Every legal system requires someone to decide what the law cannot cover. The rules run out at some point — in the hard case, the emergency, the situation the drafters did not anticipate — and at that point someone must decide. The identity of that someone, the question of who holds the authority to make the call when the categories break down, is the deepest political question any legal order faces. In domestic law it surfaces in debates about judicial review and executive power. In international humanitarian law it surfaces in the question of who gets to decide who counts as innocent, who counts as a legitimate target, and who counts as a threat serious enough to justify killing outside any judicial process. That question is not a technical one. It is a sovereignty question. And the history of the laws of war, read carefully, is a history of that question being answered differently in each successive era, with each new answer presented as the natural evolution of humanitarian concern rather than as a redistribution of the most fundamental political power.
Sovereignty is not primarily a legal concept, though lawyers have spent centuries trying to make it one. It is a political fact: the capacity to make the decision that others must live with, including the decision about who falls inside the law’s protection and who falls outside it. In war, that capacity expresses itself most nakedly in the authority to classify. The soldier or the civilian. The legitimate combatant or the unlawful fighter. The innocent bystander or the direct participant. The protected person or the targetable threat. These classifications determine who can be killed with legal sanction and who cannot, and whoever holds the authority to make them holds the power of life and death over everyone the classification touches. The laws of war have always regulated that authority, but they have never eliminated it. What they have done, across more than a century of humanitarian development, is move it.
At the Hague Conferences of 1899 and 1907, the answer was unambiguous. The classification authority sat with states, specifically with the great powers whose negotiators wrote the rules and whose consent determined what counted as binding. The laws of war at this stage are an expression of sovereign equality among the powers that mattered, with the rest of the world irrelevant to the negotiation. The relevant classification was between the lawful combatant and the unlawful fighter, and the criteria for that classification — uniform, open arms, responsible command, fixed distinctive sign — were designed by states to protect the state’s monopoly on legitimate violence. The franc-tireur, the farmer who took up a rifle without satisfying these formal conditions, was placed outside the law’s protection not because he was more dangerous than a regular soldier but because he represented a claim to legitimate violence that bypassed the state entirely. That claim was the threat. The Hague rules addressed it by excluding it: the irregular fighter received admiration, in some quarters genuine admiration, but no legal recognition. The admiration was safe precisely because it came without recognition. You could praise the heroic partisan while executing him, and the law would support the execution.
The Martens Clause, inserted into the 1899 Convention as a resolution to a genuine disagreement between delegations, has been read ever since as a humanitarian concession to the reality of popular resistance. It declared that in cases not covered by the written rules, populations and belligerents remained under the protection of the law of nations as established by the usages of nations and the laws of humanity. This sounds generous. In practice it left the irregular fighter in exactly the position he had occupied before, outside the formal legal order, subject to the judgment of the very commanders whose authority he was challenging. The clause acknowledged the existence of a moral reality it declined to protect legally. That is not a concession. It is the sovereign decision to maintain the boundary while appearing to soften it.
Nuremberg fractured this boundary in ways that have not been fully resolved since. The International Military Tribunal asserted, for the first time in the history of international law with binding force, that the sovereign decision to go to war could itself be a crime. This was a direct challenge to the Westphalian premise that states are answerable to no external authority for their decisions about the use of force. When Robert Jackson argued that the supreme crime is aggression because it contains within it the accumulated evil of everything that follows, he was not just making a legal claim. He was asserting a form of sovereignty above the state, a jurisdiction that could reach inside the cabinet room and judge the decision that sovereignty had previously made unreachable.
The language in this assertion reveals the political structure of the claim. Jackson and the other prosecutors framed Nuremberg as civilization judging barbarism, humanity judging its enemies, reason overcoming revenge. This framing did something precise and consequential. It stripped the Nazi leadership of the status of a legitimate enemy, a justus hostis in the classical law of nations sense, someone you fight, defeat, and eventually make peace with. The Nuremberg defendants were not defeated enemies. They were criminals against humanity itself. That reclassification had a political logic. If your enemy is merely a rival sovereign, he retains dignity in defeat and the possibility of reconciliation. If your enemy is the enemy of humanity, he forfeits both. The classification determines the treatment, and the classification was made by the victors.
This does not mean Nuremberg was unjust. The crimes were real and the accountability was genuine. But it does mean that the assertion of a sovereignty above the state at Nuremberg was not a neutral legal development. It was a political act performed by specific powers in specific circumstances that happened to align the judgment of the victors with the judgment of history. The authority to declare that a state’s use of force is not merely wrong but criminal, that its leaders are not merely mistaken but outlaws, is an enormously powerful instrument, and its exercise is never separate from the political interests of those who wield it.
