
Rule of Law in War places international law at the centre of the transformation of United States counterinsurgency (COIN) that occurred during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. It claims international law matters more than is often assumed and more than we have previously been able to claim, contradicting existing theoretical assumptions. In particular, the book contends international law matters in a case that may be regarded as particularly tough for international law, that is, the development of a key military doctrine, the execution of that doctrine on the battlefield, and the ultimate conduct of armed conflict. To do so, the book traces international law's influence in the construction of modern U.S. COIN doctrine, specifically, Field Manual 3-24, Counterinsurgency, released by the U.S. Army and Marine Corps in December 2006. It then assesses how international law's doctrinal interaction held up in Iraq and Afghanistan. The account of this doctrinal change is based on extensive access to the primary actors and materials, including FM 3-24's drafting history, field documents, and interviews with military officers of various ranks who have served multiple deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan.
This book investigates the extent to which international law influenced the development and execution of United States counterinsurgency doctrine during the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. Travers McLeod, drawing on his academic background and extensive primary research, argues that international law exerted a more significant impact on military doctrine and battlefield conduct than traditional theoretical frameworks suggest. By examining the creation of Field Manual 3-24, the author challenges the assumption that legal constraints are secondary to military necessity in high-stakes armed conflict.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and scholars of international relations frequently cite this work for its rigorous use of primary source interviews and internal military documentation. Readers note that the text provides a dense, academic exploration of legal influence that serves as a critical resource for understanding modern military doctrine.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
2014-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191025720
ISBN-13:
9780191025723
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