THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL IMPLICATIONS OF INFORMATION WARFARE
Richard W. Aldrich
INSS Occasional Paper 9
Information Warfare Series
April 1996
USAF Institute for National Security Studies US Air Force Academy,
Colorado
The views expressed in this report are those of the author and
do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of
the Department of the Air Force, the Department of Defense or
the US Government. This report is approved for public release
by SAF/PAS; distribution is unlimited.
********
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Richard W. Aldrich is an Air Force Staff Judge
Advocate and Associate Professor of Law at the US Air Force Academy.
He received a BS in computer science from the Air Force Academy
in 1981 and a JD from the UCLA School of Law in 1986.
********
This paper is the result of research conducted under the auspices
of an INSS research grant in the summer of 1995.
********
Comments pertaining to this report are invited and should be
forwarded to: Director, Institute for National Security Studies,
HQ USAFA/DFE, 2354 Fairchild Drive, Suite 5D33, US Air Force
Academy, Colorado Springs, CO 80840, 719-472-2717.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Foreword vii
Executive Summary ix
I. Introduction 1
II. Definitions 3
III. The Law of Armed Conflict 6
A. Applicability 6
1. Armed Conflict 6
2. Cyberspace vs. Land, Sea, Air and Space 7
B. Basic Principles 8
1. Principle of Military Necessity 9
2. Principle of Humanity 12
3. Principle of Chivalry 15
IV. Treaties 18
A. The United Nations Charter 18
B. The Outer Space Treaty 20
C. The Moon Treaty 21
D. The Liability Convention 24
E. The International Telecommunication Convention 24
F. Guidelines for the Security of Information Systems 25
V. Conclusion 25
Endnotes 27
FOREWORD
We are pleased to publish this ninth volume in the Occasional
Paper series of the US Air Force Institute for National Security
Studies (INSS). This monograph represents the results of research
conducted during fiscal year 1995 under the sponsorship of a
grant from INSS.
This paper examines the international legal implications of
information warfare and its basic underlying concepts. As the
author points out, we have entered the information age. The
US military is the most information dependent force in the world
and also the most networked. Add to that the United States' dependence
on computers and computer networks for banking, communication,
stock exchanges, transportation, air traffic control, and it
is obvious that, in the words of the Director of the National
Security Agency, "we've become the most vulnerable nation on
earth."
Infowar, the ability to destroy or disrupt these networks, has
become a major security challenge. Individuals,
terrorists, or foreign countries capable of penetrating these
infosystems could wreak havoc with our national defense and civilian
infrastructures. How does the Law of War and other international
law limit this new form of warfare? That question provides the
focus for this paper, which raises many issues with no clear
legal precedent. In this new arena, the author advocates applying
existing law to fill gaps as they are identified, while trying
to develop and adapt the law to the changed environment.
About the Institute INSS is co-sponsored by the National Security
Negotiations Division, Plans and Operations Directorate, Headquarters
US Air Force (USAF/XOXI) and the Dean of the Faculty, US Air
Force Academy. The mission of the Institute is "to promote national
security research for the Department of Defense within the military
academic community, and to support the Air Force national security
education program." Its primary purpose is to promote research
in fields of interest to our organizational sponsors: arms control,
proliferation, national security, regional studies, the revolution
in military affairs, information warfare, and environmental security.
INSS coordinates and focuses outside thinking in various disciplines
and across services to develop new ideas for USAF policy making.
The Institute develops topics, selects researchers from within
the military academic community, and administers sponsored research.
We also host conferences and workshops which facilitate the dissemination
of information to a wide range of private and government organizations.
INSS is in its fourth year of providing valuable, costeffective
research to meet the needs of the Air Staff and our other sponsors.
We appreciate your continued interest in INSS and its research
products.
JEFFREY A. LARSEN, Lt Colonel, USAF
Director, Institute for National Security Studies
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
"Information Warfare" is a fairly new concept. As such, its
definition is still evolving, but the Air Force has described
it as encompassing "any action to deny, exploit, corrupt or destroy
the enemy's information and its functions; protecting ourselves
against those actions; and exploiting our own military information
functions." The breadth of this definition spans the spectrum
from primitive propaganda and deception actions to high tech
viruses and morphing techniques. It is a concept which can be
employed offensively, defensively, and in peacetime. Because
of potential wartime applications, the question arises as to
what the legal implication of information warfare are. This
paper focuses only on the international legal implications, analyzing
the potential applicability of the Law of Armed Conflict, or
the Law of War, and several specific international treaties.
One initial hurdle posed by the breadth and uniqueness of certain
aspects of information warfare is the question of what constitutes
an armed attack in the information age? The question is important
for the purpose of determining what constitutes an unlawful aggressive
act allowing for the lawful employment of defensive or counteroffensive
force. The
answer is less than clear, but appears to revolve around the
threat the action poses to a government's authority over its
people.
The Law of Armed Conflict analysis discusses the three basic
principles central to the LOAC: the principle of military necessity,
the principle of humanity, and the principle of chivalry. The
principle of military necessity stipulates that targets must
have a military goal and be consistent with the laws of war.
The principle of humanity deals with proportionality in the type
and degree of force used. The principle of chivalry addresses
the use of trickery-both permissible ruses and impermissible
perfidy or treachery. None of the principles presents any absolute
bar to the use of information warfare concepts, tactics or weapons,
though each may limit certain implementations of the concept.
Notably, the principle of chivalry may restrict the use of trickery,
electronic or otherwise, which abuses a protected status, such
as that afforded surrendering troops, Red Cross medical services,
and the like.
Several international treaties may also constrain potential
information warfare activities. Most prominent in this area are
treaties dealing with outer space. Several
treaties place limitations on the use of certain satellites to "peaceful
purposes," a catch-phrase which has been variously interpreted
to mean "non-military" at one end or "nonaggressive" at the other.
Additionally, the Treaty on Neutrals appears to preclude neutrals
from interfering with the use of telecommunications lines which
cross their countries. In an age of packet switching and fiber
optic cables, such a task would be nearly impossible in many
cases anyway, at least without taking down the neutral's own
ability to use its communications equipment.
Information warfare is a concept whose time has already come. The
number, type, and scope of information operations seems destined
to become more omnipresent. As such it is incumbent that American
leaders be cognizant of the existing legal strictures to ensure
that such activities conform to the law. This will help preserve
the humanity of war and America's moral leadership.
UNITED STATES AIR FORCE ACADEMY
Lieutenant General Paul E. Stein Superintendent
Brigadier General Ruben A. Cubero Dean of the Faculty
HEADQUARTERS, US AIR FORCE
PLANS AND OPERATIONS DIRECTORATE
Major General Robert E. Linhard Director of Plans
Lieutenant Colonel Todd Bodenhammer Chief, National Security
Negotiations Division
USAF INSTITUTE FOR NATIONAL SECURITY STUDIES
Lieutenant Colonel Jeffrey A. Larsen Director
Major Timothy J. Krein, USAFR Editor
Ms Marsha Taylor Cover Design
INSS OCCASIONAL PAPERS
1. Explaining Weapons Proliferation: Going Beyond the Security
Dilemma. Gregory J. Rattray, July 1994
2. The Ukrainian Military: Instrument for Defense or Domestic
Challenge? Oleg Strekal, November 1994
3. North Korea's Nuclear Program: The Clinton Administration's
Response. William
E. Berry, Jr., March 1995
4. Environmental Assistance as National Security Policy: Helping
the Former Soviet Union Find Solutions to its Environmental Problems.
