Ian wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:
You can't, at least not consistent with the Geneva Conventions, bomb the fuck out of a country, help send it into disarray and then wash your hands of it all.
I don't know if this comment is accurate at all. So far the coalition has been focusing on things like air defense sites and loyalist tanks, so as to impose the no-fly and keep heavy ground forces from being able to advance into Benghazi. To my knowledge, there hasn't been any foreign bombing of power plants, transportation hubs, industry, or any other infrastructure that will be needed by civilians to keep things running during and after this period.
I don't disagree, and I was not implying that we had, as yet, "broke it," so as to lead to the conclusion that we "bought it."
However, IF the invading force's military action causes the demise of the current government, does the invading force not have the obligation to protect civilians and also see that a new government is set up?
The duty to provide security for civilians attaches as soon as the occupying force exercises control or authority over civilians of the occupied territory-that is, at the soonest possible moment. (This principle is stated in U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10 as well as the Fourth Geneva Convention, art. 6.).
If effective control is maintained from the air and the Qadafi government toppled, wouldn't the allied forces have an obligation, at the soonest possible moment, to exercise control or authority over civilians in order to provide security? Isn't that the whole point of the Fourth Geneva Convention - concerning the Protection of Civilians in Times of War?
I mean - this is the thing that irked me a bit from 2003 to 2008 -- during those years, it became almost a mantra that an "occupation" was by its very nature illegal - something against international law. Sometimes, however, occupations are not only legal but MANDATED by international law.
The allies have to be really careful here. Qadafi is a bastard, yes. But, if we topple him and as a result the situation spirals out of control into an all out civil war among remaining factions and competitors for power - doesn't international law require the allied forces - who are invading Libya - no two ways about it - just because your using mostly air forces doesn't change the fact that it's an invasion. It's Libya's airspace, and nobody asked them for permission to enter it. That sort of shit gets civilian airliners shot down (like that incident over Russia 2 decades or so ago).