Title: The Law of War
1The Law of War
Week IV Jan 31, 2007
Prohibition of Specific Weapons
2Overview of Week IV
- The history of weapons regulation
- Underlying principles
- Weapons analysis/current issues
- A look at next week
3The Lieber Code (G.O. 100) - 1863
- Art. 14 Military necessity . . . those measures
indispensable for for securing the ends of the
war, and which are lawful . . . - Art. 15 Military necessity admits of
- Direct destruction of armed enemys life and limb
- Destruction of others incidentally unavoidable
- Art. 16 Necessity does not admit of cruelty
- Infliction of suffering for sake of
suffering/revenge - Use of poison in any way
4St. Petersburg Declaration - 1868
- Exploding bullets independently developed by
Confederate Army in U.S. and Russia - U.S./Russian military leaders recognized harms
- - Czar Alexander II convened Intl Military
Commission - Declaration renounced explosive or incendiary
projectiles lt 400g - 20 states now parties
- Most recent Estonia in 1991
- first since 1869!
5Brussels Declaration - 1874
- Art. XII The laws of war do not allow to
belligerents an unlimited power as to the choice
of means of injuring the enemy - Art. XIII Prohibitions
- Use of poison or poisoned weapons
- Use of arms, projectiles, substances which may
cause unnecessary suffering - Use of projectiles prohibited by St. Petersburg
declaration
6Hague Conferences 1899/1907
- Conventions II/IV on Land Warfare
- Incorporated Brussels Declaration provisions
- Additional declarations barred use of
- Projectiles diffusing asphyxiating/deleterious
gas - Bullets that expand or flatten easily in human
body - Projectiles and explosives launched from balloons
- Convention VIII set naval mine safety limits
- - Max 1 hr life for free-floating mines
7Geneva Protocol on Gas Bacteriological Warfare
- 1925
- Prohibition on gas shall be universally accepted
as a part of International Law - Extended prohibition to bacteriological warfare
- Binding between parties
- Prohibits use, not manufacture
- 133 States now parties
- U.S. joined in 1975
- 35 others joined later last in 2003
- Subsequent treaties required destruction of
stocks - 1972 Convention on Bacteriological and Toxin
Weapons - 1993 Convention on Chemical Weapons
8UN Conv. on Environmental Modification -1976
- US conduct in Viet Nam initial impetus
- Defoliation and efforts to induce flooding
- U.S. Senate resolution called for intl agreement
- Conference of the Comm. on Disarmament drafted
- UNGA resolution opened for state signature
- Bans military or hostile environmental mods if
- Widespread (area of several hundred km2)
- Long-lasting (gt several months, or a season)
- Severe (significant harm to human life/natural
resources)
9UN Conv. on Certain Conventional Weapons - 1980
- Outgrowth of 1977 Geneva Protocol conferences
- UNGA sponsored convention restates general law of
war principles - Provides technical guidance
- Entry into force
- Applicability to parties to a conflict
- Procedures for protocol amendment
- Rules for denunciation
10Conventional Weapons Protocols - 1980
- I Non-Detectable Fragments
- Use prohibited if fragments not detectable by
X-ray - II Restrictions on use of Mines/Booby-Traps
- Use directed at civilians/indiscriminate use
barred - Specific classes of booby-traps barred
- Positions of all mines/booby-traps must be
recorded - III Restrictions on use of incendiary weapons
- Must discriminate military from civilian targets
- No use on military object w/in civilian
concentration
11Blinding Laser Weapons Protocol - 1995
- Protocol IV to 1980 UN CCW
- Bars use of laser weapons intended to cause
permanent blindness to unenhanced vision - Defined as vision of 20/200 or less
- Feasible precautions to prevent blindness must be
taken in use of other laser weapons - Blinding as collateral effect of otherwise
legitimate military use not covered
12Amended Protocol II on Mines/Booby-Traps - 1996
- New technical standards to make mines safer for
non-combatants - Requires further discrimination in employment
- Bars transfer of mines to non-state actors or
states not bound by protocol - Makes parties to conflict responsible for mine
clearance
13ICJ Opinion on Nuclear Weapons -1996
- Advisory opinion requested by WHO and UNGA
- Opinion addressed six issues
- - No specific legal authorization for nuclear use
(14-0) - - No comprehensive prohibition on nuclear use
(11-3) - - Nuclear threat/use must comply w/UN Charter
(14-0) - - Nuclear threat/use must comply w/law of AC
(14-0) - - Nuclear threat/use generally contrary to LOAC,
cannot say definitively outlawed in extreme case
(7-7) - - Must pursue nuclear disarmament in good faith
(14-0)
14Ottawa Convention on Anti-Personnel Mines - 1997
- Bans Anti-Personnel land mines
- Requires destruction of stocks w/in 10 years
- Bars production or transfer (except for
destruction) - Requires removal of existing minefields
- Calls for international cooperation in demining
and assistance to mine victims - U.S. is not a party
15Overview of Week IV
- The history of weapons regulation
- Underlying principles
- Weapons analysis/current issues
- A look at next week
16St. Petersburg Declaration
- What is the legitimate object during war?
