Monthly Archives: November 2012

Obama administration to codify U.S. drone policy

by Travis Normand

I found this article on NYTimes.com about how the Obama administration is looking to codify the U.S. drone policy. The article is quite fascinating and addresses a few of the larger complaints and challenges concerning drone usage.

Click HERE to read the entire article.

While reading the article, I had several thoughts which I wanted to address here.

My first thought came after reading the following quote:

“One of the things we’ve got to do is put a legal architecture in place, and we need Congressional help in order to do that, to make sure that not only am I reined in but any president’s reined in terms of some of the decisions that we’re making,” Mr. Obama told Jon Stewart in an appearance on “The Daily Show” on Oct. 18.

In the quote above, President Obama states that he needs “Congressional help” in order to put a legal architecture in place for the drone policy. My first thought was that as Commander in Chief, the President has historically been very careful to keep congress out of the decisions of who was designated an enemy combatant.  It will be interesting to see how much congressional help he will accept and what this will do to any current precedent.

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ASIL Insights: U.S. Court Issues Writ of Mandamus, Effectively Removing Organization from Terror List: In Re People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran

by Jessica Poarch

In his article written for the American Society of International Law’s Insights bulletin, Tom Syring discusses the removal of the People’s Mujahidin Organization of Iran (PMOI) from the State Department’s Foreign Terrorist List.

In September 2012, after unprecedented involvement by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, the Secretary of State removed the PMOI from the Foreign Terrorist List. Prior to this decision, inaction by the Secretary left the organization in administrative limbo, which prompted the Court to step in and mandate that the Secretary make a decision regarding the organization’s status.

The article discusses the PMOI’s background, the implications of being on the Foreign Terrorist List, and the arguments before the Court. Syring concludes, “Considering what is at stake, the D.C. Court’s ruling…may start a trend of closer scrutiny and judicial review of governments’ terrorist designations. The ‘unreviewable political realm’ may be justiciable after all.”

Read the entire paper here

Visit the ASIL Website.

ICTY Appeals Panel Overturns War Crimes Convictions

by Jessica Poarch

This morning’s edition of Bloomberg Businessweek reported that the appeals panel for the ICTY overturned the convictions of General Ante Gotovina and General Malden Markac, both convicted by the Court in 2011 for war crimes committed in Operation Storm. The appeals panel disagreed with the trial court and found that “there was no excessive shelling of four towns by the Croats and that the mass departure of Serbs couldn’t be described as a ‘deportation.’” This ruling is final and will not be appealed.

Read the entire story here.

For the complete record of the trial visit the ICTY website.

Iran Fires on US Predator Drone: An Armed Conflict?

by Jessica Poarch

This morning, CNN reported that last Thursday (1 November 2012), Iranian fighter jets fired on a U.S. Predator drone. The Iranian government claims that the drone was fired on after it had entered Iranian airspace; however, the Pentagon’s official statement is that the drone was past the 12 nautical mile limit and was therefore over international waters when fired upon. The drone was not damaged.

With the amount of tension surrounding Iran and its nuclear program, the question of whether or not this action constitutes an armed conflict is interesting. An International Armed Conflict (IAC) is (1) a conflict between States that (2) leads to the intervention of armed forces (for more information on the types of armed conflicts, see the “LOAC Basics” tab above).

Determining whether or not an IAC could exist in this circumstance requires meeting both prongs of the definition laid out above.

(1) I think the fact that there is a conflict between the U.S. and Iran is a given, globally with issues over the Iranian nuclear program and locally over the issue of airspace. Further, (2) the intervention of armed force by Iran is also clear as the attackers were fighter jets flown by Iranian military pilots.

If we assume these two prongs are conclusively established, the question becomes whether or not we need two armed parties in order to have an armed conflict? CNN’s article calls the drone a “U.S. Air Force drone,” so for the sake of argument, we will say that this drone is considered to be a part of the U.S. military forces (thereby eliminating the other looming questions of who is driving and regulating the drone). However, if the drone is not armed and is only doing surveillance, is it considered a party to the “intervention of armed forces”?

In reality, the question of whether firing on the drone constitutes an IAC or not is moot as the armed conflict, if there was one, is now over, and its limited duration lead to no meaningful application for the rest of the LOAC. Nevertheless, as students of the law and observers of international relations, we must take note of this event, hoping that it is just another example of the growing tensions between the U.S. and Iran, and not the first shots fired in America’s next major conflict in the Middle East.

LOACBlog.com listed on State Bar of Texas’ website

by Travis Normand

I was informed today that the State Bar of Texas has listed the LOACBlog.com on the Texas law blog page of their website.  It is an honor to be included, and I would like to thank the State Bar of Texas for listing this site among so many other great legal blogs.

LOACBlog.com is one of 140 blogs that are listed on the website.  It can be found under the heading “International Law” and is currently the first, and only, international law blog listed!

You can see the entire list of blogs HERE.

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The Use of Drones for Targeted Killings – A Decade Behind Us, A Decade to Go?

by Jessica Poarch

“What was once considered an immediate response to an exceptional threat to the United States is now a permanent and institutionalized feature of U.S. foreign policy. Perhaps by November 3, 2022, policymakers and the American people will have noticed.” ~ Micah Zenko (30 October 2012)

In his report to Foreign Policy, Micah Zenko reminds us that November 3rd marks the 10th Anniversary of U.S. use of Drones for Targeted Killings in the War on Terror – what he terms “America’s Third War.” He shows that this program has largely expanded over the last decade and argues that, unlike the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, there is no sign that it will be discontinued in the near future.

You can read the entire article here