International Humanitarian Law, the Prohibition of Terrorist Acts and the Fight against Terrorism
In: Yearbook of international humanitarian law, Band 4, S. 329-347
Abstract
Terrorism is said to be a substitute for conventional — or classic — warfare. And the response to terrorism is now called a 'war on terrorism'. Acts of terrorism have always been with us and so has war. Since time immemorial, warfare has been subject to legal regulations: the laws of war. Their foundations can be retraced to age-old practices established to mitigate the effects of recourse to violence when conflicts could not be resolved by peaceful means. These rules used to belong to customs observed by belligerents as a matter of course. Today, international treaties are the main source of the rules governing humanitarian aspects of the conduct of war: the Geneva Conventions for the protection of war victims of 12 August 1949 and their two Additional Protocols of 1977. Is international humanitarian law relevant to the horrors of modern warfare and, in particular, to terrorism? And does it sufficiently take into account the interest of states in combating terrorism?
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