On 30 November 1961, in coordination with the government of South Vietnam, President Kennedy authorized US armed forces to prepare for the use of defoliants to support military operations against Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces.Footnote 1 In the decade that followed, the US Air Force sprayed approximately 20 million gallons of the herbicide Agent Orange over the forests and fields of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.Footnote 2 In total, Operation Ranch Hand destroyed more than five million acres of forest and half a million acres of crops in an effort to deny the enemy sanctuary.Footnote 3 Additionally, tractors equipped with ploughs levelled nearly three quarters of a million acres of vegetation.Footnote 4
The environmental devastation of the Vietnam War, which the United States maintains violated no international legal prohibitions,Footnote 5 ignited a global campaign to minimize the impact of armed conflict on the natural environment. Although international humanitarian law (IHL) has long provided general rules that result in indirect protection for the environment, this effort sought to establish special protections within that body of law through a progression of international instruments,Footnote 6 the relevant provisions of which some observers claim have crystallized into customary international law.Footnote 7
Despite consistent involvement in armed conflicts in the decades that followed, the United States has largely distanced itself from this effort. Specifically, it has declined to embrace many of the purported rules or interpretations the movement has generated, thereby injecting doubt that they enjoy customary status today. US pronouncements on the subject have done little to clarify its views, further frustrating attempts to build international consensus on the state of the law.
This article outlines and evaluates the US perspective on how treaty and customary law protect the natural environment during international armed conflict. We begin by surveying the relevant treaties to which the United States is a party and examining its views on their pertinent provisions. Attention then turns to claims that certain environmental obligations, such as those special protections residing in the 1977 Additional Protocol I to the 1949 Geneva Conventions (AP I), have attained customary status. Our discussion outlines the United States’ rejection of such claims and assesses the reasonableness thereof against international law's standards for the crystallization of customary international law. Finally, the article concludes by highlighting ambiguities in certain US environmental positions, the resolution of which, we believe, would bring much-needed clarity to the law. Against that framework, we note that environmental protections other than those which limit the conduct of parties to an international armed conflict,Footnote 8 including obligations under international and domestic environmental law, are beyond the scope of the article.
Before turning to the law, we must emphasize that our purpose is not to advocate for the adoption of more progressive legal interpretations by the United States – although, speaking in our personal capacities, we believe doing so would be beneficial. Instead, our objective is to succinctly map and objectively assess the applicable US positions. By increasing transparency, we hope to contribute to greater clarity as to how IHL protects the environment.
Environmental protections and US treaty obligations
The United States is party to several treaties that provide varying degrees of specific, general or incidental protections to the natural environment. Three of these treaties warrant examination in our analysis.Footnote 9
The Hague and Geneva Conventions
Article 23(g) of the Regulations Annexed to the 1907 Hague Convention (IV) Respecting the Laws and Customs of War on Land (Hague Regulations) provides a foundational safeguard for the environment by forbidding parties “to destroy or seize the enemy's property, unless such destruction or seizure be imperatively demanded by the necessities of war”.Footnote 10 The rule, violation of which is a war crime under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court,Footnote 11 embodies the long-standing customary prohibition against wanton destruction expressed in earlier instruments such as the 1874 Brussels Declaration and, with particular relevance to US interpretation, the 1863 Lieber Code.Footnote 12 And as noted by the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the Hague Regulations reflect customary international law.Footnote 13
A similar restriction, albeit of more limited applicability, is found in Article 53 of the 1949 Geneva Convention (IV) relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War (GC IV), which provides:
Any destruction by the Occupying Power of real or personal property belonging individually or collectively to private persons, or to the State, or to other public authorities, or to social or cooperative organizations, is prohibited, except where such destruction is rendered absolutely necessary by military operations.Footnote 14
In contrast to Article 23(g) of the Hague Regulations and its Rome Statute corollary, only “extensive” destruction in violation of Article 53 is a grave breach of GC IV and a war crime under the Rome Statute.Footnote 15 Further limiting its scope is the fact that, unlike the Hague Regulations, its protections are limited to the context of occupation.Footnote 16 Like the Hague Regulations, the Geneva Conventions are generally considered to reflect customary international law.Footnote 17
As applied to the environment, these provisions beg the question of what is encompassed by the notion of “property”. Neither treaty defines the term. This omission has minimal practical significance in the course of many military operations, but it is of pronounced concern in the environmental context. For their part, Article 53 of GC IV and the International Committee of the Red Cross's (ICRC) corresponding 1958 Commentary clarify that the term includes “real or personal” property, regardless of whether it is owned by private persons or the State or other public authorities.Footnote 18 Neither clarifies, however, whether it includes aspects of the environment that are not traditionally associated with legal notions of real property, such as a State's national waters (territorial, archipelagic and internal) or airspace. From a textual standpoint, the extent to which these provisions protect all environmental components is, therefore, somewhat uncertain.
