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SOCIAL
SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL / AFTER SEPT. 11
Counter-terrorism,
Armed Force and the Laws of War
Adam Roberts, Professor of International Relations, Oxford
University
The essay
is also published in Survival (quarterly journal of IISS,
London), vol. 44, no. 1, Spring 2002, pp. 7-32. Copyright ©
The International Institute for Strategic Studies, London, 2002
What is the role of the laws of war in the ongoing 'war on terror'
proclaimed and initiated by the US following the terrorist attacks
of 11 September 2001? The body of international law applicable
in armed conflict does appear to have a bearing on many issues
raised in anti-terrorist military operations in Afghanistan
as well as elsewhere, including particularly the issues of discrimination
in targeting, protection of civilians, and status and treatment
of prisoners. Because of the unusual character of the armed
conflict, different in important respects from what was originally
envisaged in the treaties embodying the laws of war, a key issue
in any analysis is not just the law's application or otherwise
by the belligerents, but also its relevance to the particular
circumstances of this war. It is not just the conduct of the
parties that merits examination, but also the adequacy of the
law itself.
The present essay focuses on three issues.
Are the laws of war formally applicable to anti-terrorist
military operations?
In the event that anti-terrorist military operations
involve situations different from what was envisaged in the
main international agreements on the laws of war, should the
attempt still be made to apply that body of law?
Are captured personnel suspected of involvement in terrorist
organisations entitled to prisoner-of-war (PoW) status?
The answers to these questions may vary in different circumstances.
The most prominent manifestation of the present US-led 'war
on terror', and the focus of this article, is Operation Enduring
Freedom, which commenced in Afghanistan on 7 October 2001.
However, the war on terror has involved, and is anticipated
to involve, action in other countries too, each with its own
particular legal and factual context.
The laws of war (also referred to as 'international humanitarian
law applicable in armed conflict') are embodied and interpreted
in a variety of sources: treaties, customary law, judicial decisions,
writings of legal specialists, military manuals and resolutions
of international organisations. Although some of the law is
immensely detailed, its basic principles are simple: the wounded
and sick, PoWs and civilians are to be protected; military targets
must be attacked in such a manner as to keep civilian casualties
and damage to a minimum; humanitarian and peacekeeping personnel
must be respected; neutral or non-belligerent states have certain
rights and duties; and the use of certain weapons (including
chemical weapons) is prohibited, as also are other means and
methods of warfare that cause unnecessary suffering. The laws
of war are the product of negotiations between states, and reflect
their experiences and interests, including those of their armed
forces. For centuries these rules, albeit frequently the subject
of controversy, have had an important function in the policies
and practices of states engaged in military operations. Given
the need for coalition members to harmonise their actions on
a range of practical issues, these rules have had particular
significance for international coalitions involved in combat.
Even in situations in which their formal applicability may be
questionable, they have sometimes been accepted as relevant
guidelines.
The four 1949 Geneva Conventions - the treaties that form a
key part of the modern laws of war - are concerned not so much
with the conduct of war as with the protection of victims of
war who have fallen into the hands of an adversary. They explicitly
apply in a wide variety of situations. Common Article 1 specifies
that the parties 'undertake to respect and to ensure respect
for the present Convention in all circumstances'. Common Article
2 specifies that the Conventions 'apply to all cases of declared
war or of any other armed conflict which may arise between two
or more of the High Contracting Parties, even if the state of
war is not recognized by one of them'. Thus the existence or
non-existence of a declaration of war, or a formal state of
war, is not necessary for the application of the Conventions.
Despite such provisions, the laws of war in general, and the
Geneva Conventions in particular, have often proved difficult
to apply in anti-terrorist military operations.
The laws of war are not the only body of law potentially relevant
to the consideration of terrorist actions. In many cases, acts
committed by terrorists would indeed be violations of the laws
of war if they were conducted in the course of an international
or even internal armed conflict. However, because they frequently
occur in what is widely viewed as peacetime, the illegality
of such acts has to be established first and foremost by reference
to the national law of states; international treaties on terrorism
and related matters;1 and other relevant parts of
international law (including parts of the laws of war) that
apply in peacetime as well as wartime, for example the rules
relating to genocide, crimes against humanity and certain rules
relating to human rights. The attacks of 11 September should
be regarded as falling within the legal category of 'crimes
against humanity', which encompasses widespread or systematic
murder against any civilian population.2
By contrast, the laws of war constitute a principal (though
not exclusive) legal framework regarding the conduct of anti-terrorist
military operations, and responses thereto, especially when
these assume the character of an armed conflict.
Jus ad bellum and jus in bello
In any armed conflict, including one against terrorism, it is
important to distinguish between the legality of resorting to
force and the legality of the way in which such force is used.
In strict legal terms, the law relating to the right to resort
to the use of force (jus ad bellum) and the law governing
the actual use of force in war (jus in bello) are separate.
The latter applies to the conduct of international conflict
irrespective of the issue of the right of the belligerents to
resort to the use of force. Although I do not doubt the importance
and complexity of jus ad bellum issues raised after 11
September, and despite having personal views (in favour of the
legality, and indeed overall justifiability, of the military
action in Afghanistan), this essay's focus is on the jus
in bello aspects of the US-led military operations.
Despite the lack of a formal connection between jus ad bellum
and jus in bello, there are certain ways in which they
interact in practice. Observance of jus in bello may
contribute to perceptions of the justice of a cause in three
main respects. First, in all military operations, whether or
not against terrorists, a perception that a state or a coalition
of states is observing basic international standards may contribute
to public support within the state or coalition; support, or
at least tacit consent, from other states; and avoidance of
disputes within and between coalition member states. Second,
if the coalition were to violate jus in bello in a major
way, for example by committing atrocities, that would help the
cause of the adversary forces and even provide them with a justification
for their resort to force under jus ad bellum. Third,
in anti-terrorist campaigns in particular, a basis for engaging
in military operations is often a perception that there is a
definite moral distinction between the types of actions engaged
in by terrorists and those engaged in by their adversaries.
Observance of jus in bello can form a part of that moral
distinction.
However, the jus ad bellum rationale that armed hostilities
have been initiated in response to major terrorist acts can
raise issues relating to the application of certain jus in
bello principles. Two such issues are explored here: first,
whether there is scope for neutrality in relation to an anti-terrorist
war; and second, whether those responsible for terrorist campaigns
can be viewed as exclusively responsible for all the death and
destruction of an ensuing war.
The right of states to be neutral in an armed conflict is a
long-standing principle of the laws of war. Events of the past
century, especially the growth of international organisations
- including the United Nations - have exposed problems in the
traditional idea of strictly impartial neutrality and have led
to its modification and even erosion. In many conflicts there
were states which, even while not belligerents, pursued policies
favouring one side, for example joining in sanctions against
a state perceived to be an aggressor. The importance of such
forms of non-belligerence, distinct from traditional neutrality,
may help to explain the emergence of terms such as 'neutral
or non-belligerent powers' in post-1945 treaties on the laws
of war.3
In respect of Afghanistan, the sanctions initiated by the UN
Security Council against the Taliban regime in 1999, on account
of its support of terrorism and its refusal to hand over Osama
bin Laden, had already required all states to take action against
the Taliban.4 Following the attacks of 11 September,
the UN Security Council promptly adopted resolutions stating
that all states were to take a wide range of actions against
terrorism.5 President George W. Bush went substantially
further, stating in his 20 September address to Congress:
Every
nation, in every region, now has a decision to make. Either
you are with us, or you are with the terrorists. From this
day forward, any nation that continues to harbor or support
terrorism will be regarded by the United States as a hostile
regime.
He
also said in his peroration: 'Freedom and fear, justice and
cruelty, have always been at war, and we know that God is
not neutral between them'.6 It is evident that
the scope for traditional neutrality was implicitly understood
by the Security Council, and explicitly proclaimed by the
US, to be very limited in this anti-terrorist war. Naturally,
some states, including Iran, proclaimed that they were with
'neither Bush nor bin Laden'; and not all states were willing
to assist the US-led military action directly. However, this
war confirmed the lesson of many recent episodes, including
the 1991 Gulf War and the 1999 Kosovo War, that when armed
conflict by a coalition is combined with the application of
general UN sanctions against the adversary state, the scope
for traditional (i.e. impartial) neutrality is indeed limited
- especially so when, as in the case of al-Qaeda, the adversary
operates in numerous states, which are required by the UN
to take a range of measures against it.