- What humanitarian limits are placed on this?
- When does the convention apply?
- Are the limits on application consistent with
humanitarian principles?
17Hague Conventions Declarations
- Superfluous injury v. unnecessary suffering
- When do these agreements apply?
- all participating clause
- What about as customary international law?
- What are relative merits of customary law versus
conventions?
18Additional Geneva Protocol I - 1977
- Art. 35 Restates now customary rules
- Right to choose methods not unlimited
- Weapons/methods causing superfluous injury or
unnecessary suffering prohibited - Methods/means intended or expected to cause
serious environmental harm prohibited - Art. 36 Must evaluate conformance of new weapons
to intl law
19UN Convention on Certain ConventionalWeapons -
1980
- Restates general law of war principles
- Right to choose methods of warfare not unlimited
- Superfluous injury/unnecessary suffering barred
- - Causing severe damage to environment prohibited
- Martens Clause (first used in 1899 Hague
accords) - in cases not covered by this Convention . . . or
by other international agreements, the civilian
population and the combatants shall at all times
remain under the protection and authority of the
principles of international law derived from
established custom, from the principles of
humanity and from the dictates of public
conscience.
20Overview of Week IV
- The history of weapons regulation
- Underlying principles
- Weapons analysis/current issues
- A look at next week
21Joint Combat Shotgun
- What is methodology for weapons analysis?
- Is there an outright prohibition on weapon?
- Specific agreement or customary norm
- Does the weapon cause superfluous injury?
- Balancing test between necessity and harm
- Is the weapon capable of discriminate use?
- Can the environmental impact be controlled?
22Joint Combat Shotgun Issues
- Is there an outright prohibition?
- Were Germans right there is a customary ban?
- Do deforming shot classify as dum dum rounds?
- Does the weapon cause superfluous injury?
- Multiple wounds at close range
- Wound characteristics of buckshot
- Is it indiscriminate in effect?
- Does it cause environmental harm?
23Joint Combat Shotgun
- Was the historical analysis convincing?
- Is use before modern law relevant?
- Analogy to Claymore Mine valid?
- Issue was harm to civilians
- Are you convinced?
24Cluster Munitions
- Disperse many bomblets over large area
- Troops in open
- Lightly armored vehicles
- Dud rates of 5-30
- Higher in some terrain
- May remain explosive 30 years after use
25Small Caliber Munitions
- Many modern assault rifles use small high
velocity bullets that tumble after body impact - Cause massive internal wounds
- More lethal than older, larger bullets
- What is military necessity?
- How does balance come out?
26Is this a lawful weapon?
27Additional Geneva Protocol I - 1977
- Art. 35 Restates now customary rules
- Right to choose methods not unlimited
- Weapons/methods causing superfluous injury or
unnecessary suffering prohibited - Methods/means intended or expected to cause
serious environmental harm prohibited - Art. 36 Must evaluate conformance of new weapons
to intl law
28Geneva Protocol I Commentary
- Prepared under ICRC sponsorship
- Details convention history and law of war
background - NO official status
- - cf travaux preparatoires
29Overview of Week IV
- The history of weapons regulation
- Underlying principles
- Weapons analysis/current issues
- A look at next week
30Looking Ahead Week V
- Focus on law governing air warfare
- Unique in lack of specific binding conventions
- General principles of law of war (lecture)
- Customary provisions embodied in Hague/GP I
- Readings
- 1923 draft Rules on Air Warfare
- 1954 Hague Convention on Cultural Property (skim)
- 1977 GP I
- 1977 Reagan letter of transmittal on GP II
- Linebacker and the Law of War
Issue to ponder What are criteria for lawful
targeting?