The future of law: Protecting the rights of Civilians. (International Law).
Slaughter, Anne-Marie ; Burke-White, William
Throughout world history, the principal threat to international
peace and security has been "war"--the threat that the League
of Nations, the Kellogg-Briand Pact, and the United Nations sought, but
failed, to prevent. Traditionally, war has been declared and fought on a
mass scale, waged by soldiers fighting for states in organized armies.
In the traditional understanding of war, it was possible to attack a
nation only by first destroying the army that protected it. Civilians
were thus largely insulated from conflict, physically separated from
danger by the armies that stood between them and their enemies. Prior to
the rise of airpower and the advent of weapons of mass destruction,
international law did not have to address the security of the civilian
populations themselves. Legal regimes therefore proscribed war generally
and only protected civilians in occupied territories.
"Civilian" security was generally a matter of domestic law.
While interstate warfare has declined in recent decades, civil
conflict arising from ethnic, religious, and nationalist strife is on
the rise. And as the events of September 11 demonstrated in the starkest
terms, international violence is no longer limited to war fought between
states, whether declared or undeclared. Individuals can murder thousands
and potentially millions of other individuals across national borders
without ever encountering an army. The physical space between combatant
states as patrolled by soldiers, sailors, and pilots no longer serves as
a protective buffer to safeguard civilians. National armies and
state-supported terrorism are still important, but international rules
addressing only organized state violence are more appropriate for past
wars than for wars to come.
To address this new generation of threats, international law must
move beyond general prohibitions on war and develop a regime to protect
civilian lives. We must embrace and elevate the principle of civilian
inviolability to an absolute prohibition on the deliberate targeting or
killing of civilians in armed conflict of any kind, by states or
individuals, for any purpose. This principle must become a foundational
principle of the international order, equivalent to and parallel with
the prohibition on interstate war in Article 2(4) of the UN Charter.
When the framers of the UN Charter adopted the prohibition on the
use of force in interstate relations in Article 2(4), they were pulling
together a number of strands of existing law, similar to the situation
today. The principle of civilian inviolability has been strengthened and
developed in three distinct bodies of international law--the law of war,
international criminal law, and the law of terrorism. The law of war
regulates the conduct of combat, with an emphasis on protecting
civilians from violent conflict. International criminal law has grown
from its roots in Nuremberg to hold individuals accountable for
international crimes. The law of terrorism has developed in an effort to
prohibit attacks by non-state actors and state sponsorship of these
attacks.
These three bodies of law are deeply rooted in the existing
international order and are supported by generally effective enforcement
mechanisms. Collectively they offer a powerful new logic to address and
possibly prevent violent conflict in the next century. The protection of
civilians must become more than a specialized doctrine applicable in
specific areas of the law. "Civilians" are individuals who do
not choose to engage in armed conflict, who seek only to go about their
lives and participate in their communities. They are not cannon fodder,
not tools to be used as means to any end. They must be free from
violence, whether from their own governments, marauding armies, suicide
bombers, or hijacked planes.
Under the law of war the principle of civilian inviolability is
typically referred to as "noncombatant immunity." The change
in terminology that we propose, as well as the elevation of this
principle to a foundational principle of international order next to
Article 2(4), is telling. "Noncombatant" implies individuals
trying to stay clear of the violence swirling around them.
"Civilian" means members of civil society, in every nation
around the world and increasingly across borders. It is the birthright of all civilians, as all humans who choose not to take up arms, to be
free from violence, to be free to live their lives in dignity and peace.
The move from "noncombatant immunity" to "civilian
inviolability" is thus a move from the law of war to the law of
peace.
The Law of War
The law of war has a long history both in formal agreements and in
the practice of states. This body of law provides the foundations for
the principle of civilian inviolability. As early as the Hague
Conventions of 1907, international treaties restricted the conduct of
warfare in order to protect civilians from armed conflict. These early
regulations were limited, prohibiting only "the killing and
wounding treacherously" of noncombatants and the bombardment of
undefended towns. Killing civilians for killing's sake was
outlawed, but killing civilians for military advantage remained
permissible. In 1938 the League of Nations added its voice, finding that
the intentional bombing of civilians "was illegal."