The general indignation caused by terrorist attacks can also
affect the implementation of jus in bello when fighting
terrorism is the jus ad bellum. Because the terrorists
started the war, it is sometimes argued, they are responsible
for all the death and destruction that ensues. Such a view,
implying that the peculiar circumstances involved in the jus
ad bellum might override certain considerations of jus
in bello in the war that follows, has no basis in the
law. There was evidence of such thinking in some statements
made in the US in connection with Afghanistan. In early December,
discussing civilian casualties, US Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld said: 'We did not start this war. So understand,
responsibility for every single casualty in this war, whether
they're innocent Afghans or innocent Americans, rests at the
feet of the al-Qaeda and the Taliban'.7
Another possible connection between jus ad bellum and
jus in bello relates to the principle of 'proportionality'.
This is a long-established principle that sets out criteria
for limiting the use of force. One of its meanings relates
to the proportionality of a military action compared to a
grievance. It involves a complex balance of considerations,
and it would be incorrect to interpret this principle to imply
a right of tit-for-tat retaliation. It would be legally unjustified
for a military response to a terrorist act to have the objective
of killing the same number of people and there was no suggestion
or indication that this was a coalition objective.
The other main meaning of proportionality relates to the actual
conduct of ongoing hostilities. As a US Army manual succinctly
interprets it, 'the loss of life and damage to property incidental
to attacks must not be excessive in relation to the concrete
and direct military advantage expected to be gained'.8
This meaning of proportionality is an important underlying
principle of jus in bello, and is not directly linked
to jus ad bellum. However, this meaning of the principle
is often difficult to apply in armed conflict. It may, but
does not necessarily, limit the use of force to the same level
or amount of force as that employed by an adversary. It exists
alongside the principle of military necessity, which is defined
in the US Army manual as one that 'justifies those measures
not forbidden by international law which are indispensable
for securing the complete submission of the enemy as soon
as possible'.9 The principle of proportionality
is therefore in tension, but not necessarily in conflict,
with the current US military doctrine which favours the overwhelming
use of force in order to achieve decisive victory quickly
and at minimum cost in terms of US casualties.10
Anti-terrorist military operations
Anti-terrorist
military operations, including those resulting from the events
of 11 September, can have fundamental characteristics that
are far removed from those of inter-state armed conflicts
as principally envisaged in the laws of war. This is because
of six factors relating to the nature of the opposition:
Neither all terrorist activities, nor all anti-terrorist
military operations, even when they have some international
dimension, necessarily constitute armed conflict between states.
Terrorist movements themselves generally have a non-state
character. Military operations between a state and such a
movement, even if they involve the state's armed forces acting
outside its own territory, are not necessarily such as to
bring them within the scope of application of the full range
of provisions regarding international armed conflict in the
1949 Geneva Conventions and the 1977 Geneva Protocol I.11
Anti-terrorist operations may assume the form of actions
by a government against forces operating within its own territory;
or, more rarely, may be actions by opposition forces against
a government perceived to be committing or supporting terrorist
acts. In both these cases, the conflict may have more the
character of non-international armed conflict (that is, civil
war) as distinct from international war. Fewer laws-of war
rules have been formally applicable to civil as distinct from
international war, although the situation is now changing
in some respects.
In many cases, the attributes and actions of a terrorist
movement may not come within the field of application even
of the modest body of rules relating to non-international
armed conflict. Common Article 3 of the 1949 Geneva Conventions
is the core of these rules, but says little about the scope
of application. The principal subsequent agreement on non-international
armed conflict, the 1977 Geneva Protocol II, is based on the
assumption that there is a conflict between a state's armed
forces and organised armed groups which, under responsible
command, exercise control over a part of its territory, and
carry out sustained and concerted military operations. The
protocol expressly does not apply to situations of internal
disturbance and tension, such as riots, and isolated and sporadic
acts of violence.12
Since terrorist forces often have little regard for
internationally agreed rules of restraint, the resolve of
the anti-terrorist forces to observe them may also be weakened,
given the low expectation of reciprocity and the tendency
of some part of the public under attack to overlook any breaches
by their own forces.
A basic principle of the laws of war is that attacks
should be directed against the adversary's military forces,
rather than against civilians. This principle, violated in
terrorist attacks specifically directed against civilians,
can be difficult to apply in anti-terrorist operations, because
the terrorist movement may not be composed of defined military
forces that are clearly distinguished from civilians.
Some captured personnel who are members of a terrorist
organization may not meet the criteria for PoW status as set
out in the 1949 Geneva Convention III. In particular, such
personnel may fail to pass the tests of 'belonging to a Party
to the conflict', 'being commanded by a person responsible
for his subordinates', 'wearing a fixed distinctive sign',
and 'conducting their operations in accordance with laws and
customs of war'. However, even if they are not entitled to
PoW status, such persons should still be treated humanely.
(The question of prisoners is discussed in greater detail
below.)
These six factors reflect the same underlying difficulty governments
have in applying the laws of war to civil wars, namely, that
the opponent tends to be viewed as a criminal, without the
right to engage in combat operations. This factor above all
explains why, despite the progress of recent decades, many
governments are anxious about applying the full range of rules
applicable in international armed conflict to operations against
rebels and terrorists.
For at least 25 years, the US has expressed a concern, shared
to some degree by certain other states, about the whole principle
of thinking about terrorism in a laws-of-war framework. To
refer to such a framework, which recognises rights and duties,
might seem to imply a degree of moral acceptance of the right
of any particular group to resort to acts of violence, at
least against military targets.13 Successive US
administrations have objected to certain revisions to the
laws of war on the grounds that they might actually favour
guerrilla fighters and terrorists, affording them a status
that the US believes they do not deserve. When, on 29 January
1987, President Reagan explained why he was not recommending
Senate approval of 1977 Geneva Protocol I additional to the
1949 Geneva Conventions, he mentioned that granting combatant
status to certain irregular forces 'would endanger civilians
among whom terrorists and other irregulars attempt to conceal
themselves'. In addition, he indicated a concern that the
provisions would endanger US soldiers when he stated in very
general terms that 'the Joint Chiefs of Staff have also concluded
that a number of the provisions of the protocol are militarily
unacceptable'. He argued that US repudiation of the protocol
was an important move against 'the intense efforts of terrorist
organisations and their supporters to promote the legitimacy
of their aims and practices'.14 Whether all this
was based on a fair interpretation of 1977 Protocol I is the
subject of impassioned debate which is beyond the scope of
this survey. The key point is the US concern - which has not
changed fundamentally in the years since 1987 - that the laws
of war might be misused by some in order to give an unwarranted
degree of recognition to terrorists. This concern has been
evident in the Afghanistan crisis.
While the application of the law may be particularly difficult
in anti-terrorist operations, it is not unimportant. Indeed,
some failures to observe legal restraints in past campaigns
have been instructive. In military operations with the purpose
of stopping terrorist activities, there has been a tendency
for counter-terrorist forces to violate basic legal restraints.
There have been many instances in which prisoners were subjected
to mistreatment or torture. In some cases, excesses by the
government or by intervening forces may have contributed to
the growth of a terrorist campaign against it. External states
supporting the government have sometimes contributed to such
excesses. Applying pressure on a government or army to change
its approach to anti-terrorism, to bring it more into line
with the laws of war and human-rights law, can be a difficult
task.
One example of an anti-terrorist military campaign, the 1982-2000
Israeli presence in Lebanon, shows the importance of legal
restraints in anti-terrorist operations, and the hazards that
can attend a failure to observe them. This episode has certain
similarities to the case of Afghanistan in 2001-02, as well
as some obvious differences.
Israel's June 1982 invasion of Lebanon was explicitly in response
to 'constant terrorist provocations', including, since July
1981, '150 acts of terrorism instigated by the PLO, originating
in Lebanon, against Israelis and Jews in Israel and elsewhere:
in Athens, Vienna, Paris and London'. Israel said that if
Lebanon was unwilling or unable to prevent the harbouring,
training and financing of terrorists, it must face the risk
of counter-measures.15 The invasion led to the
attacks on the inhabitants of Sabra and Shatila refugee camps
outside Beirut in September 1982 by Israel's local co-belligerents,
the Lebanese Phalangists. At the lowest estimates, several
hundred Palestinians in the camps, including many women and
children, were killed. This event aroused strong opposition
internationally, and also in Israel. The Israeli authorities
established a Commission of Inquiry, which concluded that,
while the Phalangist forces were directly responsible for
the slaughter, Israel bore indirect responsibility.16
During the whole period of Israeli military involvement in
Lebanon, the treatment of alleged terrorist detainees also
caused controversy. Israel was opposed to giving them PoW
status on the grounds that as terrorists they were not entitled
to it. The detainees were held in very poor conditions in
notorious camps, including al-Khiam (run by the Israeli-created
South Lebanese Army) and al-Ansar (run by the Israel Defence
Forces).17 The Israeli military presence in Lebanon
received extensive criticism internationally and in Israel,
and it cost many lives among the Israel Defence Forces as
well as their adversaries and in the civilian population.
