MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History

THE PERILS OF AMBIGUITY

A recurring issue in warfare—one that appears in the records of every modern conflict—is how prisoners of war should be dealt with. The summary execution of prisoners is clearly a war crime, as is refusing to accept an enemy’s surrender when he signals his desire to capitulate. In the confusion of battle, however, circumstances are not always so straightforward. To what degree are soldiers required to risk their own lives to capture an enemy who aims to kill them right up to the last moment? And what legal requirements apply to soldiers who face an enemy that has a record of ignoring white flags, for example, or violating other surrender conditions?

Winston Churchill once said that a prisoner of war “is a man who tries to kill you, and having failed to do so, asks that you not kill him.” Under the Geneva Convention, it is a war crime for soldiers either to kill prisoners after capturing them or to refuse to take prisoners altogether and kill everyone they encounter. But in such cases, who should be held accountable? Only the soldiers who committed the killings? Or also the commanders who ordered them to do so, whether explicitly or obliquely? Two American cases

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History

MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History2 min read
Weapons Check War Hammer
The war hammer, as crude as it seems, was a practical solution to a late-medieval arms race between offense and defense. From the 14th century, steel plate armor spread amongst the warrior classes. The angled and hardened surfaces of plate armor were
MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History2 min read
Opening Round
By the time of the Second World War, “Field Artillery” almost felt like an antiquated concept. In a world with heavily-armored tanks, long-range shelling, and high altitude bombers, it felt almost quaint to wheel out a glorified cannon onto the battl
MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History12 min read
Becoming The Desert Fox
In late October 1917, a detachment of German mountain troopers weary from hard Alpine fighting on the Isonzo front were crossing the river Torre with a group of Italian prisoners. The ordinarily calm waters of the river had swollen into a raging floo

Related Books & Audiobooks