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Oxford Law Citator
Contents
Expand All
Collapse All
Preliminary Material
Dedication
Foreword
Preface
Table of Contents
Table of Cases
International Courts and Tribunals
National Cases
Israel
United Kingdom
United States
Tables of Legislation
International Legislation and Instruments
National Legislation and Manuals
Canada
United Kingdom
United States
Abbreviations
Main Text
Part 1 The Law of Targeting in Context
1 Introduction
1.1 Introduction
1.2 What is targeting?
1.3 Why is targeting important?
1.4 Putting the law of targeting into context
1.5 Outline of the text
1.6 The background to the book
1.7 The purpose of the book
2 Historical Evolution of the Law
2.1 Lieber Code
2.2 St Petersburg Declaration 1868
2.3 Brussels Declaration 1874
2.4 Oxford Manual 1880
2.5 Hague Convention II, 1899
2.6 Hague Peace Conference 1907
2.7 Hague Convention IX, 1907
2.8 Air warfare
2.9 Geneva Conventions 1949
2.10 Hague Cultural Property Convention 1954
2.11 Environmental Modification Convention 1976 (ENMOD)
2.12 Additional Protocols I and II 1977
2.13 San Remo and Air and Missile Warfare Manuals
2.14 International criminal jurisdiction over war crimes
2.15 ICRC Customary Law Study
2.16 Conclusion
3 Sources of the Law
3.1 Introduction
3.2 The sources of targeting law
3.3 Customary law
3.4 Treaties
3.5 Treaty formalities
3.6 Statements of interpretation and reservations
3.7 Interpretation of treaties
3.8 Treaty rules and custom
3.9 ICRC Customary Law Study
3.10 Commentaries on the Additional Protocols
3.11 UN Secretary General’s bulletin
3.12 Conclusion
4 The Spectrum of Conflict
4.1 Introduction
4.2 International armed conflict
4.3 Meaning of armed conflict
4.4 Conflicts under article 1(4) of API
4.5 Non-international armed conflicts to which Additional Protocol II (APII) applies
4.6 Non-international armed conflicts under Common Article 3
4.7 Occupation
4.8 Conflicts other than armed conflicts
4.9 Human rights law and domestic law
4.10 Peacekeeping, peace enforcement, and the spectrum of conflict
4.11 Conclusion
Part II General Principles of the Law of Targeting
5 Customary Rules of Targeting
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Fundamental customary principles of targeting law
5.2.1 Methods and means of warfare not unlimited
5.2.2 Military necessity
5.2.3 Humanity
5.2.4 Chivalry
5.2.5 Distinction
5.2.6 Threats of violence
5.3 The rule of discrimination at customary law
5.4 Combatants
5.5 The meaning of ‘the armed forces’
5.6 The meaning of ‘civilians’
5.7 The protection of civilians
5.8 Civilian objects
5.9 Doubt as to character of an object
5.10 Customary rule of proportionality
5.11 Precautions in attack
5.12 Precautions against the effects of attacks
5.13 Conclusion
6 The API Rule of Distinction
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Nuclear weapons
6.3 Basic rule
6.4 The meaning of attacks and the scope of application
6.5 The meaning of civilians, armed forces, and combatants
6.6 Interaction between articles 51, 43, and 44
6.7 Prohibiting attacks on civilians
6.8 Determining civilian status
6.9 Indiscriminate attacks
6.10 Article 51(5)(a)
6.11 Article 51(5)(b)—the rule of proportionality
6.12 Other aspects of article 51
6.12.1 Article 51(6)
6.12.2 Article 51(7)
6.12.3 Article 51(8)
6.13 Military objectives and the protection of civilian objects
6.14 In case of doubt
6.15 Particular rules of protection
6.15.1 Cultural objects and the natural environment
6.15.2 Objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population
6.16 Articles 57 and 58—precautions
6.17 Article 59—non-defended localities
6.18 Article 60—demilitarized zones
6.19 Protective zones at customary law
7 Precautions
7.1 Introduction
7.2 The general rule
7.3 The listed precautions in article 57(2)
7.4 Precautions against the effects of attacks—the obligations of defenders
7.4.1 Precaution (a)
7.4.2 Precaution (b)
7.4.3 Precaution (c)
7.5 The reciprocal nature of precautions obligations
7.6 Involuntary human shields
7.7 Voluntary human shields
7.8 Conclusion
8 Targeting Persons and the Controversy as to Direct Participation in Hostilities
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Members of the armed forces as combatants
