens
Nouveau Recueil (ser. 3) 461, reprinted in 2 Am.
Journal Int'l Law 90 (1908) [hereinafter 1907 Hague
Convention IV]. |
| 11Geneva
Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons
in Time of War (Geneva IV), signed August 12, 1949,
6 U.S.T. 3516, T.S. No. 3365, 75 U.N.T.S. 287 (effective
Feb. 2, 1956) [hereinafter Geneva Convention IV]. |
| 12
Protocol for the Protection of Cultural Property in the
Event of Armed Conflict, signed May 1954, 249
U.N.T.S. 358 [hereinafter Protocol I to the 1954 Hague
Convention]. |
| 13
But see allegations of limited military damage in Richard
L. Zettler, "Iraq's Beleaguered Heritage," Archaeology,
May/June 1991, p. 38. |
| 14
Second Protocol to the Hague Convention of 1954 for the
Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed
Conflict, opened for signature Mar. 26 1999, see:
www.unesco.org [hereinafter Protocol II to the 1954 Hague
Convention]. |
| 15
Since 1999, when President Clinton submitted the Hague
Convention and its Protocols to the Senate, the two
instruments have awaited that body's Advice and Consent. |
| 16 A
rule of international custom to this effect is codified in
Article 18 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties,
May 23, 1969, 1155 U.N.T.S. 331, reprinted in 8
I.L.M. 679 (1969). Although the United States is not a
party to the Vienna Convention, it has accepted the
articulated burden of international custom. |
| 17
UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and
Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of
Ownership of Cultural Property, adopted Nov. 14,
1970, 823 U.N.T.S. 231, reprinted in 10 I.L.M. 289
(1971). |
| 18
Parks, supra note 6, pp. 3-25. |
Finis
SOURCE: http://www.ifar.org/heritage.htm
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