The law of operational targeting : viewing the LOAC through an operational lens
Author zone:
Geoffrey S. Corn and Gary P. Corn
Host item entries:
Texas international law journal, Vol. 47, no. 2, Spring 2012, p. 337-380
Languages:
English
General Note:
Photocopies
Abstract:
Understanding how air and missile warfare is planned, executed, and regulated requires more than just an understanding of relevant LOAC provisions. In U.S. practice (and that of many other countries), air and missile warfare is one piece of a broader operational mosaic of law and military doctrine related to the joint targeting process. How operational commanders select, attack, and assess potential targets and how the LOAC reflects the logic of military doctrine related to this process is therefore the objective of this Article. To achieve this objective, the authors focus on a recent decision by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), Prosecutor v. Gotovina. Although the military operation at the center of this case involved only limited use of air and missile warfare, the ICTY’s extensive focus on the use of artillery and rocket attacks provides a useful and highly relevant illustration of why understanding the interrelationship between law and military doctrine is essential for the logical and credible development of the law. The authors therefore seek to “exploit” this case as an opportunity to expose the reader to this interrelationship, an interrelationship equally essential to the effective evolution of the law of air and missile warfare.
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