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From treaty to custom: Shifting paths in the recent development of international humanitarian law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 February 2024

Giovanni Mantilla*
Affiliation:
Department of Politics and International Studies (POLIS), Christ’s College, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
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Abstract

From 1864 to the 1970s, international humanitarian law (IHL) changed through the path of formal treaty revision. Since 1977, however, purported changes to IHL have come not from treaty making but from interpretation, particularly through claims about the attainment of customary status by existing treaty rules. This article explains this shift as the result of the attitudes and choices of key IHL stakeholders under the changed conditions of post-Second World War multilateralism. It argues that the turn toward customary law claims-making was a reaction to the negotiation politics and contested outcomes of the 1977 Additional Protocols (APs) to the Geneva Conventions. After 1977, leading actors looked to custom as a means of arresting or encouraging legal change. The resulting, much-expanded IHL has proved influential and authoritative, even if its precise degree of acceptance by states remains unclear.

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ORIGINAL ARTICLE
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© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law in association with the Grotius Centre for International Law, Leiden University

1. Introduction

Since its origins in the mid-nineteenth century, modern international humanitarian law (IHL)Footnote 1 changed over time in periodic episodes of state-sanctioned multilateral treatymaking.Footnote 2 However, after the adoption of two Additional Protocols (APs) to the 1949 Geneva Conventions more than four decades ago, states have shied away from new IHL treatymaking, with only one minor IHL instrument emerging: the Third AP (2005) establishing the ‘Red Crystal’ as an official emblem of the movement. A few prominent treaties have been created in areas related to IHL, including the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and various weapons bans (landmines, cluster bombs, nuclear arms), but these are not normally taken as revisions to the core of IHL.

Despite stagnant treaty revisions, the development of IHL has not slowed down. Important recent changes to IHL have emerged through processes and practices of interpretation, specially interpretation via claims-making regarding the customary status attained by certain treaty rules.Footnote 3 The extension of IHL through customary law claims-making is such that scholars consider it to have ‘revolutionized’ critical areas of the regime, notably the humanitarian regulation of non-international armed conflict (NIAC).Footnote 4 According to Droege and Giorgiou, in the last 45 years IHL has undergone a ‘phenomenal transformation’ that has rendered it ‘literally unrecognizable’.Footnote 5 This article takes up the question: What explains this change?

Based on archival and other primary records, secondary sources, and interviews, I explain this shift as the result of the purposeful attitudes and choices of key actors under the changed political and institutional conditions of post-Second World War multilateralism. More concretely, I argue that the turn to interpretation via customary law claims-making was largely a reaction to the negotiation politics and contested outcomes of the APs in 1974–1977. Soon after those negotiations, due to the perceived flaws of the APs, the perils of the universal multilateral process that produced them, and problems with their ratification, certain states and influential non-state actors looked to interpretation via customary law claims-making as a potential means of arresting or promoting legal change, respectively. Although initial state maneuverings regarding customary law in the 1980s were short-lived, non-state entrepreneurs began experimenting with it themselves in the 1990s, harnessing new institutions (international criminal tribunals) and traditional methods of normative development (expert consultations steered by the International Committee of the Red Cross, henceforth ICRC) in new ways, amid the discursive openings afforded by a renewed atrocity background. The resulting, much-expanded IHL has proved influential, even if its degree of acceptance by states is difficult to gauge and remains subject to debate.

I proceed as follows: Section 2 outlines the conventional path of change in IHL and examines the reasons for the eventual shift, particularly the transformative effects of decolonization upon traditional IHL-making. Section 3 argues that three influential IHL stakeholders (the United States; legal scholars Antonio Cassese and Theodor Meron; and the ICRC), all disappointed with the APs for different reasons, pivoted to the terrain of customary law as an alternative way to shape IHL’s evolution. Section 4 discusses how Cassese and Meron through their work as scholars and international judges, and the ICRC via its Customary Law Study, deepened that turn. In a fifth, concluding section, I reflect on the consequences of this shift, including states’ relative silence on the ICRC’s Customary Law Study.

2. The traditional pathway

From 1864 to 1977, IHL was normally created and revised via multilateral diplomatic conferences of government ‘plenipotentiaries’. States were the central protagonists in these processes through their power to negotiate, adopt, and ratify treaties, yet with some exceptionsFootnote 6 the process behind treaty revision always relied on the ICRC’s initiative, expertise, and organizational work. Time and again (in 1864, 1929, 1949, and the 1970s) the ICRC, together with Switzerland and scores of diplomats, practitioners, and scholars, promoted legal change by conducting extensive research, consultation, and drafting. Historically, IHL revision episodes did not simply aim at improving existing law in light of recent atrocity; they were also ‘forward-looking’, reflecting expectations of, and preparations for, future war-fighting.Footnote 7

While the ICRC’s authority has long been and remains central to IHL’s development,Footnote 8 transformations in interstate multilateralism have altered the law’s modal pathway of change since the 1970s.Footnote 9 Multilateral processes of IHL treatymaking have always been microcosms of the broader international politics of their time,Footnote 10 mirroring the complications of the international society that produced them. Until 1949 IHL had remained largely a Western-dominated affair,Footnote 11 with major powers such as Britain, France, and the United States leading diplomatic majorities and playing a gatekeeping role during codification.Footnote 12 However, as international society gradually transformed in the twentieth century, but especially with decolonization and the Cold War after 1945, IHL multilateralism too began experiencing gradual change sparked by the ideas, lived experiences, and growing diplomatic protagonism and voting power of dozens of decolonized (and Socialist) states.

Previously excluded from (or sidelined during) lawmaking, non-western state participants approached postwar IHL codification vigorously, promoting transformative ideas to redress its received biases and the violence it had historically enabled upon them.Footnote 13 In a singularly noteworthy change, in 1949 Socialist and Latin American states made a key contribution in supporting an end to IHL’s silence on internal conflict, a legal gap that had long benefitted imperial powers by licensing atrocity in their colonial territories. Although the reasons behind Soviet support of this particular innovation were tied to Cold War politicking (as the USSR did not intend to accept IHL’s application within its own empire), by pushing European empires and other powerful sceptics to compromise and accept rules for internal conflict, Socialist and Latin American states helped to forge the ‘revolutionary’ Common Article 3 (CA3) to the Geneva Conventions.Footnote 14

Despite there being other important Socialist and non-Western state contributions in 1949,Footnote 15 more crucial for the eventual shift to customary law analysed in this article was the round of IHL revisions in the 1970s. At the 1974–1977 Diplomatic Conference for the Reaffirmation and Development of International Humanitarian Law (CDDH hereafter, for its French name) decolonization and Cold War politics combined decisively to endorse legal innovations deeply cherished by anti-colonial Third World-led negotiating majorities.Footnote 16 Chief among such formal changes were the extension of IHL to ‘armed conflicts in which peoples are fighting against colonial domination and alien occupation and against racist regimes in the exercise of their right of self-determination’ and the affordance of POW protection to captured ‘freedom fighters’, both achieved through Additional Protocol I (API). These innovations legally equated wars of national liberation to interstate conflicts, legitimating the former through the application of IHL. African and Asian states, alongside a dozen liberation movements present at the CDDH, together fought to explicitly steer the law in an anti-colonial and anti-racist direction to at least partially level a legal playing field theretofore slanted to favour the West. In practical terms, these ideas stood to increase the odds of national liberation success by committing imperial powers to observe some war-making restraints, as well as judicial guarantees and humanitarian protections towards colonial rebels.

Beyond matters of national liberation, API also brought a host of other crucial novelties supported by African and Asian states.Footnote 17 These included the detailed codification of rules to protect civilians and civilian objects from the dangers of combat,Footnote 18 the criminalization of IHL violations, rules on mercenaries, and the prohibition of reprisals against civilians.

A second treaty instrument, Additional Protocol II (APII), was negotiated in 1974–1977 to expand the humanitarian regulation of NIAC contained in CA3. Although reducing atrocity across a range of situations of internal violence had been one central reason for the launch of the revisions’ episode, the rules ultimately enshrined in APII only partially satisfied humanitarians’ ambitions. On the one hand, APII augmented CA3 in core areas (it introduced basic rules of civilian protection and guarantees for victims of internal armed conflict and medical and religious personnel), yet those rules’ actual import was limited by design through the insertion of a high threshold of application.

Although formally both APs were adopted ‘by consensus’ at the close of the diplomatic conference in June 1977, the compromises they crystallized were in fact deeply contentious, the product of oft-elusive efforts at collective agreement in an increasingly politicized world.Footnote 19 Of all, it was probably the group of Afro-Asian states that walked away most content from the CDDH, due to their successful (partial) decolonization of IHL through the revindication of liberation war, API’s intricate regulation of combat operations, and the safeguarding of their sovereignty in the context of NIAC.

