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558 Pages·2013·5.87 MB·English
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inIn International Human Rights Law thte r en and the Law of Armed Conflict Ca t oio in the Context of Counterinsurgency nn tea xl tH o u f In the past decade, few topics have attracted more attention among international lawyers m C than the interplay between international human rights law (IHRL) and the law of armed conflict a o n (LOAC). At the same time, the multiple – often multinational and extraterritorial – u military operations in response to the ‘new threats’ to (inter)national security posed by nR ti non-State actors have incited a debate among security experts on how to counter eg rh insurgencies. This study ties these legal and security debates together, and in doing so i nt focuses specifically on two traditional, but controversial kinds of military power, namely ss uL targeting and operational detention. Counterinsurgency doctrine recognizes both as ra indispensible instruments to defeat an insurgency. At the same time, they are seen as gw e strategic hazards that are to be applied with consideration and care for fundamental n a counterinsurgency principles. To end today’s ‘wars amongst the people’, such as those in cn y d Iraq and Afghanistan, counterinsurgent States have come to realize that it is in their t strategic interest to ensure that the conduct of their troops remains within the boundaries h of the applicable law. However, especially targeting and operational detention raise e controversial issues in IHRL and LOAC as well as their interplay, which is even more L a complicated by the specific characteristics of modern-day insurgencies. w o This study aims to contribute to the development of the legal theory on the interplay of f With a Particular Focus on IHRL and LOAC, and to value the operational consequences of this interplay on A targeting and operational detention in counterinsurgency. As such, the study not only r Targeting and Operational Detention m intends to serve an academic, but also a military-operational purpose. e d Among the issues covered in this study are the concepts of insurgency and counter- C insurgency; the conceptual underpinnings of IHRL and LOAC; the ‘humanization’ of o armed conflict; the international law on the interplay of norms in general and the maxim n fl of lex specialis derogat legi generali in particular. Other topics include the applicability of i c IHRL and LOAC in counterinsurgency operations; and the regulation of targeting and t operational detention under IHRL and LOAC, including controversial topics such as the concept of direct participation in hostilities, the existence of a requirement of ‘least harmful means’ in the concept of military necessity, and the requirements pertaining to security detention in non-international armed conflicts. E r i c P o u Eric Pouw w International Human Rights Law and the Law of Armed Conflict in the Context of Counterinsurgency With a Particular Focus on Targeting and Operational Detention Eric Pouw International Human Rights Law and the Law of Armed Conflict in the Context of Counterinsurgency With a Particular Focus on Targeting and Operational Detention ACADEMISCH PROEFSCHRIFT ter verkrijging van de graad van doctor aan de Universiteit van Amsterdam op gezag van de Rector Magnificus Prof. dr. D.C. van den Boom ten overstaan van een door het college voor promoties ingestelde commissie, in het openbaar te verdedigen in de Agnietenkapel op donderdag 14 november 2013, te 10.00 uur door Eric Hendrik Pouw geboren te Ermelo Promotiecommissie Promotor: Prof. dr. T.D. Gill Overige leden: Prof. mr. P.A. Nollkaemper Prof. dr. Y.M. Donders Prof. dr. R. Geiß Prof. dr. F.P.B. Osinga Dr. J. K. Kleffner Faculteit der Rechtsgeleerdheid iv ©2013 text E.H. Pouw Design text: Eric Pouw Design cover: Eric Pouw & Esther Winnubst Image: ‗Australian and Dutch soldiers conduct patrols in preparation to hand over the Patrol Base Qudus which was build by the Reconstruction Task Force in Baluchi‘, Afghanistan (1 August 2008), <www.defence.gov.au/opEx/global/opslipper/images/gallery/2008/1002/20080731adf82 39682_209.jpg>. This image is used with permission from the Australian Defence Force. The Royal Netherlands Army, the Army Legal Service and the Netherlands Defence Academy have made this research and this manuscript factually and financially possible. The views and opinions in this dissertation are and remain solely the responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the Minister of Defense. Permission of the author is required for distribution or any use of this dissertation. Vormgeving tekst: Eric Pouw Omslag ontwerp: Eric Pouw & Esther Winnubst Foto: ‗Australian and Dutch soldiers conduct patrols in preparation to hand over the Patrol Base Qudus which was build by the Reconstruction Task Force in Baluchi‘, Afghanistan (1 August 2008), <www.defence.gov.au/opEx/global/opslipper/images/gallery/2008/1002/20080731adf82 39682_209.jpg>Deze foto is overgenomen met toestemming van de Australian Defence Force. Dit onderzoek en deze publicatie zijn feitelijk en financieel mogelijk gemaakt door de Koninklijke Landmacht, de Militair Juridische Dienst Krijgsmacht en de Nederlandse Defensie Academie. De meningen en opvattingen die in deze dissertatie worden uitgesproken zijn en blijven voor de verantwoordelijkheid van de desbetreffende auteur. Zij geven niet noodzakelijk de mening van de Minister van Defensie weer. Voor verspreiding of elk gebruik van deze dissertatie is toestemming van de auteur vereist. v Table of Contents – Summary Table of Contents – Summary ............................................................................................... vii Table of Contents .................................................................................................................... ix List of Abbreviations ............................................................................................................ xvii Introduction ............................................................................................................................ 1 Part A. Context and Conceptual Framework for Analysis ..................................................... 27 Chapter I Strategic and Military Context ........................................................................................... 29 Chapter II The Legal Context ............................................................................................................... 47 Chapter III Conceptual Framework for Analysis on the Interplay of Norms of IHRL and LOAC .................................................................................................................................. 129 Conclusions Part A ...................................................................................................................................... 141 Part B. Interplay Potential .................................................................................................... 143 Introduction .............................................................................................................................................. 145 Chapter IV IHRL ................................................................................................................................... 147 Chapter V LOAC .................................................................................................................................. 185 Conclusions Part B. ...................................................................................................................................... 229 Part C. Interplay Appreciation .............................................................................................. 231 Part C.1. Targeting ................................................................................................................ 231 Introduction .............................................................................................................................................. 235 Chapter VI IHRL ................................................................................................................................... 237 Chapter VII LOAC .................................................................................................................................. 255 Chapter VIII Interplay .............................................................................................................................. 331 Conclusions Part C.1. .................................................................................................................................. 357 Part C.2. Operational Detention ........................................................................................... 363 Introduction .............................................................................................................................................. 365 Chapter IX IHRL ................................................................................................................................... 367 Chapter X LOAC .................................................................................................................................. 385 Chapter XI Interplay .............................................................................................................................. 415 Conclusions Part C.2. .................................................................................................................................. 435 Part D. Synthesis and Conclusions ....................................................................................... 437 Chapter XII Synthesis and Conclusions ............................................................................................... 439 Abstract ........................................................................................................................ 461 Samenvatting ........................................................................................................................ 475 Table of Treaties ................................................................................................................... 489 Case-Law ........................................................................................................................ 491 Other Materials ..................................................................................................................... 501 Bibliography ........................................................................................................................ 507 viii

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graduate-level stuff that goes well beyond the basic infantryman's ability to enter .. See (1924), The Mavrommatis Palestine Concessions - Greece v.
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