It was not, however, until the 1949 Geneva Conventions that an
overarching regime to protect civilians was codified. The Fourth Geneva
Convention of 1949 was specifically drafted to protect civilians in
international armed conflicts. The convention regulates the treatment of
civilians in occupied territories and forbids "grave
breaches," including the "willful killing, torture or inhuman
treatment" of civilians. The Geneva Conventions place affirmative
duties on states to suppress such breaches and to search for and
extradite or prosecute violators.
While the grave breaches provisions only apply in international
armed conflicts, Article 3, common to all four Geneva Conventions,
applies to any armed conflict, international or internal. Common Article
3 is weaker in form than the grave breaches provisions; it does not
impose duties to suppress or prosecute. Nonetheless, Common Article 3
forbids "violence to life and person," and "outrages upon
personal dignity" against "persons taking no part in the
hostilities." The 165 states-parties to the Geneva Conventions thus
created the first global regime to protect civilians from willful
killing in the course of armed conflict.
The next significant step forward in the development of the
principle of civilian inviolability was the adoption of the 1977
Additional Protocols to the Geneva Conventions. Additional Protocol I,
applicable in international armed conflicts, establishes a basic rule
that all parties must "distinguish between the civilian population
and combatants... and accordingly shall direct their operations only
against military objectives." Likewise, Additional Protocol I
requires that "the civilian population as such, as well as
individual civilians, shall not be the object of attack."
Additional Protocol II, which applies in all armed conflicts, is less
specific, but nonetheless guarantees that "the civilian
population... shall enjoy general protection against the dangers arising
from military operations." The foundations of the principle of
civilian inviolability were thus established.
Despite the heightened protection accorded civilians in the Geneva
Conventions and their protocols, such protections have historically
applied only in the context of interstate war. War-crime trials in the
wake of World War II all required a preliminary finding of an
international armed conflict before invoking laws protecting civilians.
Given that the physical separation of the civilian population from the
enemy army was seen as protection itself, the Geneva Conventions applied
largely to prisoners of war and civilians who were in territory occupied
by another state. Common Article 3 of each Geneva Convention and
Additional Protocol II expanded the scope of protection for civilians,
applying it to civilians in armed conflict, whether or not they were in
the hands of the enemy or in occupied territory. Nevertheless, the
existence of an armed conflict, preferably of an international
character, remained an absolute prerequisite for legal protection.
The jurisprudence of the ad hoc international tribunals of the
1990s has greatly expanded civilian protection law, relaxing the
requirement that there be armed conflict and applying these rules in
non-international as well as international armed conflicts. As the Trial
Chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) held in 1996, "The rule that the civilian population as such
as well as individual citizens, shall not be the object of attack is a
fundamental rule of international law applicable to all armed
conflicts... irrespective of their characterization as international or
non-international." In recent ICTY jurisprudence no distinction is
made between international and non-international armed conflict; the
same high level of protection is accorded civilians in both types of
war. As the Senior Legal Advisor in the ICTY Office of the Prosecutor
clarified: "attacks on [civilians and] civilian objects are
prohibited as a matter of customary law in all conflicts."
The developments in the law of war over the past century have
greatly expanded both the protections accorded to civilians and the
scope of applicability of these regulations. The issue today is the
extent to which "armed conflict" as defined in the Geneva
Conventions can also apply to terrorist attacks. Recent ICTY
jurisprudence suggests it should. In the Tadic case, which involved
crimes against humanity committed in 1992, the Appeals Chamber found
that "armed conflict exists whenever there is a resort to armed
force between States or protracted armed violence between governmental
authorities and organized armed groups or between such groups within a
State." This definition covers all contemporary uses of force,
including traditional interstate war, civil wars, insurgencies of all
kinds, and both domestic and international terrorism.
By expanding well beyond traditional organized armed violence to a
definition of "armed conflict" broad enough to include
violence traditionally the province of police rather than soldiers, the
law of war lays the foundation for an international legal principle
protecting individuals from violence of almost any kind. The Geneva
Conventions, however, have traditionally applied primarily to states,
imposing duties on governments that they were then bound to transmit to
their generals and officers. International criminal law, to which we now
turn, has translated these obligations into a code of specific crimes,
for which individuals can be held specifically accountable.