8.3 Distinguishing persons entitled to be respected from ‘combatants’
8.4 ‘Active’ and ‘direct’ participation in hostilities
8.5 Background of the ‘direct participation’ controversy
8.6 The Interpretive Guidance—an introduction
8.7 The Interpretive Guidance—general comments
8.8 Presumption against direct participation
8.9 ICRC Guidance—the notions of armed forces and organized armed groups
8.10 The specific act approach
8.11 Threshold of harm
8.12 The requirement for direct causation
8.13 Belligerent nexus
8.14 More general observations
8.15 Beginning and end of DPH
8.16 Temporal scope of the loss of protection
8.17 Disengagement from DPH and the consequences
8.18 A proposed view of DPH
8.19 Conclusion
9 The Controversy over Bombardment—What is the Required Degree of Care?
9.1 Introduction
9.2 Hague Regulations 1907
9.3 Draft Hague Air Rules
9.4 Protocols Additional to the Geneva Conventions
9.5 The realities of military operations
9.6 The required degree of care
9.7 Cancelling or suspending attacks
9.8 Negligence, due care, and errors of judgement
9.9 The operational context in which care is taken
9.10 Obligations of the defender
9.11 International criminal law
9.11.1 International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
9.11.2 Application of the targeting rules in Kosovo
9.12 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court
9.13 An evaluation of these war crimes
9.14 Conclusions
Part III Particular Protections
10 The Protection of the Environment
10.1 Introduction
10.2 Early texts
10.3 Hague Peace Conferences 1899 and 1907
10.4 Geneva Gas Protocol 1925
10.5 ENMOD
10.6 Articles 35 and 55 of API
10.6.1 Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW) and the environment
10.7 The environment, targeting, and the Gulf War 1990–91
10.8 Nuclear weapons
10.9 Reprisals against the environment
10.10 ICRC Guidelines for military manuals
10.11 ICRC Customary Law Study
10.12 Application of peacetime environmental law in armed conflict
11 Cultural Property
11.1 Introduction
11.2 Writings of nineteenth-century jurists
11.2.1 Lieber Code
11.2.2 Brussels Declaration 1874 and Oxford Manual 1880
11.3 Hague Peace Conferences 1899 and 1907
11.4 Hague Draft Rules 1923
11.5 Hague Convention 1954
11.5.1 Introduction
11.5.2 General protection of cultural property under the 1954 Convention
11.5.3 Special protection under the 1954 Convention
11.5.4 1999 Protocol to the 1954 Convention—general protection
11.5.5 Enhanced protection under the 1999 Protocol
11.5.6 The significance of enhanced protection
11.5.7 Loss of enhanced protection
11.6 Additional Protocol 1 and cultural property
11.7 War crimes in relation to cultural property
11.8 Military Manuals and cultural property
11.9 Participation in the treaties
11.10 Customary law protection of cultural property
11.11 Implications for the targeteer
12 Objects Entitled to Special Protection
12.1 Introduction
12.2 Civilian medical units
12.3 Hospital ships, sick-bays, other medical ships and craft
12.4 Medical units and establishments
12.5 Medical transports
12.5.1 Medical aircraft
12.6 Civilian airliners—the AMW provisions
12.6.1 Civilian airliners—the San Remo Manual provisions
12.7 Cultural objects
12.8 Aircraft granted safe conduct
12.9 Works and installations containing dangerous forces
12.10 The natural environment
12.11 Civil defence
12.12 Other persons or items for which special protection appears to be claimed
12.13 Conclusion
Part IV Weapons and Technologies
13 Weapons
13.1 Introduction
13.2 Historical evolution of the law of weaponry
13.3 Superfluous injury and unnecessary suffering
13.4 Indiscriminate weapons
13.5 Geneva Gas Protocol 1925
13.6 Weapons and the environment
13.7 Conventional Weapons Convention 1980
13.7.1 Weapons prohibited under CCW
13.7.1.1 Protocol I
13.7.1.2 Protocol II and Amended Protocol II
13.7.1.3 Protocol IV
13.8 Customary status of CCW Protocol rules
13.9 Ottawa Convention 1997
13.10 Chemical weapons
13.11 Bacteriological or biological weapons
13.12 Cluster munitions
13.13 Application of weapons law in non-international armed conflict
13.14 Treaty law restrictions on the use of certain weapons
13.15 Non-lethal weapons
13.16 Conclusion
14 Intelligence Gathering and Targeting Using Particular Technologies
