DocumentCode
565386
Title
The notion of combatancy in cyber warfare
Author
Watts, Sean
fYear
2012
fDate
5-8 June 2012
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
15
Abstract
The class of combatant constitutes one of the most important instrumentalities of the law of war. Combatant status resolves critical and enduring legal questions such as immunity from prosecution for warlike acts, susceptibility to intentional targeting, and, in part, treatment upon capture. Since the late nineteenth century, codifications of the international law of war have included criteria for combatant status keyed to ensuring desirable battlefield conduct and, to the extent possible, humanity in war. This paper revisits the author´s prior work on the topic of combatancy in cyber warfare. Building on recent public revelations concerning state capacity for offensive cyber attacks, as well as new developments in computer network attack, this paper highlights logical and normative shortcomings in current understandings of combatant status in cyberspace. In place of rote reliance on existing criteria intended for the kinetic battlefield, this paper proposes reliance on State affiliation as the sole criterion for evaluating combatant status in cyber warfare between States. An admitted interpretive gloss on current criteria, the proposed framework offers a workable and realistic reconciliation of humanitarian goals and emerging State practice in cyber warfare.
Keywords
computer network security; legislation; military computing; State affiliation; combatancy notion; combatant status; computer network attack; cyber warfare; cyberspace; humanitarian goals; intentional targeting susceptibility; international law-of-war; kinetic battlefield; legal questions; offensive cyber attacks; prosecution immunity; state capacity; warlike acts; Art; Charge coupled devices; Computer networks; Law; Manuals; Protocols; International Humanitarian Law; Law of Armed Conflict; Law of War; combatant status; cyber attack; cyber warfare;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Cyber Conflict (CYCON), 2012 4th International Conference on
Conference_Location
Tallinn
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-1270-7
Type
conf
Filename
6243978
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