Subsequent interpretation of these provisions by the United States suggests that it believes their reach is substantial. For instance, it has asserted that
the entirety of the natural environment would receive protection against wanton destruction or against destruction as an end in itself. Similarly, it seems clear that in certain cases, parts of the natural environment may be regarded as “enemy property” (i.e., natural property) that may not be seized or destroyed unless imperatively demanded by the necessities of war.Footnote 19
Under this expansive restatement, the prohibition against wanton destruction protects the whole environment, including national waters and airspace. Such a broad interpretation is consistent with the categorical pronouncement in the US Army and Marine Corps’ Commander's Handbook on the Law of Land Warfare that “[w]anton destruction of the environment is prohibited”.Footnote 20 Still, it is unclear why the United States distinguishes between “the entirety” of the environment in the first sentence and only “parts” of the natural environment as constituting the enemy's natural property in the second. Indeed, both refer to the same rule, that prohibiting wanton destruction.
Regarding the first sentence, it may be that the United States considers there to be a customary prohibition that applies with greater breadth than its treaty corollaries, one that addresses wanton destruction wherever it occurs, including in the commons (high seas, international airspace, outer space, the moon and celestial bodies).Footnote 21 If so, such an interpretation would correspond to our view. The second sentence, although encompassing all components, may be intended to reflect the fact that the two treaty provisions are, by their terms, limited to the enemy's territory (“property”, Hague Regulations, Article 23(g)) or to occupied territory (GC IV, Article 53).Footnote 22
While we leave it to the United States to explain this expression of opinio juris, review of US practice-in-fact confirms that the United States interprets the notion of property broadly. A notable and persuasive example is the US response to Iraq's actions at the end of the First Gulf War. Prior to the Iraqi military's final withdrawal from Kuwait, its forces dumped between 7 and 9 million barrels of oil into the Persian Gulf and damaged or set fire to nearly 600 oil wells. The acts affected Kuwait's land, territorial waters and national airspace (as well as international waters and airspace). In a report to the US Congress following the war, the Department of Defense (DoD) contended that “Iraq's wanton acts of destruction” violated IHL, citing both Article 23(g) of Hague Regulations and GC IV's Articles 53 and 147 (on grave breaches).Footnote 23 Although Iraq was not a party to Hague Convention IV, the United States maintained that Article 23(g) reflects customary international law and that “its obligations are binding upon all nations”.Footnote 24
Moreover, the report further implied that the release of oil into the Persian Gulf wantonly destroyed enemy property:
Review of Iraqi actions makes it clear the oil well destruction had no military purpose, but was simply punitive destruction at its worst. … As with the release of oil into the Persian Gulf, this aspect of Iraq's wanton destruction of Kuwaiti property had little effect on Coalition offensive combat operations.Footnote 25
The fact that the United States included Kuwait's territorial seas within the contemplated scope of “property” demonstrates that there are few, if any, features of the environment that would evade the articles’ proscriptions.
In sum, although a more fulsome exploration of the nuances of what constitutes property in the context of wanton destruction is beyond this article's scope, there is little doubt that the United States interprets Articles 23(g) and 53 as extending to all environmental components within an applicable State's territorial reach.
The ENMOD Convention
In contrast to the Hague Regulations and GC IV, which extend protection to the environment through generally applicable rules, the 1977 Convention on the Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental Modification Techniques (ENMOD Convention) prohibits parties from converting the environment into a weapon. Its operative provision, Article 1, forbids “engag[ing] in military or any other hostile use of environmental modification techniques having widespread, long-lasting or severe effects as the means of destruction, damage or injury to any other State Party”, or assisting, encouraging or inducing others to do the same.Footnote 26 As this text indicates, the prohibition has several elements. There is general agreement between the United States and other States as to their interpretation, subject to one minor divergence discussed below.
First, the Convention only prohibits “military or any other hostile use” of environmental modification techniques as a “means of destruction, damage or injury to any other State Party”.Footnote 27 It does not prohibit engaging in environmental modification for peaceful purposes, such as mitigating droughts, even if such actions might cause harm to neighbouring States. As noted in the DoD's Law of War Manual, the prohibition “reflects the idea that the environment itself should not be used as an instrument of war”.Footnote 28
Next, the effects must be “widespread, long-lasting or severe”. Use of the disjunctive “or” establishes a low bar; satisfying any of the three conditions suffices to meet the standard. In line with a report prepared by the ENMOD Convention's drafting committee, the United States interprets the threshold for these effects, at least as used in the Convention, as “encompassing an area on the scale of several hundred square kilometers” (widespread), “lasting for a period of months, or approximately a season” (long-term), and “involving serious or significant disruption or harm to human life, natural and economic resources, or other assets” (severe).Footnote 29 As will be seen, AP I uses the same standards but requires their cumulative satisfaction.
Finally, the conduct in question must constitute an “environmental modification technique”. As the Convention clarifies, this “refers to any technique for changing – through the deliberate manipulation of natural processes – the dynamics, composition or structure of the earth, including its biota, lithosphere, hydrosphere and atmosphere, or of outer space”.Footnote 30 In their committee report, the drafters agreed that causing “earthquakes; tsunamis; an upset in the ecological balance of a region; changes in weather patterns (clouds, precipitation, cyclones of various types and tornadic storms); changes in climate patterns; changes in ocean currents; changes in the state of the ozone layer; and changes in the state of the ionosphere” qualified as environmental modification techniques.Footnote 31
The report further provides, however, that these illustrative phenomena “would result, or could reasonably be expected to result, in” threshold effects.Footnote 32 Use of the word “would” suggests that causation of the phenomena for military reasons, without more, “would be prohibited”.Footnote 33 In other words, resort to the phenomena would necessarily reach the requisite threshold.
