THE STANDARDS GOVERNING America’s drone assassinations may violate the Geneva Conventions and other international norms, legal experts say.
U.S. forces routinely classify bystanders felled in its Afghanistan drone strikes as “enemies killed in action,” even when they are not the intended targets of the strikes, according to a source and to documents obtained by The Intercept published earlier this month. But the Geneva Conventions specify that when someone’s status is not clear, they should be classified as a civilian. Article 50 of Additional Protocol I, which dates to 1977 and was ratified by 174 countries, says that “in case of doubt whether a person is a civilian, that person shall be considered to be a civilian.”
A landmark document from the International Committee of the Red Cross in 2009 expands on this rule:
All feasible precautions must be taken in determining whether a person is a civilian and, if so, whether that civilian is directly participating in hostilities. In case of doubt, the person must be presumed to be protected against direct attack. … In case of doubt as to whether a specific civilian conduct qualifies as direct participation in hostilities, it must be presumed that the general rule of civilian protection applies.“
The U.S. failed to ratify Protocol I after signing it, and the Red Cross’ legal guidance has been controversial, at least within elements of the U.S. defense establishment. But until now it’s been unclear to what extent the U.S. would depart from treaties and other influential documents related to classifying casualties whose civilian status is unclear.
“The [ICRC] teaches the presumption of civilian status in cases of doubt, and its teaching is consistent with the purpose of international humanitarian law, which is to protect civilians from attack unless they are taking a direct part in hostilities,” says Hina Shamsi of the ACLU’s National Security Project. “What the U.S. is essentially presuming is that the people it has killed were taking a direct part in hostilities. In other words, in assessing the lawfulness of its lethal force, it’s turning the exception into the rule.”
The United States Special Operations Command has previously declined to comment on The Intercept’s revelations about its drone strikes in Afghanistan.
This controversial U.S. posture toward possible civilians is not confined to its drone wars or to the documents obtained by The Intercept; it’s also explicitly outlined in a landmark law-of-war manual issued by the Department of Defense in June. The manual, the first ever such department-wide manual in the DoD’s history and the culmination of years of legal deliberation by military and civilian lawyers, directly addresses Additional Protocol I, but argues that customary international law does not require classifying people as civilians by default.
“A legal presumption of civilian status in cases of doubt may demand a degree of certainty that would not account for the realities of war,” the document states. It also claims that “under customary international law, no legal presumption of civilian status exists for persons or objects.”
While the Defense Department claims that a presumption of civilian status is not part of “customary international law,” at least one member of the defense establishment has said the opposite. Michael Schmitt, a professor at the U.S. Naval War College and 20-year veteran of the Air Force, endorsed the presumption of civilian status as a key part of “customary international law” in the course of arguing against strict Red Cross legal guidance on which members of a hostile group may be attacked in combat. As he wrote in his article in the Harvard National Security Journal:
International humanitarian law already accounts for situations of doubt as to whether an individual is a civilian. Article 50.1 of Additional Protocol I, a provision generally deemed reflective of customary international law, provides that “[i]n case of doubt whether a person is a civilian, that person shall be considered to be a civilian.”
The DoD manual doesn’t only reject a presumption of civilian status, it also discusses when it is appropriate to direct attacks against what it refers to as civilians:
Attacks, however, may not be directed against civilians or civilian objects based on merely hypothetical or speculative considerations regarding their possible current status as a military objective. In assessing whether a person or object that normally does not have any military purpose or use is a military objective, commanders and other decision-makers must make the decision in good faith based on the information available to them in light of the circumstances ruling at the time.
Legal experts interviewed for this article criticized U.S. drone-war leaders not only for misclassifying civilians as combatants, but also for seeming to abandon the idea that people the U.S. militarily attacks on foreign soil must pose an imminent threat.
Under international law, initiating the use of force in another country is legitimate only within a narrow range of circumstances, one of which is a need to quickly defend against an imminent threat. The Obama administration nodded at this norm when it outlined standards stipulating that in counterterrorism operations, it “will use lethal force only against a target that poses a continuing, imminent threat to U.S. persons.” The Bush administration also embraced this concept, stating in a 2002 National Security Strategy document that “for centuries, international law recognized that nations … can lawfully take action to defend themselves against forces that present an imminent danger of attack.”
The Bush administration then stretched the definition of “imminent danger” to include Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. But at least it tried to justify war using the framework of imminent threat.
