ABSTRACT

This book is an examination of American army legal proceedings that resulted from a series of moments when soldiers in a war zone crossed a line between performing their legitimate functions and committing crimes against civilians, or atrocities.

Using individual judicial proceedings held within war-time Southeast Asia, Louise Barnett analyses how the American military legal system handled crimes against civilians and determines what these cases reveal about the way that war produces atrocity against civilians. Presenting these atrocities and subsequent trials in a way that considers both the personal and the institutional the author considers how and why atrocity happens, the terrain of justification, and the degree to which the army and American society have been willing to take military crimes against civilians seriously.

 Atrocity and American Military Justice in Southeast Asia will be of interest to students, scholars and professionals interested in Military Justice, Military history and Southeast Asian History more generally.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part |14 pages

Part I War in the Philippines

chapter 1|37 pages

Mr. Root’s atrocity trials

chapter 2|61 pages

The real atrocity trials

part |10 pages

Part II The American prosecution of Japanese war crimes in the Philippines

chapter 3|38 pages

MacArthur and Yamashita

part |11 pages

Part III From Lanang to Danang: The Philippine War writ large in Vietnam