The US explanation, on the other hand, is more nuanced. It recognizes that “earthquakes, tsunamis, and cyclones are environmental effects likely to be widespread, long-lasting, or severe that could be caused by the use of environmental modification techniques”.Footnote 34 The prohibition would therefore only apply in circumstances in which causation of the enumerated phenomenon would reach the requisite severity. For the United States, causation of a minor earthquake to disrupt enemy operations in a relatively remote area, for example, would likely not breach the obligation.
Additional Protocol I
The United States is a prominent non-party to the first treaty to apply so-called “special protection” to the environment during armed conflict. While it is bound by the 1949 Geneva Conventions, the United States has not ratified AP I, which deals with international armed conflict. In addition to several articles that generally or incidentally protect the environment – such as, insofar as it applies to qualifying parts of the environment, the prohibition on attacking civilian objectsFootnote 35 – the Protocol also contains three novel protections that specifically apply to the environment.Footnote 36
• Article 35(3): “It is prohibited to employ methods or means of warfare which are intended, or may be expected, to cause widespread, long-term and severe damage to the natural environment.”
• Article 55(1): “Care shall be taken in warfare to protect the natural environment against widespread, long-term and severe damage. This protection includes a prohibition of the use of methods or means of warfare which are intended or may be expected to cause such damage to the natural environment and thereby to prejudice the health or survival of the population.”
• Article 55(2): “Attacks against the natural environment by way of reprisals are prohibited.”
As the United States is not party to the instrument, these safeguards do not bind it.Footnote 37 Yet, some observers claim that Articles 35(3) and 55(1) reflect contemporary customary international law binding the United States and other non-parties.Footnote 38 This begs the question of the US view regarding customary IHL protection of the environment.
Environmental protections under customary international law
In its 2005 study on Customary International Humanitarian Law (ICRC Customary Law Study), the ICRC identified three rules pertaining to the environment that it asserts are customary in character. The foundational rule is Rule 43, “Application of General Principles on the Conduct of Hostilities to the Natural Environment”.
The general principles on the conduct of hostilities apply to the natural environment:
A. No part of the natural environment may be attacked, unless it is a military objective.
B. Destruction of any part of the natural environment is prohibited, unless required by imperative military necessity.
C. Launching an attack against a military objective which may be expected to cause incidental damage to the environment which would be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated is prohibited.Footnote 39
In great part, albeit not entirely, Rule 43 is consistent with US views on the customary law protection of the environment. The United States agrees that, in general, parts of the environment are protected by the customary law prohibition on attacking civilian objects (paragraph A), that wanton destruction of the environment not justified by imperative military necessity is prohibited (paragraph B), and that any attacks against military objectives must consider damage to those parts of the environment constituting civilian objects during their proportionality analyses (paragraph C).Footnote 40 From the US perspective, however, beyond those parameters, Rule 43 is overbroad to the extent that it applies to all parts of the environment.Footnote 41
The ICRC's categorical approach is grounded in the definitions of “civilian object” and “military objective” found in Article 52 of AP I. According to paragraph 1 of that provision, “[c]ivilian objects are all objects which are not military objectives”.Footnote 42 Paragraph 2 defines military objectives as “objects which by their nature, location, purpose or use make an effective contribution to military action and whose total or partial destruction, capture or neutralization, in the circumstances ruling at the time, offers a definite military of advantage”.Footnote 43
A plain text reading of these provisions suggests that the characterization of objects is binary: an object is either a military objective or a civilian object. In line with this interpretation, the ICRC's Guidelines on the Protection of the Natural Environment in Armed Conflict (ICRC Guidelines) observe that “all parts or elements of the natural environment are civilian objects, unless some become military objectives”,Footnote 44 a position that the ICRC likewise included in its commentary to Rule 43.Footnote 45
The ICRC asserts that this categorical, dualistic approach is “generally recognized today”, a claim supported by the International Law Commission (ILC) in its 2022 Principles on Protection of the Environment in Relation to Armed Conflicts (PERAC Principles).Footnote 46 PERAC Principle 13 states: “No part of the environment may be attacked, unless it has become a military objective.”Footnote 47 The ILC's commentary on the earlier draft of the PERAC Principles explains that the norm “underlines the inherently civilian nature of the environment”.Footnote 48 By this approach, the environment is protected as such due to its intrinsic value, without regard to whether “damage to it would not necessarily harm humans in a reasonably foreseeable way for the purposes of international humanitarian law assessments”.Footnote 49
Although the United States generally supports AP I's definitional approaches to civilian objects and military objectives,Footnote 50 it follows an alternative interpretation according to which the natural environment only “receives the protection afforded civilian objects insofar as it constitutes a civilian object”.Footnote 51 The key distinction is that the United States disagrees with the ICRC that if the target of an attack or other military operation is not a military objective, it must be, by definition, a civilian object:
[T]he fact that the natural environment is not considered as intrinsically military in nature, does not necessarily mean that every element thereof should be treated as a civilian object under the law of armed conflict. Furthermore, … the natural environment should not be viewed in the abstract, but rather as a collection of elements, some of which are civilian in nature and protected as such.Footnote 52
