THE GENEVA CONVENTIONS AND THE PHOENIX PROGRAM

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80R01720R001100060018-1
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
13
Document Creation Date: 
December 19, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 8, 2004
Sequence Number: 
18
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Publication Date: 
August 30, 1971
Content Type: 
MF
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PDF icon CIA-RDP80R01720R001100060018-1.pdf635.67 KB
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OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE WASHINGTON, D. C. 20301 Al A /73 f VIETNAMESE: AFFAIRS, HEADQUARTERS, CIA SUBJECT: The Geneva Conventions and the Phoenix Program On 19 July 1971, Ambassador William E. Colby appeared before the House Subcommittee on Foreign Operations and Government Information to testify concerning CORDS operations in South Vietnam. During the hearing the issue was raised concerning the applicability of the Geneva Conventions to the Phoenix (PHUNG HOANG) Program. As a consequence, Ambassador Colby was requested to furnish at a later time a legal opinion which would address this issue and which would be incorporated as part of his testi- mony. Subsequently, the Office of the Legal Advisor at State and the Office of the General Counsel at Defense developed a statement that sought to clarify the issue. A copy of this statement is being furnished (Enclosure) because of your close and continuing interest in the Phoenix (PHUNG HOANG) Program. You will note that this statement represents the opinion of the Department of State. The reason for this is keyed to a portion of the sentence appearing at the top of page three, namely, "...and we have acknowledged a residual responsibility with respect to those captured by US forces.'' Essentially, the point involves the position taken by State concerning "residual responsibility." It is the Defense view that the legal rights of persons are provided for under the terms of the Geneva Conventions, and thus the protection of the legal rights of citizens of South Vietnam remains the responsibility of the Government of South Vietnam. The United States does not acquire a "residual responsibility" under the Geneva Conventions for protecting the legal rights of South Vietnamese citizens. Accordingly, it is not relevant to discuss the legal rights of Vietnamese citizens within the framework of this advisory program. Other than this point, Defense is in full agreement with the contents of this statement. This statement may be instructive in terms of your agency's interest in the Phoenix (PHUYG HOANG) Program. No objection is interposed if you wish to make wi er distribution. w-V I u L. I-HKNHAM EncIosurePQC) E.: i DSS CJKI ? JES Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP80R01720R001100 Approved or Release 220 1/30: CIA-RDP80ROl 720R001 100060018-1 Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP80R0l720R001100060018-1 RECORD COPY House Committee on Government Operations OSD/ISA/VNTF Foreign Operations and Government Room 4C840 Information Subcommittee Hearing Transcript, 19 July 1971 Page 768, following line 2 The Geneva Conventions and the Phoenix Program Questions have been raised and considered from time to time concerning the conformity of the Phoenix Program with the Geneva Convention require- ments. The following memorandum represents the opinion of the Depart- ment of State on this question. MEMORANDUM The Geneva Conventions and the Phoenix Program The four Geneva Conventionms of 1949 for the protection of war victims updated earlier international conventions to reflect the experiences of World War H. They filled a number of lacunae which had become evident in the earlier conventions. The fourth Convention on pro- tection of civilian persons in time of war was a completely new treaty- designed to minimize, to the greatest possible extent, the suffering of civilians caught in the turbulence of war. Bearing in mind the Nazi practices during World War II, the drafters of the fourth Convention sought to ensure humane treatment of civilians in belligerent and occupied territories, and to lay down rules to prevent their being deported, taken as hostage or interned in concentration camps. Experience since 1949 has revealed additional lacunae in the Conventions, and international dis- cussions are now taking place with a view to the further refinement of humanitarian treatment of both combatants and non-combatants caught up in armed conflict. Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP80R0l720R001100060018-1 Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP80R01720R001100060018-1 Article 4 of the third Convention of 1949 on protection of prisonersof war sets certain standards for recognition as prisoners of war. In Vietnam, the United States and the Republic of Vietnam have as a conscious policy accorded prisoner of war status to many thousands of paramilitary and other prisoners captured by United States or South Vietnamese forces who would not be entitled to it under- the Convention. (See MACV Directive 381-46, dated 27 December 1967, copy attached.) Article 4 of the fourth Convention on protection of civilian persons in time of war provides that persons protected by that Convention are those who find themselves in the hands of a party to the conflict or occupying power of which they are not nationals. This means that South Vietnamese civilians detained by South Vietnamese authorities are not protected persons within the meaning of Article 4 of the fourth Geneva Convention. Article 4 also provides that nationals of a co-belligerent state are not protected persons while the state of which they are . nationals has normal diplomatic representation in the state in~whose hands they are. This provision would seem to cast considerable doubt on the entitlement of South Vietnamese civilians captured by United - States forces toprotection as protected persons even while they are in the custody of theUnited States forces. Nevertheless, the United States and South Vietnamese Governments have agreed that humanitarian treatment must be accorded to all persons, irrespectiveof whether an individual - Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP80ROl 720R001 100060018-1 Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP80R01720R001100.060018-1 is considered a protected person within the meani+ng of the Convention, and we have acknowledged a residual responsibility with respect to - those captured by US forces. Article 3, which is common to all four of the Geneva Convent:i+ons; prescribes the minimum standards of humanitarian treatment to be accorded to all persons, even though they may not be "protected persons" within the strict meaning of the Conventions. Paragraph 1(d) of this Article prohibits "the passing of sentences and the carrying out of executions without previous judgment pronounced by a regularly constituted cour;t,-affording. all the judicial guarantees which are recognized-as indispensable, by - civilized peoples." This provision applies only to sentencing for-crimes and does not prohibit a state from interning civilians or subjecting them to emergency detention when such measures are necessary for...the security- or safety of the state. The Phung Hoang, or Phoenix Program, i?s-a Vietnamese program aimed at -the Viet Cong Infrastructure (VCI), the political. subversive apparatus- -which directs and supports the military threat to South Vietnam'.s security:. The United States support of this program has been principally advisory. in nature directed at improving the intelligence-methods, the apprehension techniques, the legal procedures and the detention arrangements involved in the struggle of the Vietnamese against the VCI:. Persons suspec.ted..of involvement in the VCI may be arrested by the Vietnamese-authorities and placed in administrative detention or brought to trial. Lion: No sort of immunity is given to anyone under this provision. There is nothing in it to prevent a person presumed to be guilty from being arrested and so placed in a position where he can do mo further harm; and it leaves intact the right of the State to prosecute, sentence and punish a cco rAppgoved tfFer Release Q0061301/30 : CIA-RDP80RO172OR001100060018-1 Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP80R01720R001100060018-1 4 The Vietnamese "An Trill, or administrative detention procedure, is similar in'some respects to the emergency detention procedures utilized by a number of other nations in time of emergency to intern persons on grounds of national security. Such procedures involve no criminal sentence and are not violative of Article 3.-9/ On the other hand, aspects of the "An Trill procedure raise some problems which give us concern.-in this regard. We have been working with the Government of the Republic of Vietnam with a view to improving the procedure to ensure the humanitarian treat- ment of detainees. We are striving to make the "An Trill procedure accord with fundamental concepts of due process, and to improve the conditions of internment. Not a part of the Phoenix Program, but sometimes discussed as in possible conflict with the Geneva Conventions, is the subject of forced relocations of cgmmunities. Vietnamese Government policy is currently to bring security to the people rather than the people to security when- ever possible, but such relocations have occured in the past and, if deemed essential, might occur in the future. Article 49 of the Fourth Convention, intended to deal with the transfer of protected persons from occupied territory, clearly contemplates the possibility of transfer inside the national territory for security reasons. Article 49, like 2/ Articles 42, 43 and 78 of the Fourth Geneva Convention clearly contem- plate wartime internment and assigned residence for civilians as accepted procedure under certain safeguards. Since these Articles apply only to protected persons, their specific requirements would not apply to South Vietnamese civilians. Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP80ROl 720R001 100060018-1 Approved For Release 2006/01/30: CIA-RDP80R01720R001100060018-1_ 5 Articles 42 and 4,; concerns only protected persons. Of course, the general obligation of humanitarian treatment would apply in the case of any relocation of communities in South Vietnam, even though the individuals involved are not protected persons under the fourth Conven- in conclusion, although there have been some individual failures in execution, the general obligation of humanitarian treatment under.- lying the Geneva Conventions has been accepted by the Governments of Vietnam and the United States in the context of the Vietnam conflict, despite the anomalies created by attempting to apply rules essentially designed for a World War II situation to one involving a political, subversive infrastructure. Department of State (Legal Adviser): Concurrence Department of Defense (General Counsel) Inf rmed (not concurrence) Ambassador William E. Colby: Concurrence Office or Origin: OASD/ISA/VNTF Action Officer: LTC David E. Farnham Approved For Release 2006/01/30: gyh4zRPR4PPA1c720R00tr?Qk Q1t8-;I97 1 r } 3,1-40 Approved For Release 200fy~,1 30 :1 2 101720R001100060018-1 IT T T11E r T. t t r? Lt T 1 C, iyr i T 7, A VIE IN, 1.1 Al':A APO S- In Francisco . 902,22 DI iE(_'TI:VE 27 December 19G7 NUMBER 231-46 (M _CJ2 O) MILITARY INTELLIGENCE CL/1111 )l y ID' SC} I AL, F: t l ING OF D.t.'t .S .-'JN _, E S 1. PURPOS, ;. This directive provides policy guu: dance for ,tho corn- bineci screcnil or t tine >, a IJ7' required, of )C the activation, as s. Colli tined Tactical Screening Centers ?(CTSC). 2. GI' ?ERALL. a. The forces Rile t capture or detain suspect personnel ar re- for the prompt screening and classification of det,. inees. b. Criteria for determination of status and classification of dc:- taine 's is contained in paragraphs 3 and 4 of Annex A. c. Disposition of detained pars onnel. ;vho have been classi. 7c.c1 11 be made in c ccorclance with paragraph 5 of Annex A. d. Close coorci'Ination b^t-veen the c pturin; forces, civil ther- itieSy and military police units is essential to accompli h the sc C:t?ni n; classification, and disposition of Lilo detained personnel. 3. -APPLICABILITY. This dire cti~ e app1i-es to all US forces and i{ ti'i'r1!i. F attached, or under operational control of T 2,cV' . b. CTSC are to be activate? on an fra S needoCI`I basis in con- ]linction with combined operations, to Olltin:.'. e the screening of detained; per.. Sons. Deactivation will occur as scron as the tactic ragcd in combat or a belligerent act under arms other than an act of terro;?- ism, sabotage, or spying. b. Detainees will be classified as Non-Prisoners of War when determined to be one of the following categories: (1) Civil Defenca.nts. (a) A detainee who is not entitled to PTV status but is subject to trial by GVN for offenses a.gainst GW law. (b) A detai ? ~ nee z w ho is a member of one of the units listed in paz agn.'ap17 3d, above, a110, who was tlctaineci while not engaged in actual combat or a bell.iggerent act under arms, and there is no proo at f t the de- tainee'ever particip ,tee? in actual combat or belligerent" act under arms. (c) A detainee who is suspected of being a spy, saboteur or terrorist. Page 2 of Annex, A Approved For Release 2006/01/30 CIA-RDP80ROl 720R001 100060018-1 .l.IACV Dir 331-4 ,Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP80R01720R001100060018-1 (2) Ile tur'iees (Hoi Chanh), All, persons I'eg'ardless of p:? ,;t membership in any of the units listed in paragraph 3, above, who voluntarily submit to G VN control. (3) Innocent Civilians. Persons not members of any units listed in paragraph 3, above, and not suspected of being civil defendants. 5. D-1-S-STTI0i\T OF C LA SS'F D TD E TAINEES. a. Detainees who have been classified will be processed as follows; (1) US captured ?~~',r's and those PW`S turned over to the U'S by .1V!vMAF will be retained in US l ilitary channels until transferred tore ARVN PW Camp. (2) Non-Prisoners of I'var who are suspected as civil defen- dants will be released to the appropriate GVN civil autIlo_iLies . (3) Non-Prisoners of War who qualify as returnees will be transferred to the appropriate Chicu Hoi Center. (4) Non-Prisoners of War determined to be innocent civil- falls will be released and returned to the place of capture. b. Responsibilities and procedures for evacuation and accounting for PWTs are pr escr-ibed in MACV Directive 190-3 arid USE',-RV Regulation 190-2. t 111 .> A Approved For Release 2006/01/30 CIA-RDP80R0l720R001100060018-1