The Red Cross’s Campaign to Undermine the Laws of War https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/politics-current-affairs/2017/11/the-red-crosss-campaign-to-undermine-the-laws-of-war/

November 16, 2017 | Evelyn Gordon
About the author: Evelyn Gordon is a commentator and former legal-affairs reporter who immigrated to Israel in 1987. In addition to Mosaic, she has published in the Jerusalem Post, Azure, Commentary, and elsewhere. She blogs at Evelyn Gordon.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has recently undertaken to educate the public about the Geneva conventions and associated regulations. To this end, it has posted on its website a three-question “quiz” about restrictions on civilian casualties. Evelyn Gordon points out that the first two questions, which are more or less identical, are answered incorrectly:

Question number one: “You’re a military commander. The enemy is hiding in a populated village across the front line. Can you attack?” The correct answer, according to the website, is “no.”

This is simply false. The laws of war do not grant immunity to enemy soldiers simply because they choose to hide among civilians, nor do they mandate avoiding any military action that might result in civilian casualties. They merely require that civilians not be deliberately targeted (the principle of distinction), that reasonable efforts be made to minimize civilian casualties, and that any such casualties not be disproportionate to the military benefit of the operation (the principle of proportionality). . . .

The laws of war were never meant to be a suicide pact; they do not require countries to let their own civilians be slaughtered in order to avoid harming enemy civilians. But in the ICRC’s version, they do. Its website teaches users that military action that harms enemy civilians is never permissible, so all an enemy must do to slaughter the other side’s civilians with impunity is to set up shop among its own civilian population. By that logic, no action should have been taken to stop, say, Islamic State’s genocide of the Yazidis, because it operated out of populated villages and couldn’t be dislodged without civilian casualties. Is that truly what the ICRC wants? . . .

If obeying the laws of war requires letting your own civilians be slaughtered, no country under attack would agree to do so. That is precisely the danger of the ICRC’s position. . . . The ICRC is not only encouraging terrorists to operate from among civilian populations by granting them immunity; it is also discouraging efforts to comply with the civilian-protection measures mandated by the real laws of war.

Read more on Evelyn Gordon: http://evelyncgordon.com/the-red-cross-destroys-the-laws-of-war/