In support of its position, the United States has pointed out that States do not treat the entire environment as protected during combat operations:
[P]arts of the natural environment not constituting military objectives are routinely adversely affected by lawful attacks against military objectives. This type of environmental damage (e.g., small craters in the earth formed from the use of artillery) is generally not considered as part of the implementation of the principle of proportionality.Footnote 53
By the US approach, environmental features that are reasonably characterized as civilian objects, such as natural resources, would be protected from direct attack, thereby benefiting from such conduct-of-hostility rules as proportionality and precautions in attack.Footnote 54 However, those rules would not protect parts of the environment that bear little or no nexus to the civilian population and therefore would not be considered objects at all.Footnote 55 In other words, the United States articulates what has been labelled the anthropocentric approach to the environment, zeroing in on its relationship to the civilian population and civilian activities.Footnote 56
The next duty that the ICRC characterizes as customary in its Customary Law Study is set forth in Rule 44, “Due Regard for the Natural Environment in Military Operations”. This rule provides, in part, that
[m]ethods and means of warfare must be employed with due regard to the protection and preservation of the natural environment. In the conduct of military operations, all feasible precautions must be taken to avoid, and in any event to minimize, incidental damage to the environment.Footnote 57
The Study's commentary explains that this obligation “stems not only from the application … of the rules protecting civilian objects, but also from a recognition of the need to provide particular protection to the environment as such”.Footnote 58 Textually, the United States views the rule as reflecting customary law insofar as it applies to environmental features qualifying as civilian objects.Footnote 59 However, it disagrees with aspects of the ICRC's commentary to the rule.
With respect to the “due regard” standard in the first sentence, the ICRC Customary Law Study's commentary and the ICRC Guidelines, which reiterate the same duty,Footnote 60 refer to a general recognition that the environment should be provided distinct protection, particularly when employing means and methods of warfare.Footnote 61 Interestingly, the Guidelines assert that this due regard obligation is “operationalized” in, for example, the requirements to take “constant care” and feasible precautions to spare and minimize incidental damage to civilian objects,Footnote 62 an unambiguous reference to Article 57 of AP I.
As just noted, however, the United States does not view all parts of the environment as per se protected by IHL's customary conduct-of-hostility rules concerning civilian objects. Nor has it recognized the constant care obligation outlined in Article 57(1) of AP I as customary.Footnote 63 Instead, the United States has long considered the “principle that all practicable precautions, taking into account military and humanitarian considerations, be taken in the conduct of military operations to minimize incidental death, injury, and damage to civilians and civilian objects” to be customary in character.Footnote 64 In other words, it concurs with Rule 44's feasible precautions requirement only to the extent that it applies to civilian objects.
A third environment-specific rule in the ICRC Customary Law Study is Rule 45, “Causing Serious Damage to the Natural Environment”, which states: “The use of methods or means of warfare that are intended, or may be expected, to cause widespread, long-term and severe damage to the natural environment is prohibited. Destruction of the natural environment may not be used as a weapon.”
The first half of this rule is plainly based on Articles 35 and 55 of AP I,Footnote 65 except for the latter's ban on reprisals. US objections to Article 55's prohibition on reprisals against the environment (or, for that matter, most other civilian objects) may partly explain the absence of any reference to reprisal.Footnote 66 As to the final sentence, the United States is of the view that the use of means and methods of warfare affecting the environment is “prohibited only if their use is clearly excessive in relation to the concrete and direct overall military advantage anticipated”.Footnote 67 More to the point, the United States has long rejected characterization of Articles 35(3) or 55, or parts thereof, as customary.Footnote 68
Before the United States signed AP I in 1977, the Joint Chiefs of Staff concluded that its environmental provisions were “not expected to have any significant military impact and [were] consistent with overall US security interests”.Footnote 69 Although acknowledging the provisions’ novelty, the Joint Chiefs pointed to the fact that the United States had already discontinued using Agent Orange, the only means or method of warfare that Article 35 could have arguably prohibited – a view they reiterated five years later when providing additional recommendations in support of deliberations on US ratification.Footnote 70
Concerns arose later during the Reagan administration. In a 1985 review, the Joint Chiefs began to express hesitancy regarding the two articles, albeit in a narrow set of circumstances:
It is not clear what type of weapons or methods of warfare would be prohibited by paragraph 3, Article 35. … This Article could have considerable impact on naval warfare. Attacks against oil tankers and ships carrying hazardous chemical cargoes might be expected to have long-term, widespread, and severe effects on the sea environment.Footnote 71
Even then, however, the articles were deemed “militarily acceptable”, subject to certain conditions.Footnote 72
The fact that the United States military was generally comfortable with the two articles at the time should not be construed as signalling that it understood them to reflect customary international law. After all, AP I both codified existing law, such as the principle of distinction, and progressively developed IHL. Indeed, it was widely understood that the environmental provisions incorporated into the Protocol were novel within IHL. Nor should the Joint Chiefs’ recommendations be misunderstood to imply that, to the extent that the United States has observed environmental limitations on its means and methods of warfare (e.g., by discontinuing use of Agent Orange), it has done so out of a sense of legal obligation. As will be explained, absent that condition, customary international law does not form from practice alone.
