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Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate General’s Legal Center & School* *Non-attribution policy: materials and ideas presented are those of the instructor and , are not to be attributed to any institution or to the U.S. Government

Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

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Page 1: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

Protected Persons

Matthew J. FestaProfessor of Law, South Texas College of Law

Associate Professor, International & Operational Law,

U.S. Army Judge Advocate General’s Legal Center & School*

*Non-attribution policy: materials and ideas presented are those of the instructor and , are not to be attributed to any institution or to the U.S. Government

Page 2: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW

KEY ISSUE: COMBATANTS V. CIVILIANS

Page 3: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate
Page 4: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate
Page 5: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate
Page 6: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

Protected persons: what’s at stake?

• 1. Are you a lawful target?• 2. How are you to be treated?• KEY FACTS:

–STATUS–CONDUCT

Page 7: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

STATUS DURING

CONFLICTNON

COMBATANTS

COMBATANTS CIVILIANS

GC III, art. 4AP I, art. 43(2)

GC I, art. 28

GC IV

UNPRIVILEGEDBELLIGERENTS

US Policy

Page 8: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

COMBATANTCOMBATANT

Page 9: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

WHO IS A LAWFUL COMBATANT?

Hague IV (belligerents) / GC III (POW) definitions

• Armed forces of a State party to a conflict—art. 4(1)• Militia / volunteer corps / org resistance movements belonging to a State

party if (art. 4(2)): Under responsible command; Fixed, distinctive, recognizable sign; Carry arms openly; & Conduct operations IAW laws of war

AP I (art. 43(2)) (1977)• Members of the armed forces of a Party to the conflict• Under AP I, a “Party” is a State (with a limited exception that the United

States rejects)

Page 10: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

LAWFUL COMBATANT STATUS

Right to participate directly in hostilities

Lawful targets Excludes those hors de combat / non-combatants

Combatant Immunity Legal privilege for combatants to use lethal force Except war crimes/not connected to armed conflict

Entitled to POW status if captured

Page 11: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

NONCOMBATANT

Page 12: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

NONCOMBATANTS

Medical / Medical Admin / Chaplains

IAC (GC I)

• Exclusively engaged• Abstain from hostile acts• Respect and Protect• Retained Personnel Not POWs

• Armlet / ID card—art. 40

NIAC (CA 3 / AP II)

• Respect and Protect• Wear emblem

Page 13: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

Protected?

Page 14: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

RETAINED PERSONNEL?

Al Warafi v. Obama- May 24, 2013

Al Warafi claim: GC I, art. 24 status

DC Circuit Ct denied Habeas Petition Captured during early part of Afghan war –

possibly as part of State armed force in an IAC (not decided)

Holding: GC I status requirements not applicable because “mandatory indicia” required by GC I art. 40 not met

Concurrence: Not all of GCs will apply as broadly as CA 3

Page 15: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

UNPRIVILEGED BELLIGERENT

Page 16: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

DPH(Direct Participation in Hostilities)

Civilians shall enjoy the protection afforded by this section/part, unless and for such time as they take a direct

part in hostilities.

AP I, art. 51(3)AP II, art. 13(3)

Page 17: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

UNPRIVILEGED BELLIGERENTS

Targetable (DPH/CCF) Not entitled to engage in combat activities

Traditionally:• War criminals or national criminals

Not expressly recognized in GCs but arguably by AP I (arts. 44(4); 45(3)) & AP II (e.g., art. 1(1))

No combatant immunity

Page 18: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

CIVILIANS

Page 19: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

DEFINING CIVILIANS

GC IV (1949) – not defined

AP I (1977)

• “The civilian population comprises all persons who are civilians” –art. 50

• Civilian ≠ Combatant (defined in the neg.)

CA 3 / AP II – not defined

Page 20: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

CIVILIANS IN MILITARY OPERATIONS

General population, including: Wounded/injured/ displaced Criminals

Rescue workers/ police/ first responders, including national Red Cross

Civilians accompanying the forces Third country nationals, including ICRC,

NGOs, security contractors, journalists, etc.

Page 22: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

TREATY VS. CUSTOMARY LAW

Of 4 GCs, only GC IV expressly protects civilians (other than civilians accompanying forces)

Under GC IV, greatest protection afforded to “protected persons”

AP I expands protection to all situations in IACs United States not party to AP I but fills gaps as

customary law or by policy Less protection for civilians in NIACs generally

CA 3 applies; AP II (US not party) or CIL also fills gaps

Page 23: Protected Persons Matthew J. Festa Professor of Law, South Texas College of Law Associate Professor, International & Operational Law, U.S. Army Judge Advocate

Questions?Matthew J. Festa

South Texas College of LawDept. of Int’l and Operational Law

U.S. Army Judge Advocate General’s Legal Center and School

Phone [email protected]