International Criminal Law
Developments in international criminal law have strengthened the
rules of the law of war, expanding their scope and creating a viable set
of enforcement mechanisms. Just as the law of war has moved from a focus
on states to a focus on individuals, so too has international criminal
law. International law has long dictated that when one state wrongs
another, the state that committed the wrong must pay reparations.
International criminal law has moved this liability to the personal
level, holding individuals responsible for their own acts and those that
they commanded or supervised.
This process of the individualization of international law is
crucial for the operation of the principle of civilian inviolability.
The process began at Nuremberg, when individuals, rather than states,
were indicted for and convicted of crimes against civilians. It then
drew on the corpus of human-rights law, which rendered state-society
relations transparent, imposing direct obligations on governments to
safeguard the basic rights of their citizens. The next step was to
render governments themselves transparent, transforming the previously
unified government into an aggregation of individual officials
performing specific functions, each personally responsible for his or
her actions.
The ICTYis the foremost example of this process of the
individualization of international law. The ICTY has applied the rules
of civilian protection and held individuals accountable. In its 2000
decision in the Kupreskic case, which tried Kupreskic for acts of ethnic
cleansing against Yugoslavian Muslims, the Trial Chamber described
"the protection of civilians" in time of armed conflict as
"the bedrock of modern humanitarian law," holding Kupreskic
personally accountable for violations thereof. Nearly every judgment of
the ICTY to date has found that the victims are part of a protected
civilian population and held the perpetrators criminally responsible for
crimes against humanity or war crimes. Most of the ICTY's
indictments seek to establish individual criminal responsibility for
crimes against civilians. Even former heads of state are not immune.
Slobodan Milosevic, for example, stands charged with "murder and
willful killings of Croat and other non-Serb civilians."
National courts have joined the international tribunals in
prosecuting individuals for violations of civilian protection law under
the principle of universal jurisdiction. Historically invoked in cases
of piracy, national courts are now using universal jurisdiction to
prosecute crimes against civilians when the crimes can be described as
genocide or crimes against humanity. A famous example is the Spanish
request for the extradition of Augusto Pinochet to stand trial for acts
of torture committed when he was president of Chile. Likewise, Belgium
has convicted individuals of war crimes against civilian populations in
Rwanda, and Germany has prosecuted war crimes against civilians in
Bosnia.
To make a general principle of civilian inviolability effective,
international criminal law is undergoing a further transformation. Just
as state-society relations and governments themselves have been rendered
transparent, society is itself undergoing this same transformation.
Individual actors in society, whether alone or part of a group or
network, are now being held accountable for their acts toward fellow
citizens and the citizens of other countries. Regardless of the
perceived justice or injustice of their cause, they may not pursue their
claims through attacks on civilians or they will be held personally
accountable. Their acts are now subject to regulation under both
domestic and international law. Courts everywhere are now ready and
willing to enforce these rules.
The Law of Terrorism
Unlike the law of war and international criminal law, which have
undergone significant development in the past decades, the law of
terrorism has progressed slowly, stumbling over definitional ambiguity.
Nevertheless, two distinct legal approaches to terror have
developed--preventing and punishing acts of terrorism and holding states
accountable for those acts. Both approaches provide further support for
the principle of civilian inviolability.
The United Nations attempted to draft a comprehensive treaty
against terrorism in 1972 and failed. Instead, a piecemeal approach
ensued in which specific acts of terrorism-aircraft hijacking, crimes
against protected persons, and hostage taking--became the subjects of
separate multilateral treaties. The purpose of these treaties was to
define a specific crime, to require states to pass domestic laws
forbidding the crime, and to create a system whereby perpetrators would
either be prosecuted or extradited to face prosecution elsewhere. Each
of the crimes defined in these various treaties involves the taking of
innocent civilian life, whether air passengers, diplomats, or hostages.
The limited effectiveness of piecemeal treaty-making led to a
broader approach to prevent terrorism. In 1994, the UN Declaration on
Measures to Eliminate International Terrorism condemned "all acts,
methods, and practices of terrorism as criminal and unjustifiable"
and declared such acts a "grave violation of the purposes and
principles of the United Nations." Invoking the principle of
civilian inviolability, the declaration described terrorism as
"criminal acts intended or calculated to provoke a state of terror
in the general public, a group of persons or particular persons."