In any event, by 1987, the Executive Branch decided not to pursue ratification of AP I, characterizing it as “fundamentally and irreconcilably flawed.”Footnote 73 Deputy State Department legal adviser Michael Matheson laid out specific objections at an American University event that year.Footnote 74 Concerning special protection for the environment, he labelled Articles 35 and 55 “too broad and ambiguous” and stated that they were “not part of customary international law”.Footnote 75
Faced with such opposition, the ICRC Customary Law Study acknowledges the US position by stating that it appears the United States is a “persistent objector”.Footnote 76 But as that status does not preclude crystallization of the customary rule, it is unsurprising that the United States pushed back aggressively on Rule 45 once the Study was published. In a joint letter, DoD general counsel William Haynes and Department of State legal adviser John Bellinger used the environmental provisions to illustrate numerous objections to the study's approach and conclusions, which the United States continues to maintain today:
[T]he Study fails to demonstrate that Rule 45, as stated, constitutes customary international law in international or non-international armed conflicts …. First, the Study fails to assess accurately the practice of specially affected States, which clearly have expressed their view that any obligations akin to those contained in Rule 45 flow from treaty commitments, not from customary international law. …
… The Study recognizes that the practice of specially affected States should weigh more heavily when assessing the density of State practice, but fails to assess that practice carefully. France and the United States repeatedly have declared that Articles 35(3) and 55 of AP I, from which the Study derives the first sentence of Rule 45, do not reflect customary international law.Footnote 77
Evaluating the US position
Since the United States is not a party to AP I, its position must be assessed against the requirements for the formation of a customary international law rule. As the ICJ has repeatedly observed, it is “axiomatic that the material of customary international law is to be looked for primarily in the actual practice and opinio juris of States”.Footnote 78 Both elements must be established; if they are not, a customary rule does not exist.Footnote 79
State Practice
With respect to the first element, the practice in question must be sufficiently dense before it leads to the crystallization of a customary rule. In its North Sea Continental Shelf judgment, the ICJ observed that “very widespread and representative” practice is required, from which a discernable pattern of behaviour can emerge.Footnote 80 Consequently, State practice contrary to a purported customary rule augers against its existence.
Since there have been very few, if any, intentional operations causing Rule 45's level of environmental harm, it cannot be said that affirmative actual practice precludes such a rule. But in some circumstances, State inaction qualifies as practice bearing on the existence of a customary rule.Footnote 81 Relying on this observation, the ICRC suggests that Rule 45 “is supported, in part, by the abstention from operations causing the threshold damage”.Footnote 82
In our opinion, this is a flawed assertion because inaction is only relevant when deliberate. A State must consciously decide to refrain from conducting an operation likely to cause widespread, long-lasting or severe damage in order to provide the requisite State practiceFootnote 83 – and the ICRC, in fact, acknowledges the need for conscious abstention elsewhere in its Customary Law Study.Footnote 84 It is, of course, difficult to assess whether States, including the United States, have deliberately abstained from conducting operations generating such damage to the natural environment.Footnote 85 Indeed, when Article 35(3) of AP I was drafted, there was “a widely shared assumption that battlefield damage incidental to conventional warfare would not normally be proscribed by the provision”.Footnote 86 Accordingly, it cannot be said with any reasonable degree of confidence that States, at least those not party to the Protocol, have deliberately (vice incidentally) abstained from causing widespread, long-lasting and severe environmental damage.
Given these standards, it is reasonable for the United States to conclude that State practice in support of special protection for the environment is insufficiently dense to satisfy customary international law's high crystallization threshold. While a comprehensive treatment of the evidence cited in the ICRC Customary Law Study is beyond the scope of this article, suffice it to say that we are not convinced that the collective body of practice is “widespread and representative”.
Some States, for instance, have repeatedly maintained that Rule 43, which proscribes damage to the environment regardless of whether it constitutes a civilian object, needs to be narrowed before accurately reflecting the general practice of States.Footnote 87 Recall that the United States points to the absence of general practice in support of its position. As it concerns the proportionality component of Rule 43, Israel has likewise stated that it
is unaware of any State which, upon attacking a military base in a remote area, would consider expected damage to surrounding bushes, rocks or soil as damage to civilian objects that ought to be incorporated in the proportionality assessment relating to the attack.Footnote 88
Our experience with US armed forces and other States with which they operate, such as their NATO allies, is identical. This negative practice contravening the purported rule's stated breadth indicates that it has not attained customary status.