3. Shifting the path of change: The APs and their discontents

The APs revisions process demonstrated how an altered balance of influence amid postwar universal multilateralism could impact IHL’s trajectory. In theoretical terms, after 1949 IHL treatymaking gradually underwent a process of ‘power-outcome decoupling’,Footnote 20 i.e., a growing mismatch between the views of the predominantly Western actors that had until then constructed a largely Eurocentric body of law, and the outcomes of universal lawmaking conferences operating under sovereign equality (one state, one vote) in a postcolonial international society. By the 1970s the ‘non-West’ had indeed become a central protagonist of IHL-lawmaking.

I argue that that the turn toward interpretation via customary law claims-making by three influential types of stakeholders was linked to their disappointment with the AP’s negotiation process and outcomes. That said, it is essential to clarify that the states and non-state actors analysed below had different reasons to be dissatisfied with the APs. As the next section explains, while major Western states denounced the national liberation-related innovations as ‘political’, and disliked some of the new combat rules for their alleged lack of realism, both scholar-jurists and the ICRC tended to lament the underwhelming expansion of IHL rules for NIAC via APII. This diversity of concerns shaped these actors’ subsequent approaches to customary law claims-making. What they all seemed to share, however, was an understanding of the risks and complications of traditional treaty-making as a means of legal change.

3.1 Major Western states

In the 1970s as in 1949, the United States, the UK, and France again constituted the backbone of the Western state group involved in the ‘reaffirmation and development’ of IHL. Initially unenthusiastic about entering a new revisions episode at all, these states worked strenuously for years to ensure that the APs met their preferences across different areas.Footnote 21 While by no means wholly unsuccessful across the range of issues considered in negotiations, the Third World’s successful legitimation of national liberation war and freedom fighters through API certainly represented the most politically salient battle for the conservative Western gatekeepers.Footnote 22 Although desirable, fair, and necessary from the perspective of a decolonized world long subjected to imperial atrocity,Footnote 23 major Western states viewed these changes as noxious (introducing allegedly-dangerous notions of ‘just war’ into IHL, hence threatening to foment violence),Footnote 24 disingenuous (because they did not expect liberation movements to be willing or able to respect IHL), of little humanitarian use (because they would make the law applicable to a limited, and purportedly waning form of conflict), and politically insulting (by bringing pointed opprobrium on imperialism, racism, occupation).

National liberation-related features were not API’s sole ‘defects’ in Western eyes, however. Additional changes, especially the prohibition of reprisals against civilians, the regulation of armed attack to protect installations containing ‘dangerous forces’ (such as dams, dykes, and nuclear plants) and the environment, and potential IHL limitations on the use of nuclear weapons, all left Western states concerned with the new law and its production process.Footnote 25

Archival evidence supports this argument. In the case of the American delegation, while the initially striking a positive note (‘we succeeded beyond our expectations in codifying and developing the law’), the US post-negotiation report noted having ‘considerable misgivings’ regarding the revisions exercise, viewing it from the start as ‘more of a hazard than an opportunity’, hence with ‘caution and concern’. Why?

We had seen in other contexts the risk that conferences of one hundred or more countries would be dominated by a majority of developing countries, a majority that all too often seems to be led by radical States bearing grudges against the wealthy countries in general and against the United States in particular. These concerns were in fact justified …Footnote 26

Due to these difficulties, American delegates concluded that it was:

most important … in any broad multilateral conferences of the future to be in such a posture that we can get along without an agreement, to make this relative independence clear and credible, and to work closely with the other developed countries to ensure a cohesive approach.Footnote 27

Like their American colleagues, British delegates admitted they had approached IHL revisions in the 1970s:

with mixed feelings … the UK feared that [the conference] would be likely to … weight the scales in favour of the causes currently popular with the non-Western majority at the United Nations. Nevertheless we hoped that real humanitarian advances could be made.

Like US diplomats, British officials lamented that ‘both these hopes and these fears we realised’.Footnote 28 Their final confidential report explained that, on the one hand:

the two Protocols do mark … an important humanitarian advance in many fields, especially … the protection of the civilian population. On the other hand, the principle of equality of application has been breached, most notably through in the reclassification of certain types of national liberation conflicts as being international in character and in the treatment of captured irregular forces … the problem is whether the aim of protection of enemy civilians and civilian objects and the consequent restrictions on the freedom of military action has been pursued further than realism would dictate.Footnote 29

The French delegation’s report was more blunt and bitter: ‘After four years of dubious combat, the Conference ended with pressured consensus: humanitarian texts masking deep disagreement between participating states regarding the value and the content itself of the adopted law.’Footnote 30 French delegates denounced API’s ‘multiple, detailed obligations, albeit formulated in ambiguous and confusing ways’ and chastised APII which became a ‘lapidary expression of some general principles curiously placed alongside rare, more elaborate articles, [which are] testament of an older text whose core had disappeared’. ‘The reasons for this’, they explained, ‘are political’.Footnote 31

As some of the above evidence suggests, Western gatekeeper states’ disappointment with universal multilateralism since the mid-1970s was not limited to the IHL or the APs’ experience; the US infamously declined to sign the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea in 1982, withdrew from UNESCO in 1985, rejected the International Court of Justice’s Nicaragua decision in 1986, and denounced the UNGA as hopelessly biased against US interests.

To be clear, I do not claim that the APs did not achieve important change, that they were not influential, or that they were broadly rejected or ignored by Western states. The opposite is probably true.Footnote 32 Archival evidence suggests that after a few years of domestic (and NATO) legal and military analysis, British concerns with the APs were successfully met through a combination of understandings and declarations. France found APII acceptable enough to ratify it 1984, but did not warm up to API until 2001, once its decolonization and defence woes had relaxed.

My precise argument here is simply that the experience of negotiating the APs, and aspects of their contents, turned former gatekeeper Western states off the traditional path of change – multilateral treatymaking – and encouraged them to use alternative ways to shape the IHL’s future, particularly interpretation via customary law claims-making.

The US became particularly recalcitrant. Not content with (rather boisterously) refusing to ratify API,Footnote 33 in the mid-1980s American officials conducted private diplomacy to convince the UK, France, and West GermanyFootnote 34 to follow suit, pressing them instead to endorse a bespoke declaration, to include select principles from API (redrafted in language acceptable to the Reagan administration) and exclude, among others, the provisions on national liberation, the protections of installations containing dangerous forces, and the prohibition of reprisals against civilians.Footnote 35

The purpose of the American-designed document seemed threefold: relieving external pressures to ratify API, generating a consensus among core NATO states on desirable rules for future military interoperability, and – more to the point here – shaping international debate about the elements of API that might eventually attain the status of customary law, blunting some of the Third World coalition’s key innovations, especially regarding national liberation. Conversely, the US actively promoted the ratification of APII, which it considered to be a step forward in the humanization of internal conflicts hampered by a restrictive scope of application.Footnote 36

American resort to customary claims-making about IHL thus had both ‘positive’ and ‘negative’ sides.Footnote 37 On the positive side, American officials wished to further the idea that most of APII could and eventually should attain the level of customary law.Footnote 38 Meanwhile, their ‘negative’ agenda involved preventing the rules on national liberation war and freedom fighters from attaining customary status, as well as shaping future customary law-ascertainment regarding the articles protecting civilian persons and objects.Footnote 39

A British telegram summarizing a 1986 meeting held with the US State Department to discuss the American declaration of principles underscored US intentions ‘undoubtedly to use the present opportunity to warn the world at large to avoid using their voting strength in multilateral negotiation to override the wishes of the major powers’.Footnote 40 British officials further reasoned that the American declaration was also linked to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) adverse judgment regarding US involvement in Nicaragua, presumably viewing the ICJ’s decision as evidence of the Court’s anti-US politicization, hence a potential tendency to foment undesirable customary law formation.Footnote 41

Although it failed to persuade their European peers to endorse their bespoke declaration, the US government nevertheless made public its contents in 1987 at an academic workshop specifically organized to elucidate the parts of the APs that could be considered customary law.Footnote 42 Ironically, although the participation of high-level American officials at this event was a deliberate effort to shape API’s process of customary law-attainment via state opinio juris, it was other actors – not obviously beholden to the military interests of the US or NATO – who would take up the baton and run far with it.Footnote 43

3.2 Non-state entrepreneurs

The APs’ negotiation also left certain non-state legal entrepreneurs dissatisfied. Two international legal scholars who in the 1970s had served as advisors to their home governments during the APs process, Antonio Cassese and Theodor Meron, afterwards became active proponents of informal tactics for IHL development, eventually coalescing around the use of interpretation to advance the law, including customary law claims-making.Footnote 44

Writing as early as 1979 in a volume assessing the APs, Cassese offered the following recommendation:

I submit that those who have the lot of humanitarian law at heart should not overemphasize the deficiencies and pitfalls of the Protocols. Stressing the (inevitable) demerits and loopholes of these international instruments can only lead to increased skepticism about international humanitarian law … I therefore believe that scholars … should do their utmost to strengthen the possible role of these momentous treaties … Legal scholars can serve a useful purpose in their expert capacity as well, by propounding interpretations of the Protocols that aim at emphasizing the humanitarian purpose of their rules. As neither international law in general nor the Protocols themselves entrust anybody with the task of giving authoritative interpretations of their provisions, there is much room in this area for forward-looking jurists. The Protocols offer much space for interpretation … many rules … are therefore open to divergent interpretations.Footnote 45

For his part, in 1995 Meron claimed:

International lawmaking and various diplomatic conferences, for example, the conference that adopted the Additional Protocols to the Geneva Conventions in 1977, have, on the whole, been unsympathetic toward extending the protective rules applicable to international wars to civil wars, an attitude that has dampened prospects for redress through orderly treaty-making. Because conferences often make decisions by consensus and try to fashion generally acceptable texts, even a few recalcitrant governments may prevent the adoption of more enlightened provisions.Footnote 46

This analysis was not new for Meron. Concerned with situations of internal violence falling below APII’s scope of application, in a 1983 article he had already proposed:

a short, simple, and modest instrument to state an irreducible and non-derogable core of human rights that must be applied at a minimum in situations of internal strife and violence (even of low intensity) that are akin to armed conflicts.Footnote 47

Meron envisioned, as a first step, a ‘solemn declaration, which would not require formal accession or ratification by states’.Footnote 48 This ‘solemn declaration’ idea echoed an initiative made by the ICRC in 1972 after states flatly rejected plans for binding rules applicable to internal troubles and disturbances.Footnote 49 Meron’s project produced a document endorsed by distinguished experts in Turku (Finland) in 1990, but which ultimately failed to secure formal state approval at the UN.Footnote 50

Meron had also participated in the 1987 Washington workshop alluded to earlier (where American officials publicized their government’s views regarding the APs and customary law). His remarks there revealed an understanding of the importance of the customary path for IHL’s development through the identification of state practice and opinio juris together.Footnote 51 Finding fault with the ICJ’s bare assertion regarding the customary status of CA3 in their Nicaragua decision ‘for the virtual absence of discussion of the evidence and reasons supporting this conclusion’, as well as the strategy of deeming certain rules to be customary law ‘without judicious attention to counter-practices’, in the end he acknowledged that this ‘method cannot but influence future consideration of customary law in various fields, including the Geneva Conventions’. He added:

Despite perplexity over the reasoning and, at times, the conclusions of a tribunal, states and scholarly opinion in general will probably accept judicial decisions confirming the customary law character of some of the provisions of the Geneva Conventions as statements of the law. Eventually, the focus of attention will shift from the inquiry into whether certain provisions reflect customary law to the judicial decisions establishing that status.Footnote 52

Meron was prescient: the practice of customary law claims-making endured, sometimes by assertion, others by more careful demonstration. He himself embraced the customary law path in short order through a study of the complementarity between human rights and humanitarian law.Footnote 53

Cassese also developed his approach to IHL advancement via customary law claims-making through his scholarship since the early 1980s.Footnote 54 In 1984, he authored a law review article offering a comprehensive survey of the IHL rules that could be said to have reached customary status, including some from the APs.Footnote 55 Like Meron’s, Cassese’s approach was academic, so he was careful to draw fine distinctions between rules from the 1949 Geneva Conventions and those from the APs. It was clear, however, that his tactic aimed at highlighting the broad importance of customary IHL as a means to augment the law’s reach.

Until the late 1980s the ideas of Cassese and Meron remained scholarly opinions aired out in academic conferences, journals, and books. Similarly, the American bespoke declaration of API principles (and the ICJ’s opinion on CA3) appeared unique. It remained unclear whether and how the use of customary law claims-making would actually make a dent and change IHL. Ultimately, it was its adoption by the ICRC that wound up cementing its influence.

3.3 The ICRC

The ICRC (and the Swiss government, as the host of the CCDH) also found the APs’ negotiation process disappointing. They originally envisioned the revisions episode to last at most two sessions; negotiations, however, extended to four meetings (six if you count two meetings on conventional weapons), already on the heels of years of research, consultations, resources, and painstaking diplomacy. Archival evidence shows that, dreading a possible fifth session, in 1976 the Swiss government and the ICRC actively liaised behind-the-scenes with key delegations across political groupings to help broker compromise and limit the risk of prolongation.Footnote 56

Although the ICRC’s private balance-sheet after the CDDH refrained from overdramatizing the AP’s flaws, instead framing them as the ‘maximum attainable’ at the time, its overall tone was indicative of some measure of regret. ‘An inventory of negative points … is very difficult to establish, because although it is rather clear that the ideal was not attained from a humanitarian viewpoint, it is very difficult to set the contours of such an ideal …’Footnote 57

Nevertheless, the ICRC did recognize concrete issues with the APs in form and content. On form, the texts appeared to it regrettably ‘heavy’ and difficult, precisely due to the complex compromises struck in conference, often resolved through complicated and sometimes ambiguous formulations. Regarding API’s specific contents, however, it lamented only the formulation of a handful of rules, among which figured the absence of a complete prohibition of attacks on installations containing dangerous forces (which had been restricted to the chagrin of NATO states but not fully banned as the ICRC wished), the requirement of state consent to allow for the provision of humanitarian relief, and the deletion of a provision foreclosing the filing of reservations on certain ‘fundamental’ provisions of the APs. Concerning APII, the ICRC regretted the last-minute deletion of multiple articles from the working draft (the result of a behind-the-scenes compromise between representatives of the Third World and the West), as well as the requirement of state consent for providing humanitarian relief in rebel-held territory.

Importantly, the ICRC did not lament the extension of IHL to national liberation conflicts via API because:

[it demonstrated the] concern of Third World countries to build a humanitarian law that takes into account their specific problems. For these countries, liberation from colonialism and racism is a fundamental humanitarian principle and the central importance they give to conflicts against “colonial” or “racist” regimes cannot be ignored. To have taken it into consideration in Protocol I is the best way to show them that humanitarian law is now theirs and no longer just a body of law drawn up by “Westerners” according to “Western” norms. On substance, we cannot pretend that [this extension] is regressive, since it introduces a broader application of the law. We can thus only be reticent regarding the manner and form in which this expansion was formulated.Footnote 58

Overall, a reading of the ICRC’s private post-conference bilan suggests that the organization found three broad aspects of the APs disappointing. First, the confusing formulation of many of the rules. Second, the introduction of conditions and loopholes in areas as important as the protection of civilians and the provision of humanitarian relief. Third – and in agreement both with scholar-jurists and the US – APII’s limited ‘humanization’ of NIAC, which was largely chalked up to the Third World’s attachment to their national sovereignty and their ‘tendency to ardently, if not blindly, defend it’. Indeed, the ICRC quipped that ‘generally … Protocol II allows us to gauge, in the contemporary international context, the extent to which states are willing to sacrifice to humanitarianism their absolute right to do as they please within their territory’.Footnote 59

These issues notwithstanding, once the CDDH wrapped in June 1977 the ICRC turned decisively to the diffusion of the APs and the promotion of their ratification, allocating this task to a specific, dedicated official (Hans-Peter Gasser). However, despite Gasser’s efforts, those of the Swiss depositary, or of the UN General Assembly via multiple resolutions, the process of state ratification of the APs moved slowly. By the end of 1982, only 27 states had ratified API, and 23 APII.Footnote 60 Major Western states, including the US, Britain, and France wavered further throughout the 1980s, and with the American decision against API’s ratification in 1987 and non-ratification by major non-Western states including Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, India, Israel, Pakistan, and Turkey, the goal of reaching universal commitment with the revamped IHL seemed to falter.

I draw a direct connection here between three broad factors (disappointment with aspects of the negotiated APs, a recognition of the complications of treatymaking amidst intense international politicization, and concern with the instruments’ limping ratification process) and the ICRC’s eventual endorsement of customary law to strengthen IHL. Sharing similar goals, the context of the early 1990s provided both the ICRC and scholar-jurists entrepreneurs with a political opening to achieve them.

