The U.S. State Department’s ambassador for global criminal justice said on Nov. 21 that Washington has seen “systemic war crimes” committed by Russian forces in Ukraine and called the current situation a “new Nuremberg moment.”
Van Schaack said that there’s growing evidence that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine “has been accompanied by systemic war crimes committed in every region where Russian forces have been deployed,” which she said includes “deliberate, indiscriminate, and disproportionate attacks against the civilian population and elements of the civilian infrastructure.”
She said the “aggression against Ukraine” is a manifest violation of the United Nations Charter, to which U.N. members are bound.
“We’re seeing custodial abuses of civilians and POWs and also efforts to cover up these crimes,” Van Schaack said.
The trials ran from 1945 to 1956 and saw more than 160 surviving German defendants convicted of war crimes, crimes against peace, and crimes against humanity, while 37 were handed the death sentence.
When asked if she believes there’s a possibility for any Russian individuals to be held accountable for their actions and the alleged atrocities committed in Ukraine, the ambassador said “this is definitely a new Nuremberg moment.”
“Just as the Allies at the end of the Second World War banded together to advance the imperative of justice and usher in a new era of accountability for what then was the worst imaginable crime, it now falls to all of us to ensure that those responsible for the war crimes and other atrocities that we’re seeing in Ukraine are held to account,” she said.
Report on POWs
Earlier in November, the United Nations said in a statement that prisoners of war from both Russia and Ukraine had told U.N. human rights investigators that they'd been tortured or subjected to various forms of sexual violence while held captive.Russian POWs, held by Ukraine, claimed they had been subjected to kicks in the face and body after surrendering and were, in some cases, stabbed or electrocuted.
Ukrainian POWs held by Russia made similar claims.
On Nov. 21, Ukrainian officials said they'd investigate video footage that Moscow alleges shows Ukrainian military personnel killing captive Russian troops who may have been trying to surrender in the village of Makiivka in eastern Ukraine’s Luhansk region.
Some of them lie face down on the ground while others emerge from a nearby building with their hands raised. They appear to be unarmed as they move to join the other soldiers on the ground.
A man wearing a yellow armband—typically worn by Ukrainian forces to identify themselves—appears to be filming the situation. At the last minute, a man emerges from behind the outbuilding and appears to be armed. Gunfire can then be heard before the video cuts off.
‘They Must Be Found and Punished’
Separate drone footage appears to show the same Russian soldiers lying motionless and covered in blood.The Epoch Times has been unable to verify the footage.
Van Schaack said on Nov. 21 that officials are also tracking the situation regarding the videos closely.
“It’s really important to emphasize that the laws of war apply to all parties equally, both the aggressor state and the defender state, and this is in equal measure,” Van Schaack said, although she stressed that when it comes to the war in Ukraine, “that’s really where the equivalency ends.”
“When we’re looking at the sheer scale of criminality exhibited by Russian forces, it’s enormous compared to the allegations that we have seen against Ukrainian forces,” she added while noting that Russia has responded to such allegations with “propaganda, denial, and disinformation” while Ukrainian authorities have “generally acknowledged abuses and have denounced them and have pledged to investigate them.”