We are, of course, cognizant that some inconsistency may not be fatal to a determination that a general practice exists. As the ICJ later clarified in its Paramilitary Activities judgment:
It is not to be expected that in the practice of States the application of the rules in question should have been perfect …. The Court does not consider that, for a rule to be established as customary, the corresponding practice must be in absolutely rigorous conformity with the rule. In order to deduce the existence of customary rules, the Court deems it sufficient that the conduct of States should, in general, be consistent with such rules, and that instances of State conduct inconsistent with a given rule should generally have been treated as breaches of that rule, not as indications of the recognition of a new rule.Footnote 89
This does not, however, affect our conclusion that the US position is reasonable in light of the totality of State practice. The reality is that there is little evidence of States refraining from operations that they would otherwise have conducted because of the risk of causing widespread, long-lasting and severe environmental damage. Similarly, we are aware of no actual, in contrast to verbal, practice of States treating every aspect of the environment as a civilian object, damage to which an attacker must consider in proportionality and precautions in attack analyses. Nor have States relied on any exceptions or other justifications for their behaviour from which one could reasonably infer that an applicable rule has crystallized. And public denials that such rules exist amount to verbal practice (and opinio juris) standing in the way of the crystallization of the purported customary rules.
Moreover, the notion of specially affected States further counsels against a finding that the rules are customary in character. Such a status was first raised by the ICJ in its North Sea Continental Shelf judgment, where it implied that the views and actions of specially affected States are of heightened importance in determining the content of customary international law. Thus, when assessing whether a practice is sufficiently dense,
an indispensable factor to be taken into account is the extent to which those States that are particularly involved in the relevant activity or are most likely to be concerned with the alleged rule (“specially affected States”) have participated in the practice.Footnote 90
This is because these States often have a “greater quantity and quality of practice” due to their “depth of experience” with certain rules.Footnote 91 Provided that the assessment of the evidence supporting a purported rule is contextual, searching, and reflective of careful consideration of its credibility,Footnote 92 specially affected States should receive some degree of deference when identifying customary rules.
Against this backdrop, the ICRC acknowledges that “if ‘specially affected States’ do not accept [a] practice, it cannot mature into a rule of customary international law …. Who is ‘specially affected”’ will vary according to circumstances.”Footnote 93 It further notes that, “[w]ith respect to any rule of international humanitarian law, countries that participated in an armed conflict are ‘specially affected’ when their practice examined for a certain rule was relevant to that armed conflict”.Footnote 94
Along the same lines, the United States maintains that “the practice of States that have relatively little history of participation in armed conflict and the practice of States that have had a greater extent and depth of experience or that have otherwise had significant opportunities to develop a carefully considered military doctrine” are neither similarly situated nor equivalent in terms of crystallizing customary international law.Footnote 95 A State is only specially affected to the extent that it engages in armed conflict; speculation as to how rules might be applied by a State that does not carries far less weight.
Although not essential to our conclusion, considering the frequency with which they find themselves in armed conflict, we believe that Israel and the United States are specially affected States. Therefore, their actual and verbal practice are afforded significant weight in the customary law assessment. While the precise extent to which the practice of specially affected States must be considered is unsettled,Footnote 96 it is reasonable to infer that, at a minimum, the practice and imprimatur of these and other specially affected States is especially persuasive when assessing whether a rule is customary.Footnote 97
But even assuming solely for the sake of analysis that there are no specially affected States with respect to the impact of warfare on the environment, it would be difficult to find that Rules 43–45, as articulated, reflect the general practice of States. Moreover, should general practice exist, it has not been “accepted as law” by States, at least not to the level necessary to crystallize a customary rule of IHL.
Opinio juris
The “subjective” element of customary international law is that the relevant State practice must reflect State opinio juris.Footnote 98 It is well established that
[n]ot only must the acts concerned amount to a settled practice, but they must also be such, or be carried out in such a way, as to be evidence of a belief that this practice is rendered obligatory by the existence of a rule of law requiring it. … The States concerned must therefore feel that they are conforming to what amounts to a legal obligation.Footnote 99
Accordingly, acting out of a sense of legal obligation must be distinguished from other motivations for State behaviour, including political policy, practical expediency or equitable (in contrast to legal) principles of comity.Footnote 100
Again, in light of this standard, we find that US objections to the evidence relied upon by the ICRC are objectively reasonable. One need look no further, for example, than the relative abundance of States that have expressly declared that the relevant environmental provisions of AP I, upon which Rule 45 is based, do not accurately reflect customary international law.Footnote 101 Those and similar denials with respect to the expansive scope of Rules 43 and 44, especially those of specially affected States, are an insurmountable obstacle to a determination that the rules are customary in nature. Such opinio juris denying the customary status of the purported rules contrasts with the relative paucity of that supporting them.