Robert L. Dunaway, November 1995
5. Economic Power in the Sino-U.S. Relationship. Kevin F. Donovan,
December 1995
6. Nuclear Proliferation: Diminishing Threat? William H. Kincade,
December 1995
7. Nuclear Proliferation: The Diplomatic Role of Non-Weaponized
Programs. Rosalind R. Reynolds, January 1996
8. Five Minutes Past Midnight: The Clear and Present Danger
of Nuclear Weapons Grade Fissile Materials. Guy B. Roberts, February
1996
The International Legal Implications of Information Warfare
Because exploiting [information systems] will readily cross international
borders, we must be cognizant of what the law allows and will
not allow. We must have good legal advice as we get into this.
-- General Ronald R. Fogelman, Chief of Staff, US Air Force1
I. Introduction
In the above quote, General Fogelman was speaking of "Information
Warfare," the type of warfare believed by many to be the means
by which the next "big" war will be fought and more importantly,
the means by which future wars will be won. The term itself is
enigmatic, embracing concepts as old as war itself and as new
as the latest technology. The recent meteoric rise in prominence
of the concept is inextricably linked to the dramatic advances
in communications technology and information systems, specifically
the computer.
Some scientists suggest that the most important invention is
not "wireless communication, flying, the internal combustion
engine or the atomic bomb but the digital computer;" for, while
the others may be a threat to our environment, our privacy or
our lives, none of them can threaten our image of ourselves in
the way the computer can.2 Nor may any of them affect how future
wars are fought as much as the networked digital computer will.
Futurists Alvin and Heidi Toffler, authors of The Third Wave
and War and AntiWar, claim we have entered a new era -- an information
age. They
refer to this era as the Third Wave to differentiate it from
the agrarian and industrial periods. In the Third Wave, information
ascends to become the most important resource and, as such, becomes
a significant means of both preventing and/or limiting future
wars as well as winning wars.
Many scoff at the idea as so much hype. Perhaps
so, but it is important to realize that the American military
is the most information-dependent force in the world. It uses
computers to help design weapons, guide missiles, pay soldiers,
manage medical supplies, write memos, control radio networks,
train tank crews, mobilize reservists, issue press releases,
find spare parts and even suggest tactics to combat commanders.3
The American military is also the most networked force in the
world, a combination which, absent adequate defenses, makes the
American military extremely vulnerable to information attacks.
The country's heavy civilian reliance on computers in communications,
air traffic control, banking and the stock exchanges, has prompted
National Security Agency director, Vice Admiral John McConnell,
to comment that, "We're more vulnerable than any nation on earth."4
The Joint Security Commission has characterized American vulnerability
to infowar as "the major security challenge of this decade and
possibly the next century."5 Individuals, terrorist groups or
foreign countries capable of penetrating the military's information
systems could wreak havoc with our national defense.
Some say the war has already begun. Robert Ayers, of the Defense
Information Systems Agency (DISA), has concluded that Department
of Defense computers were broken into by unknown persons in excess
of 300,000 times in 1994. Indeed, DISA itself tried to test the
military's vulnerabilities by hacking into 8,932 DOD computers.
DISA successfully gained control of 88% of them, using only "front
door" attacks. Even more discouraging is the fact that only 4%
of those hacked into even knew they had been victimized, and
shockingly only 0.2% reported it.6
How, then, does the law of war and other international law limit
this new form of warfare, if at all? To answer that question,
this paper will first explore the definition of the term "information
warfare," then discuss the appropriateness of applying the laws
of war to information warfare techniques. Finally, it will turn
to international treaties to determine how they may impact this
new form of warfare.
II. Definitions
How the laws of war and international treaties proscribe the
scope and use of information warfare hinges largely on how it
is defined. Unfortunately, the definitions are diverse. Indeed,
there are even various terms used in lieu of or in addition to
information warfare including: "infowar," "information operations," "netwar," "command
and control counterwar (C2W)," "Third Wave War," "knowledge war" and "cyberwar."7
The term "information-based warfare" is sometimes used to denote
a subset of information warfare, but can also describe an earlier,
more narrow concept of infowar: Information-based warfare is
an approach to armed conflict focusing on the management and
use of information in all its forms and at all levels to achieve
a decisive military advantage especially in the joint and combined
environment. Information-based warfare is both offensive and
defensive in nature-ranging from measures that prohibit the enemy
from exploiting information to corresponding measures to assure
the integrity, availability, and interoperability of friendly
information assets.8
Some also distinguish "information age warfare" from information
warfare. The
former "uses information technology as a tool to impart . . .
combat operations with unprecedented economies of time and force,"9
while the latter "views information itself as a separate realm,
potent weapon and lucrative target."10
"Information assurance" is most often used by non-military individuals
and organizations to denote only the defensive aspect of information
warfare, though many in the corporate community also employ the
term "information warfare" for that purpose. Winn
Schwartau, author of the book Information Warfare: Chaos on the
Electronic Superhighway, defines information warfare as "an electronic
conflict in which information is a strategic asset worthy of
conquest or destruction."11 He also defines three classes of
information warfare: Class 1 is personal information warfare,
Class 2 is corporate information warfare, and Class 3 is global
information warfare.
The Computer Security Institute defines information warfare
as, [d]istinct from "computer crime" because it implies an aggressive
act on the part of one adversary-whether an individual, a competing
organization or a rival government-against another in an ongoing
struggle for hegemony in the marketplace or the political arena.12
It goes on to distinguish the term from "information gathering" by
noting that the former carries with it the threat of interrupted
operations and destroyed assets in addition to the loss of secrets
normally associated with another's information gathering.13
According to The Washington Post, "The Pentagon formally defines
infowar as the effort to seize control of electronic information
systems during a conflict."14 However, this assessment of the
Pentagon's definition is far too narrow. Indeed some in the Pentagon
have defined information warfare so broadly that it encompasses
virtually all aspects of warfare activity. In a publication recently
released by the Air Force, Cornerstones of Information Warfare,
infowar is defined as "any action to deny, exploit, corrupt or
destroy the enemy's information and its functions; protecting
ourselves against those actions; and exploiting our own military
information functions."15 Under this definition, information
warfare is dependent only on the nature of the action, not the
means by which it is accomplished. Thus, the conventional bombing
of a computer center is information warfare, but would not be
under definitions offered by Mr. Schwartau and others.
The National Defense University defines infowar as "the use
of information and information systems as weapons in a conflict
where information and information systems are the targets." This
would presumably include the wartime use of propaganda and psychological
operations (PSYOPS).
However the term is defined, its very name may make matters
more complicated from a legal perspective. Under
the broadest definitions, information warfare could be carried
out both during peacetime and in conflict. Calling a peacetime
activity "information warfare" may unnecessarily suggest the
applicability of the laws of war or the appropriateness of defensive
measures. It was perhaps for this reason the United States Army
has referred to the concept instead as "information operations." In
spite of this, the term "information warfare" seems already too
entrenched in the American vocabulary to change anytime soon.
