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Sexual Assault Cases Spur Military to Overhaul Justice System

The U.S. military has proposed historic changes to its justice system in the wake of concerns about the sexual assault of service members, ProPublica's T. Christian Miller reports. However, the proposed reforms don't address the power of senior commanders to decide whether to press charges, select juries and to vacate court martial convictions. 

The changes would include the issuance of sentencing guidelines for military crimes and having military judges, not juries, determine sentences. 

Charles Erdmann, the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, told ProPublica "'these would be the biggest reforms in 30 years.'"

Pakistan Empowers Military Courts to Try Militants

After dozens of schoolkids were killed by the Taliban, Pakistan has changed its constitution to allow military courts to try militants, the New York Times reports: "Among analysts and legal experts, the military courts have raised a slew of worries about the erosion of fundamental rights, the sidelining of the civilian judiciary and the prospect of soldiers’ wielding untrammeled power in a country with a long history of military takeovers." The courts, however, had wide support, even among opponents to military rule.  "Legal, political and militancy experts warn that these courts are not a panacea for terrorism, and that Pakistanis may be making a grave mistake in treating the rule of law as a negotiable commodity," especially considering the support for militancy in Pakistani society.

Military Still Bans Service By Transgendered People

Even though Congress repealed the "don't ask, don't tell" policy that banned gay members of the military of serving openly, a ban remains on transgendered people serving in the military, the Washington Post reports: "The ban remains firmly in place, with about two dozen service members known to have been discharged over the past two years, according to advocates." About 15,500 transgender people are serving in the military, the Willliams Institute estimates.

Beyond The Terminator- Developing the Law of Cyber Warfare

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Thu, 01/02/2014 - 14:08

Last month, I wrote a piece for the Connecticut Law Tribune about the lack of legal doctrine to govern cyber warfare--and what a UConn professor and law student are doing about it:

Forget Terminator-style cyborgs sent back in time on an assassination mission.

Cyber warfare is here, but the form it takes doesn't involve lethal robots. It's things like Stuxnet, a computer "worm" that is believed to have been created in 2010 to attack Iran's nuclear facilities. Or unmanned planes – navigated by software and "pilots" on the ground – dropping bombs.

But while cyber warfare is here, the law of war and the rules of engagement are largely undeveloped regarding cyberwar, according to David Thaw, a University of Connecticut visiting assistant professor of law whose scholarship focuses on cybersecurity regulation and cybercrime.

There is not even clarity in international law about when cyber warfare can be started. For example, Thaw asks, when would an attack on Google constitute an act of war instead of just criminal activity? What level of cyberwarfare is proportionate as a matter of law?

There is a "wide space that the law needs to catch up" on quickly, Thaw said.

The open legal questions have led Thaw and Joel Henry, a cyberspace operations officer of the 103rd Airlift Wing, Connecticut Air National Guard, and a UConn law student in his last semester, to research the law of armed conflict and cyberwarfare. They have presented their research at places like the Pentagon and NATO conferences.

Talking to experts in those forums made them realize that they needed to address not only what happens during a cyber warfare conflict, but about what leads up to the conflict.

Their collaboration started after Henry wrote a paper on cyber warfare for one of Henry's classes, and because Henry has served as a cyberoperations officer with the Connecticut National Guard and the U.S. Air Force for five years. Prior to that, Henry was an Air Force captain and a weapons loader for A-10 fighter jets from 2002 to 2008. Until this semester, Henry was an evening law student working full time as an engineer.

The aim of professor and student is to develop "a set of legal guidelines to help the international community and the individual nation-states" as they draft their own laws and policies about cyber warfare, Thaw said.

Due to the interconnectivity of many systems with the Internet — for example, power grids, water and fuel pipelines and emergency services — cyberwarfare could have unintended consequences. For example, Country A deploys a cyberweapon against Country B, but the weapon affects systems in Country C due to the interconnective nature of technology, Thaw said.

If the military is using a cyberweapon to target an electronic system or a computer system of an adversary, it must be sure that use of that weapon is not going to have unintended consequences for a civilian population, Henry said.

One issue with cyber warfare is the risk of collateral damage if excessive force is used in more densely populated areas, Thaw said. The same is true of conventional warfare, he said. "You don't drop an imprecise high-yield warhead in a major urban center … to take down one building," Thaw said. "You use a precision-guided ordinance" from an aircraft.

The law needs to require that in cyberspace as well, he said.

Henry said his contribution to the paper is in terms of drafting new cyberlaw of armed conflict and how that applies to military operations. The focus has been on judge advocates assigned to military units, Henry said.

Henry said his research has been informed by his personal experience of working with JAGs assigned to one of the Air Force's Air and Space Operations Centers. Their research has shown that, as the law stands currently, "JAGS probably wouldn't be equipped "to lawfully authorize cyber warfare attacks, Henry said. "What would that individual need to know from a legal standpoint to authorize the use of a particular weapon?" Henry asked.

Thaw added: "One of the reasons we have judge advocates in uniform advising commanders who have to make decisions about deploying military assets" is to ensure that military action is lawful and that unlawful harm is not done to civilians, Thaw said.

Another issue with cyber warfare is what happens if remote-controlled aircraft are taken over by unauthorized people. "New questions arise when controlling things remotely," Thaw said.

Another issue with cyber warfare is what happens if remote-controlled aircraft are taken over by unauthorized people. "New questions arise when controlling things remotely," Thaw said.

Thaw and Henry hope to publish their research sometime in the future. For now, they are revising on the basis of their meetings with experts.

Editorial: Politics Gets In The Way of Closing Guantanamo

The Washington Post has an editorial arguing that some progress has finally been made on closing Guantanamo. The Post writes that the Senate voted this month "to preserve language in the pending National Defense Authorization Act that would ease restrictions on repatriating Guantanamo detainees and allow their transfer to the United States for trial, detention or medical treatment." However, The Post reports that the defense bill is in danger of not passing for the first time in 51 years.

Overall, "a legal regime will be needed for the arrest, interrogation and long-term detention of foreign terrorist suspects who cannot be handled by the domestic U.S. justice system" after Guantanamo is closed, The Post concludes.

Pentagon Plans to Close Guantánamo Detainee Hearings to Press

The Miami Herald reports that the latest military hearings for Guantanamo detainees are going to be closed to the press. "Officials have not been able to explain why the Pentagon is unprepared to fulfill its transparency pledge. First Amendment attorney Dave Schulz said he had been seeking assurances from the Defense Department’s Office of General Counsel that reporters would be able to watch captives argue for their freedom since soon after the Pentagon published its 23-page PRB procedures in May 2012," the Herald further reports.
 

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