The Geography of the Battlefield: A Framework for Detention and Targeting Outside the 'Hot' Conflict Zone

70 Pages Posted: 2 May 2012 Last revised: 5 Jul 2013

See all articles by Jennifer C. Daskal

Jennifer C. Daskal

American University - Washington College of Law

Date Written: June 1, 2012

Abstract

The U.S. conflict with al Qaeda raises a number of complicated and contested questions regarding the geographic scope of the battlefield and the related limits on the state’s authority to use lethal force and to detain without charge. To date, the legal and policy discussions on this issue have resulted in a heated and intractable debate. On the one hand, the United States and its supporters argue that the conflict — and broad detention and targeting authorities — extend to wherever the alleged enemy is found, subject to a series of malleable policy constraints. On the other hand, European allies, human rights groups, and other scholars, fearing the creep of war, counter that the conflict and related authorities are geographically limited to Afghanistan and possibly northwest Pakistan. Based on this view, state action outside these areas is governed exclusively by civilian law enforcement, tempered by international human rights norms.

This Article breaks through the impasse. It offers a new and comprehensive law-of-war framework that mediates the multifaceted security, liberty, and foreign policy interests at stake. Specifically, the Article recognizes the state’s need to respond to the enemy threat wherever it is located, but argues that the rules for doing so ought to distinguish between the so-called “hot” battlefield and elsewhere. It proposes a set of binding standards that would limit and legitimize the use of targeted killings and law-of-war detention outside zones of active hostilities — subjecting their use to an individualized threat assessment, a least-harmful-means test, and significant procedural safeguards. The Article concludes by describing how and why this approach should be incorporated into U.S. and international law and applied to what are likely to be increasingly common threats posed by transnational nonstate actors in the future

Keywords: targeted killing, detention, law of war, hot battlefield, conflict zone, international humanitarian law

Suggested Citation

Daskal, Jennifer C., The Geography of the Battlefield: A Framework for Detention and Targeting Outside the 'Hot' Conflict Zone (June 1, 2012). 161 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1165 (2013), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2049532

Jennifer C. Daskal (Contact Author)

American University - Washington College of Law ( email )

4300 Nebraska Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20016
United States
202- (Phone)

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