4. Enacting the shift towards customary IHL

4.1. Cassese and Meron: Scholars-cum-judges

The atrocity context of the early 1990s resurfaced enduring challenges regarding respect for and application of IHL, this time amid multiple conflicts occurring in the Balkans.Footnote 61 Debates about the ‘crisis’ of the law rose anew, alongside a revitalized role for – and disappointment with – UN peacekeeping in Somalia, and later in Rwanda. Legal entrepreneurs, international organizations, and even the ‘P-5’ states within the UN Security Council now underscored a need to pursue criminal accountability as a means of enforcement, paving the way for institutional innovation via the creation of ad hoc tribunals, and soon after, the permanent ICC. Cassese and Meron were at this stage no longer just influential international legal scholars in their own right, but occupants of high-ranking positions in core international criminal tribunals, which they began to harness as mechanisms to develop IHL.Footnote 62

The UN Security Council (UNSC) took the first steps, however. In 1993 the Council unanimously adopted Resolution 827 establishing an International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), the first such institution since the Second World War. The UNSC tasked the ICTY with prosecuting four types of offenses: (i) Grave breaches of the 1949 Geneva Conventions; (ii) violations of the laws and customs of war; (iii) genocide; and (iv) crimes against humanity. In the Spring of 1994 the Council agreed to create a second tribunal to deal with the atrocities committed in Rwanda. Unlike with the ICTY, the 1994 resolution establishing the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) expressly determined that the court had jurisdiction over ‘serious violations’ of the IHL rules governing internal armed conflict, Common Article 3 and APII.

The founding ICTR Resolution became the first international instrument to criminalize atrocities committed in internal conflict, a move whose importance cannot be overstated: Only twenty years prior, while negotiating the APs, states deemed the notion of war crimes in internal conflicts incongruous.Footnote 63 Still, it remained uncertain whether this UNSC Resolution could be deemed applicable to cases beyond Rwanda.

That uncertainty was soon mitigated. In October 1995 the ICTY, through the Appeals Chamber presided by Judge Antonio Cassese, delivered the landmark Tadić opinion. An appeal by Duško Tadić, a presumed Bosnian war criminal, had questioned the tribunal’s jurisdiction over acts committed in internal conflicts, arguing that its founding charter only authorized it to prosecute abuses perpetrated in international conflicts. Since violations of Common Article 3 were not technically ‘grave breaches’ of the Geneva Conventions, Tadić’s defence argued that the ICTY could not proceed.Footnote 64 The Appeals Chamber responded that while internal atrocities could not be deemed grave breaches, they constituted ‘violations of the law and customs of war’, a distinct category of acts considered under a separate article of the Tribunal’s charter. In this way, by resorting to an argument about the customary nature of Common Article 3, and ‘the core’ of APII, the tribunal set a clear legal precedent that resonated in later decisions.Footnote 65

Cassese’s touch was evident here. Years later he told an interviewer that during discussions about the ICC:

I was told there was also this fear of the ‘Cassese approach’, namely judges overdoing it, becoming dangerous by, say, producing judgments that can be innovative. For example, at the ICTY, we said for the first time that war crimes could also be committed in internal armed conflicts. This was breaking new ground. You go beyond the black letter of the law because you look at the spirit of law.Footnote 66

A decade and a half after formulating his plans to develop IHL through interpretation, Cassese deployed his legal entrepreneurship from within a new authoritative institution, an international tribunal. This became his trademark, if controversial, style.Footnote 67

The Tadić decision brought with it another crucial innovation. As some noted at the time, in its response to Tadić’s claims, instead of asserting its jurisdiction in internal conflicts with recourse to customary law, the ICTY Appeals Chamber could have simply determined that the conflict in the former Yugoslavia was international. This would have resolved the controversy in that particular case and allowed the tribunal to continue pursuing its work without complicated debates about conflict classification.

Yet a further response by Tadić’s defence, claiming that in fact no armed conflict was taking place at the time in the former Yugoslavia, enabled the judges in the Appeals Chamber to provide a positive definition of armed conflict as occurring ‘whenever there is a resort to armed force between States or protracted armed violence between governmental authorities and organized armed groups or between such groups within a State’.

This phrasing, credited once again to Cassese, immediately became noteworthy.Footnote 68 The most prominent international legal circles immediately seized upon it and considered it, alongside the ICTR statute, to herald the new era of the criminalization of internal atrocities. Meron himself agreed that this decision demonstrated ‘the renewed vitality of customary law in the development of the law of war’. In his view, ‘the clarification of customary law on this subject is the most important normative contribution of the decision’.Footnote 69

The relationship between IHL and international criminal law (ICL) is complex: each body of law features different protagonists, follows particular logics and purposes, and responds to different though partially overlapping sources and communities of practice.Footnote 70 This being said, it appears that as regards normative development the ICL-IHL interplay has largely moved in one direction: international criminal tribunals producing jurisprudence that extends IHL through interpretation.Footnote 71 This jurisprudence seems to generally have been welcome; with few exceptions, even states have failed to show opposition.Footnote 72 As I note below, this is also true of the ICRC’s Customary Law Study.

4.2 The ICRC’s turn to customary lawFootnote 73

The ICRC’s Customary Law Study is doubtless the most prominent source of recent legal change in IHL. Analyses of the Study’s contents and methodology abound,Footnote 74 so my exploration of them here only addresses aspects relevant to my argument. My focus lays chiefly on understanding the process behind the ICRC mandate to produce the report as a lens through which to understand the politics of the customary law turn.

The Customary Law Study idea can be traced back at least to August 1993.Footnote 75 There, after a three-day International Conference for the Protection of War Victims convened by Switzerland and attended by 160 states, the UN Secretary General, and major international human rights and humanitarian NGOs, participants issued a strongly-worded declaration calling for action to improve respect for IHL. Interestingly for my purposes here, the very first question then-ICRC Director for Principles, Law, and Relations with the Movement, Yves Sandoz asked state representatives was: ‘Why have [you] not acceded to all the instruments of humanitarian law?’ Sandoz had himself participated as delegate in the negotiation of the APs, and as he rose within the ICRC’s ranks, he had surely also witnessed (and become concerned with) their normative limitations and slow ratification.

Although this 1993 Conference lacked treatymaking powers, one of its central committees (the Drafting Committee) appears to have essentially functioned as a negotiation forum of the event’s Final Declaration. Absent archival evidence, details about most states’ positions in 1993 are hard to come by, yet interviews with participants indicate that important powers such as the United States, India, Cuba, China, and Nigeria expressed opposition to the idea of extending IHL via formal treaty-making. The ICRC seemed to agree. In a 1996 article, Sandoz characterized a potential new episode of wholesale treaty revision as ‘long, costly, and hazardous’, likening it to opening a ‘Pandora’s box’ which might even allow states to roll back existing treaty IHL.Footnote 76 Sandoz’ views may plausibly be read not merely as an assessment of the global politics of the early 1990s but as harkening back to the APs’ negotiation in the 1970s.

The resulting 1993 Conference declaration omitted plans to proceed towards treatymaking. Crucially, however, it reaffirmed participants’ determination ‘to apply, and to clarify and, where it is deemed necessary, to consider further developing the existing law governing armed conflicts, in particular non-international ones’.Footnote 77

The Conference created an Intergovernmental Experts Group (IEG) to follow up on this work. The IEG then met twice, in September 1994 and January 1995, featuring widespread governmental participation (60 states in 1994 and 107 in 1995) alongside scores of other governmental and non-governmental organizations.Footnote 78

Official accounts of the IEG meetings in 1994 and 1995 refer to ‘intensive discussions and negotiations’ occurring over several days, culminating in a set of recommendations. Among these, recommendation V invited the ICRC:

to prepare, with the assistance of experts in IHL representing various geographical regions and different legal systems, and in consultation with experts from governments and international organizations, a report on customary rules of IHL applicable in international and non-international armed conflicts, and to circulate the report to States and to competent international bodies.Footnote 79

This mandate was given final approval at the 1995 International Red Cross Conference, another event attended and sanctioned by governments as well as National Societies of the Red Cross and Red Crescent. There, only one (unnamed) state is recorded as having voiced opposition to the idea of turning to customary law.Footnote 80

Two points are crucial here. First, while in the past government expert meetings of this size constituted the prelude to formal treaty revisions, now the ICRC, and the Red Cross and Red Crescent movement seemed ready to use them differently. Second, despite not constituting multilateral treatymaking by states, this preparatory phase did rely on a measure of state endorsement, in that the adoption of these different resolutions always required widespread approval by participants, including governments. States could have hardly guessed the expansive results of a study authorized in the context of an International Red Cross and Red Crescent conference, and for that reason it seems a stretch to attribute them an entrepreneurial role here. It is more likely that many states acquiesced to what might have seemed a relatively unassuming proposal, or one whose outcomes they may have been able to steer in their favour. Whether or not all states were aware of the stakes involved and supportive of a transformative endeavour, these resolutions granted governmental authority upon the ICRC to conduct the Customary Law Study.

