Perhaps these will provide guidance on other unlawful belligerents as well. |
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Why do we hand them this right to be recognised as belligerents, when we do not even understand their war aims? |
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The 1935 act banned munitions exports to belligerents and restricted American travel on belligerent ships. |
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Several of the belligerents in the recent war were not parties to this Convention. |
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All that changed in 1918 when, like two punch-drunk boxers, the belligerents began finally to land blows which had effect. |
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The customary laws of war, when adapted for conflict with unlawful belligerents, must always incorporate rules of humanitarian restraint. |
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It should also cancel any existing sales of military equipment to possible belligerents in the war, the organisation said in a statement. |
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But in the federal arena, belligerents on both sides are escalating their brinksmanship. |
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Similar technologies are being applied within the military to subdue belligerents. |
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Unlawful belligerents are never entitled to the status and protection accorded members of national armed forces. |
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Traditional peacekeeping missions were deployed only when a conflict had ceased and with the consent of the belligerents. |
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In rejecting this challenge, the Court drew the distinction between the common law notion of lawful and unlawful belligerents. |
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The laws of the Hague establish the rights and obligations incumbent on belligerents. |
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In cases involving criminal prosecution of unlawful belligerents, this could mean imposing peacetime rules on the collection of evidence. |
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France, thinks that it is necessary to take first two steps: the end of hostilities and a political agreement among the belligerents. |
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A sense of national superiority to two sets of morally equivalent belligerents would contribute powerfully to the state's international isolation. |
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Faced with the outbreak of violence which ravages the Holy Land, the Dominican Order calls the belligerents to an immediate cease-fire. |
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After France adopted the tricolour, flying the white flag continued among all belligerents as a sign of surrender or ceasefire. |
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If they did they would be considered to be so-called unprivileged belligerents or unlawful combatants. |
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International humanitarian law defines the rights and duties of belligerents and provides safeguards for non-combatants. |
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Compared with the total industrial and military effort made by the major belligerents, Canada's contribution might seem paltry. |
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We are not dealing with classic belligerents who are looking for a quick victory. |
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It urged that measures be devised to force the belligerents to renounce this practice. |
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The primary objective of those measures was to prevent the territory of Burkina Faso from serving as a rear base or haven for belligerents. |
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Their implementation is dependent on the will of belligerents to abide to the agreement. |
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Criminal elements are increasingly fuelling wars by providing belligerents with the resources to finance their expensive military activities. |
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Periodic fighting continues to erupt between the belligerents and the civilian population. |
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The State party might also attach greater importance to justice, which offered another means of restoring peace and reconciling the belligerents. |
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However, belligerents whose forces and operations are not readily detectable on imagery will stand to gain more than others. |
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Not surprisingly, the position of neutral states was consistently one of denying that reprisals between belligerents could serve to justify any infringement of neutral rights. |
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History suggests wars inevitably grow, and sometimes much larger than any of the belligerents intended. |
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The belligerents in abortion wars disdain this search for compromise as mere equivocation, a flinching from deeper truths. |
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Unlawful belligerents were protected by law when captured, but the government was free to choose either military or law-enforcement methods to deal with them. |
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Unlawful belligerents were entitled to legal protection, but the government was free to choose the means of force used against them, as was asserted long after. |
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In effect, what the critics of military tribunals would have the President do is turn enemy belligerents over to civilian law enforcement authorities for prosecution. |
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At the same time, it must be stressed that under international law, the responsibility for protecting civilians caught up in war or conflict falls on the belligerents. |
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Moreover, as against states not parties to an international armed conflict, belligerents enjoy no special privileges and remain bound by general rules of international law. |
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The rules of warfare are established by international law with a view to regulating the conduct of belligerents in the course of international armed conflicts. |
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During the Thirty Years' War, religious disagreements among the cantons kept the confederacy neutral and spared it from belligerents. |
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This declared neutrality was largely respected by the belligerents. |
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Indeed, Iran's leaders, reluctant belligerents, have shown that they want to be dissuaded from direct action by others putting pressure on the Taliban, possibly via Pakistan. |
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However, it is not a breach of neutrality, if individuals or small-unorganized groups cross neutral territory with the intention of enlisting with one of the belligerents. |
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The Pacific front saw major action during the Second World War, mainly between the belligerents United States, its ally Australia, and Japan. |
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Neutralism must also be distinguished from neutrality, which is a term in international law referring to the rules that states are obliged to follow during a legal state of war in which they are not belligerents. |
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Ex post facto monitoring, however, would be possible if belligerents undertook to keep records of their evaluations and to make them public after a certain period of time has elapsed following the end of a given conflict. |
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The rapid transformation of a peacetime economy into a war economy creates new incentives for belligerents that make war more profitable than peace. |
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It will likely succeed in imposing its will on the belligerents to get them to the table, but its chances of inducing an agreement are negligible. |
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A genuine negotiating strategy, based on equally substantial shuttle diplomacy addressing the belligerents and the states in the region, is equally important. |
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Hostilities between belligerents not only pose a physical security risk but prevent or discourage civilians from cultivating crops, travelling to market areas and engaging in other important activities. |
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Angary, in international law, the right of belligerents to requisition for their use neutral merchant vessels, aircraft, and other means of transport that are within their territorial jurisdiction. |
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Arab oil producers linked any future policy changes to peace between the belligerents. |
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Agreements may be drawn up between the belligerents and an agreed neutral for the internment of the wounded, sick, shipwrecked and PWs in neutral territory until the close of hostilities. |
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On the other hand, President Gbagbo and FANCI were also being persuaded to play their part in creating conditions which would defuse the climate of deep mutual distrust among the protagonists and belligerents. |
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The EU calls on all the belligerents immediately to rein in their fighters and to ensure that their forces respect international law, as well as the N'djamena Ceasefire agreement and the Abuja Protocols. |
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From 1991, the European Community posted observers18 to Slovenia and Croatia to make sure humanitarian aid got through to the combat zones and in an attempt to mediate between the belligerents. |
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By increasing public awareness of a particular issue, my photography could be subversive, putting the belligerents in the spot light and, if I was lucky, in a tight spot. |
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That is, of course, unless the international community chooses to permit the virtual subjugation or the actual annihilation of certain belligerents and ethnic groups. |
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What is needed is for the belligerents to be brought together, for a dialogue to be set going, and for negotiations to be conducted among the belligerent states. |
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The right of requisition recognized for belligerents by the laws and customs of war shall not be exercised except in case of urgent necessity, and only after the welfare of the wounded and sick has been ensured. |
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Countries beyond the war zones were also affected by the disruption of international trade, finance and diplomatic pressures from the belligerents. |
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The very date which put them beyond the pale as belligerents was that which they seem to have chosen in order to prove what active and valiant soldiers they still remained. |
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Gas was soon used by all major belligerents throughout the war. |
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