And obviously the vocabulary does not drive the law. Calling
a pencil a nuclear weapon, for instance, does not make it one,
but it would certainly introduce unnecessary confusion if a foreign
country learned that the Pentagon was purchasing one million
of these new "nuclear weapons."
III. The Law of Armed Conflict
Despite the lack of a universally agreed upon definition, this
paper will concentrate on that aspect of information warfare
dealing with the use of information systems for offensive or
defensive purposes. Conventional attacks against information
systems can largely be dealt with using traditional law of armed
conflict constructs to assess military necessity, proportionality,
collateral damage and the like. It
is the use of non-traditional "information weapons" which raises
the most interesting legal questions and which will be the focus
of this paper.
A. Applicability
1. Armed Conflict
The Law of Armed Conflict is also referred to as the Law of
War, though the former term seems more popular as nation states
today rarely declare war, but frequently involve themselves in
armed conflicts. The Law of Armed Conflict necessarily applies
whenever two nation states are involved in an armed conflict.16
But what is "armed conflict?" The expression "international armed
conflict" is not defined in the Geneva Conventions or elsewhere
in international law, but several commentators would consider
that, at a minimum, it would apply "wherever regular armed forces
engage the regular armed forces of a foreign state or enter the
territory of a foreign state without permission."17 "Engage" conveys
a physical confrontation, and "enter[ing] the territory of a
foreign state" denotes a physical entry, thus in both cases skirting
the concerns raised by information attacks. Some may find it
less problematic characterizing an information attack as force
if there is a physical manifestation, such as an explosion. But
this comprises only a fraction of the potential kinds of information
attacks. "Armed conflict," as presently understood, seems far
less likely to be applied to the simple manipulation of bits
inside a computer, though this may soon change. Already
the nefarious manipulation of bits could, in some cases, cause
significantly more harm than a bomb.
"Armed conflict" under Article 2 of the Geneva Conventions was
specifically chosen over the term "war" because of its broader
scope. However,
its scope in 1949 could hardly have foreseen today's potential
information warfare conflicts. The commentator Jean C. Pictet
concluded that, "Any difference arising between two states and
leading to the intervention of members of the armed forces is
an armed conflict within the meaning of Article 2, even if one
of the parties denies the existence of a state of war."18 This
only shifts the question to what constitutes "intervention," but
again the defining criteria seems to be one of physical confrontation.
If an information attack does not fit the definition of an "armed
conflict," then many, if not all of the laws of armed conflict
are not even applicable.
2. Cyberspace vs. Land, Sea, Air and Space
The Geneva and Hague Conventions both deal with the issues of
laws of war "on land" or "at sea." Even the 1977 protocols to
update the Geneva Conventions continued this connection to the
land or sea, while other law of war treaties dealt with the air
and space. This
division worked well for the agrarian and industrial ages, but
falls far short in proscribing conduct in the information age. Information
warfare takes place in what has come to be known as cyberspace,
an ethereal place which does not neatly fit into the land, sea,
air, space dichotomy.19 Information warfare involves conduct
and effects which transcend national boundaries and render such
distinctions superfluous.
Nor do actions in cyberspace come cloaked in military garb.
The information attack against a military computer could be the
work of a curious teenager down the street, the work of terrorists
in a nearby country, or the work of a belligerent government
half way around the world. One cannot always trace the source
of the action. And even when the action can be traced back, it
may lead only to an anonymous remailer. If an ICBM were launched
from Russia, it would be a fairly clear signal of the start of
an armed conflict. However, even if an information attack could
be traced to Russia, it is unclear whether a teen, a terrorist
group, or agents of the government are at the keyboard. Some
may say that this is no different from the anonymous terrorist
attacks occasionally suffered by military personnel and installations.
The killing of American soldiers in German discos is a prominent
example. In
such a case, the United States merely relied on other sources
of intelligence to fill in the ambiguities. In the German disco
case, intelligence sources were able to sufficiently point the
finger at Libya to justify military air strikes against it. Perhaps
the same can be done in the area of information attacks, though
it is interesting to note that the State Department's Anti-Terrorism
unit narrowly defines terrorism to be only politically motivated
physical attacks. Thus, information attacks would not generally
even fit within the definition of terrorism.
B. Basic Principles
There are three basic principles central to the laws of armed
conflict (LOAC) and it is instructive to analyze the applicability
of LOAC to information warfare by analyzing these underlying
tenets.
1. Principle of Military Necessity
The first principle of LOAC is military necessity. Briefly,
it "permits the application of only that degree of regulated
force, not otherwise prohibited by the laws of war, required
for the partial or complete submission of the enemy with the
least expenditure of life, time and physical resources."20 Professor
Francis Leiber defines it as, "Those measures which are indispensable
for securing the ends of war and which are lawful according to
the modern law and usages of war."21
This first principle would seem to pose few hurdles for information
warfare. However,
the exact scope of term "regulated force" is somewhat nebulous
and could pose some problems for the employment of certain types
of computer viruses. Viruses are often listed among the available "information
weapons" and include worms, Trojan horses and logic bombs. These
are all programs or sections of computer code designed to wreak
havoc on a recipient's computer. They can be designed to trigger
upon the occurrence of a certain event or to activate randomly.
Randomly triggered viruses, worms, Trojan horses and logic bombs
may not properly fit the definition of the use of regulated force.
The Principle of Military Necessity permits anything that is
not otherwise prohibited by the laws of war. This definition
currently works in the favor of information war advocates, since
most of the laws of war were set down prior to any conceptualization
of information weaponry and information warfare tactics. While
the relative void does little to impede this new form of war,
some international treaties may provide barriers.
The stipulation that defeat of the enemy be accomplished with
the least expenditure of life, time and physical resources also
favors information warfare, since it is largely viewed as a bloodless
type of warfare. Information
attacks may also take little time, potentially traveling at the
speed of light. And because it is generally aimed at disrupting
information systems, information warfare attacks are less likely
to result in the loss of physical resources or lives, though
some attacks are aimed at destroying internal electronics.
While not much has been published on how information warfare
will be conducted, Col Owen E. Jensen recently wrote an article "for
those seeking a few fundamental principles to guide them in applying
information warfare to specific scenarios."22 In his article
he emphasizes the importance of the Principle of Decapitation:
Cut or deny all the enemy's information-transfer media-telephone,
radio frequencies (RF), cable, and other means of transmission.
Sever the nervous system. Deny, disrupt, degrade, or destroy
every transmission. Stop all "gray system" access. Close off
to the enemy all third-party communications satellites (COMSAT),
whether they belong to international consortia or to commercial
enterprises or are assets of uninvolved nations.23
The all-inclusive nature of this principle raises several legal
issues: (1) its scope probably exceeds the bounds of military
necessity, (2) it probably violates the INTELSAT and INMARSAT
treaties, and (3) it probably violates the treaty concerning
neutrals. Only the first issue will be addressed here. The
latter two will be addressed in the appropriate sections below.
Again, the Principle of Military Necessity allows only the application
of that degree of regulated force required for the partial or
complete submission of the enemy with the least expenditure of
life, time and physical resources. Arguably, denying all information-transfer
media and disrupting or destroying every transmission goes beyond
a military objective by incapacitating the entire civilian populace
as well. Taking out all information-transfer media would bring
down a country's stock market, banking system, air traffic control,
emergency dispatches and more. This
would almost certainly result in the loss of civilian lives,
and may well be deemed disproportionate to the military objective. The
difficulty in the information age, however, comes in where to
draw the line.
