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Civilians were not protected under the Geneva Conventions until 1949, after WW2. From 1929 til 1949, the Hague/Geneva Conventions protected soldiers only.
Great point when addressing My Lai. Let's set aside the numerous carpet bombings of Hanoi, Napalm drops where thousands of innocent civilians were killed illegally under the Geneva Conventions, without prosecution. The entire Charlie Company that murdered over 500 women, children, and babies, ("just following orders") were either acquitted or had their cases dismissed. They weren't secretaries sitting behind a typewriter, they were the ones doing the murdering. Lt. Calley, who was the one giving the orders was given life in prison, yet served only 4 months in the stockade.
If you were to compare, and this women is found guilty, what do you think her sentence should be?
"Deliberate targeting" - it's in my post. Your post is trying to make a comparison of apples and oranges.
Carpet bombings etc are exactly why smart bomb development has been what it is. Helps to dispel the other old argument that, "I wasn't deliberately targeting civilians, I was aiming for the milk factory where they are actually making bombs; anybody else killed was simply 'collateral damage'". (GW1 anyone?)
But for crimes that were committed when she was 17, 18 & 19 years old, this woman will be treated in the juvenile court. She'll walk away fine.
Oh, and BTW on the rest of your stuff, only the US believes that it does a good job trying it's war criminals. And make no mistake that they've had many of these go ignored/unpunished. Their last POTUS just pardoned some of them. Disgusting. That's too bad, because it is exactly those kind of misdeeds and lack of accountability for those who commit them. And then wonder why the rest of the world hates to see you come in and "help".
Thankfully, the war criminals that Calley et al were are also in the extremely small minority. Not so with the Nazis.
I brought up My Lai because there were charges in the case - a rarity in the US, but also a case most of them immediately know of. That doesn't mean I agree with the lack of prosecution and lack of truly just punishment for those involved. You'll not get me backing them on that front.
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