The 1949 Geneva Conventions performed a quieter but in some ways more durable migration of the classification authority. They remained formally state-centric: negotiated by states, ratified by states, enforced through state cooperation. But by placing individual human beings at the center of the protective framework, by insisting that the prisoner of war, the wounded soldier, and the occupied civilian hold rights that no state can simply override, they introduced a competing locus of authority that was not the state. The sovereign claim embedded in the Geneva Conventions is modest but real: that the state’s power over the bodies of those it holds is not unlimited, that there is a standard external to state discretion against which that power can be measured and found wanting. The standard was not yet enforced by any effective mechanism. But its existence changed the structure of the claim. The state was no longer the sole judge of its own conduct.
The shift became explicit in 1977. The Additional Protocols’ recognition of wars of national liberation as international armed conflicts was a sovereignty statement of the first order, and it was understood as such by the states that resisted it most vigorously. To say that a movement without a state can hold rights and obligations under international law, that the PLO has standing at a diplomatic conference that is shaping the laws of war, is to say that sovereignty is not the precondition of legal personality but something that can be claimed in the course of struggle. The traditional international legal order had treated the state as the only relevant subject. The Protocols opened a crack in that premise.
But the crack was immediately controlled. The liberation fighter who received recognition had to accept the disciplinary framework of the laws of war as the price of that recognition. He had to carry arms openly, distinguish himself from the civilian population, operate under a responsible command structure. He had to become, in the formal sense, something like a soldier of a state-in-formation. The revolutionary was absorbed into the state form even as his revolutionary cause was acknowledged. The civilian population that fed him, sheltered him, and sustained his movement remained in their previous position: protected in principle, exposed in practice, always at risk of losing protection at the moment they acted. The crack in state sovereignty was real, but the framework closed around it quickly.
What happened in the 1990s was more radical, and more insidious, because it happened without anyone quite declaring it. When the legal literature on the Kosovo campaign in 1999 turned to Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International as the authoritative sources for what Additional Protocol I required as customary law, the classification authority migrated to institutions that held none of sovereignty’s traditional attributes. No territory. No population. No army. No formal democratic mandate. No process of ratification or consent. What HRW and Amnesty held was credibility, access, and the ability to fix events in the public record in ways that the legal academy then treated as authoritative. They declared Additional Protocol I binding on all states without citing evidence of customary practice, and the academic lawyers who wrote about Kosovo followed their footnotes. The moment of choice, the political decision about whose violence would be constrained and whose would be legitimized, disappeared into the appearance of expert consensus.
This is sovereignty at its most effective and most opaque. The great power at least has a flag. The international tribunal at least has a charter and a defined jurisdiction. The NGO that declares what custom requires has neither, yet exercises something functionally equivalent to the classification authority that has always been the heart of sovereign power in the laws of war. It decides, in its reports, who counts as a civilian victim and who counts as a legitimate target. It decides whether a particular attack satisfies the proportionality standard or violates it. It decides, by the pattern of its documentation and the conclusions of its analyses, which deaths the international community is invited to mourn and which are explained away as the unfortunate but lawful consequences of military necessity. These decisions shape law, shape policy, and shape the conditions under which future violence will be conducted. The entity making them is accountable to no electorate and subject to no constitutional constraint. Its authority rests entirely on the willingness of others to treat it as authoritative, which is itself a political fact, sustained by the same kind of consensus that sustained the dominance of military lawyers before the 1990s and will sustain whatever comes next.
The Israeli Supreme Court’s 2006 targeted killings decision crystallized the next migration. President Barak’s declaration that there are no black holes in international law, that every person in every conflict falls within the law’s reach, is one of the most consequential sovereignty claims in the history of the field. On its surface it sounds like an expansion of legal protection: no one is beyond the law’s concern. In practice it works in the opposite direction. By insisting that there are no spaces outside the law, Barak ensured that the state’s authority reaches everywhere, because the law the state brings with it is the law the state interprets. The terrorist who does not qualify as a lawful combatant must be a civilian. The civilian who takes a direct part in hostilities loses protection for such time as she does so. The determination of what counts as direct participation, what continuous combat function means, how long the loss of protection lasts, all of this opens into a field of legal argumentation that the state’s lawyers control.
What the court built was a legal architecture in which the classification authority the state exercises is legitimized by the law rather than constrained by it. The targeting decision is not a political decision anymore, or not only a political decision. It is a legal determination, made by officials trained in international humanitarian law, applying criteria that humanitarian lawyers helped develop, subject in principle to judicial review. The decision to kill has been laundered through a legal process that gives it a quality of legitimacy that the naked sovereign decision would lack. The classification is no longer the general deciding that this farmer with a rifle deserves to die. It is the targeting lawyer deciding that this individual’s pattern of life meets the threshold for continuous combat function, that the anticipated military advantage exceeds the expected civilian harm, that the strike is therefore lawful. The political decision and the legal authorization have become the same act.
