An international
committee is embarking on a three-year effort to establish globally-recognised
ground rules for space warfare, in anticipation of a future in which battles
are not only fought on Earth, but above it.
A coalition of
scientists, lawyers, academics and government representatives from around the
world will come together to draft a document that will outline the legal
parameters for military operations in space and its governance during war time.
The Manual on
International Law Applicable to Military Uses of Outer Space – or MILAMOS –
seeks to determine the rules of engagement during space combat and whether
current treaties regarding warfare could be applied to conflicts taking place
miles above the Earth.
This includes
establishing what actions would constitute as war crimes and whether
legislation concerning the treatment of prisoners on Earth could applied to
people taken captive in orbit, reports the Guardian.
MILAMOS
will tackle the issue of who would be responsible for clearing up space debris
left over from battles.
While
international 'space law' has been addressed in previous legislature such as
the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, this has been primarily focused on the exploration
of space and the responsibilities of the nations putting spacecraft into orbit.
The
generational leaps in space, military and aviation technology since then has
made space warfare a far more credible threat, thus calling for
a new and future-proof set of legal guidelines for space-faring militaries.
MILAMOS
paints a remarkable yet frightening picture of tomorrow's conflicts,
envisioning wars in which manned satellites are boarded and taken hostage by
hostile nations and satellite images are hacked to make
civilians appear as military targets.
It's
a scenario we have never had to consider before, a concept not lost on the
coalition tasked with penning the document. "For now, we have more
questions than answers," Dr Kubo Mačák of the University of Exeter law
school, one of the institutions drafting MILAMOS, told The Guardian.
"However, the
participation of legal and technical experts from around the world gives hope
that the solutions we identify will gain global credibility and thus shape the
policy and behaviour of space-faring states in the foreseeable future." SOURCEhttp://www.ibtimes.co.uk/what-milamos-work-begins-international-rule-book-future-space-warfare-1622796
No comments:
Post a Comment