In the United States, for example, over 95% of military communications
traverse civilian lines. The use of fiber optics and packet switching
makes taking out only military communications virtually impossible. Nevertheless,
incapacitating the entire civilian system would seem too blunt
an approach under the law of armed conflict. Taking out military
communications centers, military radio frequencies, and manipulating
military messages to create confusion and render even good messages
suspect would be a far more legally defensible position. However,
if the enemy responded by targeting civilian communications centers
and civilian frequencies, a response in kind would be more clearly
legal, even with the consequent collateral effects to civilians.
The Air Force's Cornerstones of Information Warfare notes a
troubling asymmetry between offensive and defensive actions under
information warfare: The military may, consistent with the law
of armed conflict, attack any militarily significant target.
In the context of information warfare, this means we may target
any of the adversary's information functions that have a bearing
on his will or capability to fight. In stark contrast, our military
may defend only military information functions. There are many
information functions critical to our national security that
lie outside the military's defensive purview.24 Indeed, as previously
noted, over 95% of military communications traffic over commercial
communications systems.25
The issue raises another point: who is a "combatant" in the
information age? If teenage hackers in the enemy's country unilaterally
decide to aid their government by creating havoc through their
use of computers, do they become fair game for attack by the
opposition? If civilian radio and television stations unwittingly
broadcast coded messages to the enemy's troops can they be attacked?
2. Principle of Humanity
The second basic principle is the Principle of Humanity, aimed
at prohibiting "the employment of any kind or degree of force
not necessary for the purposes of war, that is for the partial
or complete submission of the enemy with the least possible expenditure
of life, time and physical resources."26
The Law of Land Warfare forbade the employment of "arms, projectiles,
or material calculated to cause unnecessary suffering." Included
as examples were lances with barbed heads, irregularly shaped
bullets, bullets with the hard shell heads filed off, bullets
dipped in an inflammatory substance, and projectiles filled with
glass.27 The 1981 Convention on the Prohibition or Restriction
on the Use of Certain Conventional Weapons Which May be Deemed
to be Excessively Injurious or to Have Indiscriminate Effects
added weapons which resulted in nondetectable fragments in the
body, field mines, booby traps, and incendiary weapons.28 These
proscriptions are all very specific and fail to form any cohesive
framework from which logical extensions could be made. Thus,
while bullets dipped in an inflammatory substance are banned,
the United States has long claimed that nuclear weapons are not
per se excluded under the principle of humanity. Additionally,
all of the specific weapons listed are rudimentary weapons of
an older era with little real connection to any of the weapons
envisioned for use in information warfare. With
such specificity and incongruity it would be difficult to automatically
exclude any information weapon, though the overarching ban on
weapons calculated to cause unnecessary suffering may provide
a hazy boundary.
The theoretical depiction of certain types of computer programs
as "weapons" introduces another problem. The law of armed conflict
requires any nation desiring to implement a new type of weapon
to make a determination, prior to its use, regarding its compliance
with the principle of humanity.29 If a computer program, whether
it be a virus, worm, logic bomb or something else, is called
a "weapon," this may unwittingly trigger a required review. Certainly
computer programs in and of themselves have not previously been
considered weapons in the international community, though in
some uses their effects may have some striking parallels with
conventional weapons.
Some "weapon" use may also be constrained by domestic law even
if it is only applied internationally. For instance, if in the
course of employing international infowar data collection techniques "United
States persons" become subjects, the operation may fall under
the purview of Executive Order 12333. The order's applicable
provisions are as follows:
2.4 Collection Techniques.
Agencies within the Intelligence Community shall use the least
intrusive collection techniques feasible within the United States
or directed against United States persons abroad. Agencies are
not authorized to use such techniques as electronic surveillance,
unconsented physical search, mail surveillance, physical surveillance,
or monitoring devices unless they are in accordance with procedures
established by the head of the agency concerned and approved
by the Attorney General. Such procedures shall protect constitutional
and other legal rights and limit use of such information to lawful
governmental purposes. . .
2.5 Attorney General Approval. The Attorney General hereby is
delegated the power to approve the use for intelligence purposes,
within the United States or against a United States person abroad,
of any technique for which a warrant would be required if undertaken
for law enforcement purposes, provided that such techniques shall
not be undertaken unless the Attorney General has determined
in each case that there is probable cause to believe that the
technique is directed against a foreign power or an agent of
a foreign power. Electronic surveillance, as defined in the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, shall be conducted in
accordance with that Act, as well as this Order.
While domestic law is beyond the scope of this paper, it is
worth emphasizing that even operations taking place entirely
in a foreign country or countries may be constrained not only
by the foreign country's law and international law, but by domestic
law as well. This is not peculiar to information warfare, but
applies across the board. Other data collection techniques will
likely be treated in the same way as espionage, that is, while
it is not prohibited by the laws of armed conflict, it is punishable
by the laws of enemy state if the enemy can capture the spy and
exercise its jurisdiction over him or her. Infowar roles which
may fit this bill are "sniffing," "dumpster diving," and "cracking."
Sniffing generally entails the use of software to record the
first several characters of a telnet session. This information
generally includes the username, Internet Protocol (IP) address,
and password-enough information for the sniffer to breach security
and/or pose as the sniffee.
Dumpster diving, while oftentimes listed as an information warfare
technique, is nothing more than the low tech rifling through
the opposition's trash in search of userIDs, passwords, and the
like to allow infiltration of the enemy's information systems.
Cracking is the more sophisticated use of computers to access
or create back doors to the enemy's computer systems. It may
also involve setting up Trojan horses, circumventing firewalls,
and/or attempting to obtain root access.30
In addition to, or in lieu of espionage laws, some countries
may also have computer crime laws under which such conduct may
be prosecuted. Of particular note is the United Kingdom's Computer
Misuse Act. This Act broadly proscribes many actions which would
be included within the sniffing and cracking functions described
above:
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if--
(a) he causes a computer to perform any function with intent
to secure access to any program or data held in any computer;
(b) the access he intends to secure is unauthorised; and
© he knows at the time when he causes the computer to perform
the function that that is the case.31
Of even greater significance, however, is the fact that the
Act purports to apply extraterritorially, as long as any significant
link with British jurisdiction exists.32 A significant link includes
any access of a computer in the U.K.33 Based on the fact that
the Internet is designed to withstand nuclear attack by sending
message packets through any working node, the scope of this Act
is perhaps broader than would first appear. Thus, if a French
operative were to attempt to make a nefarious entry into a U.S.
Department of Defense computer and the message, by happenstance
were routed through the U.K., the French operative could be tried
and convicted under U.K. law. There would, of course, still be
the sticky situation of obtaining jurisdiction over the Frenchman.
If he were operating under the direction of the French government,
France would be unlikely to turn him over. And the Frenchman
would be well-advised to vacation somewhere other than England,
for fear that upon entering the country authorities there would
seize and try him.
3. Principle of Chivalry
The third basic principle of the law of armed conflict is the
Principle of Chivalry. Its premise is that the waging of war
should be done "in accord with well-recognized formalities and
courtesies."34 This principle recognizes that deception is often
key to military victory, and does not outlaw its use, but it
does circumscribe how and when it may be used within the broad
constructs of ruses and perfidy (or treachery).