The development of algorithmic targeting systems has extended this logic to its present extreme. Systems designed to identify targets process behavioral telemetry, location data, communication patterns, and associational networks to generate lists of people who meet the threshold for targeting. The classification decision, which has always been the core sovereign act in the laws of war, is now made upstream, embedded in the design of the system, expressed in the choice of which signals to weight and which thresholds to apply. The person who writes the code that defines suspicious behavior is exercising a form of sovereignty over everyone whose behavior the system will subsequently evaluate. The decision is made once, abstractly, in an office somewhere, and then applied automatically to thousands of people who will never know they have been classified.
This is not a departure from the history of the classification authority. It is its culmination. The Hague commanders decided case by case, looking at individual fighters and making individual judgments. The Nuremberg tribunal decided retrospectively, looking at the decisions of leaders after the war was over. The Geneva framework decided categorically, defining classes of protected persons and leaving individual determination to the parties in the field. The NGO analysts decided publicly, in reports that shaped the framework of accountability. The targeting lawyer decided procedurally, within a legal architecture designed to legitimize the decision while maintaining its practical effect. The algorithm decides structurally, by building the classification into the system itself so that no individual decision is visible and no individual decision-maker is fully accountable.
At each stage, the migration was presented as an improvement. The categorical protections of Geneva were more reliable than individual commander discretion. The procedural safeguards of the modern targeting process were more accountable than the informal decisions of the Cold War. The algorithmic system is more consistent than human judgment, less susceptible to the biases and errors of the individual analyst. Each of these claims contains some truth. What none of them acknowledges is that the migration of the classification authority is simultaneously a migration of sovereign power, and that the direction of the migration has consistently been toward less visible, less accountable, and less contestable forms of decision-making.
The populist nationalist movements currently challenging the authority of international humanitarian law and international criminal law are, whatever else they are, a reassertion of the visibility principle. When a leader refuses to submit to ICC jurisdiction, he is saying that the classification authority belongs to the state, that the decision about whose violence is legitimate is a political decision that must be made by a politically accountable actor, not by an international institution whose democratic legitimacy is unclear and whose enforcement capacity is dependent on the cooperation of the very states it purports to judge. This argument is sometimes made in bad faith, as cover for impunity. It is also sometimes made in good faith, as a genuine objection to the opacity of the authority that the humanitarian framework has accumulated. The objection deserves engagement rather than dismissal, because the accumulation is real and the opacity is real, and the question of whether the entity that now holds something like the classification authority in international humanitarian law is more or less legitimate than the state it has partially displaced is not one that the humanitarian framework can answer from within its own terms.
The search for a new framework that might recognize the legitimate self-defense of the stateless, that might detach innocence from passivity and protect the person who acts as well as the person who endures, runs into the same problem at a deeper level. The moment you say that protection should follow from the justness of the position, you must answer the question that has no neutral answer: just according to whom? Every party to every conflict believes its violence is justified. The formal neutrality of the humanitarian framework, which treats aggressors and defenders alike once the war has begun, is not a moral failure. It is the condition under which the framework can operate without becoming merely the legal expression of one side’s political claim. Abandon that neutrality and you are no longer in the domain of law as it has existed since the Hague Conventions. You are in the domain of the political, where the authority to decide is always someone’s authority, always exercised from some position, always serving some interests alongside the universal ones it claims to serve.
This is not a counsel of despair. It is a counsel of honesty. The classification authority has always been political. The history of the laws of war is the history of that authority migrating across different institutions, each presenting itself as more neutral, more principled, more humanitarian than the one it replaced, none of them fully delivering on that claim because none of them could. The state commander was political. The international tribunal was political. The NGO analyst was political. The targeting algorithm is political, most of all when it looks most like a technical process. The question is not how to find an institution that can make the classification decision without politics. That institution does not exist. The question is how to make the decision visible, contestable, and accountable enough that those who bear its consequences have some meaningful capacity to challenge it.
That is a harder question than the one the humanitarian framework has been asking. The humanitarian framework has been asking how to make the classification more precise, more consistent, more legally defensible. Precision, consistency, and legal defensibility are real goods. They are not the same good as accountability. A system can be extremely precise in its classifications and entirely opaque about who made the decision and on what grounds. A system can be legally defensible from within its own framework and still exercise a form of power over human lives that no democratic theory can justify. The history of sovereign authority in the laws of war is a history of institutions learning to be more precise while becoming less visible, of the classification decision becoming more technically sophisticated and simultaneously harder to contest.
The next chapter in that history is being written now, in the design of algorithmic targeting systems, in the legal arguments about what continuous combat function means and how long it lasts, in the political battles over ICC jurisdiction and the definition of aggression, in the questions about whether a state can strike anywhere it identifies a threat regardless of the territorial sovereignty of the state where the threat resides. Each of these debates is a debate about where the classification authority sits and who can challenge it. They are sovereignty debates dressed in the language of law. They always have been.
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