It ended with a unilateral Israeli withdrawal in May 2000.
Most anti-terrorist operations are largely internal matters,
conducted by governments within their own territories, often
within certain legal and prudential limits. Within functioning
states, terrorist campaigns have often been defeated through
slow and patient police work (sometimes with military assistance)
rather than major military campaigns; for example, the actions
against the Red Army Faction in Germany and the Red Brigades
in Italy in the 1970s. The British military and police operation
against 'Communist Terrorists' in Malaya after 1948 is a good
example (in a colonial context) of a long-drawn-out and patient
anti-terrorist campaign that was eventually successful.
In other contexts, too, Western armed forces, engaging with
adversaries showing at best limited respect for ethical and
legal restraints, have themselves managed to observe basic
rules of the laws of war. This was the case in the 1991 Gulf
War, in which Iraq mistreated prisoners, despoiled the environment
and had to be warned in brutally clear terms not to engage
in chemical or biological attacks and terrorist operations.
The US-led Gulf coalition sought to observe the law not because
of any guarantee of reciprocity, but because such conduct
was important to the maintenance of internal discipline, and
of domestic and international support. Similar conclusions
were drawn from the 1999 Kosovo War. Reciprocity with one
adversary in one particular conflict is not the only basis
for observing the laws of war.
The US armed forces have indicated their intention to observe
the rules governing international armed conflicts, even in
situations which may differ in certain respects from the classical
model of an inter-state war. A principle codified in the Standing
Rules of Engagement issued by the US Joint Chiefs of Staff
on 15 January 2000 spells this out:
US forces will comply with the Law of War during military
operations involving armed conflict, no matter how the conflict
may be characterized under international law, and will comply
with its principles and spirit during all other operations.18
The
development by US and allied forces of techniques of bombing
that are more accurate than in previous eras has increased
the technical possibilities of air power being employed discriminately,
and therefore in a manner that is compatible with laws-of-war
rules about targeting. This is a momentous development in
the history of war, yet its effects, especially as regards
operations against terrorists, should not be exaggerated,
as it cannot guarantee no deaths of innocents. Precision-guided
weapons are generally better at hitting fixed objects, such
as buildings, than moving objects which can be concealed,
such as tanks. Civilian deaths will still occur, whether because
certain dual-use targets are attacked, because of the proximity
of military targets to civilians, or because of faulty intelligence
and human or mechanical errors. In addition, malevolence and
callousness can still lead to attacks on the wrong places
or people. A further problem with the new type of US bombing
campaign is that, in the eyes of third parties, it can easily
look as if the US puts a lower value on the lives of Iraqis
or Serbs or Afghans than it does on its own almost-invulnerable
aircrews: a perception which can feed those hostile views
of the US that help to provide a background in which terrorism
can flourish.
In an anti-terrorist war, as in other wars, there can be strong
prudential considerations that militate in favour of observing
the laws of war. These include securing public and international
support; ensuring that terrorists are not given the propaganda
gift of atrocities by their adversaries; and maintaining discipline
and high professional standards in the counter-terrorist forces.
Such considerations may carry great weight even in conflicts,
or particular episodes within them, which differ from what
is envisaged in the formal provisions regarding scope of application
of relevant treaties These considerations in favour of observing
the law may be important irrespective of whether there is
reciprocity in observance of the law by all the parties to
a particular war. However, it is not realistic to expect that
the result of the application of such rules will be a sanitised
form of war in which civilian suffering and death is eliminated.
Afghanistan
In wars in Afghanistan over the centuries, conduct has differed
markedly from that permitted by the laws of war. These wars
always had a civil war dimension, traditionally subject to
fewer rules in the laws of war; and guerrilla warfare, already
endemic in Afghanistan in the nineteenth century, notoriously
blurs the distinction between soldier and civilian which is
at the heart of the laws of war. Some local customs, for example
regarding the killing of prisoners and looting, are directly
contrary to long-established principles of the law. Other
customs are different from what is envisaged by the law, but
are not necessarily a violation of it: for example, the practice
of soldiers from the defeated side willingly joining their
adversary rather than being taken prisoner. In some cases,
conduct has been consistent with international norms: for
example, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
had access to some prisoners during the Soviet intervention.
Overall, however, compliance has been limited.
The war in Afghanistan - principally between the Taliban and
Northern Alliance forces - had been going on for many years
before the events of 11 September 2001. Both parties were
called upon to comply with their obligations under international
humanitarian law. UN Security Council Resolution 1193 of 28
August 1998, passed unanimously, reaffirmed inter alia
that
all parties to the conflict are bound to comply with their
obligations under international humanitarian law and in particular
the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and that persons
who commit or order the commission of grave breaches of the
Conventions are individually responsible in respect of such
breaches.
The
reference to grave breaches would appear to suggest that the
Security Council viewed all the rules of the 1949 Geneva Conventions
as applicable, and not just common Article 3, which deals
with civil war. The clear terms of this resolution are a reminder
that, three years before it became directly involved, the
US as well as other powers did view the laws of war as applicable
to the Afghan conflict.
Following the events of 11 September 2001, when it was evident
that an armed conflict between the coalition and the Taliban
was likely, the ICRC, consistent with its general practice,
sent confidential messages to certain governments reminding
them of their obligations under international humanitarian
law. Unfortunately, in the first of what would be many clashes
between humanitarian bodies and national governments in this
crisis, the ICRC messages touched on the issue of nuclear
weapons in a way that invited antagonism and rejection: a
replacement message had to be sent.19 The ICRC
subsequently issued some public statements on the application
of the laws of war in this crisis, reminding all the parties
involved - the Taliban, the Northern Alliance and the US-led
coalition - of their obligations to respect the law, and stating
that the ICRC was continuing a wide range of activities inside
Afghanistan.20
Like the period of Soviet intervention of 1979-89, and indeed
wars in many countries in the period since 1945, the war in
Afghanistan from 7 October 2001 to the present can perhaps
be best characterised as 'internationalised civil war'. This
is not a formal legal category, but an indication that the
rules pertaining to both international and civil wars may
be applicable in different aspects and phases of the conflict.21
On the technical legal question as to which of the main laws
of war treaties have been formally binding on the belligerents
in the hostilities in Afghanistan since October 2001, the
1907 Hague Convention IV on land warfare applies because of
its status as customary law, binding on all states whether
or not parties to the treaty. In addition, Afghanistan, and
also the main members of the international coalition, are
parties to the following agreements:
the 1925 Geneva Protocol on gas and bacteriological
warfare;
the 1948 Genocide Convention;
the four 1949 Geneva Conventions.
While some of the states involved are parties to certain additional
agreements, the above-named treaties provide the basic treaty
framework for considering the application of the law in this
particular armed conflict. In addition, rules of customary
international law apply, including certain provisions of 1977
Geneva Protocol I that are accepted as having that status.
As regards civil-war aspects of the Afghan war, some but not
all of the provisions of the agreements listed above apply.
The 1907 Hague Land War Convention's Article 2 indicates that
the convention and its annexed regulations apply only to wars
between states. The 1925 Geneva Protocol is not formally applicable
to civil wars.22 The 1948 Genocide Convention is
considered to apply to non-international as well as international
armed conflict. In the 1949 Geneva Conventions, common Article
3 lists certain minimum provisions for humane treatment of
those taking no active part in hostilities that are to be
applied in non-international armed conflict.
The implementation of the laws of war posed a problem for
Operation Enduring Freedom from the start. The number
of Afghan forces involved in the war, many of which were under
local warlords, and the lack of clear structures of authority,
decision-making and military discipline among them, were all
complicating factors. One of the groups involved, al-Qaeda,
had committed or supported numerous criminal acts in foreign
countries. Difficult practical issues facing the coalition
included: the need to conduct operations discriminately; the
possibility that adversary forces might mistreat or execute
coalition prisoners; the possibility that some enemy personnel
facing capture might be reluctant to surrender their weapons,
and that they might not qualify for PoW status; maintenance
of order (and avoidance of looting and revenge killings) in
liberated towns; how to bring pressure on Northern Alliance
forces to observe basic norms; and assistance for humanitarian
relief operations.