Together then, the ICRC, National Societies of Red Cross and Red Crescent, and states all contributed to steering IHL’s pathway change towards customary law. Treatymaking was not openly discarded, yet the words and actions of these stakeholders confirm how it seemed to have acquired a reputation of risky and limited tool, potentially desirable for specific purposes (e.g., weapons regulation) but not for the broader consideration of IHL corpus of principles and rules.Footnote 81 To be sure, the shift to customary law was not inevitable; had states, National Societies, or the ICRC pushed hard to reignite a codification process, they may well have succeeded. Yet a confluence of views regarding the undesirability of treatymaking in the mid-1990s foreclosed the traditional pathway of IHL change while bolstering the ICRC’s authority as legal entrepreneur, this time via the customary route.

Requiring over a decade to complete and a multitude of international and in-country experts from all regions of the world, the Customary Law Study itself constituted a mammoth effort.Footnote 82 Legal expert teams carried out research in the ICRC’s own archives, considered national sources of nearly 50 states (nine in Africa, 11 in the Americas, 15 in Asia, one in Australasia, and 11 in Europe) international organization resolutions and reports, and jurisprudence of international courts and judicial bodies.Footnote 83 Scholars and governmental experts also participated in the process, including Meron and Georges Abi-Saab.

The Study was finally published in 2005 as a 4000-page three-volume report.Footnote 84 As is now well-known, its findings were sweeping: of over 161 rules of conduct in armed conflict, nearly all (146) were found to be applicable as customary to both international and internal conflicts, while a few merited the ‘arguably applicable in non-international armed conflict’ qualifier, and some others were deemed applicable only to either IAC or NIAC.Footnote 85 The most important rules extended to NIAC were those relating to the conduct of hostilities, the use of means and methods of warfare, and the treatment of persons in the hands of a party to the conflict.Footnote 86

Substantively, the Study addresses three of the core ‘flaws’ of the APs as identified by the ICRC in 1977 and by scholar-jurists in the following two decades. First, it adapted the often elaborate and sometimes awkward language of the Protocols – for instance with regard to the articles protecting the civilian population, civilian objects, and installations containing dangerous forces – reformulating them in simpler (if not altogether unambiguous) terms.Footnote 87 Second, it simplified and expanded the API rules regarding the protection of the natural environment,Footnote 88 or of humanitarian relief personnel.Footnote 89 Third, as noted, the Study ‘equalized’ the regulation of internal and international conflicts almost completely; only 12 rules in four main areas remained the ‘reserved domain’ of IACs: the definition of combatants and armed forces, conditions for POW status, the regulation of occupied territory, and the regulation of belligerent reprisals.Footnote 90

At the same time, the Study ostensibly steered clear of pronouncing on the national liberation-related provisions through which the Third World partially decolonized IHL in the 1970s. First, the Study made no effort to define armed conflicts as such, only the rules that apply to them, thereby eschewing debate about the customary status of API’s extension to conflicts against colonial, racist or occupying regimes. Second, without recreating API’s complex terminology regarding the protection of national liberation fighters, the Study’s short reformulation of the entire rule (Rule 106) may be read as incorporating such protections.Footnote 91 Third, in its rephrasing of the rules dealing with the protection of civilian persons, objects, dangerous forces, and especially the natural environment, the Study furthered one of the goals most fervently endorsed by the Third World in the 1970s: a stricter limitation of the conduct of hostilities. At the same time, the Study also steered clear of advancing as customary other rules which major Western powers found (and still find) particularly objectionable, such as the general prohibition of reprisals against civilians.

The Study garnered much attention upon publication, particularly from scholars.Footnote 92 From the side of states, a robust response came from the US in a 2006 memorandum. In it, American legal advisors John B. Bellinger III (State) and William Haynes (Defence) both recognized the Study’s general value and politely but forcefully critiqued its method, sources, and (some of) its findings.Footnote 93 They used four rules from the study to illustrate their methodological concerns with the Study, two of which had appeared in API in modified form: rule 51, stating that ‘humanitarian relief personnel must be respected and protected’, and rule 45, declaring that ‘the use of methods or means or warfare that are intended, or may be expected to, cause widespread, long-term and severe damage to the natural environment is prohibited’. Interestingly, as Sivakumaran and Milanovic observe, American analysis of these rules was ‘often reasonable but hardly devastating’, and none of the four critiqued rules were ‘genuinely pivotal to the structure of customary IHL as set out in the study’. For this reason, Sivakumaran and Milanovic conclude that the American memorandum did not ‘challenge the Study’s main contributions, such as the generalizability of the conduct of hostilities rules or the applicability of most rules to non-international conflicts’.Footnote 94

Besides the US, only Israel has expressed criticism of the Study.Footnote 95 Egypt and Finland have referred approvingly to it,Footnote 96 as have a handful of other states, including Malaysia, Sweden, Australia, and Azerbaijan. Beyond them, official state reaction has generally been muted. At the same time, the Study has garnered an important degree of authority through its use by an expansive range of actors, particularly domestic and international courts and tribunals but also international organizations and even national militaries.Footnote 97 The conclusion reflects further on the Study’s reception, and more generally on the politics and broader implications of the customary law turn in IHL.

5. Conclusion

This article has traced a notable shift in IHL’s path of change over the last four decades, from treatymaking to interpretation via customary law claims-making,Footnote 98 connecting this change to the experience and outcomes of the APs’ making in 1974–1977.

This conclusion offers tentative reflections on the question of how we may assess the turn to customary law politically and normatively. Given IHL’s historical development from a predominantly Western-led dominated project to a now (partially) decolonized body of law, what may we say about the turn to customary law? Has it worked to redress the ‘power-outcome’ decoupling of postwar universal lawmaking in the favour of Western states? Or has it instead furthered the move away from Western designs?

These questions have no straightforward answers. Future research, especially in government archives, should examine state perceptions and tactics across Global North and South states regarding the Customary Law Study and the work of international courts, tribunals, and scholars. This is important but challenging work, not least given issues of access and document availability, among several others.Footnote 99

This article’s findings permit two general, provisional claims. On the one hand, the customary law turn seems to have done little to undermine the decolonization of IHL as regards API’s features on national liberation; as noted earlier, these were largely eschewed in the ICRC’s Study.Footnote 100 On the other hand, given its expansive approach to the humanization of internal conflicts far beyond the confines of APII, the Study clearly runs against the past wishes of a great majority of Third World states (though not just them), which in the 1970s refused to compromise their sovereignty to permit stronger rules for NIAC. Those states justified their position then as upholding the principles of non-intervention against potential neo-colonialism. In that sense, one’s assessment of the ‘revolutionary’ change in the area of NIAC regulation depends on whether one views IHL rules and principles for internal conflict as either authorizing neo-colonialism or, conversely, as tending to induce restraint and reduce atrocity.Footnote 101

Two other possible ways to tentatively gauge the politics of the customary law turn involve interrogating its process-level legitimacy, and wider reactions to its outcomes. On process, the authorization of the Study’s mandate in various International Red Cross and Red Crescent forums, as well as the Study’s actual making via consultative global research, together suggest their reliance on widespread approval and participation. Indeed, according to Sivakumaran and Milanovic, the Study is underpinned by epistemic authority, not just because it was steered by the ICRC ‘with its 150-plus years of expertise in IHL’ but because it was based on the participation of many independent experts, academics, and governmental experts.Footnote 102 In addition,

the Study’s claim to epistemic authority is linked to persuasion. Through clear commentaries on the rules and the massive, simply unprecedented amount of practice assembled the Study seeks to convince its readers that its conclusions are verifiable, and thus correct.Footnote 103

Here I make no attempt to ascertain whether any aspect of the Study is correct, but simply underscore that its findings about customary IHL have been presented (and largely received) not as the predilection of the ICRC but as the product of a robust collective process.

In terms of outcomes, as noted earlier, official state reactions to the Study have been scarce and generally brief, with only the US issuing a dedicated (if incomplete) evaluation of it. There has been no concerted state pushback against the Study; meanwhile, ‘so many international legal institutions have treated it as authoritative’ that its ‘process of accretion is highly likely to continue’.Footnote 104

To be sure, states’ muted reaction to the Study remains a puzzle. Should we take it to mean acquiescence, obliviousness, or rather as a strategic choice by them neither to confirm nor deny an IHL rule’s purported customary status, maintaining freedom of action without ‘outing’ themselves as ‘anti-humanitarian’? Future research should attempt to investigate this crucial question. Yet it bears underscoring here that, when criticism or scepticism has emerged against the Study, it has come from the US and some of its allies, not from Global South states. In the end, as Sivakumaran and Milanovic shrewdly note, the Study is ‘exactly as authoritative as states have allowed it to be’,Footnote 105 and so far, states have opted for leniency.