Ruses. By international treaty, "[R]uses of war . . . are considered
permissible."35
Ruses consist of the use of trickery without reliance on any
protected sign, symbol or status. The use of misinformation to
convince the Iraqis that the United States would attack from
the shore was a proper use of a ruse. The
ruse was designed to encourage the Iraqis to set up their troops
to defend an attack from the shore, thereby allowing for more
effective attacks against relatively unprepared forces away from
the shore and an unsupported Iraqi rear flank.
Perfidy. Perfidy on the other hand is prohibited under the law
of armed conflict. Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions states, "It
is prohibited to kill, injure or capture an adversary by resort
to perfidy. Acts inviting the confidence of an adversary to lead
him to believe that he is entitled to, or is obliged to accord,
protection under the rules of international law applicable in
armed conflict, with intent to betray that confidence, shall
constitute perfidy." The protection which one is obliged to accord
an enemy is largely identified by certain protected symbols which
have been set out in a series of international agreements.
Various treaties have established protected status for symbols
designating medical activities,36 historic, artistic, scientific
or cultural objects,37 civil defense,38 prisoner of war camps,39
civilian interment camps,40 and dangerous forces.41 The UN emblem,
the flags, uniforms and aircraft markings of neutrals and the
enemy, and the white flag of surrender42 all denote a special
status.43
None of these symbols would seem likely to come into play in
information warfare operations. The protected status recognized
by these symbols, however, may. For instance, suppose Iraq sent
a bogus e-mail message to low level coalition force commanders
in the Gulf purporting to be from the commander of all coalition
forces indicating that Iraq has surrendered and all hostilities
are to cease immediately. If a commander acted on this message
believing it to be real, and suffered heavy casualties from an
Iraqi force he thought was surrendering but was actually attacking,
would Iraq be guilty of violating the Law of Armed Conflict?
The question raised is whether such action constitutes a ruse
or perfidy. Arguably, although Iraq did not directly claim to
be surrendering, its act of spoofing the United States into so
believing and taking advantage of the protected status of surrendering
troops, may well place its actions into the category of perfidy
and therefore constitute a LOAC violation.
Neutrals. The issue of neutrals may pose interesting legal issues
under information warfare. Generally,
nationstates desiring to maintain neutrality may not allow belligerents
to cross their territory or use their ports except to perform
emergency repairs. How then does this general concept apply in
the information era where communications channels criss-cross
a nation's territory and may well be used by belligerents on
either or both sides? The Convention on Neutrals44 would seem
to suggest that a neutral could condone the use of its communications
cables without risking its neutrality:
Art. 8. A neutral Power is not called upon to forbid or restrict
the use on behalf of the belligerents of telegraph or telephone
cables or of wireless telegraphy apparatus belonging to it or
to companies or private individuals.45 However, if a neutral
tried to prohibit the use of its communications channels to one
of the belligerents it would have to prohibit use of the same
to the other belligerent(s) as well or place its neutral status
in jeopardy:
Art. 9. Every measure of restriction or prohibition taken by
a neutral Power in regard to the matters referred to in Articles
7 and 8 must be impartially applied by it to both belligerents.
A neutral Power must see to the same obligation being observed
by companies or private individuals owning telegraph or telephone
cables or wireless telegraphy apparatus.46
In fact, the common use of fiber optic cables and packet-switched
networks may well make it nearly impossible to deny the use of
communications facilities to a belligerent without also denying
those facilities to one's own populace. Significantly
the treaty does not address telecommunications satellites, though
the same problems may well exist in selectively denying use to
some users without jeopardizing all users.
IV. Treaties
Having reviewed some of the considerations in applying the laws
of war to information warfare, this paper will now review the
applicability of international treaties and customary international
law.47 The broad definition of information warfare precludes
a comprehensive review of all treaties which could have some
tangential impact. This section will attempt only to highlight
those treaties which would appear to most directly affect the
implementation of information warfare operations.
A. The United Nations Charter
The waging of aggressive war was outlawed by Article 2, paragraph
4 of the Charter of the United Nations:
All Members shall refrain in their international relations from
the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity
or political independence of any state, or in any manner inconsistent
with the Purposes of the United Nations. Instead of "war," the
Charter used the broader concept of "threat or use of force." While
some favored defining aggression in the U.N. Charter, the United
States opposed the idea on the grounds that no definition could
adequately account for all the circumstances necessary to make
such a determination.48 The United States' position prevailed.
This paper does not attempt to refine the definition, but only
to provide some insight into the concept's interpretation. The
term "force" has sometimes been used in a broad sense to embrace
all types of coercion: economic, political and psychological
as well as physical. Western nations have largely rejected such
a comprehensive definition, the support coming primarily from
Third World countries.49
The U.N. General Assembly adopted a nonbinding definition in
its Resolution on the Definition of Aggression.50 Aggression
was limited to the use of "armed force" in Article 1. An enumeration
of such acts is set out in Article 3, though Article 4 makes
clear the list is not exhaustive. The
economic, ideological and other modes of aggression were carefully
considered . . . but the result was an interpretation that they
did not fall within the term `aggression' as it had been used
in the Charter.51
Nor did the definition adopted by the General Assembly address
the threat of force. Despite
the ambiguity of the terminology used in the Charter and the
relatively narrow definition of aggression adopted by the General
Assembly, most international attorneys hold that "As long as
the act of force . . . compels a State to take a decision it
would not otherwise take, Article 2(4) has been violated."52
This is a very broad interpretation which could potentially pull
many information warfare activities within its proscriptive ambit,
including propagandizing through the Internet. However, Article
19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights declares: "Everyone
has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right
includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to
seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media
and regardless of frontiers."
Even if certain actions are clearly identified as unauthorized
uses of force, the difficulty then comes in detecting the actions
and/or identifying the perpetrator. It is not at all clear that
information-warfare steps by a potential adversary would be readily
detectable: the "How do you know you are at war?" question may
be quite difficult to answer.53
B. The Outer Space Treaty
The Outer Space Treaty states that "States Parties to the Treaty
undertake not to place in orbit around the earth any objects
carrying nuclear weapons or any other kinds of weapons of mass
destruction . . .."54 The term weapons of mass destruction has
generally referred to nuclear, chemical and biological weapons.
It is unclear whether the destructive potential of information
weapons could move it into this class as well. Even in that event,
however, the stipulation that the orbiting object not "carry" such
a weapon would seem to militate against the inclusion of information
weapons under under a strict reading of this provision. Satellites
would act more as a relay point for an information warfare "weapon," than
as a "carrier" of the weapon.