14.1 Introduction
14.2 Intelligence gathering
14.3 Intelligence gathering, reconnaissance, and communications using UAVs
14.4 The marking of UAVs
14.5 Firing weapons from UAVs
14.6 UAVs firing weapons autonomously
14.7 Civilian involvement in UAV operations
14.8 Directed energy attacks
14.9 Nuclear attack
14.9.1 The International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion
14.9.2 The UK position
14.9.3 Nuclear disarmament
14.10 Nanotechnology and the challenges posed by advances in technology
Part V Specific Domains
15 Maritime Targeting
15.1 Introduction
15.2 Early treaty law regulating maritime targeting
15.3 The obligations of neutral powers in naval warfare
15.4 Submarine warfare—the early law
15.5 Littoral targeting and API
15.6 Submarine warfare, the modern law
15.7 Other conventional law applying to naval warfare
15.8 The right to participate in hostilities at sea
15.9 San Remo Manual 1994—the basic rules
15.10 San Remo Manual—exemption from attack
15.11 Vessels exempt from attack
15.12 Aircraft exempt from attack
15.13 Other enemy vessels and aircraft
15.14 San Remo Manual—attacking neutral vessels and aircraft
15.15 San Remo Manual—precautions in attack
15.16 Weapons in naval warfare
15.16.1 Missiles and other projectiles
15.16.2 Torpedoes
15.16.3 Mines
15.17 Ruses and perfidy in naval warfare
16 Air and Missile Targeting
16.1 A brief historical background
16.1.1 Application of API to the air domain
16.2 Some introductory remarks
16.3 What is airspace and how does sovereignty apply within it?
16.3.1 Divisions of airspace and freedom of navigation
16.3.2 Zones of airspace and their significance
16.3.3 Exclusion zones, war zones, and no-fly zones
16.4 Aircraft, UAVs, missiles, and military aircraft
16.5 Civil and State aircraft under the Chicago Convention
16.6 Movement of military aircraft through airspace
16.7 Status of crews of military aircraft
16.8 Persons parachuting from aircraft in distress
16.9 Weapons, methods, and means of aerial warfare
16.9.1 Air-to-surface weapons
16.9.2 Air-to-air and ground-to-air weapons
16.10 Ground attack
16.11 Surrender of, and to, aircraft
16.12 Interception, inspection, and diversion of neutral civil aircraft
16.13 Capture of neutral civil aircraft and goods
16.14 Capture of enemy civil aircraft and goods
16.15 Protected, and specially protected, aircraft
16.16 Application of the fundamental targeting principles to duties of those on the ground
16.17 What is direct participation in air hostilities?
16.18 The legal use of less sophisticated technologies
16.19 Conclusion
17 Targeting and Outer Space
17.1 Introduction
17.2 Application of targeting law to outer space
17.3 Meaning of outer space
17.4 The treaty regime in outer space
17.5 Application of law of armed conflict rules to space
17.6 Anti-satellite attack methods
17.7 The space debris problem
17.8 Weapons law in space
17.9 Summary
17.10 Civilian involvement in space operations
17.11 Conclusion
18 Cyber Targeting
18.1 Some preliminary definitions
18.2 Applicability of the law of armed conflict to cyber hostilities
18.3 Cyber attacks
18.4 Application of API to cyber attacks
18.5 Applying the rules to cyber operations
18.5.1 Is the proposed target system a military objective?
18.5.2 Discrimination, proportionality, and target selection
18.5.3 DDOS attack using botnet
18.5.4 Intelligence gathering via a targeted Trojan—planting a kill-switch in the process
18.5.5 ‘Man-in-the-middle’ attack
18.5.6 Denial of service attack via system logic
18.5.7 Compromised supply chain
18.5.8 Masquerade
18.5.9 Cyber attacks on objects entitled to special protection
18.5.10 Perfidy and espionage
18.6 Who has the right to participate in cyber hostilities?
Part VI Practical Aspects of Contemporary Targeting
19 The Prosecution of Difficult Targets
19.1 Introduction
19.2 Fighting in built-up areas (FIBUA)
Whether the military objective is fixed or movable and, in the latter case, whether it is in the location that is to be attacked.
How much military advantage an attack on that objective may be expected to yield.
What are the alternative methods of achieving that military advantage?
What death or injury to civilians or damage to civilian objects may the attack be expected to cause?