“In international law, ‘imminent’ means what non-lawyers would assume it means: immediate, about to happen,” says Sarah Knuckey, an international lawyer and professor at Columbia Law School. “But the U.S. government interpretation of ‘imminent’ expands traditional legal interpretations, and expands the scope of who can be killed and when.”
Even these criteria for defining imminence are omitted in a 2013 Pentagon study made public this month by The Intercept, which evaluates certain aspects of the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) killing campaign in Yemen and Somalia in 2011 and 2012. Instead, the only criterion mentioned in the study to justify targeting a person for lethal operations is an opaque reference stating that they must “present [a] threat to U.S. interest or personnel.”
A National Security Council spokesperson contacted previously by The Intercept would not explain why the Pentagon study’s rules for drone assassinations differed from those outlined by the White House the same month. But the spokesperson said that the White House rules are “in effect today.”
This seems like a pretty good article. The one thing I would quibble with is anonymous non-sources. If hey won’t give you and answer, name them. in Fact you should escalate the situation.
Why settle for a non-quote from a nobody like a janitor or a general. If you are going to “not quote” somebody make it somebody important. Like Ashton Carter or John Kerry refusing to comment.
I think you people may be too ethical for modern journalism.
For Example:
Good job everyone involved – keep mowing down Muslamofascist scum until not a single one is left standing.
How about you go and fuck yourself, Louise Cypher. Hatelful racist piece of shit.
“..under customary international law, no legal presumption of civilian status exists for persons or objects.”
That ‘customary international law’ was in effect a couple of thousand years ago, when most inhabitants of conquered cities were slaughtered – men, women, children, babies.
Hospital and wedding party attacks are carried out in the same custom as Biblical times, only with far less danger to today’s ‘warriors’.
And huge media repression in Turkey, US terror ally in Syrian gang-rape.
intercept is totally silent.
While it is good to point out that the drones “may” be an international crime–The Intercept’s silence in areas that the US government doesn’t want the public’s attention (Syria, Turkey, eg) points up its incredible failure as a project.
Oligarch owned, jackal journalism.
Sad
https://theintercept.com/2015/10/29/attacks-on-the-press-escalate-ahead-of-turkish-elections/
It might help next time if you waited a few hours before assuming TI isn’t going to cover something. TI is not Fox, MSNBC, CNN, etc, it doesn’t do instant breaking news, but rather takes time to do some research on the subject before publishing.
Presumably, as in the case of the MSF hospital in Afghanistan, decisions to attack civilians are always made in good faith. Presumably the same good faith rule will apply in the coming dystopia when the government strikes its own citizens on domestic soil in cases of imminent threat (to power). Collateral damages (spouses, children, neighbors) should be taken care of under the DoD rules outlined above.
*MURTAZA* goddammit auto correct
What an absurd title for an article Murata.
“American Drone Assassinations May Violate International Law, Experts Say.”
The optimum words being ‘May’ and ‘Experts’.
We have experts; amazing what any asshole can make a living at these days.
Off course it’s violates international law; I fly over to your house with my little remote controlled helicopter and hover over your back yard and fire a little itsy bitsy missile up the ass of your dog….did I kill your dog?
Off course I did.
Did I break any law?
Yes most certainly.
Get your head out of your cornflakes and think for yourself.
This is not a subject one uses a velvet glove with…hit these bastards with sledgehammer man. They are assholes.
Name me one International law that America does not violate.
They are the school bully, fuck sake…always have been.
America the land of the free *cough* and the home of the depraved.
With male initiators like John Wayne, and Arny ‘I like to fuck the maid’, and all that claptrap in Hollyfools.
What can you expect.
We are dealing with infantile psychopaths; barely above a level two consciousness dragging there knuckles on the floor and killing with, joysticks of all things here…
And they said video games weren’t harming the little kiddies.
I wonder if the society would have stood up against the companies making them if they knew what video games would have lead too in their children.
Hypothetical that is…
That much of The Intercept’s readership so openly mock the mealy-mouthed framing of this article is a measure of how so utterly Greenwald has become the mirror of the US corporate media establishment.
I would be inclined to believe that Greenwald presents the stories to be covered with the US State Department for approval.
This would give a tactile quality to the oligarch funded project that employees Greenwald as editor appropriate: The “Intercept”.
Indeed, if the oligarch funder of this project is a personal friend of Obama, doesn’t this pose a fundamental problem?