Is the era of IHL treatymaking over? Such a claim seems premature and in the long run, probably erroneous. Yet, given the resurgence of geopolitical discord among great powers, and of major interstate war, it is much more likely that contemporary and future change in IHL will keep coming from customary law-ascertainment and soft law documents, among others, than from binding codification.Footnote 106 Processes taking those alternative forms have been in motion of years now regarding new areas of concern (e.g., cyber operations) as well as more traditional ones.Footnote 107 Comparative research should thus continue regarding the politics of contestation surrounding the many recent and ongoing efforts non-codification IHL-making.Footnote 108 In terms of ICRC-led initiatives, another critical case exists in the Interpretive Guidance on the Notion of Direct Participation in Hostilities,Footnote 109 and in the revised commentaries on the four Geneva Conventions and the APs. We may also further witness the ‘unilateralization’ of IHL-making by states,Footnote 110 including through the publication of national military manuals that rephrase IHL in ways that suggest a muddying of existing law.Footnote 111 And all IHL stakeholders should watch with close attention developments in state practice and opinio juris emerging from contemporary conflicts, including that between Russia and Ukraine.

Whatever path of change IHL may take in the future, legal entrepreneurs, states, scholars, and civil society must continue interrogating its politics, norms, and procedures. The legitimacy of IHL – its authority, ownership, and likelihood of influence – lies in the balance.

Footnotes

*

I thank Nico Krisch and Ezgi Yildiz, as well participants in their multiyear project on ‘The Paths of International Law’, for their support and feedback on this long-in-the-making article. Thanks go also to colleagues from the Lauterpacht Centre on International Law at the University of Cambridge, as well as to the Editors of the LJIL, and two anonymous reviewers, for their incisive comments. Lastly, I am grateful to the individuals who agreed to be interviewed for this project over the years under the condition of anonymity.

References

1 I refer largely to IHL to mean the same thing others characterize as the ‘Law of Armed Conflict’ (LOAC) or ‘Laws of War’ (LOW) but I recognize that each term has a distinct history and community of practice.

2 G. Mantilla, ‘The Origins and Evolution of the 1949 Geneva Conventions and the 1977 Additional Protocols’, in M. Evangelista and N. Tannenwald (eds.), Do the Geneva Conventions Matter? (2017), 35.

3 A. O. Petrov, Expert Laws of War: Restating and Making Law in Expert Processes (2020); C. Droege and E. Giorgou, ‘How International Humanitarian Law Develops’, (2022) 104 International Review of the Red Cross 1798; M. Milanovic and S. Sivakumaran, ‘Assessing the Authority of the ICRC Customary IHL Study: How Does IHL Develop?’, (2022) 104 International Review of the Red Cross 1856.

4 Among others, see S. Sivakumaran, ‘Re-Envisaging the International Law of Internal Armed Conflict’, (2011) 22 European Journal of International Law 219; M. Hakimi, ‘Custom’s Method and Process: Lessons from Humanitarian Law’, in C. A. Bradley (ed.), Custom’s Future: International Law in a Changing World (2016), 148.

5 See Droege and Giorgou, supra note 3, at 1838.

6 Late nineteenth-century codification efforts in Brussels and the Hague were primarily state-driven, but in the twentieth century all revision conferences have been convened by the Swiss government in coalition with the ICRC, and with the attendance of international and civil society organizations as observers.

7 See Mantilla, supra note 2; O. Barsalou, ‘Preparing for War: The USA and the Making of the 1949 Geneva Conventions on the Laws of War’, (2018) 23 Journal of Conflict and Security Law 49; B. van Dijk, Preparing for War: The Making of the Geneva Conventions (2022).

8 Although the ICRC has long presented itself as the neutral ‘guardian’ of IHL, its role in lawmaking (as in other areas) has always been political and selective, albeit in complex ways that defy general characterization. For scholarship examining IHL lawmaking with critical attention to the complicated politics of the ICRC see the works cited in note 7, but also: M. Lewis, The Birth of the New Justice: The Internationalization of Crime and Punishment, 1919-1950 (2014), 269–70; M. Barnett, Empire of Humanity: A History of Humanitarianism (2011); G. Mantilla, Lawmaking under Pressure: International Humanitarian Law and Internal Armed Conflict (2020); G. Mantilla, ‘Deflective Cooperation: Social Pressure and Forum Management in Cold War Conventional Arms Control’, (2023) 77 International Organization 564; C. Carpenter, ‘Lost’ Causes: Agenda Vetting in Global Issue Networks and the Shaping of Human Security (2014); D. P. Forsythe, The Humanitarians: The International Committee of the Red Cross (2005).

9 N. Krisch and E. Yildiz (eds.), The Many Paths of Change in International Law (2023); N. Krisch and E. Yildiz, ‘From Drivers to Bystanders: The Varying Roles of States in International Legal Change’, SSRN, 23 May 2023, available at ssrn.com/abstract=4456773.

10 G. Mantilla, Lawmaking under Pressure, supra note 8; E. Benvenisti and D. Lustig, ‘Monopolizing War: Codifying the Laws of War to Reassert Governmental Authority 1856–1874’, (2020) 31 European Journal of International Law 127.

11 F. Mégret, ‘From “Savages” to “Unlawful Combatants”: A Postcolonial Look at International Humanitarian Law’s “Other”’, in A. Orford (ed.), International Law and its Others (2006), 265.

12 See van Dijk, supra note 7; G. Best, War and Law since 1945 (1994).

13 H. M. Kinsella, ‘Superfluous Injury and Unnecessary Suffering: National Liberation and the Laws of War’, (2017) 32 Political Power and Social Theory 205.

14 On the making of Common Article 3 to the Geneva Convention see G. Mantilla, ‘Forum Isolation: Social Opprobrium and the Origins of the International Law of Internal Conflict’, (2018) 72 International Organization 317; B. van Dijk, ‘“The Great Humanitarian”: The Soviet Union, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and the Geneva Conventions of 1949’, (2019) 37 Law and History Review 209.

15 G. Mantilla, ‘The Protagonism of the USSR and Socialist States in the Revision of International Humanitarian Law (IHL)’, (2019) 21 Journal of the History of International Law 181; see also van Dijk, supra note 7. As van Dijk’s work shows, the Soviet Union deserves credit for developing the POW and Civilian Conventions as a whole.

16 G. Abi-Saab, ‘Wars of National Liberation in the Geneva Conventions and Protocols’, in Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law (1979), 353.

17 For recent histories of these anti-colonial developments see A. Alexander, ‘International Humanitarian Law, Postcolonialism and the 1977 Geneva Protocol I’, (2016) 17 Melbourne Journal of International Law 15; E. Davey, ‘Decolonizing the Geneva Conventions: National Liberation and the Development of Humanitarian Law’, in R. Burke et al. (eds.), Decolonization, Self-Determination, and the Rise of Global Human Rights Politics (2020), 375; Mantilla, supra note 8; Kinsella, supra note 13.

18 G. Mantilla, ‘Social Pressure and the Making of Wartime Civilian Protection Rules’, (2020) 26 European Journal of International Relations 443.

19 H. M. Kinsella and G. Mantilla, ‘Contestation before Compliance: History, Politics, and Power in International Humanitarian Law’, (2020) 64 International Studies Quarterly 649.

20 T. Hanrieder and M. Zürn, ‘Reactive Sequences in Global Health Governance’, in O. Fioretos (ed.), International Institutions in Time (2017), 93.

21 See Mantilla, supra note 8.

22 J. von Bernstorff, ‘The Battle for the Recognition of Wars of National Liberation’, in J. von Bernstorff and P. Dann (eds.), The Battle for International Law: South-North Perspectives on the Decolonization Era (2019), 52.

23 There were important internal divisions and competing visions within the Third World regarding the historical meaning of anticolonial conflicts. For an analysis that considers such complexities see E. S. Mackinnon, ‘Contingencies of Context: Contested Legacies of the Algerian Revolution in the 1977 Additional Protocols to the Geneva Conventions’, in I. Venzke and K. J. Heller (eds.), Contigency in International Law: On the Possibility of Different Legal Histories (2021), 317.

24 On the complexities of the use of ‘just war’ language at the CDDH see J. Whyte, ‘The “Dangerous Concept of the Just War”: Decolonization, Wars of National Liberation, and the Additional Protocols to the Geneva Conventions’, (2019) 9 Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development 313; Mackinnon, supra note 23.

25 Importantly, the contours of Western states’ concern with the APs changed over the years following the CDDH. While for some (the UK, for example) some fears came to be seen as manageable through reservations, understandings, or declarations, for others (the US, notably) they increased in number and intensity. The major change towards stringency for the US took place between the Carter and Reagan administrations; however, subsequent administrations seemingly relaxed their position towards aspects of the APs, including their applicability to nuclear warfare.