The active role of the media in this war has ensured that
these issues have been heavily publicised. Reporters are operating
close to, and even in front of, the front lines, sending back
reports and high-resolution pictures as events unfold. Up
to the end of January 2002, more reporters had died while
covering the war in Afghanistan than non-Afghan coalition
military personnel.23 The lesson of other modern
wars has been confirmed: that the press plays a critical role
in repeatedly raising matters germane to the laws of war.
One issue relating to the laws of war which impacted upon
all phases of operations in Afghanistan is humanitarian relief.
Such relief constitutes a major activity in almost all contemporary
wars. The need for humanitarian relief is particularly likely
to arise in anti-terrorist operations against a weak or failed
state, because such states breed conditions in which terrorist
movements can operate and large-scale human misery can occur.
The fact of a war being against terrorists, while it may affect
the mode of delivery (since land convoys may be vulnerable
to seizure) does not affect the law applicable to the provision
of relief. The basic obligations of the various parties to
an armed conflict to assist in and protect humanitarian relief
operations are embodied in 1949 Geneva Convention IV, on civilians.24
Humanitarian relief issues proved critically important in
Afghanistan. Announcing the start of Operation Enduring
Freedom, President Bush stated: 'As we strike military
targets, we will also drop food, medicine and supplies to
the starving and suffering men and women and children of Afghanistan'.25
US forces air-dropped considerable quantities of aid at the
same time as the major bombing operations took place. There
was tension between the US and humanitarian agencies, some
of which were critical of the bombing campaign, doubtful of
the value of air-dropped supplies and concerned about the
aggravated risks and obstacles to their work that resulted
from the military operations. While the effects of war and
the onset of winter heightened the urgent need for aid, the
collapse of the Taliban regime in early December 2001 and
its replacement by the interim administration facilitated,
but by no means guaranteed, the secure delivery of aid by
land routes. A wide range of countries and organisations took
part in the provision of aid.26 Refugees started
to return in significant numbers: over 3,000 per day in January,
but there were also movements of ethnic Pashtun from Afghanistan
to Pakistan.27
Bombing
The anti-terrorist rationale of the coalition operations in
Afghanistan gave a particular character to two issues on which
the laws of war had a substantial bearing: bombing and the
status and treatment of prisoners.
The principle that the bombing of Afghanistan should be discriminate
was repeatedly stated. On 21 October, General Richard B. Myers,
the Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said:
The last thing we want are any civilian casualties. So we
plan every military target with great care. We try to match
the weapon to the target and the goal is, one, to destroy
the target, and two, is to prevent any what we call 'collateral
damage' or damage to civilian structures or civilian population.28
US
bombing in Afghanistan aroused much international concern,
particularly as regards civilian casualties and damage. There
were reports of many attacks causing significant numbers of
civilian casualties and damage. Two attacks in October hit
an ICRC warehouse in Kabul. According to press reports, over
a hundred villagers may have died in bombings on 1-2 December
of Kama Ado and neighbouring villages in eastern Afghanistan,
not far from the cave complex at Tora Bora. In several cases,
bombings led to casualties among coalition forces: while this
is not a laws-of-war issue as such, and is not uncommon in
armed conflicts, it highlights the fact that bombing remains
far from clinically accurate.
It is difficult to arrive at a reliable estimate of the overall
number of civilian deaths caused by the bombing in Afghanistan.
As in the 1991 Gulf and 1999 Kosovo wars, the Pentagon has
been reluctant to issue figures. Apart from certain statements
by the Taliban, the highest reported estimate is over 3,500
as of mid-December, but there are grounds for doubt.29
In sharp response, Rumsfeld stated in an interview on 8 January
2002 that
there
probably has never in the history of the world been a conflict
that has been done as carefully, and with such measure, and
care, and with such minimal collateral damage to buildings
and infrastructure, and with such small numbers of unintended
civilian casualties.30
Even
if the figure is an over-estimate, the bombing has clearly
resulted in large numbers of civilian deaths and caused thousands
of Afghan civilians to flee their homes.31 Much
work is needed to put right such human and material damage
as can be repaired.
In legal terms, the incidence of civilian deaths per se
may not always constitute a violation, absent other factors;
and there are strong reasons to believe US statements that
civilian deaths in the above types of episode were unintended.
Some may well have resulted from errors of various kinds,
and some may have been unavoidable 'collateral damage'. One
cause of civilian casualties may have been the fact that,
in a legacy from the period of Soviet involvement in Afghanistan,
many Taliban military assets were located in towns, where
they were less vulnerable to raids from rural-based guerrillas,
but where they were of course closer to civilians who risked
getting hit in bombing attacks. While much of the bombing
was discriminate, questions are raised about whether all appropriate
measures were taken to reduce civilian casualties and damage.
Even if much of the civilian death and destruction is not
a violation of the law, the resulting adverse public perception
risks harming the coalition cause.
The US was particularly sensitive about accusations that it
had acted indiscriminately. Rumsfeld accused the Taliban and
al-Qaeda leaders of both causing and faking civilian damage:
'They are using mosques for command and control, for ammunition
storage, and they're not taking journalists in to show that.
What they do is when there's a bomb goes down, they grab some
children and some women and pretend that the bomb hit the
women and the children.'32 What truth there is
in all this is difficult to determine.
Did the concern over civilian casualties undermine the US
bombing effort? Its eventual success against the Taliban would
suggest not, but there were indications that the concern had
serious effects. It was reported that the US had deliberately
slowed the pace of the campaign, and increased the risk to
the people executing it, because of legal restraints and moral
values. It was also stated that war planners frequently chose
not to hit particular targets, even if they were militarily
important, and pilots allegedly complained of lost opportunities.
Yet the planners could not give their reasoning for ruling
out certain targets, as it would give the adversary 'a recipe
book for not being bombed'. The issue of civilian casualties
also became ammunition for inter-service battles, particularly
for Army arguments in favour of 'boots on the ground'.33
One issue raised by the bombing, and which involved the risk
of immediate and possible future civilian casualties, was
the use of cluster bombs. These are air-dropped canisters
containing numerous separate bomblets which disperse over
a given area. The bomblets, which are meant to explode on
impact or to self-deactivate after a specific period, can
cause particularly severe problems if they fail to do so.
There have been objections to their use, principally on the
ground that they have a tendency, like anti-personnel land-mines,
to kill people long after the conflict is over. Reports from
Kosovo and elsewhere have confirmed the general seriousness
of the problem.34 On the other hand, some evidence
from the Afghanistan campaign suggests that cluster bombs
were an effective weapon. As the law stands, there has been
no firm agreement to outlaw cluster bombs, and while they
cannot be said to be illegal per se, their use does
raise questions regarding their compatibility with fundamental
principles of the laws of war. They are certain to be the
subject of further pressures to limit or stop their use, or
to ensure more effective safeguards against later accidental
detonations.
A second issue concerns the use of bombing in the hunt for
Taliban and al-Qaeda personnel, following the fall of the
Taliban regime in early December 2001. In the preceding phase,
bombing had been used primarily in support of Northern Alliance
frontal operations aimed at capturing the main Taliban-held
cities. Once this was achieved, a good deal of the bombing
was directed against remnant Taliban and al-Qaeda forces and
their leaders. Several incidents were reported in the press
in which those killed were neither. The reports drew attention
to the difficulty of distinguishing between civilians and
these forces. They also raised the question, of broader significance
in anti-terrorist wars: to what extent is bombing an appropriate
form of enforcement once a state is, to a greater or lesser
degree, under the control of a government that is opposed
to the terrorists? At that point, to what extent can the focus
be transferred to other forms of police and military action
that may be less likely than bombing to cause civilian casualties?
One long-standing prohibition in warfare is the rule against
use of gas and bacteriological methods of warfare. The US
repeatedly expressed concern that al-Qaeda might be preparing
to use such methods in terrorist attacks. In addition, there
were situations in which there could have been pressures for
the US to use gas. When, in 1975, the US ratified the 1925
Geneva Protocol, it indicated that it considered that certain
uses of riot-control agents in armed conflict did not violate
the protocol.35 In early December 2001, Rumsfeld
was asked at a press conference if the US might use gas in
the hunt for Taliban and al-Qaeda personnel in mountain caves.