The Outer Space Treaty also states that, "The moon and other
celestial bodies shall be used by all States Parties to the Treaty
exclusively for peaceful purposes. . . [T]he testing of any type
of weapons and the conduct of military manoeuvres on celestial
bodies shall be forbidden."55 The term "celestial bodies" refers
only to natural bodies, such as the moon, asteroids, and planets,
not to man-made satellites, and as such would appear to limit
little the current scope of information warfare activities. Under
this treaty and other space treaties, states are responsible
for insuring that space is used for the benefit of mankind and
for peaceful purposes. At least one international legal scholar
contends that "This applies to data flows as to any other activity."56
Indeed the issue of Transborder Data Flow ("TBDF") has become
an especially important one in the field of international commerce. The
abbreviation TBDF is shorthand for international information
transfer, "though TBDF is the more widely used term."57 What
falls within the scope of "peaceful purposes" has met with much
debate among international legal scholars, though, "The term
`peaceful' is generally taken to mean nonaggressive as opposed
to nonmilitary."58 Thus, even infowar activities envisioned for
the moon or other celestial bodies would apparently not be proscribed
by the treaty unless they were aggressive in nature. Even
then, some have suggested a non-peaceful purpose may legitimately
be made of space objects when acting in "self-defense."59
INTELSAT60 and INMARSAT61 have similar "peaceful purpose" provisions
applicable to classes of satellites. While the same analysis
would apply, the likelihood of using these satellites for information
warfare operations would presumably be much higher than using
the moon or other celestial bodies, so the analysis becomes significantly
more important. If a satellite is used to relay military logistical
data, is the purpose other than the permitted "peaceful purpose"?
Most would probably hold such communications to be routine and
not prohibited. What if the same data is relayed in anticipation
of war? Would its character then change? Some may argue it does.
C. The Moon Treaty
The Moon Treaty62 makes reference to the concept of the Common
Heritage of Mankind: "The Common Heritage of Mankind" ("CHM")
is a concept that can be found in the [Moon Treaty], in the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and elsewhere. Broadly,
the CHM concept, in part, reflects a belief that all nations
should share in an identified resource, even if, in the case
of the moon, some nations lack the technological means to access
and exploit that resource. At
some point a studied attempt probably will be made to apply the
CHM concept to information, broadly defined, as a natural resource.63
While the term "natural resources" generally conjures images
of tangible things, like moon rocks, minerals from asteroids
and the like, natural resources can include such intangible natural
resources as "the broadcast spectra, orbital positions, and scientific
information."64 Nevertheless, one legal scholar has noted the
inappropriateness of applying this doctrine to information, especially
when trying to carry with it the rest of the baggage associated
with the concept, such as the concepts of sovereignty over resources
and depletion of resources.
Whatever else may be said for the CHM principle, the concept
would be difficult to apply to information as a natural resource. It
would be illogical and impracticable to attempt to extend a concept
such as sovereignty, which has been applied to extraction of
mineral resources, to information. Information is not a natural
resource.65
D. The Liability Convention
Another space treaty also raises issues concerning how information
warfare may be impacted by existing international law. Article
II of the Liability Convention states that, "A launching State
shall be absolutely liable to pay compensation for damage caused
by its space object on the surface of the earth or to aircraft
in flight."66 Based on the fact that the treaty took effect in
1972, it would seem clear that this treaty provision was not
intended to constrain the still far-off concept of information
warfare. Rather,
the provision was likely oriented towards more direct damage,
such as that caused by a falling satellite.67
The definition of "damage" in Article I does not dissuade one
from so concluding, though its language is arguably broad enough
to encompass more: "(a) The term `damage' means loss of life,
personal injury or other impairment of health; or loss of or
damage to property of States or of persons, national or juridical,
or property of international intergovernmental organizations."68
Since the treaty does not limit how the space object causes
damage, could it be used to assess liability against a state
which used a satellite to conduct information warfare operations?
It seems unlikely, based on the context in which the treaty was
negotiated, but warplanners should at least consider responses
to a claim under this provision by a state which claims infowar
damages. Could the term property be construed to include intangible
property such as the data stored in a computer? Certainly it
could, though again such a reading seems strained. One does not
normally speak of "damaged" information, though data which has
been corrupted by a virus could be termed damaged.
That the treaty limits liability to damage inflicted "on the
surface of the earth or to aircraft in flight," may also raise
the issue that it does not extend to data manipulations performed
in cyberspace.69
The counterargument would then be that the collateral damage
of the manipulated data occurred on the surface of the earth
or to an aircraft in flight.
Art. IV allows for exoneration from liability if the damage
to the claimant state (or person represented by the claimant
state) was caused by the gross negligence of the claimant or
an act or omission done with intent to cause damage. The
article goes on to say, however, that there will be no exoneration
if the launching state was not complying with international law
(specifically the United Nations Charter and the Outer Space
Treaty).
While it seems unlikely that this treaty would apply to information
warfare, a contrary determination could prove exceptionally expensive. The
compensation which the launching State shall be liable to pay
for damage under this Convention shall be determined in accordance
with international law and the principles of justice and equity,
[to return the claimant to the status quo ante.]70
Some recent novels and conjecture in the popular press have
suggested the possibility of a nation taking out Wall Street
or the Federal Reserve system.71 Consider the costs of returning
the United States to the status quo ante after such a debacle.
E. The International Telecommunication Convention
The International Telecommunication Convention may further constrain
the information war planner. It states that, "All stations, whatever
their purpose, must be established and operated in such a manner
as not to cause harmful interference to the radio services or
communications of other Members . . ."72 Time magazine reported
that "the Air Force's latest secret weapon" is a converted cargo
plane named Commando Solo.73 Commando Solo can purportedly "jam
a country's TV and radio broadcasts and substitute messages--true
or false--on any frequency." This would appear to be a violation
of both the above cited article and Art. 37, which reads, "Members
agree to take the steps required to prevent the transmission
or circulation of false or deceptive distress, urgency, safety
or identification signals . . ."74 But Art. 38 of the same treaty
states, "Members retain their entire freedom with regard to military
radio installations of their army, naval and air forces."75
F. Guidelines for the Security of Information Systems
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
on November 26, 1992, adopted guidelines for the security of
information systems.76 The OECD comprises 24 countries in North
America, Europe and the Pacific region. The Group of Experts
which prepared the document consisted of government delegates
and scholars in various fields including law and computer science. Indeed
the Group of Experts was chaired by an attorney, the Honorable
Michael Kirby, President of the Court of Appeal, Supreme Court
of New South Wales, Australia. Unfortunately, the Guidelines
sidestep the issue of information warfare, never mentioning it
under any of its various rubrics throughout the document. The
Guidelines do address computer crime, and to this extent address
some of the same concerns raised by information warfare. Though,
in the end the Guidelines are just that, guidelines.
The Guidelines also address the problem of jurisdictional competence,
suggesting that countries seek to harmonize their rules on extraterritorial
jurisdiction and review their domestic law to determine its suitability
for dealing with transborder offenses.77 In addition, the Guidelines
encourage the adoption of international agreements. In the meantime,
however, the Guidelines make clear the they "do not affect the
sovereign rights of national governments in respect of national
security and public order ("ordre public"), subject always to
the requirements of national law."
V. Conclusion
General Fogelman was insightful for recognizing the importance
of ascertaining the legal boundaries and implications of activities
taking place under the catch phrase of information warfare. Unfortunately,
for the same reasons that many recognize this information age
as a Third Wave or new era, many of the issues now being raised
are without clear precedent.