26 Report of the United States Delegation to the Diplomatic Conference on the Reaffirmation and Development of International Humanitarian Law Applicable in Armed Conflicts, Fourth Session, Geneva Switzerland, 17 March–10 June, 1977, submitted to the Secretary of State by George H. Aldrich, Chairman of the Delegation, 8 September 1977, 28–9, on file with author.

27 Ibid.

28 Report of the Working Group of Officials on the Ability of the United Kingdom to Become a Party to the Protocols Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and Relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts (Protocol I) and the Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and Relating to the Protection of Victims of Non-International Armed Conflicts (Protocol II), FCO 66/946, folio 274a, pp. 2–3, UK National Archives.

29 Ibid.

30 Rapport Technique de la Délégation, Quatrième Session de la Conférence Diplomatique sur la Réaffirmation et le Développement du Droit Humanitaire Applicable dans les Conflits Armés (Genève 15 mars – 10 juin 1977), Paris, 22 June 1977, p. 2, Folder F.6.8.1.2, Box 1678, Nations Unies et Organisations Internationales, French Diplomatic Archives, La Courneuve.

31 Ibid., at 2–4.

32 See, for instance, J. Dill, Legitimate Targets?: Social Construction, International Law and US Bombing (2014); N. C. Crawford, Accountability for Killing: Moral Responsibility for Collateral Damage in America’s Post-9/11 Wars (2013).

33 D. J. Feith, ‘Law in the Service of Terror’, (1985) (Fall) The National Interest 36.

34 By the mid-1980s other European NATO states, including Belgium, Italy, Greece, and the Netherlands, had ratified the APs. But France, the UK, and West Germany remained on the fence, hence susceptible to American influence.

35 Letter from US Secretary of Defense, Caspar W. Weinberger to George Younger, UK Secretary of State for Defense, 3 August 1987, DEFE 70/1934, folio 8, UK National Archives.

36 M. J. Matheson, ‘The United States Position on the Relation of Customary International Law to the 1977 Protocols Additional to the 1949 Geneva Conventions’, (1987) 2 American University International Law Review 419.

37 I mean ‘positive’ in the sense of endorsing some rules and ‘negative’ in the sense of rejecting or limiting others. These terms do not represent my own assessment of the normative value of these rules.

38 At the time, American officials supported their own country’s ratification of APII. Although the Reagan administration submitted it to Congress for ratification in 1987, the treaty remains unratified, allegedly due to concerns that it does not cover certain types of non-international armed conflict. See www.cfr.org/blog/international-treaties-united-states-refuses-play-ball.

39 In private British officials disclosed that their high-level American counterparts (Secretaries of Defense, State, and the Attorney General) did not weigh API’s deficiencies in the area of civilian protection as heavily as those regarding national liberation. ‘In fact’, noted a British diplomat in Washington, it was the ‘Feith/Sofaer politico-legal arguments [on national liberation] which have driven the US decision [not to ratify API].’ Letter from John Kerr (UK Embassy in Washington) to Paul Lever (UN Department, FCO), 26 February 1986, DEFE 70/1934, folio 5, UK National Archives.

40 Telegram ‘Additional Protocols to the Geneva Conventions’, Washington Telno. 623, FCO to British Embassy in Bonn, 24 October 1986, FCO 58/4367.

41 Case concerning Military and Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v. United States of America), Judgment of 27 June 1986, [1986] ICJ Rep. 14. The ICJ decision declared CA3 to constitute customary law applicable to all types of conflict.

42 See Matheson, supra note 36.

43 Representatives of the ICRC (Pierre Keller and Hans Peter Gasser) attended this workshop, as did Theodor Meron, discussed below.

44 Meron was Legal Advisor to the Israeli Foreign Ministry at the 1972 ICRC preparatory meetings of experts. Antonio Cassese was part of the Italian delegation, which supported a strong APII with few conditions for application and substantive protective content.

45 A. Cassese, ‘A Tentative Appraisal of the Old and the New Humanitarian Law of Armed Conflict’, in A. Cassese (ed.), The New Humanitarian Law of Armed Conflict (1979), 461, at 500–1 (emphasis added).

46 T. Meron, ‘International Criminalization of Internal Atrocities’, (1995) 89 American Journal of International Law 554, at 555.

47 T. Meron, ‘On the Inadequate Reach of Humanitarian and Human Rights Law and the Need for a New Instrument’, (1983) 77 American Journal of International Law 589; T. Meron, Human Rights in International Strife: Their International Protection (1987).

48 See Meron, ‘On the Inadequate Reach of Humanitarian and Human Rights Law and the Need for a New Instrument’, ibid., at 606.

49 ICRC, Conference of Government Experts on the Reaffirmation and Development of International Humanitarian Law Applicable in Armed Conflicts Geneva, 24 May - 12 June 1971, Vol. V - Protection of Victims of Non-International Conflicts (1971).

50 For more on this initiative see M. Scheinin, ‘Turku/Abo Declaration of Minimum Humanitarian Standards (1990), Workshop “Standard- Setting: Lessons Learned for the Future”, Geneva, 13–14 February 2005’ (International Council on Human Rights Policy and International Commission of Jurists, 2005).

51 T. Meron, ‘The Geneva Conventions as Customary Law’, (1987) 81 American Journal of International Law 348, at 362.

52 Ibid., at 363 (emphasis added).

53 T. Meron, Human Rights and Humanitarian Norms as Customary Law (1989).

54 Francois Bugnion agrees that Cassese must be given credit as one of the earliest authoritative voices claiming the customary status of humanitarian law for internal conflicts. F. Bugnion, ‘Customary International Humanitarian Law’, (2008) African Yearbook of International Law 59, at 85.

55 A. Cassese, ‘The Geneva Protocols of 1977 on the Humanitarian Law of Armed Conflict and Humanitarian Law’, (1984) 3 UCLA Pacific Basin Law Journal 55, at 57.

56 ‘Consultations Présidentielles’, J2.111#1979/29_1#10* Département politique féderal, Swiss Federal Archives, Bern.

57 ICRC, Division Juridique, dossier ‘Questions autour de la CDDH’, folder ‘Information des délégations, avant et après la quatrième Session’, Archives of the International Committee of the Red Cross, CICR B-AG 152-354 (translation by author).

58 Ibid., (translation by author).

59 Ibid., (translation by author).

60 See Meron, ‘On the Inadequate Reach of Humanitarian and Human Rights Law and the Need for a New Instrument’, supra note 47, at 591.

61 J. M. Henckaerts, ‘The International Committee of the Red Cross and Customary Humanitarian Law’, in R. Geiss et al. (eds.), Humanizing the Laws of War: The Red Cross and the Development of International Humanitarian Law (2017), 83, at 87.

62 Exactly how Meron and Cassese later came to occupy the positions of international legal power they did (described below) should be studied further. See, for instance, C. Mikkel Jarle, ‘The Creation of an AD Hoc Elite: And the Value of International Criminal Law Expertise on a Global Market’, in K. J. Heller et al. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of International Criminal Law (2020), 89.

63 C. Rudolph, ‘Constructing an Atrocities Regime: The Politics of War Crimes Tribunals’, (2001) 55 International Organization 655.

64 G. H. Aldrich, ‘Jurisdiction of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia’, (1996) 90 American Journal of International Law 64.

65 See Hakimi, supra note 4.

66 Cassese as interviewed in H. V. Stuart and M. Simons, The Prosecutor and the Judge: Benjamin Ferencz and Antonio Cassese - Interviews and Writings (2010), at 52–3.

67 T. Hoffmann, ‘The Gentle Humanizer of Humanitarian Law – Antonio Cassese and the Creation of the Customary Law of Non-International Armed Conflicts’, in C. Stahn and L. van den Herik (eds.), Future Perspectives on International Criminal Justice (2010), 58; R. Cryer, ‘International Criminal Tribunals and the Sources of International Law: Antonio Cassese’s Contribution to the Canon’, (2012) 10 Journal of International Criminal Justice 1045; M. Fan, ‘Custom, General Principles and the Great Architect Cassese’, (2012) 10 Journal of International Criminal Justice 1063; A. Cassese, ‘Soliloquy’, in A. Cassese et al. (eds.), The Human Dimension of International Law: Selected Papers of Antonio Cassese (2008), lx.

68 C. Warbrick and P. Rowe, ‘The International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia: The Decision of the Appeals Chamber on the Interlocutory Appeal on Jurisdiction in the Tadic Case’, (1996) 45 International & Comparative Law Quarterly, at 697.

69 T. Meron, ‘The Continuing Role of Custom in the Formation of International Humanitarian Law’, (1996) 90 American Journal of International Law 238.

70 C. Stahn, ‘Between “Constructive Engagement”, “Collusion” and “Critical Distance”: The International Committee of the Red Cross and the Development of International Criminal Law’, in R. Geiss et al. (eds.), Humanizing the Laws of War: The Red Cross and the Development of International Humanitarian Law (2017), 185, at 210–11.