Rumsfeld's response contained no denial:
Well, I noticed that in Mazar, the way they finally got the
dead-enders to come out was by flooding the tunnel. And finally
they came up and surrendered, the last hard core al-Qaeda
elements. And I guess one will do whatever it is necessary
to do. If people will not surrender, then they've made their
choice.36
Prisoners
From
late November 2001, the status and treatment of prisoners
taken in the war on terror became a major international controversy.
Within the Pentagon, if not necessarily at the political level,
it had been recognised early on that the prisoner issue could
be difficult. An unpublished document circulated by the USAF's
International and Operations Law Division on 21 September
2001 outlined the dimensions of the problem: terrorists were
to be treated as 'unlawful combatants'; it was 'very unlikely
that a captured terrorist will be legally entitled to PoW
status under the Geneva Conventions'; however, there was a
'practical US interest in application of Law of Armed Conflict
principles in the context of reciprocity of treatment of captured
personnel.' As regards treatment upon capture,
if a terrorist is captured, Department of Defense members
must at the very least comply with the principles and spirit
of the Law of Armed Conflict … A suspected terrorist captured
by US military personnel will be given the protections of
but not the status of a PoW.37
Initially,
international attention focused on one event: the killing
of a large number of Taliban and al-Qaeda prisoners following
the revolt at Qala-e Jhangi Fort near Mazar-e Sharif in the
period 25 November -1 December 2001. Even before the prisoners
were taken at Kunduz at around the time of its fall on 23-24
November, it was evident that the surrender and imprisonment
of the non-Afghan forces fighting alongside the Taliban would
be extremely difficult. At the same time, there was very little
sign of serious preparation for handling prisoners, large
numbers of whom were likely to be particularly dangerous.
The precise chain of events leading to the revolt has yet
to be established, but the causes appear to include the following
heady mix: these were particularly fanatical soldiers, for
whom the whole concept of surrender would be anathema; the
arrangements for receiving, holding and processing the prisoners
appear to have been ad hoc and casual; a number of
prisoners had not surrendered all their weapons, and by not
having laid down their arms they failed to meet the requirements
for PoW status; the prisoners were held in a place where there
was a large store of weapons, to which they gained access;
and some reports suggest that the prisoners feared that they
were about to be killed, so had nothing to lose by revolt.
When asked at a press conference whether the suppression of
the prison revolt at Mazar-e Sharif had been proportionate,
Rumsfeld indicated bafflement:
Now,
the word 'proportion' - 'proportionate' is interesting. And
I don't know that it's appropriate. And I don't know that
I could define it. But it might be said - and I wouldn't say
it - (laughter) - but it might be said by some that to quickly
and aggressively repress a prison riot in one location might
help dissuade people in other locations from engaging in prison
riots and breaking out of prison and killing more people.
I don't know that that's true. It might also persuade the
people who are still in there with weapons, killing each other
and killing other people, to stop doing it … Your question's
too tough for me. I don't know what 'proportionate' would
be.38
The
revolt at Qala-e Jhangi Fort was a desperate struggle in which
not only many prisoners, but also a number of Northern Alliance
troops in charge of the fort, died. US bombing, and sharp-shooting
by UK special forces, played a part in the defeat of the uprising.
Public discussion in the UK and elsewhere has focused on the
events at the fort, including the question of whether the
force used to quell the rebellion was excessive. If the situation
was as desperate and threatening as reports indicated, the
use of force is hardly surprising. Public discussion should
more usefully focus on how prisoners should be received and
dealt with. Events at the fort raised the issue of whether
the US and, in particular, the Northern Alliance, had a clear
policy for treating prisoners, including the foreign fighters.
The real cause of the disaster was probably a failure to think
the issue through before the prisoners arrived at the fort,
and especially the failure to disarm all prisoners.
Other reports of maltreatment and deaths of prisoners elsewhere
confirm that the overall approach of the Northern Alliance
was defective. In particular, by late December there had been
numerous reports of Afghan captors beating their detainees,
and the ICRC was reported as expressing concern that it had
been able to register only 4,000 of the 7,000 prisoners which
the US said it and its Afghan allies had in custody.39
The actual influence of the US and its coalition partners
over the Northern Alliance's actions in such basic matters
as protection of prisoners - and whether they used it - is
open to question. Coalition members have expressed different
views on this. In his Pentagon press briefing on 30 November,
Rumsfeld indicated - in general terms, not in connection to
the prisoner question - that the US does have influence with
the forces with which it operated in Afghanistan:
We
have a relationship with all of those elements on the ground.
We have provided them food. We've provided them ammunition.
We've provided air support. We've provided winter clothing.
We've worked with them closely. We have troops embedded in
their forces and have been assisting with overhead targeting
and resupply of ammunition. It's a relationship.40
This
contrasts with an earlier statement of British Prime Minister
Tony Blair, who was asked on 13 November, again in general
terms, 'What sanctions do we have over the Northern Alliance?'.
He replied simply, 'None'.41
The question of the status and treatment of al-Qaeda fighters
taken prisoner in Afghanistan, arguably distinguishable from
the status and treatment of Taliban fighters taken prisoner,
involves the important but difficult issue of whether or not
such combatants are considered lawful. The key factor in determining
the lawfulness of a combatant, and therefore the entitlement
to participate directly in hostilities, is the affiliation
of the combatant to a party to the conflict.
Lawful combatants comprise the organised armed forces (including
militias and volunteer corps) of a state or otherwise recognised
party to a conflict. They also include members of certain
other militias and volunteer corps, including those of organised
resistance movements, belonging to a party to the conflict,
provided that they meet certain criteria: they must be under
a responsible command system; wear a fixed distinctive sign;
carry arms openly; and conduct their operations in accordance
with the laws of war. Members of regular armed forces who
meet such criteria may well be lawful combatants even if the
regime that they serve is not recognised as the lawful government
of the state. Lawful combatants are entitled to PoW status
and all of the rights set forth in the Geneva Convention III.
Lawful combatants cannot be punished for the mere fact of
having participated directly in hostilities, but they can
be tried for any violations of international law, including
the laws of war, they may have committed.
What is the status of those many people who are involved in
hostile activities in various ways, but who fail to meet the
above criteria? Since the Second World War, the problem had
arisen repeatedly; one suggested term for a wide range of
such combatants was 'unprivileged belligerents'.42
Many belligerents failing to meet one of the criteria were
viewed as entitled to PoW status, but not all were.43
In current US military manuals two terms with apparently identical
meaning, 'unlawful combatants' and 'illegal combatants', are
used to refer to those who are viewed as not being members
of the armed forces of a party to the conflict and not having
the right to engage in hostilities against an opposing party.44
Such combatants can face penal sanctions for participating
directly in hostilities and for other acts they may commit,
and they do not have the right to PoW status; but they do
retain a claim to certain fundamental guarantees regarding
their detention and any judicial proceedings against them.
The distinction between lawful and unlawful combatants is
important. Article 5 of the 1949 Geneva Convention III provides
that, in cases of doubt, prisoners shall be treated as PoWs
'until such time as their status has been determined by a
competent tribunal'. While this Article does not specify the
nature of the 'competent tribunal', Article 45 of the 1977
Geneva Protocol I, in elaborating these provisions, allows
for considerable leeway in the procedure by which a tribunal
could reach such a decision. The possibilities that the proceedings
could take place after a trial for an offence, and
also in camera in the interest of state security, are
not excluded. In US official manuals the general principle
that Article 5 tribunals must be held is not contested. The
US Army manual states unequivocally: 'When doubt exists as
to whether captured enemy personnel warrant PW [prisoner of
war] status, Art. 5 Tribunals must be convened'.45
The fact that certain prisoners may be viewed as unlawful
combatants, and may (after a tribunal has so determined) be
denied PoW status, does not mean that they have no legal rights
at all. A strong argument can be made that, whether or not
they are formally entitled to such rights, they should have
certain of the basic safeguards accorded to PoWs. Furthermore,
Article 75 of the 1977 Geneva Protocol I elaborates a range
of fundamental guarantees that are intended to provide minimum
rules of protection for all those who do not benefit from
more favourable treatment under other rules. Any state with
a claim to act legally in international relations, even if
not itself a party to the 1977 Geneva Protocol I (neither
the US nor Afghanistan is a party), must take the rules in
Article 75 seriously as the minimum standards, especially
as these provisions are viewed as customary law.46
The United Kingdom's long engagement against terrorism in
Northern Ireland provides one precedent for applying international
rules to prisoners whose status is contested. While denying
that there was an armed conflict whether international or
otherwise, and strongly resisting any granting of PoW status
to detainees and convicted prisoners, the UK did come to accept
that international standards had to apply to their treatment.