This paper dealt only with the international legal implications,
and in this arena we see that most of the treaties and customary
international law to which legal scholars are looking for guidance
was developed, in many cases, decades before information warfare
concepts were envisioned. Nevertheless, certain basic principles
can be carried forward--principles such as military necessity,
proportionality and chivalry. The specifics in how these general
principles will be applied to certain information warfare scenarios
will likely require gradual honing. As countries begin to agree
on certain standards, these may well develop into a new customary
international law. More immediate desires for regulatory guidance
may prompt nations to seek consensus through the treaty making
process.
Some prominent thinkers have claimed that our First and Second
Wave legal system is so hopelessly unable to deal with Third
Wave issues, that it must be replaced promptly, and ignored to
the extent necessary in the interim. This seems an overreaction
prone to anarchy. On the other hand, some claim that the issues
raised by information warfare are really no different than those
that have been raised throughout time and that thoughtful application
of the existing law is all that is needed. This extreme also
seems off the mark and betrays a naïveté of dealing
with complex issues in an entirely new realm. However, for now,
we have only the existing law and must apply it as best makes
sense, working to fill the law's gaps as they are identified.
The fast moving world of the Third Wave will provide challenges
in accomplishing this, but the ease and speed with which information
can be exchanged may also facilitate the task.
ENDNOTES
_______________________________
1 Computer World, June 5, 1995, p. 5
2 Manfred Lachs, Article: Views From The Bench: Thoughts On
Science, Technology And World Law, 86 A.J.I.L. 673 (1992) (Judge
and former President of the International Court of Justice) citing
Joseph Weizenbaum, Computer Power and Human Reason: From Judgment
to Calculation (1976).
3 Washington Post, "The Pentagon's New Nightmare: An Electronic
Pearl Harbor," July 16, 1996, p. C03.
4 Time, "Onward Cyber Soldiers," Aug. 21, 1995, p. 44.
5 Time, "Onward Cyber Soldiers," Aug. 21, 1995, p. 40
6 Washington Post, "The Pentagon's New Nightmare: An Electronic
Pearl Harbor," July 16, 1996, p. C03.
7 John Arquilla and David Ronfeldt, of The RAND Corporation,
have defined information warfare as being the sum of netwar and
cyberwar. Netwar they define as "societallevel conflict waged
through Internetted
modes of communication." Cyberwar they define as "conducting
and preparing to conduct military operations according to information
principles."
8 Working definition recognized by the School of Information
Warfare and Strategy of the National Defense University as of
11/16/93. 9 Department of the Air Force, Cornerstones of Information
Warfare, at 2 (1995).
10 Cornerstones of Information Warfare, at 3. 11 Winn Schwartau,
Information Warfare: Chaos on the Electronic Superhighway, p.
13 (1994). 12 Richard Power, Current and Future Danger: A CSI
Primer on Computer Crime & Information Warfare, p. 27 (1995).
13 Ibid.
14 Washington Post, "The Pentagon's New Nightmare: An Electronic
Pearl Harbor," July 16, 1996 at C03.
15 Cornerstones of Information Warfare, at 3. This definition
is similar to one proposed by the Office of the Assistant Secretary
of Defense for C3I.
16 The Law of Armed Conflict also applies to certain conflicts
internal to a nation-state, but that is beyond the scope of this
paper. 17 Lieutenant Colonel William J. Fenrick, Article: The
Rule Of Proportionality And Protocol I In Conventional Warfare,
98 Mil. L. Rev. 91 (1982) [Lt Col Fenrick was a Legal Officer
with the Canadian Forces.]
18 The Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, Commentary 20 (1958).
19 The legal ambiguities raised by cyberspace are not unique
to discussions of information warfare. Computer
crimes have raised some of the same issues. To what extent can
Muslim countries enforce their criminal sanctions against the
importation of pictures of scantily clad women when Internet
sites around the world offer such pictures to anyone with a modem
or other means of accessing the Internet. Or take the example
of offering unauthorized gambling nationwide. One
Internet site in Turks and Caicos is already doing so, despite
the objections of the U.S. Department of Justice. So
far the Justice Department has been unable to prevent the gambling
outfit from continuing its operations.
An attack on the military's Rome laboratories in New York by
a British hacker resulted in a conviction primarily because both
the United States and Britain had laws outlawing the particular
conduct engaged in by the hacker and agreed to cooperate in the
capture and prosecution of the individual. Adept hackers oftentimes
travel electronically through several countries en route to the
target of their attack, both to befuddle the investigator and
to complicate the international legal issues involved in their
arrest and prosecution.
20 The Air Force Judge Advocate General School, The Military
Commander and the Law 580, (September 1994).
21General Orders 100, Section I, paragraph 14. 22 Col Owen E.
Jensen, "Information Warfare: Principles of Third-Wave War," Airpower
Journal (Winter 1994).
23 Ibid. at 37 (emphasis added).
24 Cornerstones of Information Warfare, at 3 n.1.
25 Science Applications International Corporation, Information
Warfare: Legal, Regulatory, Policy and Organizational Considerations
for Assurance, A Research Report for the Chief, Information Warfare
Division (J6K), Command, Control, Communications and Computer
Systems Directorate, Joint Staff, The Pentagon, Washington, DC
(July 4, 1995). The fact that a country's military uses civilian
communications for a large portion of its message traffic increases
the justification for claiming such a target is a military target.
26 The Military Commander and the Law 580 (September 1994).
27 Article 34, Field Manual 27-10 (1956). 28Some may claim the
Convention did not "add" these weapons to the list of forbidden
weapons, but reduced to writing that which, over time, had already
come to be recognized by many countries around the world. 29Protocol
I to the Geneva Conventions, Art. 36. Indeed, a new "means or
method" of warfare requires a similar determination under the
article: "In the study, development, acquisition or adoption
of a new weapon, means or method of warfare, a High Contracting
Party is under an obligation to determine whether its employment
would in some or all circumstances, be prohibited by this Protocol
or by any other rule of international law applicable to the High
Contracting Party."
30Firewalls are computers which serve as protective front-ends
to a network. All traffic which seeks access to the network must
pass through the firewall computer, which is designed to ferret
out intruders. Root access is that access level which allows
the user to execute the widest range of commands. Such access
is normally only afforded to the system operator. Hackers who
obtain such access can wreak havoc on the system.
31 Section 1(1), Computer Misuse Act 1990. 32 Section 4(2),
Computer Misuse Act 1990. 33 Section 5(2), Computer Misuse Act
1990 reads:
(2) In relation to an offence
under section 1, either of the following is a significant link
with domestic jurisdiction--
(a) that the accused was in the
home country concerned at the time
when he did the act which caused
the computer to perform the
function; or
(b) that any computer containing any program or data to which
the accused secured or intended to secure unathorised access
by doing that act was in the home country concerned at that time.
34 The Military Commander and the Law 581 (September 1994).
35 The Hague Regulations of 1907, Art. 24. 36 Red Cross, Red
Crescent, Red Lion and Sun, or Red Star of David. (Art. 38, 1949
Geneva Convention I and Art. 18, 1977 Geneva Protocol I, to the
1949 Geneva Conventions. The Red Lion and Sun is largely obsolete
since on September 4, 1980 Iran indicated its intent to use the
Red Crescent henceforth). 37 Red circle with triple red spheres
in the circle on a white background (Roerich Pact of 1935) or
royal blue square and triangle on a white shield (Art. 16, 1954
Hague Convention and Art. 20, The Hague Regulations) or rectangular
panel divided diagonally into two triangular portions, the upper
black and the lower white (Art. 5, 1907 Hague Convention IX).
