Master of Ossus wrote:You ignored the requirement that the target be a lawful one.
I didn't. I read that Protocol time and again. International law allows to select a broad spectrum of lawful targets. Would getting rid of government officials before the Iraq war be acceptable?
Master of Ossus wrote:You ignored the requirement that the target be a lawful one. (And you're really stretching the definition of "ongoing armed conflict," here, if not outright ignoring it).
Why? Ceasefire is not a peace treaty (which people run into time and again).
Master of Ossus wrote:You ignored the requirement that the target be a lawful one and ignored the requirement that the conflict be ongoing. Admittedly, that one's closer, but I also didn't object nearly so vociferously to that one.
Yes, the Cuba one does not have an ongoing conflict. To be fair, however, the conflict between Cuba and the terrorist organization Posada was a member of (the CIA, in other words) might be still counted as ongoing. You allowed ongoing conflicts to include
non-state bodies as parties.
Master of Ossus wrote:I also note that you quietly omitted such other instances of your behavior as your comparison of Ann Coulter to Osama bin Laden and Noam Chomsky to al-Awklaki, which both ignored the requirement that the target be lawful--Chomsky and Coulter meet NONE of the NECESSARY criteria for lawfulness; bin Laden and al-Awlaki meet all of them.
Coulter actually does, if you stretch it. One: a conflict. There's one between (1) US and Afghanistan (2) US and Iraq. Two: lawful target. Coulter is an instigator of U.S. agression, and while she's not a soldier of the US that goes to Afghanistan or Iraq and kills people, she could be related to that. By the Protocol, you could make a case to kill her if you could argue that she furthers enemy goals and her elimination would give you a military advantage. And as for Chomsky, no, until he is chosen as a "lawful target", you can't kill him. But what is required for that? Simply an assessment that would indicate his death would hinder enemy military efforts and further your own ones. You just need to designate him as a military threat. It is hard with Chomsky, because he's not one. But it is far easier with Islamic clerics. What if a cleric preaches Jihad? He furthers enemy goals! Off with his head.
Master of Ossus wrote:Those are not assassinations. Wartime killing of officers is the exercise of the lawful application of military force. I have already described this in the thread in considerable detail.
Yeah, I know, but it is far more simple to call them legal assassinations or liquidations.
Master of Ossus wrote:Before I launch into this, I don't really know what this has to do with anything. I didn't read TheHammer's posts (as I just stated before you launched into this), but I assume that it's related to this. Is it legal for Iraqi military to assassinate US politicians? Again, I assume that by "assassinate" you mean "target for use of lethal force." And it depends on the politician. Are they a lawful target or not? I have NEVER required that OTHER COUNTRIES follow US domestic law. I have absolutely no idea where you got this claim. My statements regarding Obama, the US military, etc. following US domestic law are relevant only because they are subject to US domestic law AS WELL AS international law when engaged in an ongoing armed conflict.
Okay. So this means other nations, so as long as they follow the Protocol when choosing targets, can do so? That's essentially my only question.
Master of Ossus wrote:YES. A MILITARY OFFICER ON THE FRONT LINE IS A LAWFUL TARGET UNTIL AND UNLESS HE SURRENDERS. GOD.
"On the front line"? That requirement is not even in the Protocol. He can be deep in the rear. He's still a legal target.
Master of Ossus wrote:Yes, it does. Why does this mean that international law does not exist?
No, quite contrary. I just wanted to make sure we're applying the standard universally.
Samuel wrote:Except it doesn't work that way. Remember Nuremburg? Killing civilians served a military purpose (the dead cannot help partisans), but it was still deemed a war crime. There are, in fact, standards.
The only thing you need to do it is to never get in a Nuremberg situation, i.e. remain the victorious party in wars. Not hard when you're the USA. Also, your soldiers are immune to international prosecution, so you can crap on the international law.
But none were tried for killing officials and officers. That's not a crime. So if you prove that Object X is an enemy official in a position of power, not just a mere civilian, you can kill him - even if he is a civilian - and it would be legal.