The UK Commission of Inquiry whose report in 1972 led to this
conclusion is an interesting example of asserting the wider
relevance, even in an internal conflict, of certain international
legal standards, including some from the main body of the
four 1949 Geneva Conventions.47
In 1967-68, during the US involvement in Vietnam, the US issued
directives to classify Viet Cong main force and local force
personnel, and certain Viet Cong irregulars, as PoWs. This
was despite the existence of doubts and ambiguities as to
whether these forces met all the criteria in Article 4 of
the 1949 Geneva Convention III. However, there was a significant
exception in respect of terrorism. Viet Cong irregulars were
only to be classified as PoWs if captured while engaging in
combat or a belligerent act under arms, 'other than an act
of terrorism, sabotage, or spying'. There was provision for
establishing Article 5 tribunals to determine, in doubtful
cases, whether individual detainees were entitled to PoW status.
Those not entitled to such status were to be transferred to
the South Vietnamese authorities.48
US policy regarding prisoners taken in Afghanistan appeared
initially to leave only limited room for application of the
rules of protection contained in the laws of war. By referring
to these prisoners generally as 'battlefield detainees' and
'unlawful combatants', the US signalled its unwillingness
to classify al-Qaeda and Taliban prisoners as PoWs. On 11
January 2002, when asked whether the ICRC would have any access
to the prisoners who had just been taken to the US naval base
at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, Rumsfeld stated:
I think that we're in the process of sorting through precisely
the right way to handle them, and they will be handled in
the right way. They will be handled not as prisoners of war,
because they're not, but as unlawful combatants. The, as I
understand it, technically unlawful combatants do not have
any rights under the Geneva Convention. We have indicated
that we do plan to, for the most part, treat them in a manner
that is reasonably consistent with the Geneva Conventions,
to the extent they are appropriate, and that is exactly what
we have been doing.49
In
the event, ICRC officials started interviewing detainees at
Guantanamo on 18 January, and were able to establish a permanent
presence there. On 22 January Rumsfeld, contrary to his earlier
statement, recognised that 'under the Geneva Convention, an
unlawful combatant is entitled to humane treatment'.50
On 7 February, the White House, in the first major policy
statement on the issue, announced that Taliban prisoners were
covered under Geneva Convention III, but al-Qaeda members
were not. While neither group was accorded full PoW status,
the White House gave detailed assurances about their treatment.
Two considerations contributed to the US determination not
to classify as PoWs prisoners taken in Afghanistan: the first
related to conditions of detention of prisoners, and the second
to the conduct of judicial proceedings. On conditions of detention,
the 1949 Geneva Convention III famously states that PoWs are
only obliged to give name, rank, date of birth and personal
or serial number. The US was anxious to obtain considerably
more information from them, although whether a different classification
actually improves the prospects of securing accurate information
is debatable. As regards judicial proceedings, from early
on in the war, the US reportedly intended to prosecute a number
of al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders, including Osama bin Laden
if captured. The US has been reluctant to pursue the procedure
laid down in the Geneva Convention, which specifies that any
sentence of a PoW must be 'by the same courts according to
the same procedure as in the case of members of the armed
forces of the Detaining Power'.51 Such procedures,
US officials feared, could provide opportunities for al-Qaeda
suspects and their lawyers to prolong legal processes and
attract publicity. There was also concern that in cases involving
defendants with no documents and no willingness to collaborate
with any of the procedures, and where evidence might be largely
based on intelligence sources, it could be difficult to provide
evidence that met high standards of admissibility, and equally
high standards of proof of direct personal involvement in
terrorist activities. Further, al-Qaeda might learn valuable
information, for example, about its vulnerability to intelligence
gathering, from evidence in open court. In addition, following
the normal US military procedures for appeals was seen as
posing problems.52
In certain other respects, too, there could be difficulties
in treating some of the prisoners as normal PoWs. For example,
a practice that is normally pursued after a war - releasing
and repatriating prisoners - is complicated in this case by
three considerations. First, while the war in Afghanistan
may be concluded at a definite date, it may be decades before
the 'war on terror' can be declared to be over for the US.
Second, unlike PoWs in a 'normal' inter-state war, the prisoners
concerned might continue to be extremely dangerous after release,
given their training and motivation to commit acts of terrorism.
Third, their countries of origin might refuse to accept them
back, except perhaps as prisoners.
President Bush's Military Order of 13 November 2001 provides
for the option of trying certain accused terrorists by military
commissions operating under special rules. It specifies that
individual terrorists, including members of al-Qaeda, can
be detained and tried 'for violations of the laws of war and
other applicable laws', and that the military commissions
would not be bound by 'the principles of law and the rules
of evidence generally recognized in the trial of criminal
cases in the United States district courts'. It also contains
some extremely brief provisions for humane conditions of detention,
and provides for the Secretary of Defense to issue detailed
regulations on such matters as the conduct of proceedings
of the military commissions.53 The provision for
trial by military commission is not unprecedented: for example,
President Roosevelt's Proclamation of 2 July 1942, bluntly
entitled 'Denying Certain Enemies Access to the Courts of
the United States'.54 On 30 November 2001, the
President's Counsel offered several assurances, including
that such commissions are one option, but not the only option.55
Nevertheless, President Bush's Military Order remained the
subject of considerable legal and political debate in the
US and elsewhere as to its constitutionality, practicability
and advisability. One test of the detailed regulations, which
had not been issued at the time of writing, will be whether
the procedures of the military commissions conform with the
ten recognised principles of regular judicial procedure outlined
in Article 75(4) of 1977 Geneva Protocol I.
Overall, the US handling of questions relating to the treatment
and status of prisoners, especially those under Northern Alliance
control, has caused widespread concern and criticism. The
principles briefly indicated in the above-mentioned USAF document
of 21 September 2001 were not consistently followed, and practical
arrangements, especially around the time of the rebellion
at Mazar-e Sharif, were inadequate. Although many key US positions
were defensible, especially that certain prisoners might not
qualify for PoW status, aspects of US policy and procedures
were poorly presented, and in some cases did not appear to
be fully thought-out. The prisoner issue - always sensitive
anyway - was especially significant in this war: if the coalition
was perceived to have treated prisoners inhumanely, or to
have regarded their status and treatment as being in an international
legal limbo, there would be risks of a general weakening of
the prisoner regime, including for any coalition personnel
taken prisoner in the ongoing war on terrorism. The handling
of this issue was a potential threat to coalition unity. The
controversies over the prisoner question had a special resonance
because of the concern of other countries that the US had
been moving towards unilateralism generally, on a wide range
of matters: in this perspective, fairly or unfairly, the US
reluctance to accept the full application of the 1949 Geneva
Convention III on PoWs to those particular prisoners was seen
as one more example of a selective approach to international
law. The White House statement of 7 February, while not answering
all concerns, provided reassurance that US polices would follow
provisions of the Geneva Conventions.
Conclusion
Bush
administration policies on these laws-of-war issues have evolved
in a generally sensible direction. However, neither the United
States nor its critics have shown a clear understanding of
how the laws of war should be applied to military counter-terrorist
operations. This is in no small part because the application
of those laws is complicated, as a return to the three questions
set out at the beginning of this essay shows:
First, according to a strict interpretation of their
terms, the main treaties relating to the conduct of international
armed conflict are formally and fully applicable to anti-terrorist
military operations only when those operations have an inter-state
character. Where anti-terrorist operations have the character
of civil war, the parties must apply, as a minimum, the rules
applicable to civil wars.
Second, in anti-terrorist military operations, certain
phases and situations may well be different from what was
envisaged in the main treaties on the laws of war. They may
differ from the provisions for both international and non-international
armed conflict. Recognising that there are difficulties in
applying international rules in the special circumstances
of anti-terrorist war, the attempt can and should nevertheless
be made to apply the law to the maximum extent possible. This
conclusion is reinforced by decisions of commissions of inquiry,
a resolution of the UN Security Council, some practice of
states and considerations of prudence.
Third, the great majority of prisoners taken in war
meet the criteria for PoW status laid down in international
treaties, and must be so treated if they continue to be held.
However, in an anti-terrorist war, as in other wars, there
are likely to be certain individuals who do not meet the criteria.