38 Blue triangle on orange background (Art. 66, 1977 Geneva
Protocol I, to the 1949 Geneva Conventions).
39 PW or PG on a square flag (Art. 23, 1977 Geneva Protocol
I, to the 1949 Geneva Conventions).
40 IC on a square flag (Art. 83, 1977 Geneva Protocol I, to
the 1949 Geneva Conventions). 41 Three bright orange circles
of equal size on the same axis (Art. 56(7), 1977 Geneva Protocol
I, to the 1949 Geneva Conventions). 42 White flag is recognized
as a symbol of surrender under Article 32, 1907 Hague Regulations.
43 Air Force Pamphlet 110-34, 25 July 1980.
44 Convention Respecting the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers
and Persons in Case of War on Land, The Hague, October 18, 1907.
45 Convention on Neutrals.
46 Convention on Neutrals.
47 The applicability of some of the treaties discussed infra
was raised in an unpublished "Legal Roadmap" document prepared
in 1993 by the Aegis Research Corp.
48 Whiteman, Digest of International Law 740, (1965).
49 Schachter, International Law in Theory and Practice 110-113
(1991).
50 G.A. Res. 3314 (XXIX) (1974), G.A.O.R. 29th Sess., Supp.
31 at 42.
51 Broms, The Definition of Aggression, 154 Rec. des Cous 299,
386 (1977-I).
52 Schacter, International Law in Theory and Practice 110-113
(1991). Many international attorneys find support for their belief
in the International Court of Justice cases involving the Corfu
Channel and Nicaragua. 53 George F. Kraus, Jr., CDR (ret.), U.S.
Navy, "Information Warfare in 2015,"
Proceedings p. 42 (Aug. 1995)
54 Article IV of the Treaty on Principles Governing the Activities
of States in the Exploitation and Use of Outer Space, Including
the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies, Jan. 27, 1967, 18 UST 2410,
610 UNTS 205 [hereinafter the Outer Space Treaty]. The United
States is a signatory to this treaty, as are Australia, Bulgaria,
Canada, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland, the German Democratic
Republic, Hungary, Japan, Mongolia, Nepal, Niger, Republic of
Korea, Sierra Leone, Sweden, Ukrainian Soviet
Socialist Republic, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, United
Arab Republic, and Great Britain.
55 Article IV of the Outer Space Treaty. Similar language is
included in the Treaty Governing the Activities in Outer Space,
on the Moon, and Other Celestial Bodies, G.A. Res. 34/68, 34
U.N. GAOR Supp. (No. 46) at 77, U.N. Doc. A34/46 (1979) [hereinafter
Moon Treaty].
56 Ronald Wellington Brown, "Perspective: Economic and Trade
Related Aspects of Transborder Data Flow: Elements of a Code
for Transnational Commerce," 6 J. Intl. L. Bus. 1, 1 (Spring
1984) (footnotes omitted).
57 Brown, at 2.
58 Pamela L. Meredith, "The Legality Of A HighTechnology Missile
Defense System: The ABM And Outer Space Treaties," 78 A.J.I.L.
418 (1984) citing S. Gorove, Studies in Space Law: Its Challenges
and Prospects p. 85-94 (1977); S.H. Lay & H. Taubenfeld, The
Law Relating to Activities of Man in Space p. 25 et seq. (1970);
D. Goedhuis, The Changing Legal Regime of Air and Outer Space
p. 27 (1978); N. Matte, Space Policies Program Today and Tomorrow
p. 68 (1980). She notes also that some scholars are of a different
opinion, specifically referencing Lachs and Vlasic.
59 See Andrzej Jacewicz and Jerzy Markowski, Kosmos A. Zbrojenia,
Aspekty Polityczne, Militarne, Prawne [Outer Space and the Arms
Race. Political,
Military and Legal Aspects].
60 Agreement Relating to the International Telecommunications
Satellite Organization, p. 23 UST 3813, TIAS No. 7532 ( Aug.
20, 1971) [hereinafter cited as INTELSAT Agreement]. 61 Convention
on the International Maritime Satellite Organization, p. 31 UST
1, TIAS No. 9603 (Sept. 3, 1976) [hereinafter cited as INMARSAT].
62 The Agreement Governing the Activities of States on the Moon
and Other Celestial Bodies, 18 I.L.M. 1434 (1979), has not been
ratified by the United States.
63 Brown, pp. 65-66.
64 Brown.
65 Brown, p. 68.
66 Convention on International Liability for Damage Caused by
Space Objects [hereinafter the Liability Convention], 24 UST
2389, TIAS
No. 7762, reproduced in 10 ILM 965 (1971). The Convention on
Registration of Objects Launched Into Outer Space, Jan. 14, 1975,
28 U.S.T. 695, T.I.A.S. No. 8480, 1023 U.N.T.S. 15 [hereinafter
Registration Convention], appears to provide assistance for those
seeking compensation. It requires all launching states to register
their space objects, thus making it easier to assign liability
when the infliction of damage can be associated with a registered
object:
In order to promote international cooperation in the peaceful
exploration and use of outer space, States Parties to the Treaty
conducting activities in outer space . . . agree to inform the
Secretary-General of the United Nations as well as the public
and the international scientific community, to the greatest extent
possible and practicable of the nature, conduct, locations and
results of such activities. On receiving the said information,
the Secretary-General of the United Nations should be prepared
to disseminate it immediately and effectively. (Art. XI.)
67 A later reference to component parts may further this interpretation: "Each
State Party to the Treaty that launches or procures the launching
of an object into outer space . . . is internationally liable
for damages to another State Party to the Treaty or to its natural
or juridical persons by such object or its component parts on
the Earth . . .." (Art. VII)
68 Art. I, Liability Convention.
69 Art. III allows for liability for damage "caused elsewhere
than on the surface of the Earth," but extends it only to damage
caused to space objects or person or property on board such space
objects.
70 Art. XII, Liability Convention.
71 See, e.g.,
Tom Clancy, Debt of Honor; Time,"Onward Cyber Soldiers," Aug.
21, 1995 p.43, and others.
72 Art. 35, International Telecommunication Convention, Malaga-Torremolinos,
Oct. 25, 1973, 28 UST 2495, TIAS No. 8572. The Law of the Sea
Treaty has a similar provision, there prohibiting the broadcasting
from the high seas so as to interfere with the radio broadcasts
of coastal states.
73 Time, "Onward Cyber Soldiers," Aug. 21, 1995 at 43.
74 Art. 37, International Telecommunication Convention.
75 Art. 38, International Telecommunication Convention. Paragraph
2 of Art. 38 states: "Nevertheless, these installations must,
so far as possible, observe statutory provisions relative to
giving assistance in case of distress and to the measures to
be taken to prevent harmful interference, and the provisions
of the Administrative Regulations concerning the types of emission
and the
frequencies to be used, according to the nature of the service
performed." It would seem that jamming all of a country's stations
and substituting for them the transmissions of a belligerent
would constitute a "harmful interference." The
language "so far as possible" which precedes this section may
afford the squirm room necessary to circumvent this provision
in time of conflict.
76 OCDE/GD (92) 190, Paris 1992.
77 OCDE/GD (92) 190, at 33.