This book is that rarest of works, breathed into being by an enormous
number of people who agreed it was urgently needed. For our editors,
legal advisers, expert readers, and, most of all, our writers, who
worked for a pittance and suffered through double editing and repeated
requests for rewrites, it was clearly a labor of love, and there
is no way to thank them adequately. At the same time, we are deeply
grateful to the individuals and institutions who provided the funding
and facilities to do the job.
Herbert and Marion Sandler and The Sandler Family Supporting Foundation
quickly saw the potential and stepped forward with the funds that
enabled us to launch the project. The Ford Foundation, through the
efforts of Larry Cox, our program officer, provided the rest of
the budget, permitting completion in the shortest possible time.
Sanford J. Ungar, dean of the American University School of Communication,
graciously provided an office and every possible form of administrative
support with the help of assistant dean, Patrick Martin. Claudio
Grossman, dean of AU’s Washington College of Law, enthusiastically
supported the involvement by WCL’s unique faculty. Professor
Diane Orentlicher threw herself behind the project and, aided by
the WCL War Crimes Research Office and a grant from the Open Society
Institute, organized a conference in October 1996 that helped determine
our agenda; she suggested authors, critiqued plans, and closely
supervised a large portion of the articles. WCL Professor Kenneth
Anderson took on the enormous task of legal editing, and Professor
Robert Kogod Goldman was a source of solid advice throughout. The
War Crimes office with OSI funding sponsored the legal research
by Ewen Allison, an indefatigable WCL graduate who put himself on
call around the clock and had the assistance of Deans’ Fellows,
Mair McCafferty and C. Jeffrey Tibbels.
Eric Stover, former executive director of Physicians for Human Rights,
organized a critical second conference in April 1997 at the Human
Rights Center he heads at Berkeley. He brought clarity of purpose
to every strategic moment and played a central role in obtaining
funding. Aryeh Neier, President of the Open Society Institute gave
wise counsel at both conferences, offered moral support when it
was most needed, and also critiqued a number of articles. Anna Cataldi,
the Italian writer, assembled the journalists, photographers, and
legal scholars for our first brainstorming session and prodded and
promoted our efforts from beginning to end.
It was essential in a book combining law and journalism that we
strive to meet the standards of both professions. Maj. Gen. (ret.)
A. P. V. Rogers of the British Army, our consultant on military
law, undertook a detailed legal review. Louise Doswald-Beck, Urs
Boegli, and Jean-Francois Berger of the International Committee
of the Red Cross read the text and made useful suggestions. Lt.
Col. Scott Morris of the U.S. Judge Advocate-General corps and Lt.
Col. (ret.) H. Wayne Elliott, a former chief of the JAG international
law division, gave us valuable criticism and encouragement. Jim
Toedtman, Newsday’s Washington bureau chief, made numerous
helpful suggestions. Thom Shanker of the New York Times edited the
three articles on sexual violence and read the final text. Views
expressed in the articles are those of the authors and do not represent
the position of any government, institution, or organization, nor
our expert readers. Editorial judgments are the responsibility of
the writers and editors.
Tremendous energy and time went into photo-editing and design. Sheryl
Mendez broke off work on two projects in the Middle East to join
the project as photo editor and researcher, a task to which she
brought visual and political astuteness, moral commitment, and astonishing
drive. Brooke Hellewell, our unflappable deputy design editor, was
a key player, whose formidable design and organizational skills
were matched by her stamina.
Peggy Lampl, our long-suffering project manager, defused every crisis,
and played a key role in editing. One of our luckiest breaks was
the appearance of Alan Dorsey, former librarian for the ICRC in
New York, who had begun graduate studies at AU. Serving as deputy
project manager, he brought invaluable experience and knowledge
of IHL, and imposed order on the project and our office.
Ron Goldfarb, our devoted literary agent, stayed on as general counsel
in future project activities. Tabitha Griffin, our editor at W.
W. Norton, gave us constructive criticism and enthusiastic support.
Carole Kismaric advised us at crucial early moments on budget and
organization. Professor Brad Blitz of Lewis & Clark College,
Pat Watson, Evelyn Leopold of Reuters, Ian Williams of the Nation,
Chuck Lane of the New Republic, Tom Gjelten of National Public Radio,
and Michael Muskal and Jim Dooley of Newsday, provided wise guidance.
W. Hays Parks, Special Assistant to the Judge Advocate General,
and Professor Steve Ratner, of the University of Texas at Austin,
gave us welcome moral support and timely legal guidance.
Newsday editor Anthony Marro, A.M.E. Les Payne, foreign editor Tim
Phelps, and Washington news editor Anne Hoy enthusiastically backed
the book and tolerated my absences. And on a personal note, truly
special thanks go to my patient wife, Betsy, and daughter, Caroline,
who let me give up practically every evening, weekend, and vacation
day for eighteen months.
Every participant and every outside supporter made a difference.
I hope each will look on the finished product with pride, bearing
in mind that the educational effort to be built around the book
is still a work in progress.
-- Roy Gutman
Acknowledgments
for the Second Edition
Given how much has changed in the field of law and armed conflict
since 1999, revising and updating this book proved to be a big undertaking.
It would not have been possible without the generous support of
the JEHT Foundation, which gave us a grant to produce this new edition,
and the Carnegie Corporation, Ford Foundation, Knight Foundation,
and the Hamburg Institute for Social Research, which provided general
funding during the period when we were working on it. We are also
grateful to the Open Society Institute for supporting the foreign
language editions of this book over the last several years.
Since the first edition was published, the Crimes of War Project
has become an established organization and its staff members all
played an important part in the revision of our flagship book. Elisa
Munoz, executive director during the early part of the editorial
process, helped get it underway. Lauren McCollough, program manager,
was involved in administering all aspects of our work and in addition
did much valuable research and proofreading. Marika Theros, program
and development officer, ably organized our finances. As with the
first edition, the book benefited greatly from the involvement of
Anna Cataldi, Peggy Lampl, Gilles Peress, and Eric Stover, all now
members of our board of directors, as well as John Owen and Gary
Knight who joined the board later.
Professor Michael N. Schmitt generously agreed to serve as legal
editor for the second edition and has been an invaluable source
of guidance on legal and indeed editorial questions. Caroline Cross
provided superb research help that has underpinned many of the revisions
and Kimberly Grant also helped with research. Thanks to Jasmine
Moussa for her proofreading assistance. I am very grateful to the
following people who provided advice on particular areas or reviewed
drafts of the articles: Kelly Askin, Jennifer Dworkin, Françoise
Hampson, David Kretzmer, Joanne Mariner, Antonella Notari, Rodney
Pinder, Ian Piper, and John Ryle.
As with the first edition, Sheryl Mendez did a superb job of selecting
the photographs, and her contribution is central to this new edition.
We were very lucky also to retain Jeff Streeper as the book's designer,
and he played a vital role in shaping the finished book. Amy Stevens
gave valuable assistance on design and layout. Thanks also to Jim
Mairs, our editor at W.W. Norton, for his enthusiastic support of
this new edition and his judgment.
Finally, thanks to all the contributors and to all those others
who have given their time and effort to assist the work of the Crimes
of War Project during the ten years since it was first launched.
-- Anthony Dworkin

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