伊拉克占领政策与国际法

M. Schmitt, Charles Garraway
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引用次数: 8

摘要

2003年3月20日,美国和英国领导的联军袭击了伊拉克,正式依据联合国安理会十多年前的决议采取行动。“伊拉克自由”行动受到各国、非政府组织和受人尊敬的学者的广泛批评。然而,就在争论还在继续的时候,联军迅速击败了伊拉克军队,占领了这个国家。在军事行动开始不到两个月后,美国总统布什在林肯号航空母舰的甲板上宣布“在伊拉克的主要战斗行动已经结束”。本文从法律的角度探讨了联军在伊拉克战败后实施的占领政策。占领当局(联盟临时当局- cpa)以条例和命令的形式颁布了大多数。为了便于分析,我们将它们分为五类:治理、安全、救济、经济和法律体系。1907年《海牙第四公约》(所附条例)和1949年《日内瓦第四公约》载有有关的占领法。虽然《日内瓦公约》1977年《附加议定书》包括一些占领规定,但由于美国和伊拉克都不是缔约国,除非它重申习惯国际法,否则不适用。安理会还根据《联合国宪章》第七章采取行动,通过了限制联军占领活动的决议,并将其扩展到国际人道主义法的严格范围之外。这些条约和决议将作为评价联盟政策的规范性标准。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Occupation Policy in Iraq and International Law
On 20 March 2003, a US and UK-led coalition attacked Iraq, formally basing its action on UN Security Council resolutions stretching back over a decade. The operation,Iraqi Freedom, engendered widespread criticism by States, non-governmental organizations, and respected academics. However, even as the debate continued, Coalition forces quickly defeated the Iraqi military and conquered the country. Less than two months after commencement of military action, US President Bush declared from the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln that "major combat operations in Iraq have ended". This article explores, from a legal perspective, the published Coalition occupation policies implemented since the Iraqi defeat. Occupation authorities (the Coalition Provisional Authority-CPA) have promulgated most as regulations and orders. For purposes of analysis, they are grouped into five categories: governance, security, relief, the economy, and legal system. The 1907 Hague Convention IV (annexed Regulations) and the 1949 Fourth Geneva Convention contain the relevant occupation law. Although 1977 Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions includes some occupation provisions, since neither the United States nor Iraq are Parties, it is inapplicable, except as it restates customary international law. Acting under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, the Security Council has also adopted resolutions that both limit Coalition occupation activities, and expand them beyond the strict confines of international humanitarian law. These treaties and resolutions will serve as the normative standards against which Coalition policies will be evaluated.
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