This declaration was followed in 1997 by the Convention for the
Suppression of Terrorist Bombings, which "criminalizes a general
technique"--the detonation of "an explosive or other lethal
device...with the intent to cause death or serious bodily injury."
Here again, bombing is not prohibited in and of itself but only when
certain to result in civilian deaths. The 1999 International Convention
for the Suppression of the Financing of Te rrorism has sought to punish
those who finance terrorists. Offenses under this convention likewise
bolster the principle of civilian inviolability, including any "act
intended to cause death or serious bodily injury to a civilian, or to
any other person not taking an active part in the hostilities in a
situation of armed conflict."
Beyond the criminalization of acts of terrorism, a second approach
prevents state sponsorship of terrorism. Soft law in the form of UN
resolutions and declarations call on states to "refrain from
organizing, instigating, assisting, or participating in... terrorist
acts in another state or acquiescing in... activities... directed
towards the commission of such acts." These declarations, too,
invoke the notion of civilian inviolability, declaring as criminal all
acts "intended or calculated to provoke a state of terror in the
general public."
To date, much of the international law governing terrorism has been
patchy and ineffective. The specific conventions only ban one technique
and have not been uniformly respected. The broader declarations have no
binding legal force, and the UN Sixth Committee charged with producing a
global terrorist convention has met with only limited success. An
underlying theme running though all these efforts, however, is an
attempt to ban attacks aimed at civilians.
The Future of Law
The logic of this principle provides a new way to think about
terrorism. Terror does not exist in isolation; it is spread for a
purpose, generally to advance or publicize a cause or undermine public
order as part of a political, ethnic, or religious struggle. It is this
communicative aspect associated with "terrorism" that leads to
the old adage and analytic dead end: "one man's terrorist is
another man's freedom fighter."
Individually, the developments in each of these three areas of law
are significant. Taken collectively, they are extraordinarily powerful.
They create a web of prohibitions and penalties around the principle of
civilian inviolability. Whether understood as illegal combat,
international crime, or an inherent element of terrorist attacks, the
deliberate killing of individuals intent only on living their lives as
members of civil society is unacceptable.
The principle of civilian inviolability, by contrast, offers a
definitional approach to terrorism with analytic power. The fundamental
issue at stake is not the desire to terrorize but rather the types of
targets attacked. Civilians must not be the deliberate targets of attack
under any circumstances, for any purpose. Focusing on targeting choices
resolves the uneasy definitional tension between civilian, soldier, and
terrorist.
A foundational principle of civilian inviolability creates a new
category between civilian and soldier. It is the category of global
criminals. Individuals who deliberately target and kill civilians are
the modem equivalent of "the enemies of all mankind," the
designation given pirates, slave-traders, and torturers under the
international law establishing universal jurisdiction. In their current
incarnation, global criminals have killed hundreds of thousands of
people.
The final element in the equation is the addition of weapons of
mass destruction. By definition, such weapons cannot discriminate
between civilians and combatants. A foundational principle of civilian
inviolability would thus outlaw their use. It would immediately label as
an outlaw any individual, whether a national leader or a terrorist, who
prepared to use them. As part of the UN Charter or an incorporated
element of Security Council jurisprudence, this principle could thus
authorize a much wider range of action against state leaders or
individuals suspected of developing biological, chemical, or nuclear
weapons outside the strictures of current international law.
Those who kill civilians are global outlaws, individuals who have
violated the basic precepts of all legal systems. They have violated the
law of war and both national and international criminal law. They may be
government officials or generals, religious or political fanatics.
Global outlaws may be pursued by armies and police forces as well as by
intelligence operatives, financial regulators, and prosecutors. But
their pursuit, arrest, and trial must be conducted under a new
international legal order closely connected to national law. Developing
that order is the international legal challenge of the 21st century.
ANNE-MARIE SLAUGHTER is Professor of International Law at Harvard
Law School and President-Elect of the American Society of International
Law and WILLIAM BURKE-WHITE is the Cranston International Peace Fellow
at Harvard Law School.