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Chapter 3: Triggering the LOAC
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Historical Background F Prior to 1949, the laws and customs of war applied to ‘war’ F War was (and remains) an international legal term of art F Because it was assumed war would be self- evident, law of war treaties (like Hague IV) did not define situations of applicability
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Historical Background F War required a contention between states in which one state sought to overwhelm another an impose its will F This resulted in a potential conflict regulation lacunae: –Military actions not motivated by a desire to impose a state’s will on another state –Conflict between a state and a non-state entity
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Historical Background F WW II exposed the risk of ‘law avoidance’ resulting from the absence of a law application trigger F Spanish Civil War exposed the need to regulate intra-state hostilities (especially due to the failure of the belligerency concept)
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Historical Background F Inclusion of law application triggers was a major advancement in the 1949 Geneva Conventions F These law triggering articles have since evolved into the CIL trigger for all LOAC regulation (not just the Geneva Conventions)
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The CA2/CA3 Equation F 1949 Geneva Conventions substituted ‘armed conflict’ for war as the trigger for treaty applicability F This was a deliberate effort to ensure law applicability based on the de facto existence of situations mandating humanitarian protections
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THE “ TRIGGERING ” MECHANISM F Common Article 2/Common Article 3 –The conflict classification mechanisms of the 4 Geneva Conventions –The international law standard for when the law of war applies
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THE “ TRIGGERING ” MECHANISM Common Article 2: The “ international armed conflict ” standard Any dispute between states leading to the intervention of armed forces (to include an uncontested belligerent occupation) = an international armed conflict TRIGGERING THE FULL CORPUS OF THE LAW OF WAR
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THE “ TRIGGERING ” MECHANISM F CA 2 is triggered only when hostilities result between two states –CA 2 Commentary: u Focus on de facto situation u Focus on de facto authority of state F In some situations, a state may still contend that an intervention into another state’s territory is not the result of a genuine dispute –Cross border ‘hot pursuit’ operation –No legitimate government to dispute intervention
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THE “ TRIGGERING ” MECHANISM F Intervention of Armed Forces: F CA 2 Commentary: –Duration of hostilities irrelevant –Intensity of hostilities irrelevant F Some scholars assert that armed conflict requires: –Organized armed groups –A certain level of significant intensity
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THE “ TRIGGERING ” MECHANISM F Common Article 3: The “non-international armed conflict” standard F Any armed conflict not involving a contest between two states: – state v. non-state group – non-state v. non-state group F TRIGGERS ARTICLE 3 HUMANITARIAN PROTECTIONS
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UNDERSTANDING COMMON ARTICLE 3 A “ mini convention ” within each treaty F Looked to for two distinct purposes –Procedural Component: Conflict Classification: non- international armed conflict –Substantive Component: Humane treatment obligation applicable to any person not actively participating in hostilities
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WHAT IS NON-INTERNATIONAL ARMED CONFLICT? F More than riots or isolated acts of banditry –Pictet ’ s non-binding criteria: u Organization u Authority u Territory u Respect for Law of War u Government responds with regular armed forces
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WHAT IS NON-INTERNATIONAL ARMED CONFLICT F Originally NIAC was synonymous with ‘internal’ armed conflict: –Civil Wars –Internal Dissident Uprisings F Many experts believe it now extends to ‘transnational’ armed conflicts: –Hostilities between a state and non-state group –Transcending the national borders of the state F Hamdan v. Rumsfeld: CA 3 applies to any armed conflict not covered by CA 2
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WHAT IS NON-INTERNATIONAL ARMED CONFLICT? F The 1977 Protocol II Additional Triggering Requirements: –Responsible Command –Control Territory Enabling: u sustained and concerted mil ops u implementation of Protocol provisions F US Position: apply AP II to any armed conflict that triggers CA 3
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THE LOAC TRIGGER
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Intruding on State Sovereignty F When triggered, the LOAC imposes obligations on states F This limits the discretion a state may exercise in responding to a threat –CA 2: Maximum intrusion (because the hostilities are inter-state) –CA 3: More restrictive intrusion (because states sought to preserve discretion to deal with internal dissident threats)
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WHAT LAW APPLIES? The Essence of Sovereignty Domestic Law International Law
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Piercing the Shield of Sovereignty Human Rights International Armed Conflict/CA 2 Internal Armed Conflict/CA 3 State Sovereignty
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WHAT ABOUT THAT “ HUMAN RIGHTS ” ARROW? F International Law that applies at ALL times to protect individuals from their governments F NOT a component of the LOAC, although core protections are often synonymous F While fundamental principles may overlap, TRIGGERING MECHANISMS ARE TOTALLY DISTINCT
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HOW DO THE “ PROTOCOLS ” FIT IN? F 1977 Supplements to the Geneva Conventions of 1949 F An intersection of the Hague and Geneva traditions –Both treaties include additional humanitarian protections –Both treaties include provisions regulating the means and methods of warfare
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HOW DO THE “ PROTOCOLS ” FIT IN? AP I: A supplement to rules related to international armed conflict When you think CA2 international armed conflict, think Hague, Geneva, and Customary Provisions of AP I
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HOW DO THE “ PROTOCOLS ” FIT IN? AP II: A supplement to the CA 3 “ mini convention ” applicable to non-international armed conflicts When you think CA 3 NIAC, think CA 3, plus Protocol II
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Status of AP I and II in US Practice F Never ratified by US because of controversial provisions –US rejected AP I –US has indicated a willingness to enter into AP II (although still no advice and consent from Senate) F US considers most articles to reflect customary international law F Steadily growing case for overall customary international law status
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Customary International Law and IAC F CIL regulatory norms apply to both CA 2 IAC and CA 3 NIAC F Role of CIL is less significant for IAC because conventional law is more developed F However, CIL plays an important role for US practice because it often results in applicability of AP I provisions
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Customary International Law and NIAC F Many of the norms developed for IAC have ‘migrated’ to the realm of NIAC since 1949: –IAC/NIAC distinction almost irrelevant for targeting –LOAC treaties increasingly apply to both types of armed conflict –Humane treatment is a constant obligation in any armed conflict –Key remaining distinction: u inapplicability of lawful combatant status for non-state belligerents u A state cannot be subject to the law of occupation in its own territory
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