A more searching examination reveals additional support for our view. In furtherance of Rule 44, for instance, the ICRC asserts that “some military manuals, official statements and reported practice” evidence a “general need to protect the environment during armed conflict”Footnote 102 – but to the extent that this is true, there is little evidence that they do so out of a sense of opinio juris rather than for reasons of political or military expediency or convenience.Footnote 103 As the United States has repeatedly emphasized in statements to the ICRC and to the Sixth Committee throughout the proceedings that led to the ILC's eventual adoption of the PERAC Principles, “protection of the environment during armed conflict is desirable as a matter of policy for a broad range of reasons, including for military, civilian health, and economic welfare-related reasons, in addition to environmental ones as such”.Footnote 104 The United States has consistently reiterated that many of the principles inappropriately indicate they are binding in nature, rather than simply reflecting sound policy or a best practice.Footnote 105
Moreover, it is critical to emphasize that even if a practice is motivated by a sense of legal obligation, it is only relevant to the formation of customary international law if it pertains to acceptance of law that is both customary and international in nature.Footnote 106 Opinio juris must therefore be further distinguished from obligations that, albeit legal in character, are motivated solely by adherence to treaty requirements or domestic law.Footnote 107
This is not to say that treaties are irrelevant to customary international law; on the contrary, treaties may, under certain circumstances, be pertinent evidence of the existence or emergence of customary rules, as when a treaty provision is adopted to codify customary law.Footnote 108 Still, to be relevant to the existence of a customary rule, the opinio juris in question must unambiguously and conclusively show that a rule is considered customary in nature and exists independently from a corresponding treaty or domestic law obligation.
Therein lies another flaw in the ICRC's reasoning. With respect to Rule 45, for example, the ICRC Customary Law Study relies in large part on the fact that AP I is widely, albeit not universally, ratified. The problem with that assertion is that non-party States like Israel and the United States object to the characterization of Articles 35(3) and 55 as being reflective of customary international law. More to the point, even some parties to the Protocol, such as Canada and France, have expressly stated that they are not.Footnote 109 In light of these positions, all that can be said is that the articles bind States Parties as a matter of treaty law.
Thus, considering the high threshold required for customary international law, we believe that the US positions relative to the ICRC Customary Law Study's environment-specific rules are reasonable. But we further observe that even had the purported customary rules crystallized, they would not bind the United States, which would be exempt from their obligations as a “persistent objector”.Footnote 110
Persistent objector status
By their nature, rules of customary international law are binding on all States, including those that do not recognize them as such. Nevertheless, it is well recognized that “[w]hen a State has persistently objected to an emerging rule of customary international law, and maintains its objection after the rule has crystallized, that rule is not opposable to it”.Footnote 111 The objection must be clearly and persistently communicated to other States to fall within the exception. Further, the exception has a timeliness requirement; failure to object to the rule while it is emerging is a permanent bar to claiming its benefits.
Within that context, it is critical to distinguish the notion of specially affected States from that of persistent objectors. Whereas the former prevents a norm from becoming a customary rule, the latter prevents an emerging rule from prospectively binding a State once it crystallizes. The existence of a customary rule is, therefore, a necessary condition precedent to a State qualifying as a persistent objector.
We acknowledge that the applicability of persistent objector status vis-à-vis IHL is not universally accepted. For example, Conclusion 15 of the ILC's Draft Conclusions on Identification of Customary International Law (ILC Draft Conclusions) implies that the status may not apply to peremptory norms of general international law (jus cogens).Footnote 112 The ICRC has queried whether the status applies within the context of humanitarian law, taking no position on the matter.Footnote 113
While we agree that certain IHL rules, such as the prohibition on directly attacking civilians, are peremptory in character, it is overbroad to suggest that every rule in this body of law has achieved that status. To be sure, the environmental rules at stake can hardly be deemed peremptory given the absence of State consensus in support of that notion.
Seeing no reason to doubt that the persistent objector doctrine applies to the environmental rules (assuming solely for the sake of analysis that they are customary), the United States would qualify as a persistent objector. There is no debate over whether the proscriptions in Articles 35(3) and 55 of AP I were novel when that treaty was ratified; thus, they could only have emerged as a customary rule after the Protocol went into force. Although the United States had few concerns with the articles when it was considering ratifying the Protocol, once it determined that it would not, it unambiguously and persistently maintained its objection to the provisions. The ICRC concedes as much in its commentary to Rule 45.Footnote 114 And with respect to Rules 43 and 44, the United States has similarly repudiated claims that the customary rules upon which they are based should be applied so expansively in the environmental context.Footnote 115 Thus, to the extent that they are distinct from the conduct-of-hostility rules pertaining to protected objects, there is little doubt that the United States would qualify as a persistent objector to any new or emerging environmental protections identified in the ICRC Customary Law Study. They would not bind the United States, even assuming they reflected customary international law.
Current ambiguities in the US position
Although we conclude that the US position relative to the environmental aspects of IHL is reasonable, we also believe it is not without its faults. As the preceding analysis implies, several ambiguities within the US position hinder attempts to understand and anticipate how the United States may apply IHL to the natural environment. Because it is a highly influential and specially affected State, clarifying these areas would likely cultivate a greater appreciation of U.S. approaches to the subject and contribute to the progressive development of the law.