Such individuals, for example, members of a terrorist organisation,
may present special problems as prisoners, and may pose a
continuing threat even after the end of a war. The standard
presumption outlined in treaty law and in US military manuals
is that such people should be accorded the treatment, but
not the status, of a PoW until a tribunal convened by the
captor determines the status to which the individual is entitled.
In cases where it is determined that they are not PoWs, there
are certain fundamental rules applicable to their treatment,
including those outlined in Article 75 of 1977 Geneva Protocol
I. Any prisoner, whether or not classified as a PoW, can be
tried for offences, including those against international
law, that were committed prior to capture.
There are ample grounds for questioning whether military operations
involving action against terrorists constitute either a new,
or a wholly distinct, category of war. The coalition operations
in Afghanistan, and the larger war against terrorism of which
they are a part, are not completely unlike earlier wars. Many
forms of military action and issues raised are similar to
those in previous military operations, and concern issues
addressed by the laws of war.
Events in Afghanistan have confirmed that there are particular
difficulties in applying the laws of war to anti-terrorist
operations. A war that has as a fundamental purpose the pursuit
and bringing to justice of people deemed to be criminals involves
many awkward issues for which the existing laws of war are
not a perfect fit. The use of proxies in an anti-terrorist
war risks creating a situation in which major powers are at
the mercy of their local agents, whose commitment to the laws
of war may be slight.
Despite such problems, treating, or appearing to treat, the
law in a cavalier manner risks creating new problems. If a
major power is perceived as ignoring certain basic norms,
this may have a negative effect in a coalition, or on enemies.
It may also affect the conduct of other states in other conflicts.
In that wider sense, the principle of reciprocity in the observance
of law retains its value.
There has been no serious suggestion that the existing legal
framework can or should be abandoned, and no proposals for
alternative detailed rules. The existing laws of war, however
imperfect, are irreplaceable. Since issues relating to the
laws of war arise with great frequency in anti-terrorist military
operations, and will no doubt continue to do so in the continuing
'war against terrorism', there is a need for greater clarity
about observance of the basic laws of war, and about the principles
to be followed if and when parties consider that specific
circumstances justify specific derogations from that body
of law.
Adam Roberts is Montague Burton Professor of International
Relations at Oxford University and Fellow of Balliol College.
He is co-editor, with Richard Guelff, of Documents on
the Laws of War (Oxford and New York: Oxford University
Press, 2000.) An earlier version of this paper, dated 16 January
2002 and entitled 'The Relevance of the Laws of War in Anti-Terrorist
Wars', appeared on the SSRC website in January-March 2002.
Notes
1 For texts
of treaties and other international documents on terrorism,
and useful discussion thereof, see esp. Rosalyn Higgins and
Maurice Flory (eds), Terrorism and International Law
(London: Routledge, 1997). For more recent treaties and UN
resolutions see the information on terrorism on the UN website,
www.un.org.
2 'Crimes against humanity', defined in the Charter
and Judgment of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremburg
in 1945-46, are more fully defined in Article 7 of the 1998
Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (not yet
in force).
3 1949 Geneva Convention III Relative to the Treatment
of Prisoners of War, Articles 4(B)(2) and 122. See also the
references to 'neutral and other States not Parties to the
conflict' in 1977 Geneva Protocol I Additional to the Geneva
Conventions of 12 August 1949, and Relating to the Protection
of Victims of International Armed Conflicts, Articles 9, 19,
31 etc.
4 UN Security Council Resolution 1267 of 15 October
1999. See also Security Council Resolutions 1076 of 22 October
1996 and 1193 of 28 August 1998, both of which, in addressing
the ongoing conflict in Afghanistan, referred to the problem
of terrorism there, and called upon states to take specific
actions, most notably to end the supply of arms and ammunition
to all parties to the conflict.
5 UN Security Council Resolutions 1368 of 12 September
2001 and 1373 of 28 September 2001.
6 President George W. Bush, Address to a Joint
Session of Congress and the American People, Washington DC,
20 September 2001.
7 Rumsfeld, at the end of his opening statement
at a news briefing at the Pentagon on 4 December 2001, US
DoD website, http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Dec2001.
8 US Army, The Law of Land Warfare, FM 27-10,
Department of the Army Field Manual, Washington DC, July 1956,
revised 15 July 1976, paragraph 41.
9 US Army, The Law of Land Warfare, FM 27-10,
paragraph 3. A subsequent official US exposition of the principle
states: 'Only that degree and kind of force, not otherwise
prohibited by the law of armed conflict, required for the
partial or complete submission of the enemy with a minimum
expenditure of time, life and physical resources may be applied.'
US Navy, The Commander's Handbook of the Law of Naval Operations,
NWP 1-14M, Department of the Navy, 1995, paragraph 5.2.
10 See particularly Rumsfeld's comments on proportionality
in relation to the suppression of the revolt at Mazar-e-Sharif,
below.
11 In ratifying 1977 Geneva Protocol I in 1998,
the United Kingdom made a statement that the term 'armed conflict'
denotes 'a situation which is not constituted by the commission
of ordinary crimes including acts of terrorism whether concerted
or in isolation'.
12 1977 Geneva Protocol II Additional to the Geneva
Conventions of 12 August 1949, and Relating to the Protection
of Victims of Non-International Armed Conflicts, Article 1.
13 For fuller discussion, and evidence that concern
about the hazards of coping with terrorism in a laws-of-war
framework is not new, see my chapter in Lawrence Freedman
et al. (eds), Terrorism and International Order,
Chatham House Special Paper (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul,
1986), esp. pp. 14-15.
14 President Reagan's letter of transmittal of
the 1977 Geneva Additional Protocol II to the US Senate. Treaty
Doc. No. 2, 100th Congress, 1st Session, at III (1987), reprinted
in American Journal of International Law, vol. 81,
no. 4, October 1987, pp. 911-12.
15 Professor Yehuda Blum, Permanent Representative
of Israel, at UN Security Council, 5 June 1982. Security
Council Official Records, 2374th meeting, p. 7. The Security
Council unanimously demanded an end to all military activities
and a withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon in Resolutions
508 and 509 of 5 and 6 June 1982 respectively.
16 Commission of Inquiry into the Events at
the Refugee Camps in Beirut: Final Report, Jerusalem,
1983, pp. 53-4. The report is reprinted in International
Legal Materials , vol. 22, no. 3, May 1983, at p. 473.
The Commission was chaired by Yitzhak Kahan, President of
the Supreme Court of Israel.
17 In a case concerning detainees in Ansar Prison,
on which the Israeli Supreme Court issued a judgment on 11
May 1983, the Israeli authorities asserted that the prisoners
were 'hostile foreigners detained because they belong to the
forces of terrorist organisations, or because of their connections
or closeness to terrorist organisations'. Israel, while refusing
them PoW status, claimed to observe 'humanitarian guidelines'
of the 1949 Geneva Convention IV on civilians. For details
of the case see Israel Yearbook on Human Rights 1983,
vol. 13, pp. 360-64.
18 Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Instruction,
Standing Rules of Engagement for US Forces, Ref. CJCSI
3121.01A, 15 January 2000, p. A-9. A similar but not identical
statement had appeared in the Standing ROE of 1 October 1994
which this document replaces. A number of other US military-doctrinal
statements are equally definite that US forces will always
apply the law of armed conflict.
19 In its confidential messages to the US and UK
governments on 28 September 2001, the ICRC stated that 'the
use of nuclear weapons is incompatible with international
humanitarian law'. This is undoubtedly wrong as a statement
of law, and the wording was omitted in a revised text sent
to governments on 6 October.
20 See e.g. 'Afghanistan: ICRC calls on all parties
to conflict to respect international humanitarian law', Communication
to the press 01/47, ICRC, Geneva, 24 October 2001.
21 See esp. Hans-Peter Gasser, 'Internationalized
Non-International Armed Conflicts: Case Studies of Afghanistan,
Kampuchea and Lebanon', American University Law Review,
vol. 33, no. 1, Fall 1983, pp. 145-61.
22 Afghanistan is nonetheless bound by the complete
prohibition on possession and use of biological weapons in
the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention, which it ratified
on 26 March 1975. It is not a party to the 1993 Chemical Weapons
Convention, which it signed on 14 January 1993 but never ratified.
23 Eight reporters died in the period October-December
2001, several of them due to banditry rather than military
operations. Information supplied by Nik Gowing of BBC World
Television, 26 January 2002.