71 See Hakimi, supra note 4.

72 S. Darcy, Judges, Law and War: The Judicial Development of International Humanitarian Law (2014), 328.

73 This section relies partially on interviews with individuals who participated in this process (leading up to the ICRC mandate and then during the Study’s construction), including former and current ICRC staff and diplomats. I use these interviews to inform my understanding of the process, but do cite or name them directly to honor interviewees’ request for anonymity.

74 See Hakimi, supra note 4; E. Wilmshurst and S. Breau (eds.), Perspectives on the ICRC Study on Customary International Humanitarian Law (2007); Milanovic and Sivakumaran, supra note 3.

75 As one of the Study’s co-authors (Jean-Marie Henckaerts) notes, the ICRC only began to refer to the ‘customs’ of war in its appeals to the parties of conflicts (especially when they had not ratified the APs) in the late 1970s and it was not until 1987 that it explicitly mentioned ‘customary international law’. See Henckaerts, supra note 61.

76 Y. Sandoz, ‘Le Comité International de La Croix-Rouge: Gardien Du Droit International Humanitaire’, (1996) 43 Melanges Sahovic, Révue Yougoslave de Droit International 17.

77 ‘Final Declaration of the International Conference for the Protection of War Victims’, International Review of the Red Cross, No. 296, September-October 1993, at 401–5.

78 ‘Meeting of Intergovernmental Group of Experts for the Protection of War Victims, Geneva, 23 - 27 January 1995’, International Review of the Red Cross, No. 304, March–April 1995, at 4–7.

79 ‘Preparing the meeting of the group of intergovernmental experts for the protection of war victims: Preparatory meeting (Geneva, 26–28 September 1994)’, International Review of the Red Cross, No. 302, September–October 1994, at 448-449.

80 26th International Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, Report of the Conference, Geneva 1995, at 106–7.

81 For a full explanation of the ICRC’s approach to protecting and promoting IHL, at least in the 1990s, see Sandoz, supra note 76.

82 The rationale and process behind the report are well documented in J. M. Henckaerts, ‘Study on Customary International Humanitarian Law: A Contribution to the Understanding and Respect for the Rule of Law in Armed Conflict’, (2005) 87 International Review of the Red Cross 175.

83 Ibid., at 179.

84 See Henckaerts, supra note 82.

85 For details see ibid.

86 See Henckaerts, supra note 61.

87 Rules 1 (distinction between civilians and combatants) and 7 (distinction between civilian and military objects) clarify API’s Arts. 48 and 51(2) by plainly stating that attacks must not be directed at civilians or civilian objects, while rules 6 (civilians’ loss of protection from attack) and 10 (civilian objects’ loss of protection from attack) do so by clarifying the sole condition under which they lose such protection. For civilians this is ‘unless and for such time as they take a direct part in hostilities’ and for civilian objects ‘unless and for such time as they are military objectives’. See G. H. Aldrich, ‘International Customary Humanitarian Law - An Interpretation on Behalf of the International Committee of the Red Cross’, (2006) 76 British Yearbook of International Law 503, at 508–9; J. M. Henckaerts, ‘Customary International Humanitarian Law - A Rejoinder to Judge Aldrich’, (2005) 76 British Yearbook of International Law 525, at 526–7. Rule 42 simplifies the more complex language of API’s Art. 56 regarding the special protection of works and installations containing dangerous forces to the obligation that ‘particular care must be taken if works and installations containing dangerous forces … are attacked’. The ICRC Commentary to Rule 42 also adds two other ‘dangerous installations’ to Art. 56’s original list: chemical plants and petroleum refineries. See Aldrich, ibid., at 512–14; Henckaerts, ibid., at 529.

88 Rules 43, 44, and 45, all related to the natural environment, expand the coverage of Arts. 35(3) and 55 of API. Rule 43 does so by stating that ‘destruction of any part of the natural environment is prohibited’ (a rule absent in API) and introducing the rule of proportionality into the protection of the natural environment. Rule 44 introduces an obligation to take feasible precautions to avoid or minimize damage to the environment, and clarifies that scientific uncertainty ‘regarding the effects on the environment of certain military operations does not absolve a party to the conflict from taking such precautions’. Finally, Rule 45 introduces the notion that ‘destruction to the natural environment may not be used as a weapon’, which did not feature in API. See Aldrich, ibid., at 514–16; Henckaerts, ibid., at 529.

89 Rules 55 and 56 on the work of humanitarian relief personnel both simplify and expand API’s more restrictive language in Arts. 70 and 71 by stating that ‘the parties to the conflict must allow and facilitate rapid and unimpeded passage of humanitarian relief for civilians in need’ and providing that ‘only in the case of imperative military necessity’ can the movement of relief personnel be temporarily restricted. This drops the API restriction that humanitarian relief ‘shall be undertaken, subject to the agreement of the Parties concerned’ and to the ‘technical arrangements, including search, under which passage is permitted’. It further omits the Parties’ right (under API Art. 71(4)) to bar relief personnel from their territory if such personnel fails to respect its security requirements. See Aldrich, ibid., at 517.

90 See Henckaerts, supra note 61.

91 Rule 106 reads thus: ‘Combatants must distinguish themselves from the civilian population while they are engaged in an attack or in a military operation preparatory to an attack. If they fail to do so, they do not have the right to prisoner-of-war status.’ Interestingly, in his response to the ICRC’s Study, the former American head delegate to the CDDH George H. Aldrich opined that this formulation did not capture API’s compromise language in Art. 44 (3). See Aldrich, supra note 87. Nevertheless, in its commentary to the customary rule, the ICRC references both the original API language and subsequent discussion. This may be taken as an instance of ‘constructive ambiguity’ by the ICRC. On the concept of constructive ambiguity see M. Byers, ‘Still Agreeing to Disagree: International Security and Constructive Ambiguity’, (2021) 8 Journal on the Use of Force and International Law 91.

92 See Milanovic and Sivakumaran, supra note 3.

93 J. B. Bellinger III and W. J. Haynes II, ‘A US Government Response to the International Committee of the Red Cross Study Customary International Humanitarian Law’, (2007) 89 International Review of the Red Cross 443. For a response by one of the Study’s co-authors see J. M. Henckaerts, ‘Customary International Humanitarian Law: A Response to US Comments’, (2007) 89 International Review of the Red Cross 473.

94 See Milanovic and Sivakumaran, supra note 3, at 1871.

95 See Y. Dinstein, ‘The ICRC Customary International Humanitarian Law Study’, (2006) 82 International Law Studies 99.

96 In the context of the presentation of the report to the 30th International Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. ICRC, Report of the XXX International Conference of the Red Cross and the Red Crescent, Geneva 23–30 November 2007 (2007).

97 See Milanovic and Sivakumaran, supra note 3.

98 IHL may not only be changing through customary law-claims making, but also through ‘soft law’ initiatives and other collective projects not discussed here for reasons of focus, see for instance Droege and Giorgou, supra note 3. For a critical take of expert-led processes see Petrov, supra note 3.

99 For an insightful reflection on the IHL archive and its problems see B. Van Dijk, ‘What Is IHL History Now?’, (2022) 104 International Review of the Red Cross 1621.

100 It remains to be seen how the forthcoming new commentaries to the APs, currently in preparation, comment on these features of API. Given that the co-ordinator of the same commentaries is one of the Study’s co-authors (Henckaerts), I hazard the guess that they will tend to follow the Study’s circumspect approach.

101 For an important TWAIL reflection on this complicated question see A. Anghie and B. S. Chimni, ‘Third World Approaches to International Law and Individual Responsibility in Internal Conflicts’, (2003) 2 Chinese Journal of International Law 77.

102 See Milanovic and Sivakumaran, supra note 3.

103 Ibid.

104 Ibid.

105 Ibid.

106 M. Sassòli, ‘How Will International Humanitarian Law Develop in the Future?’, (2022) 104 International Review of the Red Cross 2052.

107 See Droege and Giorgou, supra note 3.

108 See Petrov, supra note 3.

109 R. Cryer, ‘The International Committee of the Red Cross’ “Interpretive Guidance on the Notion of Direct Participation in Hostilities”: See a Little Light’, in R. Geiss et al. (eds.), Humanizing the Laws of War: The Red Cross and the Development of International Humanitarian Law (2017), 113.

110 Y. Shereshevsky, ‘Back in the Game: International Humanitarian Lawmaking by States’, (2019) 37 Berkley Journal of International Law. See also J. K. Kleffner, ‘The Unilateralization of International Humanitarian Law’, (2022) 104 International Review of the Red Cross 2153.

111 M. A. Newton (ed.), The United States Department of Defense Law of War Manual: Commentary and Critique (2019).