Iraq damages cases: Supreme Court rules families can sue
Iraq damages cases: Supreme Court rules families can sue
Author
Discussion

mrmr96

Original Poster:

13,736 posts

230 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-22967853

BBC said:
The families of soldiers killed in Iraq can sue the government for damages under the Human Rights Act, the Supreme Court has ruled.

The case was brought by relatives of three men killed by roadside bombs while in Snatch Land Rovers in Iraq.

The court rejected the government's argument that the battlefield was beyond the reach of the legislation.

Judges also ruled the Ministry of Defence owes soldiers a duty of care under the law of negligence.
What do we think of this?

Grenoble

58,486 posts

181 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all

I think I agree with the govt but would like to see the full text first. From what I have seen in summary I agree with the govt - with the caveat that reasonable levels of protective equipment need to be provided. I have no problems with troops going into tough places. However, out of a squad of 10, if 9 had full kit and 1 had part kit due to shortages, I think there is a level of liability.

IroningMan

10,598 posts

272 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
The MoD needs to be taught that it cannot take advantage of the morale, motivation and commitment of the British Soldier in order to get away with sending him into combat with equipment that has been proven to be inadequate.

mrmr96

Original Poster:

13,736 posts

230 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
IroningMan said:
The MoD needs to be taught that it cannot take advantage of the morale, motivation and commitment of the British Soldier in order to get away with sending him into combat with equipment that has been proven to be inadequate.
[Devils advocate] How do you define adequate vs. inadequate? Do they need enough gear that there are zero fatalities in war?[/Devils advocate]

IroningMan

10,598 posts

272 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
mrmr96 said:
IroningMan said:
The MoD needs to be taught that it cannot take advantage of the morale, motivation and commitment of the British Soldier in order to get away with sending him into combat with equipment that has been proven to be inadequate.
[Devils advocate] How do you define adequate vs. inadequate? Do they need enough gear that there are zero fatalities in war?[/Devils advocate]
Peacetime training provides a lot of pointers - see Boots DMS & puttees prior to the Falklands, the sorry tale of SA80, and the withdrawal of Challenger 1 from NATO tank gunnery competitions etc - but the issue is what happens once something has been shown to be inadequate in theatre - like Snatch - and nothing is done about it.

Zero casualties is not possible, but fitness for purpose is: denial and arse-covering get people hurt.

Grenoble

58,486 posts

181 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
Let's face it though - defence against advanced IEDs is hard.

IroningMan

10,598 posts

272 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
It is - but Snatch wasn't intended to provide it, it was intended to provide protection against bricks, bottles, petrol bombs and the odd sniper with an Armalite. It took far too long to accept that the requirement wasn't quite the same and that Basra didn't have as much in common with Belfast as it was supposed to - and that no amount of wishful thinking was going to change that.

Of course it could have been worse: we could have deployed Saxon...

Grenoble

58,486 posts

181 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
Agreed. And IEDs is also bit of a misnomer these days as well.

"Well made, advanced, shaped charges with remote control" might be a better description in many cases.

Fittster

20,120 posts

239 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
So what was the alternative? Was there a more suitable vehicle available at the time?

IroningMan

10,598 posts

272 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
Warrior, followed by the procurement of the kind of wagons that eventually materialised. Unlike almost every other first world army we have been more or less without wheeled armour since the 70s.


McWigglebum4th

32,414 posts

230 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
Fittster said:
So what was the alternative? Was there a more suitable vehicle available at the time?
Well not invading iraq would of been a good start

mrmr96

Original Poster:

13,736 posts

230 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
McWigglebum4th said:
Fittster said:
So what was the alternative? Was there a more suitable vehicle available at the time?
Well not invading iraq would of been a good start
That's not what this thread is about.

anonymous-user

80 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
So, does this mean that any relative will be able to sue someone, if a person is killed in a car accident, at work, etc?

I saw one of the sisters on TV this morning and she was asked if they were suing on behalf of the dead soldiers daughter. She avoided answering and said it wasn't about the money, even though it does seem to be.

Nom de ploom

4,890 posts

200 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
I have mixed views about this. I really don't buy into some of this suing business in relation to war, PTSD, suing the MOD etc.

how do you prove liability? yes the mod have a duty of care to provide equipment fit for purpose, no question.

however, how prepared can you be for the eventualities of conflict? fit for purpose armour at the start or anticipateed levels of weaponry in conflict is one thing, the actualities could be very different and how do you prepare for that?

The key for me would be in the MOD "knowingly" failed to repair or provide equipment suitable for combat. if field reports strongly suggested as much then the mod does imho need to answer questions. if something is not suitable though, how easy is it to replace or improve in time to be useful?

I'm just not totally sure about willful negligence...I am prepared to be corrected on this.

anonymous-user

80 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
What a pleasant surprise to see that this thread is, thus far, wall to wall reasoned debate and sensible, balanced opinions, and no OMG HOOMIN RIGHTS NONSENSE Daily Mail cobblers.

I had some reservations about the claims, but the judgment is heavily caveated and battlefield judgments are supposed to remain unchallengeable. As many have pointed out above, the troops were sent into danger with equipment that the Government ought to have realised was unsuitable, and that just sucks.

Ginetta G15 Girl

3,220 posts

210 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
The only surprising thing about this for me is that it has taken so long, especially in light of the 2009 Haddon-Cave report.

It remains the fact that the MOD have serially and knowingly put people into danger with equipment not fit for purpose and then have tried to weasel their way out, despite test cases going back to the late 1980s.

It is a fact that the 'Safety Case' had been steamrollered into submission from the early '90s onwards and that this resulted in avoidable deaths.

For example:

Chinook ZD576 lost on the Mull in 1994

Tornado ZG710 lost on the Kuwaiti border 2003

Hercules XV179 lost in Iraq 2005

Nimrod XV230 lost over Afghanistan 2006

Furthermore, when people have pointed out that the MOD have been failing in their legal Duty of Care, they have been moved sideways or otherwise silenced. For example refusal to fly an a/c into a SAM threat area because the a/c was not fitted with counter-measures (despite the fact that such countermeasures existed and were available for fitment) resulted in damage to at least one career.

However, this is nothing new on the part of the MOD. Witness their absolute refusal to accept the existence (and causal factors) of PTSD post Operation CORPORATE. Witness their absolute refusal to accept the existence of Gulf War Syndrome post Operation GRANBY.

The Military Covenant isn't merely broken, it was torn up and thrown away years ago. It's about time that was put right.

Edited by Ginetta G15 Girl on Wednesday 19th June 16:09

rohrl

8,984 posts

171 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
Tony Blair wanted to go war in Iraq, he can pay the damages. There is no way that taxpayers (including the injured soldiers) should have to fork out again.

Grenoble

58,486 posts

181 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
rohrl said:
Tony Blair wanted to go war in Iraq, he can pay the damages. There is no way that taxpayers (including the injured soldiers) should have to fork out again.
No.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/2862325.stm

He secured a cross party govt majority to go to war.

rohrl

8,984 posts

171 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
Grenoble said:
rohrl said:
Tony Blair wanted to go war in Iraq, he can pay the damages. There is no way that taxpayers (including the injured soldiers) should have to fork out again.
No.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/2862325.stm

He secured a cross party govt majority to go to war.
No to which bit? He didn't want to go to war?

Grenoble

58,486 posts

181 months

Wednesday 19th June 2013
quotequote all
rohrl said:
No to which bit? He didn't want to go to war?
I agree that he wanted to go to war, but he did it with majority support and active voting of the representatives of the people. So the people become liable for subsequent liability.