19.3 Objectives containing dangerous substances
19.4 Shielding of military objectives
19.5 Airliners in flight
Consider the following scenario
19.6 Civilians taking a direct part in hostilities
19.7 Conclusion
20 Non-International Armed Conflict
20.1 Introduction
20.2 Common Article 3
20.3 Combatant status and the notion of fighters
20.4 APII protection of wounded, sick, and shipwrecked
20.5 APII protection of the civilian population
20.6 APII protection of objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population
20.7 APII protection of works and installations containing dangerous forces
20.8 APII protection of cultural objects and of places of worship
20.9 Prohibition of forced movement of civilians
20.10 Customary rules of targeting in NIAC
20.10.1 The principle of distinction in NIAC
20.10.2 Indiscriminate attacks
20.10.3 Proportionality
20.10.4 Precautions in attack
20.10.5 Means of combat
Booby-traps
Landmines
Incendiary weapons
20.11 General NIAC targeting rules
20.12 War crimes in NIAC
Rwanda Tribunal
International Criminal Court
20.13 Conclusion
21 Internal Security, Insurgency, and Operations Short of War
21.1 Introduction
21.2 Domestic law on the use of force
21.2.1 UK domestic law on the use of force
21.2.2 US domestic law on the use of force
21.3 Human rights law and security situations
21.4 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
21.5 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights
21.6 Lawfulness of weapons in internal security operations
21.7 Insurgency
21.8 Military aid to the civil power
21.9 Conclusions
Part VII Targeting Law Challenges and Compliance
22 How States Implement the Distinction Principle
22.1 Introduction
22.2 Targeting procedures
22.3 Rules of engagement
22.4 Disciplined forces
22.5 Military manuals
22.6 Military training
22.7 Legal advice
22.8 International jurisdiction
22.9 Other measures
22.10 Conclusion
23 A Challenge to the Distinction Principle—Effects Based Warfare
23.1 Introduction
23.2 Challenges to the contemporary law of targeting
23.3 Revalidating the contemporary law
23.4 Is the ‘effects based’ approach new and does it justify new rules?
23.5 Stretching the definition of ‘military objective’ to accommodate ‘effects based’ targeting
23.6 The purpose of the attack
23.7 The meaning of ‘military advantage’
23.8 Can ‘effects based’ accommodate to the existing law?
23.9 Applying the emerging principle
23.10 Conclusion
24 Reprisals, Neutrality, and Other Important Issues
24.1 Reprisals defined
24.2 The purpose of reprisals
24.3 UK’s declared position on reprisals
24.4 Unlawful reprisals
24.5 Reprisal use of unlawful weapons
24.6 Reprisals under the law of war crimes
24.7 Neutrality and targeting
24.8 UN Charter and neutrality
24.9 Application of human rights law in armed conflict
24.10 The degree of force that may be used in armed conflict
24.11 Assassination operations in furtherance of armed conflict
24.12 Targeted killing
24.13 Perfidy, emblems, and ruses
24.14 Espionage
24.15 Mercenaries
24.16 Denial of quarter
24.17 Safeguarding of an enemy hors de combat
24.18 Journalists
24.19 UN personnel and diplomatic staffs
24.20 Humanitarian relief
25 When Things Go Wrong
25.1 Introduction
25.2 Compensation under LOAC when things go wrong
25.3 Criminal liability when things go wrong
25.4 Is technical inferiority a defence under the law of armed conflict?
25.5 Is there a duty to investigate under the law of armed conflict?
25.6 Human rights law and investigations of deaths
25.7 Investigations by NGOs
Part VIII Conclusion
26 Is the Law of Targeting Adequate and Does it Have a Future?
26.1 Introduction
26.2 Does the spectrum of conflict make sense?
26.3 Is the law fit for purpose—effects based warfare?
26.4 Is the law fit for purpose—asymmetric warfare and suicide bombing?
26.5 Is the law fit for purpose—wider role of civilians in armed conflict?
26.6 Is the law fit for purpose—technological advances in warfare?
26.7 Law and the future nature of warfare
26.8 A future without war
26.9 Concluding remarks
Further Material
Bibliography
Index
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Tables of Legislation
From:
The Law of Targeting
William H Boothby
Content type:
Book content
Product:
Oxford Scholarly Authorities on International Law [OSAIL]
Published in print:
16 August 2012
ISBN:
9780199696611
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18.205.26.39