Or, are we supposed to take Greenwald at his word, that the oligarch doesn’t involve himself in this endeavor even one iota?
The mask is coming off this jackal journalism scam.
Greenwald believes that the US and Suadis weaponizing mercenary Al Queda types, in total contravention of international law, can be worthy of supporting.
Thus when we view this equivocation, that OBama’s drone massacres of innocent women and children “may” be a crime–well, how is the Intercept much different that the regular US jackal mediA?
Greenwald and his oligarch editor-in-chief think you guys are so gullible that you won’t want or expect even minimally competent journalism that focuses on this situation with Syria.
Mock on, mock on, Voltaire, Roussaue….
You throw the sands against the wind, and the wind blows it back again.
Mock on.
‘Maybe violate’ is bullshit. Of course it is a fucking violation. Imagine these fucking warmongering pricks going off if Mexico or Canada start bombing them with drones. Fuck them.
Edit: Some grammar mistakes there in my rant.
Imagine how these warmongering fuckers would go off if Mexico or Canada start using drones to bomb the shit out of the criminal idiots that is running their show?
Please!
The is part of the reason that The Intercept has problems being viewed as convincing and credible.
Anyone with any level of critical thinking skills and not-yet-zombified sense of ethics recognizes the reality of these drone attacks as terrorism.
When a drone is launder into another country without permission it is a violation of international law.
Just like the US funding and weaponizing mercenaries in Syria against the will of that state is illegal.
More, there is full knowledge on the part of Obama that civilians, and not just the “badiess”, we be maimed and murdered as a consequence of deploying these drones.
This is a crime.
But in the world of the jackal journalists at The Intercept (that play a smarmy game to establish and maintai cred with the US state and other corporate media), they have to soften the reality of US being a rouge state terror power.
It is mitigated and refracted through journalism where “experts say…”
If “experts” say the obvious, then TI readers are given permission to consider drone bombing people as being some what, maybe, possibly (though still subject to debate in some quarters) criminal.
Wow! How brave this oligarch Obama-buddy type of journalism is, daring to go where more feckless establishment media dare not to tread!
Surly Glenn Greenwald and his cohorts will never actually be targeted by Obama approved drones.
More jackal journalism.
Now try to bring light to your readers about what role the US has been playing in Iraq and Syria as of late.
If Greenwald’s position on this issue is a clue as to what future focus on the Middle East from The Intercept might promise, then your readership will be kept as confused as the rest of the US population.
Greenwald has be derilict and wormy when it comes to any quality journalism that point up the criminality of the US in Syria.
Of course “Anyone with any level of critical thinking skills and not-yet-zombified sense of ethics recognizes the reality of these drone attacks as terrorism.” Most readers of TI know this. It’s the new readers that might not have previously known the extent to which our country is violating international law and the Constitution, and they are who benefit most from news articles such as the one above.
And I’d like to point out that Glenn Greenwald did not write this article; different journalists have different styles/standards. Perhaps Murtaza Hussain has a reason for using the “experts” line. I’m not him so I don’t know the reasoning that goes into his journalistic style, and I won’t try to pretend otherwise.
I see parents saying kidz who won’t stop texting in class are asking to get asswhooped by the PD. So you can see how easily this murderous proposal sells with the overwhelmed parent population. Never stepped back to see if there’s an alternate solution like depriving them of weapons or phones? Instead, we stocked so many it will be a long time before they blown them all off at us.
This is not a crack at the Intercept (at all) but some of these headlines feel like a particularly dystopian issue of the Onion. It *may* be a violation of international law to kill random people halfway across the globe on the basis of secret information, no trial, and best guestimates about whether or not they count as civilians or could plausibly be called combatants in a conflict that is not really a war. Who knew?
What do you propose to replace the drone program? Exactly you have no ideas!! Yet you, at TI call yourselves activists.
Indeed. How else are we going to blow up weddings, funerals, the odd loya jurga…
I wonder if imminence includes a bunch of foreign troops near your border?
So the US has a bunch of foreign troops at its borders?
The US has a bunch of [its] troops at [foreign] borders…
of course this is war crimes. but who will enforce it? asking the government to do something is like asking hitler to prosecute the nuremberg trials.
As if anyone really cares.
In the US the military serves at the will of civilians, so why is the military dictating the rules as to engagement with civilians? If any non-military consultants were involved they failed miserably and should be eliminated from current military consulting and all future military consulting!