One such ambiguity is how the United States conceptually and substantively defines the “environment” within the context of IHL. While it has described the environment as a “collection of individual elements” rather than a “single concept or object”,Footnote 116 it is still not clear which elements are included. For instance, there is little doubt that, by the US understanding of certain prohibitions, components of the environment include the crop fields of Vietnam and the coastal waters of the Persian Gulf. But do they also encompass interconnected elements such as the wildlife living within those parts or the air surrounding them? And does the answer depend on the particular rule or the factual context in question?
The challenges that this lack of clarity presents are hardly purely academic, for they result in a body of law that may be difficult to apply on the battlefield. How, for instance, is proportionality to be calculated if there is uncertainty as to which elements of the environment are to be considered civilian objects? Or when, as a matter of law, does the incidental impact on the environment of an attack on a military objective trigger the obligation to take precautions in attack because it qualifies as damage to a civilian object? On the one hand, uncertainty could lead to a legally unnecessary decision to refrain from an attack that would yield a military advantage. On the other, uncertainty may also result in attacks contrary to those environmental protections which the United States believes do apply in armed conflict.
Unfortunately the United States is not alone in this regard, for none of the instruments referenced in this article define the term “environment” with adequate precision.Footnote 117 Similarly, there is no consensus regarding the term's scope vis-à-vis customary international law.Footnote 118 Nevertheless, as a specially affected State that has engaged in a significant number and variety of armed conflicts since the environmental aspects of IHL first emerged, clarifying how the United States interprets the concept could potentially avoid haphazard interpretation or application of the law. At the very least, it would likely prove influential in shepherding agreement regarding the precise contours of the term's scope as it pertains to customary international law.
A related ambiguity is how the United States calculates harm that might befall the environment during military operations in armed conflict. For instance, to the extent that the environment enjoys the protections afforded to civilian objects, should collateral damage be assessed like other objects? Or does the nature of the environment distinguish it in kind from manufactured objects, such as buildings, equipment or critical infrastructure? Should harm to the environment be evaluated based on its impact on the civilian population (the anthropocentric approach), or does the environment have intrinsic value forming the basis for calculating such rules as proportionality? Must attackers inquire into the fragility of applicable parts of the environment, such as an ecosystem on the brink of collapse, when making these calculations? Considering the extent to which parts of the environment are interrelated and how irreversible environmental impacts may be, these questions loom larger in the environmental context than in others.
Similar obscurities no doubt remain, and there is little question that the United States acknowledges them – yet, instead of working to clarify these areas, it has largely leveraged the law's opacity for political flexibility. As an example, when responding to the ICRC Customary Law Study, the United States primarily attacked the evidence underlying the ICRC's purported rules, but it did not provide alternative conclusions as to the law's content. In short, one could describe the United States’ approach to the post-Vietnam environmental conversation as somewhat defensive and reactive; it has not assumed a proactive, descriptive posture that could lend some coherence to the law, especially given its leadership potential in the field.
Concluding thoughts
The extent to which IHL protects the environment is, unfortunately, ill-settled. This is due in part to the United States’ unwillingness to ratify AP I and its resistance to legal interpretations expressed in the ICRC Customary Law Study. Beyond broad agreement that the prohibition against wanton destruction and the conduct-of-hostility rules, in their varying treaty and customary expressions, offer non-specific environmental protections, there is little consensus as to precisely how IHL's current framework applies to the environment and its constituent parts.
Yet, within that context, we find the US position reasonable. In light of the constitutive elements of customary international law, there is little support for the contention that the relevant provisions in AP I or the entirety of the purported rules pertaining to the environment in the ICRC Customary Law Study have crystallized into customary international law. They neither reflect the general practice of States, nor is there sufficient evidence of their acceptance as customary law. Simply put, they do not satisfy the high bar for customary law status that is well established in international law.
Even if we were to find the US position legally unsupportable, however, we would not consequently conclude that the assertion of an incorrect characterization by the United States has had, or would have, any meaningful or practical significance with respect to protecting the environment during armed conflict. After all, it is difficult to imagine a scenario in which the United States has caused or would cause, for example, widespread, long-term and severe environmental damage using the conventional means and methods of war that the US military currently employs.
Moreover, even though the United States rejects the assertion that the natural environment is intrinsically civilian in nature, we are unpersuaded that including all elements of the environment when assessing the incidental effects from attacks on nearby military objectives – assuming they are not intimately associated with and incorporated into those objectives in the first place – would be of any consequence to modern military operations. There are very few instances, in our professional experience, in which incidental damage to a part of the environment not considered by the United States to be a civilian object would ever be excessive in relation to the anticipated military advantage. In cases where incidental damage to pertinent parts of the environment might be high enough to be considered excessive, the United States would, in all likelihood, already consider those parts to be civilian objects. In our view, any friction between US and competing interpretations is, therefore, of minimal practical significance to actual military operations.
Accordingly, clarifying current ambiguities in the US position would exert greater influence on the law's development and offer greater protection for the environment than adopting broader interpretations of the law. Absent clarification of what the “environment” consists of or how damage to its components is calculated, the United States risks having obscurity cloud its interpretation and application of the law on the battlefield.