105 organizations call on Biden to overhaul flaws in how US handles civilian deaths and injuries in its operations
105 international organizations sent a letter to President Biden calling for an overhaul of U.S. civilian harm policies and practices. The signatories include human rights, humanitarian, protection of civilians, peacebuilding, civil liberties, social and racial justice, government accountability, veterans', and faith-based organizations.
The letter calls on President Biden to publicly recognize, address, and overhaul the longstanding structural flaws in how the United States mitigates, investigates, and responds to civilian deaths and injuries in its operations.
The full text of the letter can be read below.
February 8, 2022
President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, D.C. 20500
Dear President Biden,
We, the undersigned human rights, humanitarian, protection of civilians, peacebuilding, civil liberties, social and racial justice, government accountability, veterans', and faith-based organizations, urge you to lead a much-needed overhaul of U.S. civilian harm policies and practices.1
Recent New York Times investigations into U.S-caused civilian harm2 have documented significant shortcomings in how the U.S. government prevents, investigates, and responds to civilian casualties and damage to civilian objects. These findings illustrate systemic legal and policy flaws that our groups and others have repeatedly raised with the U.S. government for many years.3
For two decades, U.S. operations overseas have killed tens of thousands of civilians around the world – primarily from Brown, Black, and Muslim communities – and exacerbated communities' humanitarian needs. Rather than taking effective action to prevent and respond to these harms, the Defense Department has summarily dismissed countless credible claims of civilian casualties and regularly failed to conduct effective or transparent investigations, learn lessons over time, or provide amends, redress, or meaningful accountability.
As Commander-in-Chief, you have ultimate responsibility for how the U.S. prevents and responds to the civilian harm it causes. While many of the civilian casualties at issue occurred during previous administrations, we urge you to take the opportunity to set a new course that matches your pledges of adherence to human rights, moral leadership, transparency, and accountability.
We ask you to publicly recognize the longstanding structural flaws in how the U.S. mitigates, investigates, and responds to civilian deaths and injuries in its operations, and to take the following needed steps:
- Publicly commit to a detailed plan for how the U.S. government will address the systemic shortcomings raised by civil society groups, the media, and the Defense Department's own studies.4
- Prioritize the protection of civilians in your ongoing review of U.S. counterterrorism operations and use of force policy and ensure meaningful civil society consultation in that review.
- Ensure full, independent, and transparent investigations of all credible reports of civilian harm, including past reports that may have been erroneously dismissed. Investigations should meet international standards for independence, thoroughness, and impartiality, and should evaluate conduct according to the applicable international human rights and international humanitarian law standards.
- Provide meaningful accountability to civilian victims and survivors of U.S. operations by publicly and transparently acknowledging deaths and injuries, providing amends or redress, and appropriately holding civilian leaders and military commanders responsible for their actions, including by addressing findings of wrongdoing through disciplinary measures or prosecutions.
Through your leadership, the U.S. government can finally account for and reckon with the civilian deaths, injuries, and other harms of the last twenty years. Your legacy and commitment to human rights, humanitarianism, and racial justice globally are at stake, and we urge you to seize this opportunity to act.
Signed,
- Action on Armed Violence (AOAV)
- Airwars Alliance for Peacebuilding
- Alliance of Baptists
- American Civil Liberties Union
- American Muslim Bar Association (AMBA)
- Amnesty International USA
- Beyond the Bomb
- Bridges Faith Initiative
- BUCOFORE (Chad)
- Building Blocks for Peace Foundation (Nigeria)
- CARE USA
- Center for Civilians in Conflict (CIVIC)
- Center for Constitutional Rights
- Centre for Democracy and Development (CDD) (Nigeria)
- Center for International Policy
- Center for Policy Analysis of Horn of Africa (Somaliland)
- Center for Security, Race and Rights
- Center for Victims of Torture
- Church of the Brethren, Office of Peacebuilding and Policy
- CODEPINK
- Colombian Campaign to Ban Landmines (Colombia)
- Columbia Law School Human Rights Institute
- CommonDefense.us
- Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd, U.S. Provinces
- Council on American-Islamic Relations
- Defence for Rights and Freedom (Yemen)
- Defending Rights & Dissent
- Demand Progress Education Fund
- Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN)
- The Digital Democracy Project
- Drone Wars UK
- European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR)
- Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR-USA)]
- Foundation for Fundamental Rights (Pakistan)
- Franciscan Action Network
- Friends Committee on National Legislation
- Global Justice Clinic, NYU School of Law
- Global Partnership for the Prevention of Armed Conflict-Southeast Asia (GPPAC SEA)
- Government Information Watch
- Heritage Institute for Policy Studies (Somalia)
- Human Rights First
- Human Rights Watch
- ICNA Council for Social Justice
- Initiatives for International Dialogue (IID) (Philippines)
- Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti
- Institute for Policy Studies, New Internationalism Project
- InterAction
- International Association for Political Science Students
- International Civil Society Action Network (ICAN)
- International Rescue Committee
- Islamic Society of North America (ISNA)
- Iraq Body Count
- Justice for Muslims Collective
- Justice Project Pakistan
- Kent State Truth Tribunal
- Lawyers for Justice in Libya
- Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns
- MENA Rights Group
- Military Families Speak Out
- Mnemonic
- Muslim Justice League
- Mwatana for Human Rights (Yemen)
- National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd
- National Council of Churches
- National Freedom of Information Coalition
- National Organization For Development Society (Yemen)
- National Partnership of Children and Youth in Peacebuilding (Democratic Republic of the Congo)
- National Religious Campaign Against Torture
- No More Guantanamos
- North Carolina Conference of the United Methodist Church
- Norwegian Refugee Council USA
- Nuhanovic Foundation – Centre for War Reparations
- Open The Government
- Oxfam America
- PAX
- Pax Christi USA
- Peace Direct
- Peace Training and Research Organization (Afghanistan)
- Presbyterian Church (USA)
- Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft
- Reprieve
- Rethinking Foreign Policy
- RootsAction.org
- Saferworld (Washington Office)
- September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows
- Shadow World Investigations
- ShelterBox USA
- South Asian Americans Leading Together (SAALT)
- Stop Fuelling War
- Syria Justice and Accountability Center
- Syria Lebanon Partnership Network of the Presbyterian Church (USA) United
- Church of Christ, Justice and Local Church Ministries
- United for Peace and Justice
- Veterans for American Ideals
- Veterans For Peace
- Washington Office on Latin America
- Western States Legal Foundation
- Win Without War
- Witness Somalia
- Women for Weapons Trade Transparency
- Women's Action for New Directions (WAND)
- World BEYOND War
- Yemeni Youth Forum for Peace
- Youth for Peace and Development (Zimbabwe)