Cyber operations against water infrastructure are not legally low-impact just because they are digital or, for now, short-lived, argue Szymon Skalski and Natosha Hoduski. lieber.westpoint.edu/when-red-lin...
Cyber operations against water infrastructure are not legally low-impact just because they are digital or, for now, short-lived, argue Szymon Skalski and Natosha Hoduski. lieber.westpoint.edu/when-red-lin...
Can an occupying power conclude treaties relating to the occupied territory? Can it do so solely in its own name or also in the name of the State whose territory is occupied? No clear answer yet exists for these questions, argues Robert Kolb. lieber.westpoint.edu/occupying-po...
Szymon Skalski and Natosha Hoduski examine in their post when #cyber operations against water infrastructure may qualify as #attacks under #LOAC. lieber.westpoint.edu/when-red-lin...
Few contemporary conflicts have been as saturated with landmines as the one between #Armenia & #Azerbaijan. Davit Khachatryan discusses the continuing effects of mines on civilians & obligations of States exercising effective control over territory. lieber.westpoint.edu/anti-personn...
The Laws of Yesterday’s Wars Symposium reinforces a central understanding: modern humanitarianism is part of a much older human project, explains Samuel White. lieber.westpoint.edu/laws-yesterd...
Africa’s diverse societies have long maintained complex systems of customary law governing conflict, reconciliation & the restoration of communal harmony. Tamalin Bolus & Sarah Jean Mabeza explore the links between law & culture. lieber.westpoint.edu/african-trad...
Harmen van der Wilt and Lachezar Yanev explore in their post universal jurisdiction, prosecuting war crimes, and the role domestic courts and criminal enforcement can play in addressing violations of IHL. lieber.westpoint.edu/pushing-boun...
Although there is growing interest in providing military animals with greater protection in wartime, the lex lata of armed conflict regards animals as objects and property, explains Ronald Alcala. lieber.westpoint.edu/military-ani...
Long before formal statehood, Somali society developed a detailed and durable system for regulating violence constructed on customary law, collective responsibility, and oral authority rather than codification, explains Ayan Ali. lieber.westpoint.edu/somali-tradi...
The transition from the classical “law of war” to the modern “IHL” represents more than a linguistic evolution; it signifies a profound shift in the conceptualization of warfare, moving from a State-centric model to a person-centric model, argues Emily Crawford. lieber.westpoint.edu/terminologic...
The Torah’s enduring relevance lies not in its replication within modern law, but in its demonstration that the impulse to limit violence is ancient, cross‑cultural, and deeply embedded in human societies, argues Norman Solomon. lieber.westpoint.edu/jewish-ethic...
Hittites created one of the earliest durable systems of regulated warfare. Their treaties, laws, and ritual obligations demonstrate that humanitarian norms emerged independently across multiple civilisations, argues @rorycox.bsky.social . lieber.westpoint.edu/hittite-laws...
Today’s era of rapid scientific breakthroughs, potential dual-use technologies, and shifting geopolitical landscapes calls for strengthening the #BWC to allow it to effectively respond to current challenges, argues Barry de Vries. lieber.westpoint.edu/biological-w...
Laws of Yesterday’s Wars Vol 4: From Mesopotamia to Somalia draws together 6 chapters spanning the ancient Near East & sub-Saharan Africa. As Sam White explains, the result is a collection that speaks to lived experience of communities & doctrines they produced. lieber.westpoint.edu/laws-of-yest...
For #AWS the central issue is not whether IHL “applies". The question is whether States will do what arms control has required before: set durable, weapon-specific constraints before battlefield practice hardens into a new baseline, argues Natalie Nunn. lieber.westpoint.edu/how-lessons-...
How does international law conceptualize mass #deprivation? In the ICJ’s 2025 AO on Israel’s obligations in the OPT, Tamar Luster argues that reliance on extreme factual indicators turns an early-warning standard into a post-catastrophe label. lieber.westpoint.edu/mass-depriva...
The ICJ’s recent jurisprudence has ushered in a new dual régime of #occupation: Hague Occupation, for “on-the-spot” control; and Geneva Occupation, for “activities” control. Robert Kolb explains how each one of these limbs complements the other. lieber.westpoint.edu/evolving-bel...
Ronald Alcala discusses the concept of #outlawry in armed conflict & examines whether Russian & Ukrainian rewards programs that offer monetary & other incentives for the killing of enemy soldiers are a form of prohibited outlawry under international law. lieber.westpoint.edu/gamifying-wa...
At the heart of the debate over whether #jusinbello and #jusadbellum should be kept absolutely separate is the underlying question of #LOAC’s role vis-à-vis a sovereign’s duty, argues Thomas Wheatley. lieber.westpoint.edu/moral-disord...
Although the 1907 #HagueRegulations represented the first reasonably general codification of the law of war in modern times, they left multiple questions unresolved. In his post, Robert Kolb analyzes the lexical imperfections of the Hague Regulations.
lieber.westpoint.edu/lexical-impe...
Sabotage, while legally ill-defined, remains a feature of #armedconflict in the 21st century. Kenneth Watkin argues that #sabotage requires a sufficiently broad definition that reflects the complexity of such operations. lieber.westpoint.edu/intelligence...
Does the law of neutrality apply when a situation of #occupation arises? Benjamin Meret addresses the threshold for application of neutrality, categorizes a range of situations involving belligerent occupation & assesses whether neutrality applies to each. lieber.westpoint.edu/law-neutrali...
Klaudia Klonowska discusses the conclusions of the workshop that explored under-researched trilateral relationship between AI, cyber, and international law.
Recently, a workshop organized by Army Cyber Institute and the Netherlands Defense Academy highlighted rapid developments in #AI-enabled #cyberattacks and examined the challenges they pose to the application of international legal obligations in armed conflicts. lieber.westpoint.edu/impact-ai-en...
Within every system of law there are open & closed legal sub-systems. In the context of #war, we find both systems, pitching the #jusadbellum against the #jusinbello with differing rules concerning freedom of action, argues Robert Kolb. lieber.westpoint.edu/open-closed-...
In 2026, States will continue to affirm that IHL applies to #cyberops conducted during #armedconflict. Yet its practical influence on State behavior is likely to be limited as cyber ops become more strategic & more deeply integrated with AI, argues Jeffrey Biller lieber.westpoint.edu/law-of-cyber...
Fionnuala Ní Aoláin recounts Prof Françoise Hampson’s work regarding the Turkey-PKK conflict and the relationship between IHL and #IHLR.
It is a well-observed truism that despite early decades of human rights jurisprudence from the #ECtHR addressing ongoing #armedconflicts, the Court has studiously avoided opining on the interface of #humanrights and #IHL. lieber.westpoint.edu/early-interf...
Data poisoning will continue to occur in peace & in war. During #armedconflict, #IHL regulates its effects. But the decisive legal challenge lies earlier, argues Sam White. lieber.westpoint.edu/poisoned-wel...
#Reciprocity can signify recognition; the basic acknowledgement that an adversary is a moral and legal subject capable of #restraint and that mutual commitment sustains the legitimacy of law, argues Bryan Peeler.
lieber.westpoint.edu/reciprocity-...