Cyber Strategy and the Law of Armed Conflict

ABSTRACT

At its Lisbon Summit (November 2010), NATO has adopted its Strategic Concept.  In the U.S., Cyberstrategy is laid out in the President's International Strategy for Cyberspace (POTUS 2011) and the Department of Defense's Strategy for Operating in Cyberspace (U.S. DoD 2011).  These strategy documents will contribute to a growing policy consensus regarding cyber security and defence as well as provide better policy insights regarding cyber offence.  In doing so, they will contribute to a better understanding of how NATO and the U.S. want to prepare for, and conduct cyber warfare in a manner congruent with the law of armed conflict.  In addition, they will determine to what extent this branch of the law needs to be better understood, developed, or reformed.  Accordingly, this paper indicates how the existing legal and policy frameworks intersect with practical aspects of cyber warfare and associated intelligence activities, analyses how the new strategy documents develop and change the existing policy framework, and what repercussions this may have for the interpretation and application of the law of armed conflict.  It also demonstrates how the new strategy documents inform the policy and legal discourse and hence help confirm that NATO and U.S. as well as other NATO Nations' cyber activities are, and will continue to be, lawful and legitimate.


AUTHORS

Nato Fellow, Center for Transatlantic Security Studies (CTSS), US National Defense University

Ulf Haeussler is the NATO Fellow for the U.S. National Defense University's Center for Transatlantic Security Studies (CTSS), and a member of the Legal Service of the German Armed Forces. Prior to his assignment at CTSS he was Assistant Legal Advisor at the Headquarters, the Supreme Allied Commander Transformation (NATO HQ SACT). Earlier, he has served in several positions as a legal advisor in the German Armed Forces, including on two Balkans deployments and a secondment to NATO Heaquarters, and was a research fellow and lecturer in law at the Universities of Regensburg, Wuerzburg, and Konstanz. He has focused his research and writing on international law and its relationship with strategy, dealing with various aspects of the law of armed conflict and international military operations, international and comparative human rights law, status and functions of the armed forces, and international migration law.

 

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Keywords

A

AI
APT

C

C2
C2S
CDX
CIA
CIP
CPS

D

DNS
DoD
DoS

I

IA
ICS

M

S

SOA

X

XRY

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