24 1949 Geneva Convention IV Relative to the Protection
of Civilian Persons in Time of War, Part II (i.e. Articles
13-26). The issue of humanitarian relief is only touched on
briefly in this essay as, while of critical importance in
Afghanistan, only to a limited extent does it raise problems
specific to anti-terrorist military operations.
25 President Bush, televised address announcing
the start of military strikes in Afghanistan, 7 October 2001.
Text published in International Herald Tribune, 8 October
2001, p. 3.
26 At all stages of the operations in Afghanistan,
US military press briefings contained extensive and sometimes
detailed references to the delivery of humanitarian aid. See
e.g. the briefing by General Tommy Franks at Tampa, Florida,
on 18 January 2002, http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jan2002/briefings.html.
27 Reports from UNHCR border monitors, summarized
in a press briefing by a UNHCR spokesman in Geneva, 25 January
2002; and Afghanistan OCHA Situation Report No. 37, 29 January
2002, both on the UN Reliefweb site, http://www.reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf.
28 Richard Myers, interview with This Week
on ABC TV, 21 October 2001, http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Oct2001/briefings.html.
29 A figure of 3,767 was given by Marc W. Herold,
'A Dossier on Civilian Victims of US Aerial Bombing of Afghanistan:
A Comprehensive Accounting', 19 December 2001, University
of New Hampshire website http://pubpages.unh.edu/~mwherold/
. There are certain updates on this site. This report was
produced while the US bombing campaign (of which it is extremely
critical) was ongoing. Its methodology is imperfect, because
of the following factors: (1) The total figure is spuriously
exact, and the calculation leading to it is not transparent.
The author has informed me that the figure was not intended
to suggest total accuracy. (2) Unavoidably, in view of time
constraints, the study relied heavily on media reports, some
of them dubious. (3) In some instances al-Qaeda deaths, and
possibly Taliban deaths, may have been reported as civilian
deaths. (4) It is probable that some civilian casualties of
bombing went unreported and were thus omitted from the report.
For a strong critique, see the paper by Jeffrey C. Isaac of
Indiana University, 'Civilian Casualties in Afghanistan: The
Limits of Herold's "Comprehensive Accounting"', 10 January
2002, available at http://www.indiana.edu/~iupolsci/docs/doc.htm
.
30 Rumsfeld, Interview on C-SPAN, 8 January 2002,
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jan2002/briefings.html.
31 Many of the internally displaced in, and refugees
from, Afghanistan testified eloquently to the disastrous effects
of the bombing on civilians and their property. See e.g. Taghi
Amirani's documentary film, The Dispossessed, made
in November-December 2001, about the Makaki Camp in Nimruz
Province near the Afghan-Iranian border. The camp was initially
under Taliban, and then Northern Alliance, control.
32 Rumsfeld, Remarks outside ABC TV Studio, 28
October 2001, http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Oct2001/briefings.html.
33 William M. Arkin, 'Fear of Civilian Deaths May
Have Undermined Effort', Los Angeles Times, 16 January
2002, p. A12. http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-011602milmemo.story.
34 See esp. Cluster Bombs and Landmines in Kosovo:
Explosive Remnants of War, ICRC, Geneva, 2001. I have
also relied here on the quarterly reports of the UNMIK Mine
Action Coordination Centre in Pristina, and material on the
UN Mine Action website, http://www.mineaction.org/
. I have also consulted material on Kosovo and landmines
on the Human Rights Watch website, www.hrw.org.
35 The various US statements reserving the right
to use herbicides and riot control agents in certain circumstances
are summarized in US Army, Operational Law Handbook,
JA 422, International & Operational Law Department, The Judge
Advocate General's School, US Army, Charlottesville, Virginia,
1997, p. 5-16.
36 Ronald Rumsfeld interviewed by Tim Russert on
Meet the Press, NBC TV, 2 December 2001, http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Dec2001/briefings.html.
37 International and Operations Law Division -
HQ USAF/JAI, Summary of Legal Issues Relevant to Terrorism
Incidents of 11 Sep 01, Pentagon, Washington DC, 21 September
2001 [unpublished], pp. 5-6.
38 Rumsfeld, Press Briefing with Gen. Pace, 30
November 2001, http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Nov2001/briefings.html.
39 See e.g. Carlotta Gall, report from Sebarghan
in northern Afghanistan, 'Long Journey to Prison Ends in Taliban
Deaths: Many Suffocated in Sealed Ship Containers', International
Herald Tribune, 11 December 2001, p. 4; and Rory Carroll,
report from Kabul, 'Afghan jailers beat confessions from men',
The Guardian, London, 28 December 2001, p. 13.
40 Rumsfeld, Press Briefing with General Pace,
30 November 2001, http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Nov2001/briefings.html.
41 Tony Blair, 13 November 2001, UK 10 Downing
Street website, http://www.pm.gov.uk.
42 The category is far from new. See Richard R.
Baxter, 'So-called "Unprivileged Belligerency": Spies, Guerrillas
and Saboteurs', British Year Book of International Law
1951, vol. 28, Oxford University Press, London, 1952,
pp. 323-45.
43 Professor Levie, who has written extensively
on the law relating to PoWs, suggests that being of a different
nationality from that of the army in which they serve would
not prevent combatants from having PoW status, but he is more
doubtful about spies and saboteurs when not operating openly
and in uniform. Howard S. Levie, Prisoners of War in International
Armed Conflict, US Naval War College International Law
Studies, vol. 59 (Newport, RI: Naval War College Press, 1978),
pp. 76-84.
44 US Army, Operational Law Handbook, JA
422 (above, note 35), p. 18-9; and US Navy, Commander's
Handbook of the Law of Naval Operations, NWP 1-14M (above,
note 9), paragraph 12.7.1.
45 US Army, Operational Law Handbook, JA
422, p. 18-8. See also US Navy, Commander's Handbook of
the Law of Naval Operations, NWP 1-14M, paragraphs 11.7
and 12.7.1.
46 Article 75 is one of the many articles of 1977
Geneva Protocol I that the US views as customary international
law, binding on all states. US Army, Operational Law Handbook,
JA 422, p. 18-2.
47 Report of the Committee of Privy Counsellors
Appointed to Consider Authorized Procedures for the Interrogation
of Persons Suspected of Terrorism, Cmnd. 4901, Her Majesty's
Stationery Office, London, 1972, pp. 1-2 and 11-23.
48 Two key directives issued by US Military Assistance
Command, Vietnam, on the question of eligibility for PoW status
are (1) Annex A, 'Criteria for Classification and Disposition
of Detainees', part of Directive no. 381-46 of 27 December
1967; and (2) Directive no. 20-5 of 15 March 1968, 'Inspections
and Investigations: Prisoners of War - Determination of Eligibility'.
Both were reprinted in American Journal of International
Law, vol. 62, no. 4, October 1968, pp. 766-75. The quotation
is on p. 767.
49 Rumsfeld, News Briefing, 11 January 2002. His
suggestion that unlawful combatants have no rights under Geneva
Convention III was incorrect. In cases where there is doubt
they have the right under Article 5 to have their status determined
by a tribunal. http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jan2002/briefings.html.
50 Rumsfeld, News Briefing, 22 January 2002, ibid.
51 1949 Geneva Convention III Relative to the Treatment
of Prisoners of War, Article 102.
52 The normal appeal procedure for US armed forces
is through the appellate court of each service, then through
the US Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, and then on
to the Supreme Court.
53 President George W. Bush, Military Order of
13 November 2001, 'Detention, Treatment and Trial of Certain
Non-Citizens in the War Against Terrorism', Sections 1(e),
1(f), 3, and 4(b) and (c). Federal Register, Washington
DC, vol. 66, no. 222, 16 November 2001, p. 57,833. Text available
at the Federal Register website, http://www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/aces/aces140.html.
54 President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Proclamation
No. 2561 of 2 July 1942, 'Denying Certain Enemies Access to
the Courts of the United States', Federal Register,
vol. 7, issue of 7 July 1942, p. 5,103. On this and other
cases of US-established military commissions, see the Congressional
Research Service paper, Terrorism and the Law of War: Trying
Terrorists as War Criminals before Military Commissions,
updated 11 December 2001, Congressional Research Service Order
Code RL31191, Washington DC, 2001, pp. 18-26 and 46-8.
55 Statements by President's Counsel, Alberto Gonzalez,
in an address to an American Bar Association meeting, 30 November
2001, as cited in American Society of International Law Newsletter,
November-December 2001, p. 12.
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